Nanaimo social workers are bracing for an anticipated surge of demand from the homeless and hard-to-house with the arrival of winter in coastal B.C. The thermometer plunged to -3 C overnight Monday, with a low of -6 C forecast overnight this morning, pushing temperatures down into the lower end of the normal winter range for Vancouver Island. Read the rest of this story at Nanaimo Daily News…
Nanaimo shelters ready to bring homeless in from cold
December 30th, 2014 | Posted by in uncategorized - (Comments Off on Nanaimo shelters ready to bring homeless in from cold)Season’s greetings from People First Radio
December 18th, 2014 | Posted by in uncategorized - (Comments Off on Season’s greetings from People First Radio)audio: PFR greeting card show in full – season's greetings – on hiatus until Jan 5 #Nanaimo http://t.co/vSawZD70ep pic.twitter.com/3u8kniJM4F
— peoplefirstradio (@peoplefirstrad) December 18, 2014
The holiday season is a time for giving back
December 17th, 2014 | Posted by in uncategorized - (Comments Off on The holiday season is a time for giving back)The holiday spirit is catching on. In this video, hear how Canadians have embraced giving back during this season. How will you make charitable giving part of your holiday tradition?
End solitary confinement for teenagers
December 17th, 2014 | Posted by in uncategorized - (Comments Off on End solitary confinement for teenagers)
Ian M. Kysel in The New York Times — Solitary confinement can be psychologically damaging for any inmate, but it is especially perverse when it is used to discipline children and teenagers. At juvenile detention centers and adult prisons and jails across the [United States], minors are locked in isolated cells for 22 hours or more a day. Solitary confinement is used to punish misbehavior, to protect vulnerable detainees or to isolate someone who may be violent or suicidal. But this practice does more harm than good. It should end. Read the rest of this article at The New York Times…
The first tenants have moved into a 33-unit supportive housing building in north Nanaimo
December 16th, 2014 | Posted by in uncategorized - (Comments Off on The first tenants have moved into a 33-unit supportive housing building in north Nanaimo)#Nanaimo supportive housing development sees first tenants inside http://t.co/r70TBDl9tO pic.twitter.com/89XZMnUUwg
— peoplefirstradio (@peoplefirstrad) December 16, 2014
What it’s like to lose a daughter to an eating disorder
December 16th, 2014 | Posted by in uncategorized - (Comments Off on What it’s like to lose a daughter to an eating disorder)“The most uncomfortable aspect of eating disorders is death,” Laia Abril told me over the phone recently. The Spanish photographer was discussing her new book, The Epilogue—a photobook that chronicles a family’s grief over the death their 26-year-old daughter, Cammy Robinson, who suffered from bulimia. Read the rest of this story at New Republic…

