Wednesday, September 26, 2007

A Multi-Disciplinary Approach to Health Care

The following questions were put to me during the Provincial Election campaign by community health care professionals. My response follows.

Dear MPP candidate:

I am writing to all candidates in my riding to determine whether they support an important solution that will improve access and timeliness of health care in Ontario.

In particular, I would like to know whether you support regulatory, policy and legislative changes that will enable primary health care nurse practitioners across Ontario to fully utilize their knowledge and expertise to improve access to timely health care and reduce fragmentation and duplication of care.

Nurse practitioners provide primary health care to thousands of individuals and families in Ontario and are integral to completing the Second Stage of Medicare. Ten years ago Ontario led the way in implementing the NP role but has since fallen behind other provinces.

Earlier this year, the Primary Health Care Nurse Practitioner Integration Task Team reported to the Minister of Health and Long-Term Care on strategies to address barriers that limit NPs’ ability to provide timely, efficient, comprehensive care. I urge you to commit to implementing these recommendations.

Specifically, I would like to know whether you will commit to several key actions.

Removing barriers that restrict specialists from accepting referrals from nurse practitioners: Many women, for example, who need a referral to an obstetrician or gynaecologist, are required to first see a family physician in order for the specialist to bill the full fee for seeing the patient. The result is less timely care, increased costs for the health system, fragmentation of care and inconvenience for patients.

Removing barriers that limit NPs’ ability to prescribe and order tests and diagnostic procedures: NPs’ authority to prescribe is limited and listed in regulation. When new, more effective and cost-efficient drugs are introduced, it can take up to two years to add these drugs to the NPs’ list. NPs have the knowledge, skills and expertise to prescribe appropriately within the scope of their practice as primary health care providers.

Supporting a variety of strategies to recruit and retain NPs: NP salaries are no longer competitive within nursing in Ontario or across Canada. Government, together with nurse practitioner stakeholders, must support an independent salary review to address this issue. Changes are needed to government funding programs that will facilitate recruitment and retention of NPs through:

a) annual cost-of-living increases;
b) continued and expanded support of the Grow-Your-Own NP program; and
c) financial incentives for positions in rural, remote and under-serviced communities (e.g., moving costs, bonus payments, additional continuing education funding).

Remove barriers that limit effective inter-professional team practice: Current compensation models are structured to provide bonus payments to physician members of inter-professional primary care teams to recognize and reward illness prevention and health promotion activities such as immunizations and mammograms. Physicians are eligible for this compensation regardless of which member of the team - such as NPs or registered nurses - actually provided the care. This is disruptive to effective team development and marginalizes and devalues the contributions of other health care professionals to improving and sustaining the health of patients.

Develop, in collaboration with NP stakeholders, a public education program about NPs and their key role in primary health care: The healthcare system would benefit hugely from an enhanced understanding - by physicians, other health care providers and policy-makers, such as the LHINs - of the role of NPs in increasing access to care, reducing waiting lists, improving management of chronic diseases and implementing preventative health care programs.

Will you commit to these recommendations to support nurse practitioners and more timely access to health care in Ontario?

DearCommunity Member,

Thank you for taking time to contact me regarding this very important issue.

I am very proud of the long term approach that the Green Party of Ontario takes with respect to health care.

My own personal background includes serving on the board of my local community resource centre, the Overbrook-Forbes Community Resource Centre since 2001. I have taken a leave of absence during the election. www.ofcrc.org I served as board President from 2002-2004 and Treasurer, 2004-2007. this organization is in the process of implementing a multi-disciplinary health component which should be open to the public on site by December, 2007.

Below are what I believe are some of the pertinent sections of our platform to your questions. For your reference, the full document can be found here: www.gpo.ca/platform

The GPO’s health plan takes a broad approach to wellness, with an emphasis on healthy communities, healthy lifestyles and a healthy environment, not just health care. Reducing toxins in our environment, addressing the social determinants of health and encouraging healthy lifestyle choices are important components of the Green Party’s health plan.

The Green Party has a plan that will offer more choice, emphasize prevention and be accountable to the public.

To achieve these objectives, the Green Party of Ontario will:

Provide Ontarians in the lowest 75th percentile of income an additional health care allowance of $1,000 per person, phased in over five years at $200 per year, for purchase of prescription drugs and/or care from any practitioner mandated by the Regulated Health Professionals Act (RHPA) at an eventual cost of $9.75 billion by 2012. These professions include: physicians and surgeons, nurses, chiropractors, physiotherapists, naturopaths, audiologists, chiropodists, dental hygienists, dental technologists, denturists, dieticians, massage therapists, medical laboratory, midwives, occupational therapists, opticians, optometrists, respiratory therapists and dental surgeons.

Immediately increase the budget of the Ministry of Health Promotion, currently at 1%, to 2% of the Ministry of Health and Long-Term Care’s budget. Since most illnesses result from lifestyle choices, the GPO believes that health promotion is fiscally prudent and will lead to improved wellness. These funds would be used to place nurses in the school system to promote healthy lifestyles and to assist in identifying youth at risk of long-term health problems.

Increase the funding and effectiveness of primary and preventive health care by:
Creating a joint commission of stakeholders to explore best practices for implementation of preventive and primary health care by family doctors, with an emphasis on improved outcomes. This may include rewarding doctors who successfully assist their patients resolve risk factors such as obesity, smoking or uncontrolled high blood pressure.
Increasing support and incentives for multidisciplinary clinics and practices that team doctors with nurses, dieticians, psychologists, counsellors, physiotherapists etc. This is particularly important for taking a holistic approach to mental health, addiction and lifestyle counselling.

I am strongly supportive of proposals that promote a multi-disciplinary approach to health care. I view your proposals very favourably.

Thank you for taking the time to contact me.

Regards,
Leonard Poole

Tuesday, September 25, 2007

Questions from L'Image of Sandy Hill

Questions for the Candidate

1. Funding for Schools


What is the position of your party on extending provincial funding for religious schools?

The Green Party believes in a single publicly funded education system that treats all students fairly and equally. The UN Human Rights Committee has twice censured Ontario for violating the equality of its own citizens by funding Roman Catholic schools but not schools of other religions. The GPO does not support the John Tory solution of funding all faith-based schools. We believe that we should move to one school system with English and French streams.



What is your position for funding other types of private schools (ie. non-religious) like some which operate here in Sandy Hill?

As stated above, the Green Party believes in a single publicly funded education system. We do not support public funding of schools outside of the public system.

What is your party’s position on class size (maximum number of students in a classroom)?

The Green Party recognizes the success of the current government in reducing most class sizes to 20 from Kindergarten to Grade 3. We believe we must extend this effort through to Grade 12.

2. Transportation

What would your party do to provide an alternate route for the heavy truck traffic which currently passes through downtown Ottawa?

