Saturday, January 29, 2011

Why? This is a good question?

> Subject: Why?
>
>
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> A young Arab asks his father, "What is that weird hat you are wearing?"
>
> The father said, "Why, it's a 'chechia' because in the desert it protects our heads from the sun."
>
> "And what is this type of clothing that you are wearing?" asked the young man.
>
> "It's a 'djbellah' because in the desert it is very hot and it protects your body." said the father.
>
> The son asked, "And what about those ugly shoes on your feet?
>
> His father replied, "These are 'babouches", which keep us from burning our feet when in the desert."
>
> "Tell me," added the boy.
>
> "Yes, my son?"
>
> "Why are you living in Dearborn, Michigan and you're still wearing all this shit?"
>
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--
Hollecrest & Associates
Inc<http://www.ic.gc.ca/ccc/search/cp?l=eng&e=123456239975>
-"Turnaround Consultants" .

Sunridge Lodge <http://sites.google.com/site/sunridgelodge> "Back to Eden"
quality 24/7 care
261 Oakhill Drive, Brantford backtoeden.ontario@gmail.com
"Building elder peer communities that are cozy,caring and comfortable" -

Brant Positive Action Group <https://sites.google.com/site/bpagsiegholle> -a
positive community affirmative action group that promotes goodwill and
timely cost effective creative solutions to enhance the competitive well
being of Brant Brantford and Six Nations

Thursday, January 27, 2011

How to be a true friend and brother- here is the gold

years ago how a friend said that some people are "cursed with the
affliction to give advice." I had no idea what he meant. Sure sounded
strange to me. Now I understand. He was talking about unsolicited
advice; that is, giving advice where it is neither asked for nor
wanted.

According to Webster's Dictionary, people "offering unwanted advice or
services" are officious. I think that word is close to "obnoxious."
Such advice can be thinly veiled criticism.

I'm not talking about going to a lawyer, an accountant, a car
mechanic, or whatever when we need professional advice. What I'm
talking about is when we share our struggles and feelings with a
friend and they have a compulsion to tell us what we should or
shouldn't do, or how we should or shouldn't feel. They are in fact
putting us down in that they are assuming that they know our needs and
understand our situation better than we do ourselves.

Even when some people want advice about a personal issue, it is more
effective not to give it to them, but help them come up with their own
options and solutions.

A good counselor doesn't tell people what they should or shouldn't do.
He helps them see for themselves what they need to do.

What I want from a friend when I am feeling in the pits, is someone to
listen to me with their heart, to give me their presence, and accept
me as I am, and let me know that they care—not try to fix me—or
someone who will weep with me when I weep. Such friends may be rare
but they are worth their weight in gold.

--


Brant Positive Action Group <https://sites.google.com/site/bpagsiegholle> -a
positive community affirmative action group that promotes goodwill and
timely cost effective creative solutions to enhance the competitive well
being of Brant Brantford and Six Nations

Tuesday, January 25, 2011

Get real -interesting thoughts on apathy and the phony facade

Everyone's challenge - organizational or individual apathy,denial
 
Apathy is just one of our problems. While we all struggle with various problems to one degree or another, my personal belief—either rightly or wrongly—is that our biggest problem is that of denial; that is, being unreal (avoiding the truth about ourselves). We hide our true feelings and motives behind a facade or mask of busyness, intellectualism, performance, success, achievement, religiosity, saccharine sweetness, rationalization, belligerence, control of others, addictive behaviors, superficiality, over- conscientiousness, self-righteousness, aggressiveness, satirical humor, shyness, a negative critical attitude, and any one of a hundred or more other ways—including apathy.

Some of us who say we stand on the Word of God actually hide behind it. Ironically we use God's Truth as a defense to avoid facing the truth about ourselves. Controlling, dictatorial religious leaders do this. They hide their deep insecurities behind a façade of theological rigidity, super-spirituality, and/or authoritarianism—and deny that they are in denial.

Sadly, people living in denial don't recognize what authenticity is and, in fact, are threatened by it. They may withdraw from authentic people. For others, it "rattles the cage" of their phony facade and, when they are in denial, they tend to shout all the louder and get even more belligerent, or become very defensive.

--

Hollecrest & Associates Inc   -"Turnaround Consultants"  .

Sunridge Lodge  "Back to Eden" quality 24/7 care
261 Oakhill Drive, Brantford  backtoeden.ontario@gmail.com
"Building elder peer communities that are cozy,caring and comfortable" -
 
Brant Positive Action Group -a positive community affirmative action group that promotes goodwill and timely cost effective creative solutions to enhance the competitive well being of Brant Brantford and Six Nations  

Get real -interesting thoughts on apathy and the phony facade

Everyone's challenge - organizational or individual apathy,denial
 
Apathy is just one of our problems. While we all struggle with various problems to one degree or another, my personal belief—either rightly or wrongly—is that our biggest problem is that of denial; that is, being unreal (avoiding the truth about ourselves). We hide our true feelings and motives behind a facade or mask of busyness, intellectualism, performance, success, achievement, religiosity, saccharine sweetness, rationalization, belligerence, control of others, addictive behaviors, superficiality, over- conscientiousness, self-righteousness, aggressiveness, satirical humor, shyness, a negative critical attitude, and any one of a hundred or more other ways—including apathy.

Some of us who say we stand on the Word of God actually hide behind it. Ironically we use God's Truth as a defense to avoid facing the truth about ourselves. Controlling, dictatorial religious leaders do this. They hide their deep insecurities behind a façade of theological rigidity, super-spirituality, and/or authoritarianism—and deny that they are in denial.

Sadly, people living in denial don't recognize what authenticity is and, in fact, are threatened by it. They may withdraw from authentic people. For others, it "rattles the cage" of their phony facade and, when they are in denial, they tend to shout all the louder and get even more belligerent, or become very defensive.

--

Hollecrest & Associates Inc   -"Turnaround Consultants"  .

Sunridge Lodge  "Back to Eden" quality 24/7 care
261 Oakhill Drive, Brantford  backtoeden.ontario@gmail.com
"Building elder peer communities that are cozy,caring and comfortable" -
 
Brant Positive Action Group -a positive community affirmative action group that promotes goodwill and timely cost effective creative solutions to enhance the competitive well being of Brant Brantford and Six Nations  

Monday, January 24, 2011

Inspirational video from Jason Nelligan for your comment and thoughts -pass it on please

Here is a video made by Jason and Paul in relation to a death in Jason's council. They have worked extremely hard on this and as a result it is extremely well done and provides a great message that need's to be shared will all our members. Feel free to show it.

