Tag Archives: robert ghiz

Heart and Stroke lobbying for early treatment

The PEI Heart and Stroke Foundation is carrying on a methodical public education and lobbying campaign for the stroke treatment unit in Charlottetown. There is a letter a month in the papers which is good because it raises public awareness.

Hopefully their campaign will have some success but probably at the risk of other Islanders with disabilities being left in the cold. For instance, seniors who have a disability due to stroke are and will continue to be outside the Disability Support Program which provides useful assistive devices and support services outside the Charlottetown area.

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No grandstand for Summerside Raceway

BY MIKE CARSON
The Guardian

SUMMERSIDE — The provincial government made it final on Monday, there will be no funding for new grandstands at Summerside Raceway.
Provincial Treasurer Wes Sheridan released his government’s long awaited Responsible Gaming Strategy on Monday but the published government news release made no reference to Summerside Raceway.

The city has been pressuring government for a new grandstand at the SRW as the community prepares to host the opening ceremonies of the 2009 Canada Games.
The grandstands have been described by the city as “deplorable” and an “embarrassment” for one of the longest running industries in the community. Replacing the grandstands has been ticketed at around $3 million.

Sheridan had said earlier the Responsible Gaming Strategy that will deal with all types of gaming on P.E.I. would have a role in the SRW grandstand issue.
The provincial treasurer said Monday his government has continually said their financial priorities are focused on health care and education and that will continue.
“We will not be building grandstands at Summerside Raceway,” he said.

The minister said there has been ongoing discussion with the city that Summerside build the grandstands with Atlantic Lottery. He said the two parties could enter a lease hold agreement that could see the project come about.

Summerside Mayor Basil Stewart isn’t about to give up.

“We’re going to dig in our heels here and we’re going to somehow make this happen,” he said following Monday’s announcement. “Just because the province says it won’t fund the grandstands doesn’t mean we’ll accept this.”

Stewart intends to meet with the horsemen and city council and Atlantic Lotto to work out a strategy that will eventually lead to new grandstands at the SRW.
“We’re not going to sit back,” he said. “We are going to be looking at every angle. We can’t lose our horse racing industry in Summerside. We have to find a way to make it happen.”

A passionate call for mental health services

God help us if a Deputy Minister on PEI ever said anything that wasn’t approved by the Liberal Premier’s Office. PEI’s new government keeps a tighter rein on free speech than Prime Minister Stephen Harper or Joseph Stalin. Unlike Stalin, anyone who speaks out won’t get jailed: they just lose their jobs. Ed

Halifax+Herald A passionate call for mental health services photo Deputy minister makes rare appeal for public support

By JOHN GILLIS Health Reporter
Sat. Aug 23 – 4:46 AM

Nova Scotia’s deputy health minister called on mental health organizations and the public Friday to help her light a fire under politicians to do more to help people with mental illnesses.

’All of us collectively need to be doing something much more significant to make this a burning bridge issue for decision makers.’ cheryl doiron Deputy health minister

In a passionate off-the-cuff speech at the opening of the Canadian Mental Health Association’s national conference in Dartmouth, Cheryl Doiron said her department has put more money into mental health services over the years, but spending has declined as a proportion of the overall health budget.

“It’s very hard to get it to be the primary issue, particularly for politicians who are making budget decisions . . . because they are not getting the same pressure about mental health as they get about cancer and coronary disease and diabetes,” she said.

“We, working from the opportunity we have within government, organizations such as (the national association) and the Nova Scotia (association) and other groups, and all of us collectively need to be doing something much more significant to make this a burning bridge issue for decision makers.”

Mental health spending accounts for just over 3.5 per cent of the $3.2-billion provincial health budget.

Ms. Doiron said the relatively small amount of funding for those services means the province is failing to provide “absolutely essential help” to children and others.

She gave the example of an adolescent mental health program at the IWK Health Centre. The in-patient treatment lasts 12 to 18 months. But the 13- to 19-year-olds who might benefit from the intensive program have to wait that long just to be admitted.

Ms. Doiron said she pleaded the case to cabinet and was able to secure extra funding of $1.5 million this year and about $2 million in subsequent years to expand to 18 beds from 12.

An enduring bias against people with mental illness means people are often reluctant to speak about their conditions, and society doesn’t know they should be treated just like people with physical ailments, Toronto psychiatrist David Goldbloom told the conference in his keynote address.