I recognize that the need to remove truck transport from downtown Ottawa is great. We must use it as an opportunity to make wise long-term investments in our infrastructure. Our first goal should be to reduce demand for automobile infrastructure by ensuring that a seamless inter-provincial mass transit system is included in any proposal. Second, recognizing that rail is a far more efficient use of energy, the province must begin to plan now for greater reliance on it as opposed to trucks for the transportation of goods. Third, any new infrastructure should be tolled to appropriate cost to users. Finally, we must ensure that we do not repeat the mistake of the King Edward Bridge and allow truck traffic to split apart another community.

3. Homelessness


How does your party plan to address the growing problem of homelessness in the downtown cores of our cities?

I believe that a society is judged by the way it responds to the needs of its most vulnerable. With respect to homelessness, particularly when combined with mental illness and/or drug addiction, our legacy is shameful. Our societal response is patchwork at best, with various agencies scrambling to do what they can for those in need. All too often we resort to “blaming the victim” for their plight. This is inexcusable in the 21st Century. It is essential that the province develops and implements a comprehensive long-range plan that would ensure that acceptable housing is available to every citizen. We also must ensure that every individual who needs help with drug addictions is provided the treatment needed on a timely basis. Our failure in this area continues to compound problems that destroy neighbourhoods.

The Green Party proposes to address poverty through improvements in the minimum wage, indexing Ontario Works and Ontario Disability Support Program payments to the rate of inflation, and adjust shelter allowances to reflect average local rents as defined by CMHC.
We also propose to divert future budget surpluses to create a $5 billion Long-Term Affordable Housing Investment Dedicated Fund. Annual interest from this Fund would be used to continuously build supported housing, seniors accommodation, affordable housing, rent-to-own housing, coops, co-housing, sweat equity housing, eco-villages.


4.
University Education


Sandy Hill is home to many university students. How does your party propose to help these students meet the increasing expense of their education?


The Green Party believes that high tuition is counterproductive to developing both a competitive economy and a qualified, engaged workforce. To address this issue, the Green Party of Ontario will provide $500 million per year by 2011 to cap university tuition at $3000 average per year and college tuition at $700. The Green Party understands that in the 21st century Ontario needs well-educated citizens who are able to achieve their full potential.


5.
Public Transit


What support will your party offer to Ottawa as it tries to improve its public transportation system and meet the challenges of future growth?


The Green Party of Ontario is committed to cleaner, cheaper, more efficient and safer forms of transportation. Ontario’s current transportation system is inefficient, expensive, polluting, dangerous and unsustainable. The Green Party envisions a transportation system that does not reduce our quality of life. Our Plan for sustainability would Divert 75% of all money budgeted for new highway construction until 2012 to public transit such as GO Transit, Toronto Transit Commission and Ottawa’s OCTranspo. This will fund the service improvements, expansion and infrastructure renewal required to create a world-class transportation system, relieve gridlock and eliminate the need for new highways.

Will your party support Ottawa’s public transportation system? If so, how?

As noted above, we would shift our transportation investments from highway construction to a far greater emphasis on public transportation.

6. Medical Care


We are fortunate to have the Sandy Hill Community Health Centre in this neighbourhood but the current wait time for Sandy Hill residents to register with this facility is two years. What strategies does your party propose to increase access to primary care for our community in the next 4 years?

The GPO’s health plan takes a broad approach to wellness, with an emphasis on healthy communities, healthy lifestyles and a healthy environment, not just health care. Reducing toxins in our environment, addressing the social determinants of health and encouraging healthy lifestyle choices are important components of the Green Party’s health plan.

Health care reform is urgently needed if we are to have a health care system that is sustainable and viable in the future. The Green Party plan will offer more choice, emphasize prevention and be accountable to the public. The Green Party of Ontario will provide Ontarians in the lowest 75th percentile of income an additional health care allowance of $1,000 per person, phased in over five years at $200 per year, for purchase of prescription drugs and/or care from any practitioner mandated by the Regulated Health Professionals Act (RHPA).

We will immediately increase the budget of the Ministry of Health Promotion from its current 1% level to 2% of the Ministry of Health and Long-Term Care’s budget. Since many illnesses result from lifestyle choices, the GPO believes that health promotion is fiscally prudent and will lead to improved wellness. These funds would be used to place nurses in the school system to promote healthy lifestyles and to assist in identifying youth at risk of long-term health problems.

We will increase the funding and effectiveness of primary and preventive health care by:

1) Creating a joint commission of stakeholders to explore best practices for implementation of preventive and primary health care by family doctors, with an emphasis on improved outcomes. This may include rewarding doctors who successfully assist their patients resolve risk factors such as obesity, smoking or uncontrolled high blood pressure.

2) Increasing support and incentives for multidisciplinary clinics and practices that team

doctors with nurses, dieticians, psychologists, counsellors, physiotherapists etc. This is particularly important for taking a holistic approach to mental health, addiction and lifestyle counselling.

Tuesday, September 18, 2007

Responding to Questions from the City Centre Coalition

  1. Cities are seriously underfunded for the responsibilities they have been mandated. We favour uploading financial responsibility from cities to the Province for services previously downloaded. What will you do to resolve this longstanding issue?

The province must immediately assume responsibility for the full cost of social services. They should not be imposed on the municipal tax base. Municipal taxes currently have no relationship either to the cost of the service provided or to the ability of an individual to pay. Because of this inherent unfairness, taxpayers understandably put intense pressure on their councilors to eliminate tax increases. This leads to short term thinking on the part of city councils across the province. I am very interested in proposals developed by the Ottawa based Federation of Community Associations (FCA). As an MPP I would work hard for a full review of the provincially imposed municipal tax system.

  1. We, along with other organizations, have filed a bump-up request regarding the proposed widening of the Queensway through various central sections of Ottawa. Our request is that the Environmental Assessment on the proposed project be done at the proper level of thoroughness in order to assure adequate protection of neighbourhoods through which the highway passes. Do you support our request?

I strongly support your request. The Green Party of Ontario is committed to cleaner,
cheaper, more efficient and safer forms of transportation. Ontario’s current transportation system is inefficient, expensive, polluting, dangerous and unsustainable. TheGreen Party envisions a transportation system that does not reduce our quality of life. Our Plan for sustainability would Divert 75% of all money budgeted for new highway construction until 2012 to public transit such as GO Transit, Toronto Transit Commission and Ottawa’s OCTranspo. This will fund the service improvements, expansion and infrastructure renewal required to create a world-class transportation system, relieve gridlock and eliminate the need for new highways.

  1. We have asked the Minister of the Environment not to approve the inadequate Environmental Assessment done on a proposed project to build a highway through the Alta Vista Corridor – a project that would cause irreparable harm to communities bordering the corridor and to those downstream that would have the traffic dumped on them. Do you support our request?

I strongly support your request. Transportation systems must be designed to integrate well with the surrounding communities and bring us together not split us apart.

  1. Very little provincial attention is paid toward promoting cycling and
    educating all road users about cycling safety. While the Ministry of
    Health Promotion pays much attention to helmet safety, such programs
    reach only people who already cycle. Do you support provincial funding
    for expanded cycling facilities and for programming to encourage
    bicycle use and awareness?