The boys have asked for your comments on it.

Click on this link to watch the video on YouTube.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rhvasyW0aNw

--

Brant Positive Action Group -a positive community affirmative action group that promotes goodwill and timely cost effective creative solutions to enhance the competitive well being of Brant Brantford and Six Nations  

- Brant Knights of Columbus Free throw

Brant Knights of Columbus Free throw was a successful event-good  fraternity,good sportsmanship with many smiling faces . Well  done one for the community
You are invited to view s's photo album: Brant Knights of Columbus
Brant Knights of Columbus
Brantford -
Oct 22, 2009
by s
Photos of Knights -people and events
Message from s:
Brant Knights of Columbus Free throw 2011
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--
Hollecrest & Associates Inc   -"Turnaround Consultants"  .

Sunridge Lodge  "Back to Eden" quality 24/7 care
261 Oakhill Drive, Brantford  backtoeden.ontario@gmail.com
"Building elder peer communities that are cozy,caring and comfortable" -
 
Brant Positive Action Group -a positive community affirmative action group that promotes goodwill and timely cost effective creative solutions to enhance the competitive well being of Brant Brantford and Six Nations  

Friday, January 21, 2011

Food forthought is technology killing jobs

Great for consumers bad for busines?
 
Three Ways Technology Is Killing Businesses   Cliff Ennico

It's been more than 30 years now since the first personal computers, and more than 15 years since the Internet, gave us all a digital life. Who today can remember what it was like to do business in the days before e-mail, PowerPoint, laptops, BlackBerries, iPhones, iPods, iPads, mobile apps, Facebook and Twitter?

Today's technology is truly a marvel -- all the information in the world in your hands, at any time. But it is making it harder for businesses to make an honest buck.

Proposition No. 1: The Internet Is Killing Jobs. Back in the 1970s, if you ran a billion-dollar (in sales) corporation, you needed hundreds if not thousands of midlevel executives running around, managing the systems that made those complicated business models possible. Many of those employees were duplicating effort, providing checks and balances to ensure that all of the key functions were executed properly and correctly.

Today's information technology solutions have made most of those people obsolete. With the right technology solutions, a billion-dollar (in sales) corporation can be run by fewer than 100 full-time employees.

Think I'm kidding? In 2008, YouTube.com was acquired by Google in a $1.65 billion transaction. At the time, YouTube.com had only 72 full-time employees.

By doing complicated tasks effectively, quickly and with 100 percent accuracy, the Internet enables today's executives to perform tasks in a few minutes that used to take a team of employees days to accomplish. Great for productivity, but lousy for the employment picture.

Greater efficiency and productivity kills jobs. A famous British advertisement of the 1980s showed a photo of several angry-looking factory workers wielding sledgehammers, baseball bats and other weapons of mass destruction, over the caption "The lads would like to have a word with the new computer." While the information technology industry has created some jobs, these are dwarfed by the number of jobs lost to technology in traditional industrial and manufacturing companies.

Proposition No. 2: Technology Turns Everything into a Commodity. Today's technology creates a world of "perfect information," especially for those too lazy to spend time comparing prices. I just read about a new mobile phone application that will tell you exactly where you can find the lowest price for just about any piece of brand-name merchandise.

Great for consumers, but think about it from a retailer's perspective. When you can see competitive prices at a glance, and can order the items electronically in "real time" for instant gratification, why in a million years would you choose anything but the lowest price? Retailers who provide greater service to their customers and accordingly cannot discount to the lowest levels a Walmart, Amazon.com or Costco can are bound to suffer. People will visit these retailers to do their research, learn more about the available options, make their decision, then go online and buy the item elsewhere for the greatest possible discount.

One of the great myths of small business is that customers will actually pay more for better, more personalized service. Baloney. People want the service, but they also want everyday low prices.

Someone -- I think a famous economist -- once said that "in a world of perfect information, everything would sell for exactly one penny over cost." Many traditional retailers have relied on the unavailability of perfect information to inflate their prices on the assumption that people are too busy or basically lazy to engage in aggressive price comparison. The Internet, by making comparative price information instantly available, will force all retailers to congregate at the bottom of the market, turning virtually all products and services into "commodities" that compete only on price.

Proposition No. 3: Technology Is Killing Margins By Eliminating "Barriers to Entry." It costs a lot of money to publish a book in print format. There's the cost of paper and ink, the bindings, the cover design, the shrink-wrap, the author's royalty, shipping, warehousing and fulfillment, yada, yada.

By comparison, it costs hardly anything to publish a book in electronic format. You get the manuscript from the author, you edit it and lay it out in the appropriate e-book format, post it on your website, and people pay to download perfect, identical copies that live only in cyberspace.

Great for the reading public and wonderful for the environment, except for one thing: Can you realistically charge more than a few pennies for each download when your production costs are so low?

A quick look at Stephen King's books on Amazon.com shows that his e-books sell for a significant discount from his hardcovers and paperbacks. What's interesting is that the e-book prices are only 25 percent to 30 percent (on average) lower than the printed book prices. That won't last, especially for authors who don't have the industry clout King has.

By minimizing production costs and other "barriers to entry" generally, today's technology is also erasing margins. Once something can be produced for pennies, in a competitive market, it becomes impossible to sell them for dollars. Unless, of course, you have a monopoly (for example, patented technology or exclusive rights to a popular author's novels) and can charge whatever you like.

No wonder there's such a ruckus about the future of copyright protection in the publishing world ...

--

Hollecrest & Associates Inc   -"Turnaround Consultants"  .

Sunridge Lodge  "Back to Eden" quality 24/7 care
261 Oakhill Drive, Brantford  backtoeden.ontario@gmail.com
"Building elder peer communities that are cozy,caring and comfortable" -
 
Brant Positive Action Group -a positive community affirmative action group that promotes goodwill and timely cost effective creative solutions to enhance the competitive well being of Brant Brantford and Six Nations  

Tuesday, January 18, 2011

In challenging times do not quit- tough it out

A little motivation for everyone
 
If you feel like giving up and quitting, perhaps the following poem will encourage you to hang in, hang on, but never hang up when the going gets tough.