“I think one of the challenges around mental illness is that its unique properties include affecting our thinking, our moods and our behaviour: the very dimensions that define us as individuals,” he said. “That makes it a lot tougher to separate the illness from the person.”

And while growing numbers of people report in surveys that they have had direct experience with mental illness, either personally or through a friend or relative, the perception that people with mental illnesses are dangerous or violent has increased, Dr. Goldbloom said.

That attitude is exemplified by reporting on events such as the recent beheading of a passenger on a Greyhound bus and crime dramas like CSI and Law and Order, he said.

“The reality of mental illness, its mundane reality, is virtually never depicted,” he said. “The same applies to the newspapers, because somebody recovering from mental illness or somebody simply making a great adaptation to mental illness is about as newsworthy as a plane landing safely at the airport.”

Dr. Goldbloom said research shows that negative perceptions are formed very early, so young children should be a focus of efforts to erase stigmatization.

Workplaces should be another major target, he said.

Finding and keeping meaningful work goes a long way toward helping a person with mental illness develop a sense of self and social connections; mental illness is the leading cause of short-term disability keeping people out of the workforce, Dr. Goldbloom said.

The Mental Health Commission of Canada, of which he is vice-chairman, says mental illness drains $51 billion from the Canadian economy each year.

But there is hope that negative attitudes can be broken down, Dr. Goldbloom said.

He recalled that when he was an intern in the early 1980s, hospital staff were “terrified” of the gay men who appeared with symptoms of what was later identified as HIV/AIDS, only touching them with triple-gloved hands.

“Think of how far it has come in the ensuing 25 years,” Dr. Goldbloom said. “It’s really an extraordinary social transformation. Mental illness has not come anywhere near as far as HIV.”

( jgillis@herald.ca)

The weak and powerless just have to wait

Guardian+7in The weak and powerless just have to wait photo

The Guardian
COMMENTARY
STEPHEN PATE

Is P.E.I. a democracy or is it ruled by the rich and powerful, an oligarchy? The preferential treatment of P.E.I.’s richest by the government compared to the treatment of its weak and poor is astounding.

Oligarchies have existed since ancient Grecian democracy whenever power was held tightly by a few powerful and rich people despite actual changes in government leaders.

The rich and powerful people in an oligarchy are not seen as governing. They are the power behind the throne. They rarely come out into public scrutiny since they know the population will be agitated by their obvious power.

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One year later and life’s no better

egLogo+copy One year later and lifes no better photo

It’s hard to believe that a year has passed since the Robert Ghiz Liberals were elected. But it has. Unfortunately for Islanders with disabilities the situation is not much better than it was back last year.

The election was one of promise. Robert Ghiz campaigned on Change. Over and over he drove the message that his government would be different, would care about people.

Through Chris LeClair, Ghiz’s Chief of Staff, I was personally promised a Liberal government would institute meaningful reform of the Disability Support Program. He promised to return the $1 million cut from the budget in 2006. The Liberals would also provide DSP coverage for seniors who were excluded from the Disability Support Program.

Through some cruel twist of government logic when you turn 65 you are expected to become suddenly rich enough to buy the wheelchairs, walkers and other assistive devices needed. Of course, we know that’s only to save the government money.

This was all supposed to change.

But it didn’t. In terms of budget, we lost another $35,000 for the DSP this spring. First the minister denied it but finally admitted yes there was less money.

When asked by the opposition, the Minister first said seniors could get help and then reversed himself. Sorry, no help for seniors.

Instead of reform we got a winter-time traveling road show that is supposed to report back later. Meetings at night in winter ensured most Islanders with disabilities didn’t get heard. The road show is being run by a Liberal party worker connected to the Minister who will not have to worry about results he doesn’t agree with.

Where we are is almost discouraging considering the promises made and the hopes in the minds of Islanders with disabilities. However, we will persevere in this fight to improve the lives of Islanders with disabilities even if the government is slow to respond.

Stephen Pate
PEI Disability Alert
Charlottetown, PE

Real needs aren’t being met islanders with disabilities

journal+pioneer+crop Real needs arent being met islanders with disabilities photo

GUEST OPINION
MICHAEL LE CLAIR

When Pharaoh wanted to harass the Israelite slaves he told them to make bricks without straw. The expression “make bricks without straw” means to command getting a task done without appropriate resources.

Premier Robert Ghiz has told Islanders with disabilities to get their supports with less money, making their already difficult lives, more intolerable – in a sense, to make bricks without straw. Continue reading