Yes I do. I am an active cyclist and enjoy cycle touring. It is a sustainable practice that enhances one’s health.

Wednesday, September 12, 2007

Why I Decided to Run as a Green Party Candidate

Since the beginning of the campaign, it has been my intention to bring the issue of long-term sustainability to the forefront of the debate. As the new century has unfolded it has become clear to increasing numbers of us that we are at a very critical time in the evolution of humanity on our precious planet. We see the strains of the earth reaching and surpassing its ecological limits all around us. Whether it is our collapsed cod fishery, pine beetle infestation, disappearing polar ice sheets, rising carbon emissions or reduction in biodiversity, the evidence of our impact is overwhelming.

We know that if every person on the planet consumed resources at the rate that the average Ontarian does, we would need at least four planets to support them. This is unsustainable and must be corrected if we are to continue to exist as a species.

I challenge my political opponents to recognize that the long-term consequences of our policy decisions must be accounted for. In the 1950’s the prevailing view was that energy resources were limitless, and that there was no down side to harnessing the power of carbon. My, how times have changed. We are now being confronted with the consequences of such short-term thinking. We now know that if we design our cities for cars, and invest more in highways to move those cars instead of transit to move people, what we get is, no surprise, more cars, congestion, sprawl, fouled air and climate change.

In spite of this, our present political leaders suggest that we need only change a few light bulbs, and perhaps drive a different car. Otherwise, we can continue to expand and consume as before.

The Green Party of Ontario sees things very differently. We believe that we are approaching a tipping point over which we must not fall. We believe that we must begin now to discuss, develop and implement ways of living on this planet that truly is sustainable.

We recognize that any growth must be balanced with the imperative of finite resources. We believe that social, economic and environmental policy should:

1. create a green and sustainable living for the people of Ontario

2. contribute to the planet’s greater good

3. establish the foundation for a green and sustainable future.

Our platform seeks to do so not by spending more money, but by shifting priorities to achieve sustainable results.

It is my sincerest desire that my colleagues of all political stripes will accept the challenge to debate how their proposals move us to sustainability. The decisions we make today will have an impact for generations to come. Politicians must be challenged to explain not only what they will do for us today and for the next four years. They must also explain how their proposals will benefit our children and grand children.

We must remember that ultimately, we do not own this precious planet. We borrow it from future generations.

Tuesday, September 11, 2007

Faith Based School Funding - A Choice for Ontario

John Tory, with his early summer announcement that he would extend funding to faith based schools across Ontario, has changed the face of this election. He has clearly drawn a line in the sand on this issue, proclaiming that it is a matter of principle, and the right thing to do.

On the point of it being a principled position, there can be no argument. Dalton McGuinty may believe otherwise, but, the status quo, whereby Ontario funds one religious group to the exclusion of others, is indefensible. Does this mean, though, that we must fund all faith based schools? The Green Party believes that full consideration must be given to the alternative of moving toward a unified public system.

Our current system has its roots in pre-confederation Ontario when a Methodist Minister, Egerton Ryerson, was laying the foundation. There was no consideration at that time of any faith other than Christianity. The only issue was your denomination within that faith. The schism of the day was between Protestant and Catholic.

This is the 21st Century, however, and times clearly have changed. Unfortunately our method of funding education has not.

John Tory, as noted above, would have us solve this by extending funding to all faith based institutions that follow Ministry of Education guidelines and its curriculum. I believe this to be a short sighted path that moves us away from long term sustainability for our education system. Not only financially costly, the ultimate effect is that it moves us toward focusing on what separates us rather than what bring us together.

There are many financial and environmental arguments that can be made against such a proposal. John Tory has already thrown out the figure of investing an extra half a billion dollars to bring this about. This is from someone who professes to be a firm believer in economic efficiency. Environmentally, the profusion of various separate schools would lead to ever more demand for transportation as children go from one side of a city to another to get to their unique school.

However, these immediate costs pale in comparison to the long term social consequences. Ontario’s immigration patterns have changed in the past thirty years. People of a multitude of faiths and ethnic backgrounds have been welcomed. We have had difficulties, but we, and our children, have ultimately learned so much from each other. We are now recognized around the world as an example of how diversity can be celebrated, while simultaneously developing vibrant cohesive communities.

One of my most memorable experiences in this regard was from three summers ago. I had the opportunity to volunteer as a teacher’s assistant in a summer ESL class for teenagers. About twenty students in each class, from at least a dozen different backgrounds. New friendships were being formed amongst the students. I noted in particular two young students who were virtually inseparable in their friendship. One Muslim, the other Jewish, both newly arrived in Canada. And then there was the shy Christian from Jordan helped with his homework by the equally shy Vietnamese Buddhist. It was a memorable summer for all of us. How could this have happened if each newcomer had been directed toward a faith-based education?

In our schools today our children have the opportunity to discover what brings them together while simultaneously appreciating their diversity. I do believe that so many of these opportunities would be lost if we chose the path of further fragmentation of our educational system.

I make the argument then, for a unified school system, not on the basis of the economic and environmental arguments, (although such arguments are valid), but because it simply is the right thing to do to ensure that we continue to develop strong, cohesive, respectful communities.

Saturday, September 8, 2007

Responding to Questions from the Manor Park Chronicle

Manor Park Chronicle

September, 2007 Edition

Questions for Ottawa-Vanier, October 10, 2007 Provincial Election

Q1: The NCC and the governments of Ontario and Quebec are jointly funding an Environmental Assessment of proposed locations for one or more new interprovincial crossings. There has been considerable public comment on this issue from politicians at all three levels and from the general public.

Do you favour any of the options under study? Do you believe that Kettle Island would be a viable location for a new crossing?

Word Limit: 275

I currently do not favour any of the options under study. There is a fundamental flaw in the Terms of Reference of the Environmental Assessment. They are based on the assumption that we should continue to encourage and expect growth in demand for automobile and trucking transportation infrastructure. As we are all well aware, Canada, like every other nation, needs to develop and implement action plans that respond to the twin threats of climate change and dwindling carbon based energy supplies. Such action plans therefore, need to point us in the direction of reducing, not increasing our dependence on the personal automobile and reliance on truck transport. Any future transportation infrastructure investments need to recognize this reality.

The need to remove truck transport from downtown Ottawa provides us with the opportunity to make wise long-term investments in our infrastructure. Our first goal should be to reduce demand for automobile infrastructure by ensuring that a seamless inter-provincial mass transit system is developed. Second, recognizing that rail is a far more efficient use of energy, we must begin to plan now for greater reliance on it as opposed to trucks for the transportation of goods. Third, any new infrastructure should be tolled to appropriate cost to users.

I am not in favour of the Kettle Island crossing. According to studies already completed by the NCC and the former Region it has been shown to be the most costly, not only financially, but also environmentally and socially. We need a solution that removes truck traffic from our communities. As your MPP I would work for a transportation infrastructure that brings us to together, instead of splitting us apart.