    Don't Quit

    When things go wrong as they sometimes will,
    When the road you're trudging seems all uphill,
    When the funds are low and the debts are high,
    And you want to smile, but you have to sigh.
    When care is pressing you down a bit,
    Rest if you must, but don't you quit.
    Life is strange with its twists and turns,
    As every one of us sometimes learns,
    And many a failure turns about
    When he might have won had he stuck it out.
    Don't give up though the pace seems slow –
    You may succeed with another blow!
    Success is failure turned inside out –
    The silver tint of the clouds of doubt,
    And you never can tell just how close you are,
    It may be near when it seems so far.
    So stick to the fight when you're hardest hit–
    It's when things seem worst that you must not quit.2

I also like a quote that Robert Schuller has used: "When the going gets tough, the tough get going." Or as the title of one of his books says, Tough Times Never Last. Tough People Do.

--

Hollecrest & Associates Inc   -"Turnaround Consultants"  .

Sunridge Lodge  "Back to Eden" quality 24/7 care
261 Oakhill Drive, Brantford  backtoeden.ontario@gmail.com
"Building elder peer communities that are cozy,caring and comfortable" -
 
Brant Positive Action Group -a positive community affirmative action group that promotes goodwill and timely cost effective creative solutions to enhance the competitive well being of Brant Brantford and Six Nations  

Monday, January 17, 2011

3 Anglican bishops become Catholic priests

 

LONDON (UPI) -- Three former Church of England bishops were ordained Saturday morning as Roman Catholic priests after being received into the church, media reports said.

The three were the first Anglican clergy to join the Ordinariate, set up by Catholic Pope Benedict XVI to provide a home for traditionalist Anglicans, The Daily Telegraph reported. Under Vatican rules, married Anglican clergy can become Catholic priests but not bishops.

Archbishop Vincent Nichols, head of the Catholic Church in England and Wales, presided over the ceremony at Westminster Cathedral in London.

"Many ordinations have take place in this cathedral during the 100 years of its history. But none quite like this," Nichols said in his homily. "Today is a unique occasion marking a new step in the life and history of the Catholic Church."

The three new Catholic priests are John Broadhurst, former bishop of Fulham, Keith Newton, who was bishop of Richborough, and Andrew Burnham, former bishop of Ebbsfleet. Newton told the BBC he expects as many as 50 Anglican priests to join the Ordinariate. It will function as a kind of diocese for ex-Anglicans in England and Wales.

Major sticking points for traditionalist Anglicans include the ordination of women, their possible consecration as bishops and the role of openly gay clergy in the church.

Priests who convert will lose their stipends. Churches and other real estate will remain the property of the Church of England, and some members of conservative parishes are likely to stay in the Church of England.

--
Hollecrest & Associates Inc   -"Turnaround Consultants"  .

Sunridge Lodge  "Back to Eden" quality 24/7 care
261 Oakhill Drive, Brantford  backtoeden.ontario@gmail.com
"Building elder peer communities that are cozy,caring and comfortable" -
 
Brant Positive Action Group -a positive community affirmative action group that promotes goodwill and timely cost effective creative solutions to enhance the competitive well being of Brant Brantford and Six Nations  

Wednesday, January 12, 2011

Is stress the new status symbol? a worthy read

Is Stress the New Rolex?  Chris Durst and Michael Haaren 

"I've been working so many hours that my kids would probably call 911 to report a break-in if I came home when they were still awake."

We actually overheard a woman say this laughingly to a friend at a cafe a few weeks ago.

We were taken aback by the note of pride in the speaker's voice. After all, why would you be proud that you never see your children? You can imagine our surprise when her friend responded not with a tip on how she might slow down, but she instead answered with a clear attempt at one-upmanship.

"I hear you," she said loudly. "Jim has started sleeping in the guest room because he says I wake him up when I come in after working late -- and not for the right reasons! Ha Ha!"

And so it went back and forth, a volley of "my stress is bigger than your stress" remarks, until they picked up to leave.

The tone reminded us of those cocktail-party conversations in which the newly affluent "casually" drop details of their new car, "bespoke" clothes or exotic vacation, all while shooting freshly-monogrammed cuffs or scarring your cornea with a 5-pound gold watch launched from a well-tanned wrist.

A NEW TREND SWEEPING THE LAND?

Suspecting a new trend, we noted several similar conversations in the weeks ahead -- between businessmen at an airport, businesswomen, stay-at-home moms (an interesting joust involving who is taxiing the children around more), teachers and even a few college students. Yes, it indeed seems that stress is the new status symbol.

TAKE OUR STRESSED-OUT STATUS TEST

With so many projects, violin lessons and people harrying every Tom, Dick and Harry, we thought it might be helpful to put together a little test so that you, too, can see where you stand on the Stressed-Out Status Scale.

Give yourself one point for each of the following statements you agree with:

-- "I am too stressed to sleep at night without the assistance of a sleep aid." (Two-point bonus if the sleep aid requires a prescription.)

-- "I sleep fewer than four hours a night." (Ten-point bonus if you've eliminated sleep from your life entirely.)

-- "Within the past three months, I have missed a significant family event due to work or a similar obligation." (Three-point bonus if it involved breaking a promise to one of your children.)

-- "I text during family meals." (Two-point bonus if you don't have time for family meals.)

-- "PTA, school plays and church/synagogue/mosque are wonderful business networking opportunities." (Five bonus points if you have children and don't know what "PTA" is.)

-- "I regularly arrive late at day care to pick up my child(ren)." (Two-point bonus if you're charged for overtime and still can't get there punctually. Five-point bonus if Child Protective Services has been called at least once.)

-- "My dog is beyond uncomfortable when I finally get home to walk him." (Two-point bonus for each "accident" in the past six months.)

-- "I have no time for a love life." (Twenty bonus points if you don't know what "love life" means.)

-- "My social life has dried up and disappeared." (One bonus point if you never had one to begin with.)

-- "I am busier than all of my friends." (Three-point bonus if you're so busy that you've lost your friends.)

-- "I need at least three energy drinks to get me through the day." (One-point bonus if drinks are non-FDA approved.)

SCORING YOUR STATUS

If you scored 10 or more, you've achieved certified upwardly-mobile stressed-out status. If you scored 20 or more, you're a certified stressed-out VIP.

We'd congratulate you, but we're too busy.

--

Hollecrest & Associates Inc   -"Turnaround Consultants"  .

Sunridge Lodge  "Back to Eden" quality 24/7 care
261 Oakhill Drive, Brantford  backtoeden.ontario@gmail.com
"Building elder peer communities that are cozy,caring and comfortable" -
 
Brant Positive Action Group -a positive community affirmative action group that promotes goodwill and timely cost effective creative solutions to enhance the competitive well being of Brant Brantford and Six Nations  

Six principles- Good helping thoughts for 2011

.Six principles on  Fully Living—   "Jesus wept."1 reprint

In this, our final part in this series on "Fully Living—Fully Loving," we ask the question, how do we remove the barriers in our life that hinder or block our learning how to fully live and fully love?

