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Raise the Rates says MLAs accepting the challenge would be engaging in real action research and gain understanding

Anti-poverty activists are challenging British Columbia’s elected provincial MLAs to take a challenge and live on $610 a month—the amount they expect many individuals living on welfare payments to get by with. But they’re only suggesting the well-paid politicians live for one month on an amount that is described by Jean Swanson as “keeping people in dire, dire poverty.”

The coalition wants welfare rates increased to the equivalent of what they were in 1986. The $700 a month a person might have received in 1986 would amount to about $1,300 today, over double the current rate. The group also wants inflation taken into consideration when rates are set. (more…)

Austin Mardon, Order of Canada recipient, is about to receive an honourary degree for his mental health awareness work

In 1986, 24-year-old Austin Mardon was a junior field member with an international meteorite recovery expedition 170 miles from the South Pole. While his findings contributed to the advancement of science, the extreme hardships of the expedition left him mentally and physically disabled. Austin was eventually diagnosed with schizophrenia.

Since then, Austin has bravely survived many setbacks by evoking an indomitable will to make a contribution. He is recognized as a leader in advancing understanding and support for people with mental illness. (more…)

Stigma awareness, art to travel

June 9th, 2011 | Posted by pfmarchive in uncategorized - (Comments Off on Stigma awareness, art to travel)

Nanaimo artist and activist Wallace Malay will present about art, mental illness, and stigma at New York conference

A conference for organizing resistance against psychiatry will be held June 20-21, 2011 at the City University of New York. PsychOUT provides a forum for psychiatric survivors, mad people, activists, radical professionals, artists, scholars and students from around the world to share experiences of organizing against psychiatry. Collective resistance against the theories and interventions of institutional psychiatry has intensified over recent years. (more…)

Homophobia is rampant in schools

June 2nd, 2011 | Posted by pfmarchive in uncategorized - (Comments Off on Homophobia is rampant in schools)

Verbal, physical, and sexual harassment is reported by gay, lesbian, transgender, bisexual, and queer school students

The terms “homophobia” and “transphobia” signify a great deal of unnecessary misery in the lives of Canadian students. Knowledge of their distress and a determination to bring it to the consciousness of educators and parents motivated members of the Education Committee of Egale Canada to conduct a ‘climate survey’ of Canadian schools. University of Winnipeg professor Catherine Taylor launched the survey in December 2007, eventually collecting information from over 3,700 students across Canada. (more…)

Mental health, citizenship, and inclusion

June 2nd, 2011 | Posted by pfmarchive in uncategorized - (Comments Off on Mental health, citizenship, and inclusion)

A group of people diagnosed with schizophrenia conducted research about housing and its impacts on mental health

The struggle for housing stability is among the many challenges faced by people with schizophrenia. That struggle was the focus of a participatory action research project led by professor Barbara Schneider at the University of Calgary.

Participatory research involves members of a community group in meaningful participation in all stages of the research process, including developing the research question, gathering the data, analyzing the data, and disseminating and using the results. (more…)

Jean Oliver is working to highlight the gaps in mental health services by organizing an event that will ‘connect the dots’

Victoria resident Jean Oliver is planning an awareness event that will see 1,200 volunteers stand on white dots that stretch from the B.C. Legislature building to the Royal Jubilee Hospital on September 10th, 2011. She wants to raise awareness of gaps in mental health services within the capital region—on World Suicide Prevention Day. Jean borrowed the idea from a rally held in New Brunswick last December.

Jean struggled for years to get mental health help for herself and her children. She told the Victoria Times Colonist that to say that services are inadequate is being kind…“the services don’t exist.” (more…)