Time to speak up

29 10 2011

Our local police force released statistics about crime rates last week, garnering attention both for the drop in overall crimes and for the disturbing increase in certain categories. An increase in the number of local murders, in particular, has resulted  in a 4.2% overall increase in violent crimes vs last year. But the increases in sexual assaults against women and children, and in child pornography, are especially alarming.

Media coverage about the numbers (and some local blogs) quoted area politicians’ reactions to the figures, focused on the costs of policing and the difficulties in comparing numbers across municipalities. Hamilton isn’t Muskoka, one Councillor pointed out. The figures are to be reviewed in more detail. Let’s hope that review considers the costs of these crimes to our community not only in a financial context but in the price paid by victims and their families. Crimes against children, in particular, tear at the very fabric of our neighbourhoods and diminish us all as members of this community.

Hamilton is above the Canadian average for violent crimes. And our rate of sexual assaults against children as well as child pornography has been rising. Policing aside, what are we as a community doing about that? Are we talking about it, outraged by it, seeking solutions to change it? There is much to think about given these latest crime statistics. The thinking cannot be limited, however, to the sphere of law enforcement and municipal government. Conversations need to happen in private homes and coffee shops as well – what do we think about the sentencing handed out to those who prey on children? What messages might we send to make sure the vast majority’s outrage over these despicable crimes is understood?

The burden of finding and apprehending the criminals represented in the statistics rests on our Hamilton Police Service. But they cannot and should not stand as our only response to child abuse, woman abuse, or child pornography. These are crimes with roots in societal issues. These are crimes that send powerful messages, of the very worst kind, to kids. Our continued silence won’t do anything to change that.





Grateful in Wonderland

22 10 2011

What a night. A steady parade of hats, costumes, and grins arriving at the Ancaster Fairgrounds to travel “down the rabbit hole” and celebrate the 35th anniversary of the Community Child Abuse Council at the 2011 Mad Hatter’s Ball. By all accounts a good time was had by all, and the Council was the fortunate beneficiary of all the fun.

Regular readers of my blog know that this is an event I spearheaded in the early part of 2011. Watching it all unfold last night was heartwarming. The tally of proceeds isn’t in yet, but money aside it was truly inspiring to see the merriment and hear the laughter in a crowd brought together by a very sad need (fighting child abuse). As I said from the stage, it’s tough to be celebratory when you’re the Community Child Abuse Council and families turn to you in the wake of sexual abuse. But those little victories and

heart-swelling success stories that unfold on a regular basis at the Council are ones that must be shared and celebrated. That’s why, from the very start, we set out to host a “party with a purpose” rather than any other sort of fundraising event.

My personal thanks to friends and family, colleagues, and Council supporters who came out to attend the festivities and spend money in support of the cause. And my very sincere gratitude to those, including friends and family, who gave their time and considerable talents as volunteers before, during, and after the event. What an amazing team of volunteers the evening brought together! I appreciate your support so very much.

Pictures from the event will be posted on the Mad Hatter’s Ball web site: www.the2011mhb.com

 





A Community’s Pride

31 08 2011

The Hamilton Police Male Chorus is North America's oldest, established more than 50 years ago.

Warm congratulations to the members of the Hamilton Police Male Chorus for their recent win on “Canada Sings”. Competing as The Hammer Cruisers they pledged their winnings to Project Concern, the in-house police charity, so that the money can be directed to local charities. This community can be proud of these big-hearted singers and their commitment to local causes. Well done guys!





Unofficially Summer

22 05 2011

Summer’s official start is generally recognized to be June 21 (or, more specifically, the Summer Solstice). But for many of us, the “May 24” long weekend has traditionally heralded the arrival of the warmer weather and released us to once again enjoy outdoor living. Here’s hoping you are all making the best of this seasonal (and uniquely ours) celebration. As you stock up on charcoal, hose off the lawn chairs and otherwise prepare for summertime, however, take a moment to think about the season change from another perspective…

The network of community service providers whose programs and supports are vital to so many of our neighbours and fellow citizens approach the summer months with a different view than most of us: will there be enough food at the food banks to respond to the increase in demand that generally happens when school lets out? how can we best utilize the summer students who will be helping us? how many days of dangerously high temperatures are we in for and are we ready to respond to the needs of the most vulnerable? will our board volunteers meet over the summer? will enough donors remember us when our fundraising appeal comes during their summer vacation? how will the coming provincial election impact our ability to provide services? have we recruited enough replacements for our key volunteers who will be leaving for holidays?