First, we need to recognize that we have a problem—and admit it. As long as we deny the truth about ourselves, there is no healing or recovery. So I need to admit, "I have a problem. I need help."

Second, read good books, listen to CDs and tapes, attend classes, seminars and retreats that deal with personal growth and recovery. Learn all you can but, remember, intellectual knowledge doesn't produce healing or recovery, it just helps to understand our problem and know how and where to look for help.

Third, realize that we get damaged in damaged relationships and get healed in healing relationships. Every one of us—single or married—needs a soul-brother for men or a soul-sister for women. That is, we need someone who won't judge us, put us down, try to fix us or give us unsolicited advice—someone with whom we feel totally safe so we can be totally open and honest, and feel free to share our deepest emotions (negative as well as positive), as well as our joys, sorrows, successes, sins and failures and thus be known for who we truly are—warts and all.

We all need someone who knows us fully and loves and accepts us exactly as we are. This is what frees us to change and begin to experience healing in the deepest parts of our personality. Furthermore, only to the degree that we are known can we ever feel loved. Nobody can love a mask and nobody can ever feel loved who hides behind a mask. As long as we stay in hiding, we can never experience healing and grow to become a whole and loving person. 

Fourth, if we have deeply repressed emotions we may need, as I did, intense skilled therapy. We each need to find the type of therapy that works for us, and a therapist with whom we can work. What works for me may not work for you and vice-versa. Group therapy can also be very helpful.

Fifth, many of us will need help to learn not only how to get in touch with our feelings, but also how to express them in healthy and creative ways. Learn from the life of Jesus. When he was sad, he wept.1 When he was angry, he expressed his feelings. At times he did this verbally and when he found the money changers ripping people off in the temple, he got a whip and drove them out.2 What we need to remember, however, is to always speak and act the truth in love.

Last and most important of all, learn to put God first in your life and seek his guidance and help for every area of your life. Learn how to pray effectively by praying the right prayers.3 Ask God to confront you with the truth about yourself. If you are serious about this, God will show you; but be prepared because it usually takes pain to break through our defenses. For me personally, only when my pain is greater than my fears am I able to get in touch with my inner pain. Remember as God's Word says, "The Lord is near to all who call on him, to all who call on him in truth."4  God's Word also says, "Behold, You [God] desire truth in the inward parts, and in the hidden part You will make me to know wisdom."5

If you consistently follow these six principles, you too, will be well on the road to fully living and fully loving

--

Hollecrest & Associates Inc   -"Turnaround Consultants"  .

Sunridge Lodge  "Back to Eden" quality 24/7 care
261 Oakhill Drive, Brantford  backtoeden.ontario@gmail.com
"Building elder peer communities that are cozy,caring and comfortable" -
 
Brant Positive Action Group -a positive community affirmative action group that promotes goodwill and timely cost effective creative solutions to enhance the competitive well being of Brant Brantford and Six Nations  

Fwd: January Newsletter

For everyone interest




Please notify us ifyou wish to receive future mail by  postdelivery.



--
Hollecrest & Associates Inc   -"Turnaround Consultants"  .

Sunridge Lodge  "Back to Eden" quality 24/7 care
261 Oakhill Drive, Brantford  backtoeden.ontario@gmail.com
"Building elder peer communities that are cozy,caring and comfortable" -
 
Brant Positive Action Group -a positive community affirmative action group that promotes goodwill and timely cost effective creative solutions to enhance the competitive well being of Brant Brantford and Six Nations  

Making the rules fair for everyone

Mortgage Madness

An investigation by the CanadaMortgageNews.ca blog says the penalties for breaking a mortgage are thousands of dollars higher than they should be. Note: the federal government said in the last budget that it will standardize mortgage penalty rules. Sounds like a good chance to crack down on excessive charges.

--
Hollecrest & Associates Inc   -"Turnaround Consultants"  .

Sunridge Lodge  "Back to Eden" quality 24/7 care
261 Oakhill Drive, Brantford  backtoeden.ontario@gmail.com
"Building elder peer communities that are cozy,caring and comfortable" -
 
Brant Positive Action Group -a positive community affirmative action group that promotes goodwill and timely cost effective creative solutions to enhance the competitive well being of Brant Brantford and Six Nations  

Tuesday, January 11, 2011

The believe in good religion is proven to help your wellbeing

Very religious exhibit higher well-being
PRINCETON, N.J. (UPI) -- U.S. adults who say they are very religious
have higher overall well-being than their counterparts who are
moderately religious, a survey indicates.

For this analysis by Gallup, Americans' degree of religiousness is
based on responses to two questions asking about the importance of
religion and church attendance.

The very religious are defined as those to whom religion is an
important part of daily life and attend church, synagogue or mosque
services at least every week or almost every week.

The moderately religious do not fall into the very religious or
non-religious groups but gave valid responses on both religion
questions. The non-religious say religion is not an important part of
daily life and seldom or never attend church, synagogue or mosque
services.

Jews have the highest well-being of any of the faith groups, followed
by atheists/agnostics, Catholics, Mormons, Muslims and Protestants.
However, 55 percent of U.S. Jews were classified as non-religious and
16 percent say they were very religious.

This suggests a well-being benefit to the church-, synagogue- and
mosque-going experience that is independent of religious faith, but
may capitalize on the social aspects of attending services, Gallup
officials say.

The Gallup-Healthways Well-Being Index research is based on an
analysis of more than 372,000 interviews conducted Jan. 2, 2009, to
July 28, 2010. The margin of error is 5 percentage points to 6
percentage points.

Copyright 2011 by United Press International

--
Hollecrest & Associates
Inc<http://www.ic.gc.ca/ccc/search/cp?l=eng&e=123456239975>
-"Turnaround Consultants" .

Sunridge Lodge <http://sites.google.com/site/sunridgelodge> "Back to Eden"
quality 24/7 care
261 Oakhill Drive, Brantford backtoeden.ontario@gmail.com
"Building elder peer communities that are cozy,caring and comfortable" -

Brant Positive Action Group <https://sites.google.com/site/bpagsiegholle> -a
positive community affirmative action group that promotes goodwill and
timely cost effective creative solutions to enhance the competitive well
being of Brant Brantford and Six Nations

Thursday, January 06, 2011

A serious challenge -spread the word -to everyone not just the converted

What is the answer against all forms of evil? We Christians need to awake and not only demonstrate our faith in our everyday lives, but also aggressively communicate the gospel in word and action across the nation and around the world. The average American church is spending 95% of its income on itself—preaching to the choir as it were. No wonder we Christians aren't making an impact on our society, let alone the rest of the world.