Q2: Zoning decisions made at the municipal level may be challenged at the Ontario Municipal Board (OMB). Since the OMB is a quasi-judicial body, a successful case usually depends on legal counsel and expert witnesses.

What are your views on the role and structure of the OMB?

Word Limit: 200

Ontario is unique within Canada in having this type of oversight of municipal decision-making. Like our antiquated municipal tax system, it has its origins in late 19th Century patriarchal Ontario. It was developed at a time when the only way to legally deal with many municipal matters was through private bills in the Provincial Legislature. Obviously, times have changed and our municipalities have matured. Unfortunately, the OMB has not; as it continues to intervene in the same manner it did over 100 years ago.

Being quasi-judicial it is by definition undemocratic and arbitrary. Far too often a local community will, through democratic process, choose a particular development path, only to be threatened with appeal to the OMB. Local communities are often at a distinct disadvantage as they seldom can match the resources of a deep-pocketed developer.

As your MPP I would propose a thorough review of the mandate and purpose of the OMB. We must start by looking at best practices in other jurisdictions in Canada. How has the rest of the country been served without such an oversight body? Maybe they know something we don’t.


Q3: Municipalities across Ontario are struggling to meet their commitments within their current taxation capabilities. The basis for calculating property assessment for taxation purposes has also been controversial.

What services should be funded by property taxes?

What is the best method to finance municipalities?

Should there be changes to the structure and responsibilities of MPAC (the Municipal Property Assessment Corporation)?

Word Limit: 350

The municipal tax system in Ontario, like the OMB, is a quaint relic of the 19th Century that has not kept up with the times. The Green Party of Ontario believes that part of the solution lies in moving toward a system that assesses land value, but not the value of buildings and improvements made to such buildings, to determine municipal tax rates. This would vastly simplify the responsibilities of MPAC, as the relative value of building improvements would not be considered in their calculations.

Our plan would encourage development more along the lines of a municipality’s official plan. Land value is proportional not only to its quantity, but also to the scale and type of development permitted. Our proposal would create a disincentive to land speculation, as the property would be taxed according to its full potential for use, as reflected in its assessment and class.

This removes the disincentive of higher taxes on home improvement. A property owner is more likely to invest in best building practices, and erect a carbon neutral facility with the threat of higher taxes removed. This enhances not only the value of the building, but the community at large with cleaner air.

Another part of the solution lies in apportioning taxes according to the cost of specific services provided. Dense communities are generally less costly to serve than sprawling communities. We need a method to recognize this fact when tax bills are calculated.

Changes also are needed to the Provincial Development Charges Act. It is much too restrictive in its definition of what costs municipalities can recoup from Greenfield development. This needs to be changed to ensure that the full cost of urban sprawl is assessed to those who create it.


The cost of services that involve income redistribution and equity-related goals should not be borne by the municipal taxpayer. Therefore the provincial government should take back responsibility for 100% of the funding of all provincially mandated social service programs. The Liberals have had four years to fix the problem created by the Harris Conservatives, yet they have failed to act.

Q4: The provision of a secure electricity supply, while minimizing environmental impacts, is an important issue in Ontario. Ontario has a growing population, yet an aging electricity generation and transmission infrastructure.

What do you propose should be done on both the electricity supply and demand sides?

Word Limit: 175

As Ontario and the world confronts dwindling non-renewable energy reserves we must refocus our strategy on developing local renewable resources.

Unfortunately the province seems determined to make a critical investment error as it considers betting the farm on a $45-billion investment in nuclear energy. It takes at least 12 years to bring a nuclear plant on stream. Historically they have been drastically over-budget and never as reliable as predicted.

Instead, we must invest now in local communities. We need to remove electric element space and water heating from hundreds of thousands of Ontario homes. We must provide real-time feedback to consumers on consumption. We need to aggressively push the installation of solar hot water and geo-thermal earth energy systems.

We need changes to our building and electrical codes and the Planning Act that will mandate the highest energy efficiency of all future construction and development. It is much cheaper, more secure, and more environmentally friendly to conserve a megawatt than produce one. Our future energy security depends on a strong localized energy infrastructure.

Saturday, August 4, 2007

Liberals Continue to Expand Highways

I read in the Ottawa Sun this morning that Dalton McGuinty wants us to spend $104 million on expanding highway 174 to four lanes from two from Orleans to Rockland.

…the premier said the widening would go a long way to improving access to the road and will make the Queensway safer and less congested. McGuinty is also investing almost $50 million to widen Hwy. 417 from two to four lanes from the Queensway to west of Jinkinson Rd. and widening the Queensway from four to eight lanes from Hwy. 416 to Eagleson Rd.

Yesterday’s announcement comes four days after Conservative Leader John Tory was in town and criticized McGuinty for not doing enough to relieve traffic congestion in Ottawa.

I find it so curious that the Liberals and Conservatives like to proclaim how green they are yet they continue to promote 1950’s style thinking that encourages an ever expanding road network.

It is clear that you cannot build your way out of congestion. This has been documented time and time again. No where is the adage more true that “if you build it, they will come” than with highway expansion.

We know that we must begin to plan for the post carbon era as we are confronted with dwindling oil and gas reserves. We know that individual automobile transportation is the least efficient way to move people. Yet, in the face of this reality, all of the other political parties continue to promote highway expansion.

If we want a world class efficient transportation infrastructure, we need to stop investing in highway expansion that is designed to move automobiles, and refocus our efforts on mass transit that is designed to move people where they want to go, when they want to go there.


Monday, July 9, 2007

Talking to Ottawa City Council About Their "Transformation" Agenda

Good afternoon. My name is Leonard Poole. I speak to you today as the Green Party candidate for the riding of Ottawa-Vanier in the upcoming provincial election of October 10.

It was with considerable fanfare and sense of excitement in the air that the 20/20 visioning exercise was launched as the new City of Ottawa was formed.

I was just beginning my volunteer work with the Overbrook-Forbes Community Resource Centre and the Community Council of Overbrook.

I was impressed with the thrust of the proposals. After widespread consultation the clear consensus was that we needed to incorporate long term sustainable practices into the very fabric of our decision making process.

Today I shall first explain the fundamental roadblock I see to our efforts to effectively implement our 20/20 vision. Secondly I shall speak to how these few pages in this Strategic Directions document work against promotion of sustainable practices. Finally, I shall urge you to lobby for a complete overhaul of our method of municipal taxation to move us toward true sustainable thinking in our municipalities.

The flaw in the 20/20 exercise was that although we agreed to lofty goals; we did not incorporate a process to take us there. We did not recognize that to move toward sustainability we must have a mechanism that captures all costs. It is accepted by numerous municipalities worldwide that every decision made must account for not only the immediate financial impacts, but also the long-term environmental and social costs, or the triple bottom line.

Most of us remember the horrendous 2004 budget process. Everyone was focused on ???fiscal responsibility???. Many, including a number of you around this table, insisted on a zero percent tax increase. Representing the Community Council of Overbrook, I brought the following definition of ???fiscal responsibility???.