The community engine that responds to human needs is ever running. There is no vacation for the safety net that is vitally essential to the health and wellbeing of our most vulnerable citizens. The ongoing activities that keep this engine running are often unseen but always imporant. Taking time to consider that as we plan our summers can only add to the strength of the response. As we take time out to enjoy the season, we may also be in a position to help make sure it’s a good summer for all.  Worth thinking about.





Latest Briefing from Child Abuse Council

11 05 2011

Regular readers know that the Community Child Abuse Council releases periodic issues of its Leadership Briefing to inform and engage the public. Karen has been authoring these briefings since their inception. The latest release is now available on the Council’s web site (http://www.childabusecouncil.on.ca/) or here: Leadership Briefing Spring 2011





An Ambitious Undertaking…

21 04 2011

OK, it’s six months away but I had to share one of the most ambitious volunteer undertakings I have yet to embark upon…

Together with Event Co-Chair, Marilyn Smith (no relation, but how uncanny!) I am organizing a sizeable fundraising event to benefit the Community Child Abuse Council. October is Child Abuse Prevention Month, so it’s the perfect time for this soiree. It’s also set for 10 days before Halloween…hmmm, costumes anyone?

The 2011 Mad Hatter’s Ball is a party with a purpose. And a fundraising event like none other. Unique venue, great food, live music and dancing, no silent auction, no head table, no speeches. Just a lot of fun and a chance for adults to come out and play in support of kids who really need our support. For information and tickets, or to join us as an event sponsor, please visit the event web site : www.the2011mhb.com.





Feed The Dream

15 04 2011

Did you know that in Hamilton more than 23,000 students get a breakfast, lunch and/or snack each day at their local school or community centre? Many of these kids, 1 in 4, live in poverty. Others lack the required nutrition to get them through the day because busy lives, work schedules, or stressful home situations get in the way. Hamilton Partners in Nutrition (HPIN) provides nutritional meals and snacks to students across this community, funded largely through provincial money but relying also on donations and fundraising. Rising food costs require ongoing efforts to raise money and a significant dependence on volunteer dedication.

On Saturday, June 18th you can support their work by supporting their Feed The Dream Auction. It will be held at Hamilton’s Discovery Centre and will include both silent and live auction events as well as entertainment and hors d’oevres. Opportunities to help include buying event tickets, donating auction items, volunteering for the evening, or advertising in the auction brochure. EnMark Associates is pleased to be donating an auction item, and challenges readers of this site to do the same.

Full details can be found at www.partnersinnutrition.ca or by calling 905-522-1148, ext. 301.  Be sure to find out about the special pre-auction cruise aboard The Harbour Queen.

There are more than 100 student nutrition programs in Hamilton, and as of June 2010 they serve 447,183 breakfast meals and 650,690 snacks with the help of 6,695 volunteers. Parents alone contribute more than 45,000 hours of volunteer time, estimated to represent more than $750,000.

 

Karen’s recent work has included a project with the Hamilton Community Foundation and area stakeholders to develop a universal school-based nutrition program in Hamilton. Buildiing from what is already in place, the initiative aims to make nourishment available to all elementary school students (secondary school population would come next) and to help the community move forward towards the goal of being the best place in which to raise a child. Watch this blog and the Hamilton Community Foundation’s web site (see link at right) for updates on the project.





Communities Need Voters

31 03 2011

Canadians once again go to the polls to elect a federal government on May 2nd. Whether you like the notion of another election or not, there’s no getting around the simple fact that voting is a cornerstone of democracy. Many Canadians have stayed home in past elections, resulting in an embarassingly low voter turnout. We’ll need to change that if this is to remain a stable democracy. Just as important, communities need their residents to get out and vote.

“One of our duties and privileges of citizens in a democracy is to cast a ballot. This is what we do to resolve our differences and give direction to our leaders. We vote.” That’s the Edmonton Journal’s Graham Thomson’s take on it. “One of the best defences against oppression is democracy. We’ve had three elections since 2004 because the people of Canada in their collective wisdom elected back-to-back-to-back minority governments (once to the Liberals and two most recently to the Conservatives). Get involved, even if that means simply reading the papers or watching the news. Ask -heck, grill -your local candidates about issues you care about whether that’s health care, jobs, the environment, the Libyan mission or…”.