--
Hollecrest & Associates Inc   -"Turnaround Consultants"  .

Sunridge Lodge  "Back to Eden" quality 24/7 care
261 Oakhill Drive, Brantford  backtoeden.ontario@gmail.com
"Building elder peer communities that are cozy,caring and comfortable" -
 
Brant Positive Action Group -a positive community affirmative action group that promotes goodwill and timely cost effective creative solutions to enhance the competitive well being of Brant Brantford and Six Nations  

Wednesday, January 05, 2011

Fwd: FAIR Monthly Headlines

Interesting reads on integrity actions




   Federal Accountability Initiative for Reform

FAIR Monthly Headlines: December 2010

A selected list of articles added to the FAIR website last month. These are about whistleblowing, whistleblowers, and the types of misconduct that they typically expose.


OAG report on Integrity Commissioner – a devastating indictment

Topics: Government ethics, Integrity Commissioner, OPSIC, Reprisals

The Auditor General, Sheila Fraser, released yesterday the results of her investigation into the the conduct of the government whistleblower watchdog, Integrity Commissioner Christiane Ouimet – an investigation that was prompted by complaints from three of Ouimet's former employees. These findings amount to a devastating indictment of the Commissioner's conduct.

Fraser concluded that the three areas of complaint were founded:

 

How Ouimet failed to act

Topics: Integrity Commissioner, OPSIC

The case of Suzanne Boudreau, a former Crown prosecutor, offers a rare glimpse of how the former integrity commissioner justified inaction.

James Bagnall – December 20, 2010

OTTAWA -- It takes a certain kind of personality to play the role of government watchdog well. Essential qualities include an inner toughness, a willingness to stand up to an entrenched establishment and a determination to probe when necessary. Christiane Ouimet, the former commissioner of the Public Sector Integrity Office, appeared to have none of these.

Certainly this was the gist of the recently published audit by Sheila Fraser, the federal government's auditor general, who concluded Ouimet wasn't interested in investigating complaints about alleged wrongdoing by government employees.

 

CBC Radio: David Hutton on Auditor General's report

Topics: David Hutton, Government ethics, Integrity Commissioner, OPSIC, Reprisals David Hutton

CBC Radio – December 10, 2010

CBC's Sheila Coles interviews David Hutton on reactions to the Auditor General's recently-released report, which exposes the 'totally unacceptable' conduct of former Integrity Commissioner Christiane Ouimet, the watchdog who was supposed to protect government whistleblowers.

Auditor General Sheila Fraser's investigation found that: Ouimet failed to do her job, rejecting almost all complaints without properly examining them; that she engaged in reprisals against some of her staff that she suspected of complaining about her; and that abused staff by yelling and swearing at them, and berating them in front of colleagues.

 

Tory-created watchdogs appear unable to uncover wrongdoing

Topics: Government ethics, Government transparency, Integrity Commissioner, OPSIC

Gloria Galloway – December 27, 2010

The three independent federal watchdogs created by the Conservative government operate largely behind the closed doors of their own offices and, after one was exposed this fall for having done little in three years, critics are asking questions about the effectiveness of the other two.

The case of Integrity Commissioner Christiane Ouimet, who investigated just seven of the 228 complaints from public-service whistleblowers she received during her tenure, left many in Parliament questioning how the problems in that office had gone unnoticed.

 

FAIR offers assistance to committees probing Integrity Commissioner's office

Topics: FAIR, Integrity Commissioner, OPSIC

December 13, 2010

Today FAIR sent the following offer of assistance to members of the two House committees that share the responsibility for follow-up after the Auditor General's scathing report on the conduct of the former Public Sector Integrity Commissioner, Mme. Christiane Ouimet.

 

Integrity commissioner's actions 'unacceptable': Fraser

Topics: Government ethics, Integrity Commissioner, OPSIC, Reprisals

December 9, 2010

Former integrity commissioner Christiane Ouimet behaved unacceptably for a public servant and allegations of wrongdoing against her are justified, an audit by Auditor General Sheila Fraser found.

"In our view, [Ouimet's] behaviour and actions do not pass the test of public scrutiny and are inappropriate and unacceptable for a public servant — most notably for the agent of Parliament specifically charged with the responsibility of upholding integrity in the public sector and of protecting public servants from reprisal," Fraser wrote in her report released Thursday.

 

Power and Politics: Auditor General's report on Integrity Commissioner

Topics: Integrity Commissioner, OPSIC

December 9, 2010

Host of Power and Politics, Evan Solomon interviews Auditor General Sheila Fraser regarding her report, issued today, on the conduct of the recently-retired Public Sector Integrity Commissioner.

Evan Solomon observed that this was one of the most damning reports to be issued by the Auditor General, and that it makes this office seem "a joke".

 

Whistleblower watchdog attacked her own staff, auditor-general finds

Topics: Integrity Commissioner, OPSIC, Reprisals

Gloria Galloway – December 9, 2010

Christiane Ouimet was supposed to shield federal whistleblowers from reprisals and expose government employers who were operating outside the lines.

But Auditor-General Sheila Fraser says Ms. Ouimet, Canada's first public-sector integrity commissioner, instead engaged in the very activities she was hired to prevent, berating and marginalizing her staff while seeking vengeance against those she suspected of reporting her misdeeds.

 

Wanted: whistleblowers for doctors' overbilling

Topics: Corruption, Health care

Charlie Fidelman – December 4, 2010

Are you your doctor's keeper? Will you kiss-and-tell? In asking people to rat out their doctors on unethical fees and illegal bribes for services, the College of Physicians and the Quebec health insurance board are putting the onus on patients to uphold the profession's code of ethics, critics say.

And whistle-blowers beware. Snitches face risks, including losing their doctors, patients say.

 

The nurses were asking, 'Where did you put the cash?'

Topics: Corruption, Health care

Charlie Fidelman – December 2, 2010

When Charlotte Lintzel was desperate to be seen by a surgeon at the Montreal Neurological Institute, she casually mentioned some of his preferred clients' names to his secretary.

Instead of waiting up to a year for an appointment, the surgeon himself called her at home the next day. He whispered into the phone: "Come to my private office tomorrow at 3 p.m."