For some it means spending the least amount of money, every year, and do whatever it takes to avoid a tax increase. In our view, it means spending the correct amount of money today to ensure that in the long term we spend the least amount of money.

Our point was that when you only focus on minimizing immediate financial costs you inevitably incur larger costs in the long term. In essence, we download our social and environmental expenses on to future generations. Time and again we have been guilty of this as we seek the lowest possible tax rate and view only the immediate financial implications.

Time restrictions permit me to only highlight what I view as the most egregious aspects of this document.

1. Page 6, point C3. Close the gap, in an environmentally responsible manner if possible, in general facilities and park renewal by 10% per year. This is outrageous. Why should we be leaving ourselves an opening to behave in anything other than an environmentally responsible manner? A clear example of passing our problems onto future generations.
2. Page 6, point D4. Reduce greenhouse gas emissions by up to 20% by 2012. Is it necessary to point out how meaningless this is? Rather than setting an aggressive minimum goal of reduction, it tells us to limit our efforts to no more than 20% improvement. I thought we wanted to be a city with swagger that could boast of its achievements? Instead we can boast that we did nothing and still met our stated goals!
3. Page 8, point b4. Deliver agreed-to level of service at the lowest possible cost. Although sounding like a laudable goal, this statement speaks only to immediate financial costs. We assure ourselves of higher long-term costs when we fail to capture the full environmental and social implications of our decisions. Once again, we burden future generations with the responsibility of dealing with our short-term thinking. Reference to a move to a method of triple bottom line accounting procedures is a glaring omission from this document.
4. Page 9, Sustainable Finances. Once again, it is what is missing that stands out. The fundamental problem for city financing is the method of taxation. It is an antiquated, 19th Century system that is completely ill suited for the 21st Century. The amount that a taxpayer is assessed has absolutely no relationship either to their ability to pay or to the cost of the service provided to them. It is calculated on the basis of their possession of an unrealized capital gain. Is it any wonder that taxpayers are outraged at any tax increase? This puts intense pressure on all of you around this table to think short term to eliminate tax increases. I urge you to include in this document a commitment to join with other municipalities to lobby the Provincial Government very strongly to develop a more progressive, transparent, and fair municipal taxation system. This is a key issue that I shall speak to during my election campaign and what I shall do once elected to the Ontario Legislature.

I conclude with the words of Zen master Lin Chi who told us over 1,000 years ago,

"The miracle is to walk on earth."

Our responsibility is to ensure that future generations may continue to do so. Finally, I ask that you consider my personal vision of a Greening, Sustainable world that is part of my written submission to you.

Friday, June 1, 2007

Activist Teacher: Global Warming: Truth or Dare?

Activist Teacher: Global Warming: Truth or Dare?


I found the article above by Professor Denis Rancourt to be quite provocative and sent him the following response:

Professor Raincourt,

I just read your blog post http://activistteacher.blogspot.com/2007/02/global-warming-truth-or-dare.htm l found it an interesting read.

It is clear that you are much more than a "layperson" as you discuss this topic. You have done considerable research and know how to write a readable article.

I am of the opinion that some aspects of climate change are attributable to an anthropocentric source. However, I accept that, as a "layperson" I am out of my depth in discussing this with you on a scientific basis. My rather "simplistic" notion is that I find it very difficult to believe that the massive increase of human population and the subsequent large scale increase in emissions would not have some form of impact on the earth's climate systems. Maybe I am naive, but I note that it took over a million years to sequester carbon in oil and coal. It was, in the human time scale of things, a fairly lengthy process. We, as humans, have managed to release into the atmosphere roughly half of it in, essentially, the blink of an eye of time. Call me crazy, but it seems to me it would have an effect.

However, I believe that all of this debate about whether or not humans are influencing climate change could be all so much navel gazing. A much greater problem we need to confront is disengaging ourselves from our over consumptive ways. Since the first oil was commercially produced in 1859, we have become addicted to ever cheaper energy sources. This has been finessed and exploited by the corporate elite into the vision and promise of infinitely increasing consumption, culminating most recently in globalisation.

So, yes, you and I are in agreement regarding the concentration of wealth and power in the corporate elite, etc., etc. Where I take issue is what I regard as your dismissive attitude of personal action. You mock those who work on reducing their consumption, and suggest that it would be much better if they became more activist in taking on corporatism and the status quo. I don't disagree with becoming more directly active in one's community, and part of that can involve challenging>corporate practices. However, I do believe that making conscious consumption choices is also very much a part of direct action.

I firmly believe that we need to do both. People vote every day with the dollars they spend. Wal-Mart thrives because people shop there. Yes, we need to challenge corporate practices. However, we also need to constructively and creatively challenge those who support their practices by doing business with them.

The root cause of the over consumptive globalisation mess we are in is the fact that the vast majority of people are buying what the corporations are selling. Corporations have convinced so many of us that what we need is quantity of life instead of quality. While challenging the corporate mentality, we also need to challenge the citizenry to accept their role in changing the world. From blockbuster entertainment, closets full of clothes that we don't wear, constant vacationing, to foods from all over the world, we are constantly being sold a bill of goods. The best form of direct action is to recognize the extent to which we are perpetuating the consumer oriented economy. If we don't buy it, they don't produce it.

All of this is going to come crashing down on us soon. Once again, I only have the "layperson's" perspective, but I believe there is considerable evidence pointing to the crunch of "peak oil" hitting us very soon. I find www.energybulletin.net to be very useful. You might want to confirm your source that suggests we have coal supplies to last for a thousand years. There is considerable evidence to the contrary. However, that is another discussion.

In summary, I disagree with your climate change assertions. However, I believe such a point is likely moot, in that the larger problem is societal over-consumption of material resources fanned by a $450 billion annual marketing budget. The best form of direct action is to cut off the food source for corporatism, namely work to reduce over-consumption of material resources by convincing more people to understand that we have been hoodwinked to pursue quantity of living rather than quality of living.

Finally, I believe that a curtailment in the availability of energy resources that will happen within the next few years, (if it already hasn't started), will lead very soon to the most difficult challenge humankind has ever faced. Mainstream society hasn't even begun to recognize the immensity of this issue. It will, however, have a dramatic impact on most people's lives.

Thank you for providing your perspective. You have challenged me to respond.



Activist Teacher: Activism and Risk - Life beyond altruism

Activist Teacher: Activism and Risk - Life beyond altruism

Interesting Read.

More later...

Monday, May 21, 2007

Awakening to the Threat of Excessive Material Consumption

There are signs of a new awakening in post-industrial society. Increasing numbers of us are recognizing that the encouragement of over consumption of material goods is a fundamental problem for humanity. The belief that continual growth in consumption is essential for our well-being is now being called into question. Annual spending on marketing in excess $450 billion however continues to fan the flames of consumption-oriented living.