Thomson’s comments on March 26 sparked a lively seesaw of opinions. But it isn’t so much whether we agree with him about the way to exercise our democratic privilege as it is about the fact that we have a democratic privilege. Cliché or not, it’s about the hard-won right to put your mark on a ballot. It’s also about surrendering your right to complain or criticize if you don’t participate in the democratic process.

Municipal voter turnout has traditionally been the lowest, an ironic and sad reality given that most of us are more closely tuned-in to local issues than to provincial or federal ones. But remember that many of the issues we grapple with locally have trickle-down influences from provincial and federal levels. Economic policy can be tied to local communities just as surely as immigration policies can impact a multicultural city such as Hamilton. The Hamilton Spectator’s Code Red series included a call for getting the vote out and pointed to the (then) fledgling Hamilton Civic League’s work to encourage Hamiltonians to vote. The group identified four segments of the population that vote in disproportionately low numbers: renters, people living in poverty, students and young people, and new Canadians, even after they’ve obtained citizenship.

Younger people (those under 35) are the group least likely to cast a ballot. Sadly, that’s due in part to our failure to educate and engage them in the democratic landscape. Finding ways to encourage young voters is something that ultimately helps us all. The Ottawa Citizen, in 2006, referred to it as exercising your franchise: “It conjures up images of voters wheezing on treadmills or pumping iron, desperately trying to whip their flabby democratic muscles into shape. But on reflection, the expression is really quite apt. After all, the act of voting is how citizens keep their democracy fit. Without the workout of an election, democracy would quickly sink into morbid obesity.” Maybe the idea that voting is fitness will attract more people to the polls on May 2nd, and on every election day after that.

See www.rockthevote.com (U.S. organization dedicated to engaging and building the political power of young people). Watch for “Get Out the Vote Canada” (a Facebook page).





It’s Family Day

21 02 2011

If you live in Ontario, Alberta or Saskatchewan today is officially Family Day. It’s a statutory holiday in other parts of Canada too  (but under different names) so roughly 60% of the country observes the day as a holiday. In Ontario, it’s about celebrating the importance of families and family life to people and their communities.

(photo: David Cooper, Toronto Star)

Many families will spend time together, and a range of activities (many of them free) are happening for kids of all ages. Family members separated by distance may pick up the phone to connect, or use the less personal email, text or Skype options. But how does a community celebrate the importance of families? Public events really don’t reflect a community in this sense…for the most part they are organized by City departments and municipal staffers. And it’s February, not so conducive to the outdoor block parties or neighbourhood events we might see in warmer months.

I’m interested in hearing about ways a community can show that it values families. Are you taking part in a community-organized event? Is your corner of the bigger community doing something to celebrate family life? Is there a gesture of acknowledgement we could all make, as community members, that you think would honour families? Post a comment or drop me a line and tell us about it. In the meantime, I’m off to call my parents.





Thinking outside the lunchbox

2 02 2011

I recently had the opportunity to facilitate a discussion among stakeholders from education, health, social services, municipal services, business, food and nutrition, and philanthropic interests. The topic was the development of a school-based, universal student nutrition program for Hamilton. I have been working with the Hamilton Community Foundation on this project for several months, and this discussion was the latest step in the Foundation’s effort at helping the community to move forward with the goal that “no child leaves school hungry”.

This was a dynamic group discussion, and one peppered with as many questions as answers. That’s par for the course at this early juncture in a community initiative. But despite the unknowns, local stakeholders in attendance made it clear that they see this project as not only important but also entirely necessary. Too many youngsters don’t receive adequate nutrition in Hamilton, and many are hungry enough to be distracted from learning. But what to do? Stakeholders at the session were asked how they would approach the development of a program to make sure all students get enough to eat. They were encouraged to think beyond current efforts, such as traditional school programs or breakfast clubs. They were asked to push themselves to think “from scratch” and not be limited by the way things have historically been done. Their level of enthusiasm and commitment is a good sign of support for seeing this preliminary work by the Foundation turn into something tangible. It’s premature to report anything here in terms of the discussion, but I was reassured by the focus on outcomes for children, the desire to see parents engaged and involved, and the willingness for most stakeholders to step outside their usual parameters just long enough to imagine something new and different.

Watch for developments in the School Nutrition Project as the discussion progresses and early ideas take shape. Think you’d like to be part of the discussion? Please contact me.