 

A slow human tragedy in making

Topics: Nortel

Jeremy Bell – December 14, 2010

In late November, I went to a Senate Committee to provide testimony on Bill S-216: Protection of Beneficiaries of Long Term Disability Plans Act. The Bill provides for a small increase in creditor status for disabled employees if their company becomes bankrupt. I was disappointed to hear that Bill S-216 was defeated in the Senate.

It was a private member's bill introduced in the Senate by Liberal Senator Art Eggleton. Perhaps simple politics required the government to defeat it.

 

Have you ever worked with a psychopath?

Topics: Psychopaths

Have you ever worked with someone who was truly ruthless, egotistical, dishonest and manipulative? You may have encountered a psychopath.

Researchers have developed diagnostic criteria for this now-recognized clinical condition, and have discovered that about 20% of prison inmates meet the criteria. The incidence within the general population is about 1%.

 

Yes We Have No Bananas – How Nortel Disabled Employees Were Stiffed

Topics: Nortel

Don Burns – December 21, 2010

In the Dec. 14th issue of the Echo there was an excellent letter by Jeremy Bell. However, certain other information needs explaining.

1. The 350 disabled employees and all other employees had made contributions to an employee insurance and long term disability plan. These contributions were never put into any insurance plan but were added to Nortel's general income.

 

Majority of Canadians think corruption on rise

Topics: Corruption, Transparency International

Peter O'Neil – December 9, 2010

Canadians, living in one of the world's least corrupt countries, have a harsher view of presumed government inaction on corruption than citizens of graft-plagued countries such as Afghanistan, according to the results of a Transparency International survey released Thursday.

The Berlin-based watchdog, which reported an overall rise in public concerns globally over corruption during the economic crisis, cited Canada as being among a small group of countries where the public view is far more critical than the experts.

 

BBC Poll - Corruption is World's Most Talked About Problem

Topics: Corruption

11 December 2010

Corruption is the world's most frequently discussed global problem, according to a new BBC poll for the BBC World Service, surveying more than 13,000 people across 26 countries.

The findings show that more than one in five (21%) of those polled said they had discussed corruption and greed with friends and family over the past month, making it the most talked about global problem, ahead of climate change (20%), extreme poverty and hunger (18%), unemployment (16%), and the rising cost of food and energy (15%).

 

Obama To Nominate A Defender For Whistle-Blowers

Topics: USA

Ari Shapiro – December 15, 2010

A federal office that ran aground under the Bush administration is about to get a new leader. The White House plans to nominate Carolyn Lerner to run the Office of Special Counsel, which represents federal whistle-blowers and other victims of discrimination within the government.

Whistle-blower groups applaud the nomination and call it long overdue. "She's a great choice," says Debbie Katz, a private lawyer who represents government whistle-blowers. "She's going to have her work cut out for her."

 

Charest to set up anti-corruption agency but still resists public inquiry

Topics: Corruption, Government ethics, Organized crime

Rhéal Séguin – November 30, 2010

QUEBEC—Premier Jean Charest has finally acknowledged what his critics have been saying for more than a year – that Quebec is a province mired in corruption and it needs to be fixed. But the Premier refused to budge on growing calls for a public inquiry, instead promising a permanent anti-corruption agency modelled on New York City's Department of Investigation, set up about 140 years ago after the corrupt William (Boss) Tweed and his cronies skimmed millions from the city coffers

 

WikiLeaks' next target is big business, Assange says

Topics: Wikileaks

Andy Greenbergs – December 1, 2010

In a rare interview, Assange tells Forbes that the release of Pentagon and State Department documents are just the beginning. His next target: big business.

Early next year, Julian Assange says, a major American bank will suddenly find itself turned inside out. Tens of thousands of its internal documents will be exposed on Wikileaks.org with no polite requests for executives' response or other forewarnings.

 

Mexican gunmen abduct sole policewoman, the last cop in town

Topics: Mexico, Organized crime

December 28, 2010

GUNMEN kidnapped a 28-year-old woman who was the sole police officer in the town of Guadalupe, close to the violent northern border city of Ciudad Juarez, state officials said.

Some ten unidentified gunmen on Thursday set Erika Gandara's home ablaze and torched two cars parked outside before abducting her, witnesses told the state of Chihuahua prosecutor's office.

 

Tributes to aviation safety advocate Kirsten Stevens

Topics: Aviation safety, Kirsten Stevens

Since we announced that aviation safety advocate Kirsten Stevens was stepping down for health reasons, many people wrote tributes reflecting on Kirsten's contribution and wishing her well. The following are excerpts from just a few of these.

 

The growing abyss that is world corruption

Topics: Corruption

Brian Stewart – December 22, 2010

There's one problem area in the world today that must be stated as bluntly as possible and faced as honestly as we can — that's the collapse of trust in governments around the globe because of an almost unprecedented rise in corruption.

Every year, according to those who track these things, the world falls further into widespread corruption to the point where "at no time has there been less trust in elected representatives," the International Anti-Corruption Conference declared last month.

 

Corporate Whistleblower Protections Included in USA Food Safety Legislation

Topics: Food safety, USA

Protections Cover Workers in Industries Regulated by FDA; GAP Calls for Similar Rights for Federal Workers to be Passed.

GAP Press Release – December 21, 2010

Washington, D.C. – Today, the Government Accountability Project (GAP) is praising Congress for passing the most comprehensive whistleblower protections for food industry workers in history.

A provision in the Food Safety Modernization Act, passed today by the House and expected to be signed by President Obama, provides sweeping protections for corporate employees who report any food violations enforced by the FDA.

 

US to Canada: your meat inspection sorta sucks, only send us the good stuff

Topics: CFIA, Food safety, Listeriosis

Doug Powell – December 21, 2010

The dean of Canadian food and farm reporting, Jim Romahn, has written a powerful piece about the continuing failures in Canadian meat inspection – failures that had to be pointed out by Americans.

More than a year after 21 people died after eating Maple Leaf Foods Inc. products contaminated with Listeria monocytoges, the Canadian Food Inspection Agency was failing to enforce its own standards and there was sloppy follow-up when hazardous conditions were identified.

 

Kandahar mayor on the money about corruption

Topics: Afghanistan, Corruption

Scott Taylor – December 20, 2010

Last week the mayor of Kandahar, Ghulam Hayder Hamidi, blamed Canadians for adding to the corruption in his city. Noting that Western political leaders have repeatedly warned the Karzai government to clean up its act or face a curtailment of foreign funding, Hamidi stated to Canadian Press reporter Murray Brewster: "Who is doing the corruption? You are doing the corruption."

The exasperated mayor went on to cite instances of Canadian civilian officials wasting money and employing dubious Afghan contractors who have repeatedly swindled them.