The planet has surpassed the capacity to sustain any growth in material throughput. It is calculated that we consume in one year at least 125% of nature’s yearly output. Our biosphere is collapsing with the pressures of current consumption rates. It is the first time in recorded history that we have been confronted with this reality on a planetary scale.

Such aggressive economic activity is pushing us to a precipice. The strains of the earth reaching and surpassing its ecological limits are presenting themselves everywhere. Whether it is our collapsed cod fishery, pine beetle infestation, disappearing polar ice sheets, rising carbon emissions or reduction in biodiversity, (and the list goes on), the evidence of our impact is overwhelming. Yet, in spite of all this, mainstream thinking and our political leaders urge us to "go shopping" and increase consumption to enhance our "standard of living".

With the conclusion of the twentieth century, it became clear that capitalism had triumphed over communism as the world economic model. The Chinese, despite their one party communist social state, rushed to embrace the capitalist system. They are now manufacturer to the world.

Capitalism brought incredible efficiencies into the marketplace and we benefit from many of them. However, this model is founded on the assumption of our ability to continually expand our economy. Capitalist theory does not have the means to adequately respond to any finite limits on the availability of resources. It always assumes that the market will solve such constraints. World history is littered with the remains of past societies that failed to take resource limitation into account.

Ronald Wright in “A Short History of Progress” documents the collapse of four civilizations from our history – Easter Island, the Sumerians, the Maya, and ancient Rome. He shows how in the past entire civilizations have self destructed through wrong choices. He argues that "each time history repeats itself, the price goes up".

Capitalism, as currently construed, is ill suited to respond to the present day ecological crisis we are facing. Corporations are legally required to act in the best financial interests of their shareholders. They therefore forever look for ways to lower costs and improve their financial bottom line. They seek to avoid any responsibility for the collateral consequences of their decisions. They "externalize" such costs and impose them on society.

Companies are quick to move offshore in search of cheaper labour. The community bears the costs of the job losses while the company improves their profit. The closure of the Hershey chocolate factory in Smiths Falls south of Ottawa is a recent local example. The corporation argues that the benefit to consumers is that their costs, and therefore the price of Hershey chocolate bars, is kept low. The social costs of lost local jobs, and the environmental impact of more diesel fuel being consumed to bring that product to market is not accounted for. Out of sight, out of mind.

Retailers develop a business plan to establish large outlets that are dependent on a massive taxpayer provided automobile transportation network. The corporation takes in the profit while the community not only pays upfront for the roads, but then pays forever with increased urban sprawl, congestion, further dependence on the automobile, and polluted air. As before, the corporation argues that the consumer benefits through economies of scale that result in lower product cost. As communities, we blithely accept this argument; yet simultaneously complain about loss of local convenience, traffic congestion, polluted air and urban sprawl.


What if, however, we could capture such costs and assign them appropriately? Could it have the potential of shaping decisions by corporations and individuals alike to be more environmentally and socially responsible? The concept is "full-cost accounting" or "the triple bottom line." It is accounting that recognizes not only the financial, but also the social and environmental implications of any decisions.

There are signs of this happening in Europe. In Germany, producers are required to pay to put a Green Dot on their products. The fee is for the disposal of their packaging. If producers incorporate more packaging, they pay a higher Green Dot fee. Another European example is known as Extended Producer Responsibility whereby the manufacturer is responsible for the proper disposal of their product at the end of its useful life. With this requirement Mercedes-Benz has reduced the number of plastics in its cars from 16 to 3 and made more of its components interchangeable and re-usable. This lowers its disposal cost, and reduces the imposition of waste on society.

All levels of government need to incorporate such considerations into their budget and planning decisions. We need policy that will apply this concept to the business world. It should not be good enough for urban development to be approved or business plans executed simply because it is financially feasible. The full environmental and social costs of such plans must also be appropriately assigned.

We should require a full accounting of any environmental and social deterioration that may result. The cost of mitigation must be assigned. Every city is filled with examples of short-term quick profit motivated bad planning that has produced serious environmental and social degradation.

Interestingly, and in contrast to current collective short term thinking, our society expects individual adults to engage in personal long term planning. As we reach physical maturity, most of us begin to behave in a more responsible manner. Many of us take on 25-year mortgages; envision living with a life partner and raising children. We plan for our retirement. We accept the responsibility of planning long term. In our later years some of us begin to think of the legacy we will leave for future generations.

As individuals, then, we know how to engage in personal long term planning. Why, then, do we find it so difficult to do it collectively? What prevents us from appreciating the collective long-term consequences of our actions? Why do we fail to recognize that we are headed for the ultimate "Tragedy of the Commons"?

For part of the answer we need to look at the refinement of mass marketing and advertising in the twentieth century. It is now intimately involved in spurring us thoughtlessly on. Branding is everywhere. From the name on your computer monitor, to the insignia on your cell phone, there it is. Automobile advertising constantly implores us to be carefree and "Zoom, Zoom!" through life. This is not about providing important information to a public that is looking to make an informed choice. It is all about tickling our desires to transform them into "needs".

The marketing industry has a single-minded focus on enhancing the financial bottom line of themselves and their clients. Nothing else matters to them. Their job is to create desire and encourage customers to shop. There is not an alternate view with billions of advertising dollars trying to entice us to do otherwise.

When people begin to act collectively, they often choose to consume less, while appreciating life more. Such activity, however, cuts into the profits of industry. Therefore they do what they can to encourage individual compulsive consumption. Long-term responsible thinking is bad for business in the eyes of the short term thinking marketing guru. He wants your money, and he wants it now.

A primary goal of mass marketing is to minimize our sense of collective social responsibility and encourage "me first" consumption. You will not see the marketing tagline "Consume Less, Enjoy Life More!" emblazoned across billboards anytime soon. Mike Nickerson, in his recently published book Life, Money & Illusion asks "If the voices of marketing fell silent, what would people want?" Good question!

Society must begin to push away from these adolescent like impulses and recognize that it has reached adulthood. Collectively, at a grassroots level and through our institutions, we need to accept that it is no longer necessary for us as a society to physically grow. In fact, we need to acknowledge the extent to which such activity is leading to our own demise. As Ronald Wright points out, “We must live on the interest, not the capital of nature.” It is unconscionable that we continue to exploit resources at the rate we have become accustomed to.

There is a clear disconnect, however, between the recognition of the destruction created by this thoughtless consumption and the continued belief by a majority of the electorate and established institutions that continued growth in consumption is not only inevitable, but essential.

This is what makes it so difficult, then, for politicians (particularly those who are elected), to voice this truth, whenever they begin to recognize it. They know that to tell someone that they must consume less is not what most voters want to hear. Consumers don't take kindly to the suggestion that they may be the central cause of the problem. And, they often don't vote for those people who tell them this embarrassing truth.

When gasoline prices were rising in recent years consumers clamoured for governments to “do something”. No doubt, oil companies are making enormous profits, but in our market driven economy, the price is escalated as supply tightened in the face of increasing demand. Like it or not, this is a fundamental premise of capitalism. Curiously, politicians who understand this rarely suggest that consumers and their increasing demand may be responsible for this situation. They prefer to “demur” from even speaking of it. Who would vote for them if they did?

