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Innovation Centre ready to nurture poverty-busting social enterprises

October 29th, 2016 | Posted by pfmarchive in uncategorized - (Comments Off on Innovation Centre ready to nurture poverty-busting social enterprises)

marco-paganiSocial enterprises, says Marco Pagani, are The Answer. The answer to food insecurity, to unaffordable housing, to youth unemployment. The answer to poverty.

Pagani, a former high-tech executive who’s now president and CEO of the Community Foundation of Ottawa, pushed hard to get social enterprises a place in the City of Ottawa’s new $30-million Innovation Centre at Bayview Yards. His missionary work paid off. When the Innovation Centre opens later this fall, as many as 20 seats will be reserved for charities, not-for-profit groups and others eager to develop and launch social enterprises, which use business practices to earn money to further an organization’s social mission.  Read the rest of this article at The Ottawa Citizen…

Fifty-two months of psychological torture and the four men responsible

October 27th, 2016 | Posted by pfmarchive in uncategorized - (Comments Off on Fifty-two months of psychological torture and the four men responsible)

Adam Capay going into court in 2012. (Jeff Labine/DougallMedia/tbnewswatch.com)One thousand five hundred and sixty days in solitary confinement. To put this in perspective, consider that the United Nations has declared this form of segregation should never surpass 15 days.

There is a young First Nations man in Thunder Bay who the province of Ontario has kept in a hole for 52 months. His name is Adam Capay. When he was 19 he was arrested on minor charges and sent to jail. There he got into a fight and another man died. We don’t know if Capay is guilty—he has been waiting an incredible four years for his trial.  Read the rest of this article at Maclean’s…

Getting a handle on BC’s fentanyl-overdose crisis

October 27th, 2016 | Posted by pfmarchive in uncategorized - (Comments Off on Getting a handle on BC’s fentanyl-overdose crisis)

vka-showler-0351-jpgConsumption sites, free naloxone, wider help for addicts and more beds are seen as possible answers

Victoria, B.C. — There’s no shortage of ideas to ease B.C.’s fentanyl-overdose crisis: Supervised-consumption sites, more treatment beds, free naloxone, more supports for addicts after they go through rehab. Implementation, however, is another matter.  Read the rest of this article at (Victoria) Times-Colonist…

Diversity: Tailored and culturally appropriate mental health services are needed

October 24th, 2016 | Posted by pfmarchive in uncategorized - (Comments Off on Diversity: Tailored and culturally appropriate mental health services are needed)

New research conducted by the Mental Health Commission of Canada makes a powerful case for the social and economic imperative of responding to the unique needs of immigrant, refugee, ethno-cultural and racialized populations, including racialized populations born in Canada

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Fentanyl front lines: A growing army learns to deal with overdoses

October 22nd, 2016 | Posted by pfmarchive in uncategorized - (Comments Off on Fentanyl front lines: A growing army learns to deal with overdoses)

a1-1022-needles-clr-jpg“They might look blue or grey around their lips, ears and fingernails from the lack of oxygen. People will look dead.”

Much of Heather Hobbs’s job as a harm-reduction co-ordinator involves showing people how to inject the opioid inhibitor naloxone to reverse the effects of drug overdoses. This year alone she has trained nearly 800 people — illicit-drug users and their parents, shelter staff and support workers — to administer naloxone and has given out 843 kits.  Read the rest of this article at Victoria Times-Colonist…

‘I want to speak to you from the heart’

October 22nd, 2016 | Posted by pfmarchive in uncategorized - (Comments Off on ‘I want to speak to you from the heart’)

red-lives-matterWe Matter uses social media and video to speak directly to young aboriginals struggling with desperation, writes Mark Hume

Kelvin Redvers’s work to create a forum for speaking out about suicide among aboriginal youth started last summer when he visited the hamlet of Fort Resolution, in the Northwest Territories, where his mother grew up on the shores of Great Slave Lake.  Read the rest of this article at The Globe and Mail…