 

Vancouver IMET: Seven-year chronology of policing disaster

Topics: RCMP, White-collar crime

David Baines – December 15, 2010

For the RCMP Integrated Market Enforcement Team in Vancouver, December is the cruelest month of all.

Almost every year since the Vancouver IMET made its debut in December 2003, I have been providing annual progress reports. They have made for grim reading. Here are some excerpts:

 

Ottawa rejects key Air India inquiry recommendations

Topics: Aviation safety

Tonda MacCharles – December 7, 2010

OTTAWA—In his Calgary law office, Justice John Major tried but failed to make sense of a one-page press release outlining the federal response to his exhaustive Air India report.

"I can't make much out of it," he said frankly in an interview with the Star.The former Supreme Court of Canada judge expressed disappointed bafflement at the announcement the federal Conservative government rejected several key recommendations of his three-year Air India inquiry.

 

Heads roll as Ontario Parks attempts cleanup of Maid of the Mist mess

Topics: Bob Gale, Niagara Parks Commission

Frank Parlato – December 7, 2010

Chalk up a victory for justice and the Niagara Falls Reporter -- whose articles on Ontario's Niagara Parks Commission (NPC) and their secret arrangements with James Glynn, longtime owner of the Maid of the Mist -- led to more than the unraveling of his lease.

Last week, four NPC commissioners, including staunch Glynn ally Archie Katzman, were fired by the Ontario Ministry of Tourism. Katzman sat on the board for 40 years. The others were Fred Louws, Italia Gilberti and Ed Werner.

 

From top to bottom, how corruption infects Russia

Topics: Corruption, Russia

Shaun Walker – December 3, 2010

Everywhere you look in Russia, there are stories of corruption, whether it's a traffic policeman shaking down a motorist for a few pounds, or a businessman complaining that top-ranking government officials demanded millions of pounds in kickbacks or bribes.

So the allegations contained in WikiLeaks' US diplomatic cables originating in Moscow are not that surprising to anyone who knows the country well.

 

Australian whistleblowing pilot gets his job back

Topics: Australia, Aviation safety, International

December 21, 2010

Jetstar has reinstated a pilot who was sacked last month after raising concerns about the airline's safety. Joe Eakins, 31, criticised Jetstar's cost-cutting measures - including the hiring of overseas cabin staff - saying they were jeopardising the safety of the airline.

Mr Eakins also raised concerns that a new system of promoting pilots could affect safety.

 

USA: "Strongest team in history to protect whistleblower rights"

Topics: USA

December 15, 2010

GAP's Statement on Selection of Carolyn Lerner as Special Counsel

It is being reported by NPR that Carolyn Lerner has been nominated by President Obama to head the Office of Special Counsel, the federal office charged with investigating whistleblower complaints. A nomination for this crucial position has been needed for some time. GAP released the following statement regarding this development:

"With this choice, the White House completes selection of the strongest team of presidential appointees in history to protect whistleblower rights. Every appointee at the Department of Labor Administrative Review Board for corporate employees, Merit Systems Protection Board for government workers, and now the Special Counsel has a life long record of commitment to transparency and expertise in employment law. President Obama is doing his share to fight fraud, waste and abuse.

 

Afghan heroin glut hits home in Canada

Topics: Afghanistan, Corruption, Drug trafficking, Organized crime

Alex Roslin and Bilbo Poynter – December 11, 2010

Treatment centres are struggling to cope with the surge of addicts hooked on the heroin that is pouring into Canada from war-torn Afghanistan.

It's just before 1 p.m. on a cool, sunny Monday afternoon in late November. On a quiet residential street in Montreal's east end, half a dozen heroin addicts are waiting by office phones and cellphones in the Méta d'Âme drop-in centre and residence for opiate users and recovering addicts.

 

Russia's 'one-man Wikileaks' uncovers massive gas company fraud

Topics: Corruption, Oil industry, Russia, Videos

December 3, 2010

In Russia, the findings of a young whistleblower lawyer concerning the rampant corruption of major state-affiliated companies have made much bigger waves than the recent tsunami of Wikileaks revelations.

34-year-old Moscow lawyer Alexey Navalny could be nicknamed the "one-man Wikileaks". His website is dedicated to uncovering and publishing incidents of high-level corporate corruption, with revelations concerning Russian natural gas monopoly Gazprom, leading Russian oil company Rosneft and Russian bank VTP, among others.

 

Three Fifa World Cup officials took bribes: BBC TV

Topics: Corruption, Sport

29 November 2010

Three senior Fifa officials who will vote on the 2018 and 2022 World Cup bids took bribes in the 1990s, according to the BBC's Panorama.  Nicolas Leoz, Issa Hayatou and Ricardo Teixeira took the money from a sport marketing firm awarded lucrative World Cup rights, the programme alleges.

The alleged bribes are included in a confidential document listing 175 payments totalling about $100m (£64m).

 

Pharmacy Settles Whistleblower Case Involving Drug-Recycling Charges

Topics: Health care, Nursing home abuse, USA

Sue Reisinger – December 6, 2010

Ever wonder what happens to all those unused drugs in nursing homes? Well, they are supposed to be legally disposed of, but at least one company found itself in trouble for allegedly trying to resell them.

On Thursday Woodhaven Pharmacy Services, doing business as Remedi SeniorCare, Inc., in Baltimore, agreed to pay nearly $1.3 million to resolve civil allegations that it illegally redistributed the adulterated drugs to long-term care and assisted living facilities.

 

Jay Rosen on Wikileaks: "The watchdog press died; we have this instead."

Topics: Freedom of the press, Wikileaks

December 2, 2010

Jay Rosen, professor of journalism at New York University, thinks aloud about WikiLeaks. He has some interesting things to say about WikiLeaks as a 'stateless news organisation'.

Transcript

Hi, it's Jay Rosen and welcome to my fourth Late Night With Press Think video. Tonight, I'm going to try to explain how I think about Wikileaks, which is certainly in the news lately.

 

The dismantling of Canadian democracy promotion

Topics: Corruption, Government ethics

Nicholas Galletti and Marc Lemieux – December 29, 2010

The election-related violence in Haiti that made headlines recently was, sadly, all too predictable. The record amount of money pledged to Haiti following a devastating earthquake was not enough to get the country back on its feet. The absence of a sustainable democracy is the root of the problem in Haiti – not poor construction or lack of funds. Everyone knows this.