As tempting as it is for a political party to denounce the high profits of oil companies, such action works against the need for the citizenry to come to terms with the consequences of their highly consumptive lifestyle. The political party that does the best job of understanding this issue will be well positioned in the long term.

It is essential that we find appropriate ways to hold this mirror up to society. Citizens must be encouraged to consider the extent to which their behaviour contributes to the environmental mess our planet is in. An example occurred at a November 2006 open house given by Canada Lands for the Rockcliffe Base Development project in Ottawa. During the open mike session the writer pointed out the incongruity of hundreds of people driving to a community meeting to complain about the impact of traffic congestion. He also thought it curious that he was the lone occupant of the bus that brought him to the event. Embarrassed applause followed.

There is a growing minority of the electorate acknowledging how our over-consumptive ways are destroying our planet. They are beginning to move beyond blaming industry, and recognizing that it only produces what we consume. They understand that we vote every day with the dollars we spend. When we don't buy it, they stop producing it.

It is becoming increasingly clear to more of us that continual growth in our material consumption is a physical impossibility. There will, at some future time, be a transformation in the world. The growth in material consumption will stop as the physical limits are imposed upon us. The question is; “How shall we adapt?” Will we have truly begun to "Consume Less, and Enjoy Life More", embracing a sustainable lifestyle? Or, will we have chosen a darker path of continued encouragement of personal greed and over-consumption until the last dollar of profit is squeezed out of the earth?

The path we ultimately take will be strongly influenced by the speed with which we come to recognize that there is, in fact, a problem. The longer we stretch out our societal denial, the more difficult our choices in the future will be.

It is not easy to hear that our consumptive habits may be part of the problem. Reflection, though, is needed on this perspective. If you find yourself in agreement, then consider how you can be a part of holding up the mirror in your community.

The groundswell of world wide public concern for the condition of our planet is everywhere. For many of us, though, this concern is also accompanied by confusion as to what we can do. Our entire way of living is being called into question. To hear that one's lifestyle choices may be having a serious negative impact on the earth can be very demoralizing and difficult to accept.

We need to become more conscious of the global consequences of our choices and give consideration to alternatives. We need to start asking questions about the non-renewable energy that is consumed that encourages us to have whatever we want, whenever we want it.

Carbon based energy resources are finite. It took more than a million years to create the supply that is available to humankind. We have burned through roughly half of it in less than two hundred of those years. Whether we are transporting strawberries across a continent, or clay flowerpots around the world, future generations, our great grandchildren, will shake their heads in disbelief at the shameful squandering of such a precious resource just to satisfy our impetuous desires.

We need to question the morality of an economic system that tells us that if we have the money, we have the right to consume the product. Imagine yourself one hundred years in the future trying to explain that rationale to future generations who are confronted with serious resource shortages.

We need to question the extent to which marketing influences how we spend our money. Do we need that product on the store shelf? Do we always need to be enticed by Expedia's most recent offering, or could that local vacation retreat be equally satisfying? Do we need snow peas from China, or could local produce perhaps be tastier, and more nutritious?

We do not need to stop leading active and involved lives. In fact, we are surrounded by boundless opportunities for a satisfying personal life that does not involve consuming more of our precious resources. Humankind is rich in culture and immensely diverse. Education happens when two or more people gather and communicate. All are enriched, and no resources are consumed. We need more often to simply walk out our front door, look around and appreciate.

We cannot change the facts. We have direct control, however, over our response to the facts. Civilization still has a window of opportunity to change. The sooner we begin to take concrete action, the better it will be. It is, in the words of local visionary Mike Nickerson, "A Question of Direction".

He points in the direction of a paradigm shift of our purpose. He urges us to consider a civilization that will no longer promote a goal that insists we “expand production and consumption." He asks us to replace this with a dream of true stewardship where "Our purpose is to enjoy living while managing the planet for generations to come."

As society begins the movement toward a lower consumptive lifestyle it will have economic consequences. There will be difficult times as communities adjust to a new reality. Relocalisation of our economies will be challenging. However, it will be exceedingly more so if we delay facing up to the ultimate reality that we cannot continue to increase material consumption. That is clearly a physical impossibility. The sooner we accept this fact, the easier the transformation will be.

Monday, March 19, 2007

The Political Conundrum, or

How Do We Encourage Enough Voters to Think Long-Term?

If you are reading this, then you may share my concern for our over-dependence on non-renewable energy sources. You perhaps have begun to conclude that in the near to mid term (within twenty years), we are going to be confronted with rapidly escalating costs of energy. You may also share my concern of the economic and social implications such costs will impose on our society.

The more reading I do, the more consensus I find. It is not a matter of if, but when we shall be confronted with the consequences of worldwide Peak Oil Production. Even the most optimistic prognosticators, such as Cambridge Energy Research Associates (CERA) see world oil production peaking within 20 to 25 years. Government agencies are beginning to recognize they need to confront this issue. Web pages such as The Energy Bulletin, The Dynamic Cities Project or The Post Carbon Institute (to name but three), are full of links to stories about various groups responding to the situation.

About a year ago I started to visualize various futuristic scenarios. I Knew that I needed to improve my skills to help me cope with the post carbon era. In short, I needed to change my lifestyle. I needed to behave as if there were a critical energy shortage, so I would be better equipped to cope when it does happen.

Over the past year I have paid more attention to shopping locally. I switched to my local green energy provider, Bullfrog Power. I gave up car ownership, and started to walk, cycle or take the bus. I attempted to organize my thoughts and communicate my concerns to my community through my personal website. Not only did I feel that I could breathe with a cleaner conscience, but I felt healthier!

However, this slower pace has also provided more time to watch the world speed by. While you and I may be getting it, I must admit to being somewhat overwhelmed by the sheer numbers of those who don't. It is not just that Wal-Mart parking lots remain full, and gridlock continues to be the primary complaint of the masses. So often the electors in our various democracies are swayed by promises of short term gain. As I write, the Canadian Finance Minister is delivering an election style budget based on assumptions of continued economic "growth". He opens his speech by saying "Mr. Speaker, Canada is strong today, and we have a plan for an even better tomorrow!"

Sadly, elections are not won by telling voters the truth about what lies ahead. They are won by promises of more, forever. Many Canadians will be cheered when they hear their Finance Minister say:

Canada is great because Canadians made it great. The people who built this country worked hard to realize their vision. They set us on a bold course to greater hope and opportunity.

Only a small minority of the electorate understands the fact that our economy grew as it did over the past 100 years because of the abundance of cheap energy.

I would like to think that the small steps I am taking to change my lifestyle will help me cope with the changes that are coming. I am much more concerned, however, with how the rest of the world is going to respond. I am trying to figure out what I can do to appropriately sound the alarm. The tricky part, is the relatively short attention span of the electorate. The problem we are facing requires very long term solutions.

Some people have the patience and are prepared to accept a plan that asks them to sacrifice today for something that will show results in 2 or 3, maybe even ten years. Occasionally an astute politician can be that persuasive. But how do we convince a majority to accept less for the rest of their lives so future generations can survive? How do we develop an electorate that is that informed, and altruistic? How do we convince ever increasing numbers of people to stop listening to the constant rant of marketers who continually tell us to "zoom zoom" through life, and have it all?

I look forward to your answers.

Saturday, March 17, 2007

Buddhist Writings and the Concept of Scripture

I was raised in what I would describe as a "secular" family, in the midst of the typical North American "Christian" mindset of 1960's. Let's just say I don't recall Bible discussions around our dinner table. If the topic of religion did come up, it was usually in the context of how fanatical views often seemed to be the root of world problems. We collectively rolled our eyes upon hearing any public proclamation that "God is on our side."

Perhaps this is what appealed to me about Buddhism. As a non-theistic religion, it isn't centred around belief in a supreme being. It is, instead, a set of moral practices to live by. Ever since Alan Watts told me in the early seventies that "as the ocean waves, the universe peoples", I have been drawn to this non-dualistic way of perceiving reality.

I have read the works of several different modern day Buddhist teachers. These have included the Dalai Lama, Lama Surya Das, Thich Nhat Hanh, and Shunryu and Daisetz Suzuki, to name a few. Thich Nhat Hanh's books are small, and easy to carry, making them easy to travel with. For me, they are as close as I will come to "reading scripture". They are teachings for my heart and soul.

Here is an excerpt from the first page of Touching Peace that spoke to me today:

Our true home is in the present moment. To live in the present moment is a miracle. The miracle is not to walk on water. The miracle is to walk on the green Earth in the present moment, to appreciate the peace and beauty that are available now. Peace is all around us- in the world and in nature-and within us-in our bodies and our spirits. Once we learn to touch this peace, we will be healed and transformed. It is not a matter of faith; it is a matter of practice. We need only to find ways to bring our body and mind back to the present moment so we can touch what is refreshing, healing, and wondrous.

I found myself reading over this early in the evening as I travelled toward Ottawa on the bus from Toronto. I would put the book down, and glance at the passing landscape. I would feel awash in appreciation of the Universe in every glistening speck of melting snow, or in the passing silhoettes of the cedar trees. Everything simultaneously the same, yet unique. The ring of cell phones against the beauty of a spring sunset. All perfect.

The final chapter opens with this:

We come to the practice of meditation seeking relief from our suffereing, and meditation can teach us how to transform our suffering and obtain basic relief. But the deepest kind of relief is the realization of nirvana. There are two dimensions to life, and we should be able to touch both. One is like a wave, and we call it the historical dimension. The other is like the water, and we call it the ultimate dimension, or nirvana. We usually touch just the wave, but when we discover how to touch the water, we receive the highest fruit that meditation can offer.

In the historical dimension, we have birth certificates and death certificates. The day your mother passes away, you suffer. If someone sits close to you and shows her concern, you feel some relief. You have her friendship, her support, her warm hand to hold. This is the world of waves. It is characterized by birth and death, ups and downs, being and non-being. A wave has a beginning and an end, but we cannot ascribe these characteristics to water. In the world of water, there is no birth or death, no being or non-being, no beginning or end. When we touch the water, we touch reality in it ultimate dimension and are liberated from all of these concepts.

To me this reads as scripture. Teachings that touch me, and simply make sense. I don't know all of the terms, I have never been one to follow dogma or ritual. One thing I have learned, though is that there is no where to go, as I am already here.

Friday, March 16, 2007

We Vote With Our Dollars

I recently came across the following quote from John Robbins at http://www.foodrevolution.org/commonground.htm

We vote with our dollars, and we spend a lot of our dollars on food. Yet people don't often see their diet as a political statement. But it is. When you vote for McDonald's, that's one kind of vote. When you vote for organic food, that's another kind of vote. What you support with your dollars is what will exist in the future. Every time you spend a dollar, you are saying to the people who produce that product, "Do it again." That's how it will be read, that's how it will be interpreted and that's how it will be manifested.

There has certainly been an increasing expression of concern for the environment around world in recent months. It is reaching a fever pitch, as various political parties trip over themselves in the rush to the green paint brushes in response to opinion polls saying the environment is the number one concern of voters.. Letters to the editor plead for greater environmental efforts. However, the big box stores remain full, our highways remain clogged, and the masses continue to rush for the latest gadget, fancy food item, or escape vacation. People are telling the pollsters their feelings of concern, but when they vote with their dollars, they continue to increase the pressure on the planet. For most people, it seems, they don't want to consume less, they just want to believe that their consumption habits don't cause problems. As Sharon Astyk says on her blog:

Say it out loud. WHAT I BUY WARMS THE PLANET. MY SHOPPING DEPLETES WHAT FUTURE PEOPLE WILL HAVE. BUYING STUFF HURTS PEOPLE. The problem is that shopping also feels good. Now I'm not much of a regular shopper, but I know that heavy sense of pleasure you get when you wander into a bookstore as much as anyone. I've shopped for comfort, I've bought things and thought momentarily "this will make it better." I understand how much fun shopping is. And it is still the problem.

In other words, we have met the enemy, and it is US! Trying to shop our way out of this problem is a contradiction in terms.

My Friend Jim on a Road Less Traveled



My friend Jim is about to turn 60. His daughter recently contacted me to ask if I could contribute to a scrapbook of memories she was putting together for him. I am very thankful for the opportunity to remember a very important person in my life.

My Friend Jim

I met Jim at a tumultuous time in my life. Not yet out of my teens, I was struggling with the concept of adulthood at a time when everything around me was changing. War raged in Southeast Asia. If you hadn’t been to a teach-in, or a love-in, or a sit-in, you hadn’t been anywhere. Everyone, it seemed, had a revolution to follow.

My demeanor was typical of the times. Relatively unkempt, I sported an untrimmed beard, longish hair, and work boots. A full-length surplus military issue wool trench coat kept me warm in the winter. Rebelliousness was my nature.

I was reaching out, trying to discover myself, when I met Jim at a retreat at Camp Iawah. He was the right person for me to meet at the right time. Here was a young man, a few years older than myself, with whom I could share a similar sense of quest. Outwardly we may have seemed so different, yet we both sought truth. From those beginnings north of Westport we developed a kinship that has remained with me to this day. Although I haven’t seen Jim for quite some time, he has always remained close to my heart.

I have many memories, from ‘messing about with boats’ to trips to the east coast, to skinning my knuckles as I tried to keep old Volvos on the road. During this time, I was also learning about Buddhism, and what I learned then, I like to think, has stayed with me. One of those “Buddhist” teaching is to be in the moment. Jim showed me how to be. He did it by eating a peach. When Jim ate a peach, he ate a peach. I almost felt that I ate the peach with him.

Thank you, Jim, for being part of this lifelong journey.

Leonard.

There is nowhere to go, for we are already here.