But donor countries, including Canada, ignored this reality despite decades of experience. The 2006 presidential election in Haiti was marred by the same politicized electoral commission and lack of transparency. The crucial institution-building that was necessary to avoid a repeat was never completed. Food aid, reconstruction and security are doomed to failure under the weight of corruption, impunity and weak institutions.

 

Investor speaks out on mine scam

Topics: Financial industry, White-collar crime

Elizabeth Nolan - December 29, 2010

A local stock trader and financial expert who lost thousands in the Southwestern gold mine scam has called the case one of Canada's most serious white collar crimes.

Salt Spring resident Ron Martin characterizes himself as being more savvy than the average investor. As the vice president of Ontario's public services union for many years, he monitored one of the province's largest pension plans. He's also traded a lot of stock personally. But like many other perhaps more naive Canadians, Martin was victim to one of the country's largest-ever investor frauds, allegedly perpetrated by fellow islander John Paterson.

 

Our soldiers' lives are price paid to prop up Karzai's hated regime

Topics: Afghanistan, Corruption

Scott Taylor – December 29, 2010

Just one week before Christmas, as shopping malls across North America were blaring carols exhorting us to enjoy peace on Earth and goodwill toward men, the news came that yet another Canadian soldier had been killed in Afghanistan.

Two days shy of his 25th birthday, Cpl. Steve Martin became the 154th Canadian Forces fatality since we first deployed troops into that war-torn country in February 2002. Added to that butcher's bill are the approximately 1,500 Canadian soldiers who have suffered some form of physical wound or injury while deployed to Afghanistan, with an estimated 850 designated as Very Severely Injured who will never fully recover.

 

Public servants complain most to bosses

Topics: Canada Post, Integrity Commissioner, OPSIC

Kathryn May – December 27, 2010

Canada's public servants took more cases of suspected wrongdoing to senior officials in their own departments last year than they reported to the office of disgraced Public Sector Integrity Commissioner Christiane Ouimet.

A recent Treasury Board report showed public servants revealed 248 cases of possible wrongdoing to the senior officials in their departments, rather than going to Ouimet, the government's first integrity watchdog.

 

Ouimet's office had problems early on

Topics: Integrity Commissioner, OPSIC

Re: "'Whistleblower legislation words not supported by deeds,'" (The Hill Times, Dec. 13, p. 1).

Canadians need to understand the connection between the auditor general's damning report on the now-retired public sector integrity commissioner, Christiane Ouimet, the near-death state of the access to information system, and the kind of embarrassing and damaging leaks like the ones that come from WikiLeaks and other non-governmental organizations that facilitate whistleblowing.

Research has shown that whistleblowers tend to be high performers who are strongly dedicated to their jobs. When people like this see wrongdoing or mismanagement, they do their best to address it. Naturally, most would prefer to do it through official channels. What so few understand, however, is that official mechanisms are usually designed by management, which has an interest in preventing scandals from surfacing.

 

Cloud over Integrity Office

Topics: Integrity Commissioner, OPSIC

Hill Time Editorial – December 20, 2010

Treasury Board President Stockwell Day named a new interim Public Sector Integrity Commissioner of Canada Mario Dion last week after Auditor General Sheila Fraser's recent audit found Canada's former public sector integrity commissioner Christiane Ouimet spent the last three years doing very little with her $6.5-million annual budget and very little in response to the hundreds of disclosures of wrongdoing from whistleblowers in the federal public service.

Ms. Ouimet retired in October before the AG's audit was released on Dec. 9. But Ms. Ouimet has left a mess behind and must answer some serious questions about her leadership. So should the government.

 

'What do you do when your integrity commissioner has no integrity?'

Topics: Integrity Commissioner, OPSIC

House Public Accounts Committee to call former disgraced public sector integrity commissioner Christiane Ouimet to explain herself.

Jessica Bruno – December 20, 2010

While Parliament is poised to probe former disgraced public sector integrity commissioner Christiane Ouimet, who ran a $6.5-million annual budget until she retired in October, did very little in response to the hundreds of disclosures of wrongdoing from whistleblowers in the last three years, and "failed to properly perform her mandate," Canada's Parliamentary Budget Officer Kevin Page, who has produced influential and hard-hitting reports over the last two years in an effort to bring "truth to budgeting" to Parliament, has had to fight to get his $2.8-million budget and is still battling for real independence.

"When you look at the integrity commissioner's budget is, and the work that she did or didn't do, it's really quite a stark contrast," NDP MP Paul Dewar (Ottawa Centre, Ont.) told The Hill Times. "So you have somebody who didn't manage to do what was mandated of her, on the one hand, given a lot more resources, and yet someone who most people would argue was going above the challenge that was given to him, isn't given enough money to do his job."

 

RCMP join SISO fraud probe

Topics: SISO

Denise Davy – December 23, 2010

RCMP and Hamilton police are joining forces to investigate SISO for fraud against the government. The Hamilton police major fraud unit has been conducting an investigation into Settlement and Integration Services Organization, a 17-year-old agency that provides services for refugees and immigrants.

Hamilton/Niagara regional RCMP spokesperson Sergeant Marc LaPorte told The Spectator Hamilton police asked the RCMP's commercial crime division to get involved because of the type of fraud that's being investigated.

 

Feds to release more secret intelligence files on Tommy Douglas

Topics: Access to information

Joan Bryden – December 19, 2010

OTTAWA - The federal government has relented on its adamant refusal to release decades-old intelligence on socialist icon Tommy Douglas. It's now promising to review the file and release additional material.

The promise follows a closed-door hearing during which a Federal Court judge expressed concern about the continued secrecy surrounding the file compiled by the RCMP on a figure of such historic significance.

 

Quebec companies charged with bid-rigging

Topics: Corruption

Andrew McIntosh – December 21, 2010

MONTREAL - Eight Quebec companies and five employees were charged Tuesday with bid-rigging amid allegations that they colluded on $8 million worth of contracts to install heating and air-conditioning systems in five new Montreal condominium highrises.

The Competition Bureau laid 27 criminal charges after a major five-year investigation that may fuel renewed calls for a public inquiry into the seemingly endless corruption of Quebec's infamous construction sector.

 

The rise and fall of SISO

Topics: SISO

Denise Davy – December 20, 2010

The elevator doors open in the main lobby of the downtown courthouse. A small crowd that has been waiting patiently for Morteza Jafarpour erupts into cheers when they spot him.

The crowd rushes forward to embrace him. It's a hero's welcome, although Jafarpour looks anything but. He is pale and worn and the oversized jail-issued deck shoes he's wearing force him to shuffle.

 

Public integrity office founder fears for its future

Topics: Integrity Commissioner, OPSIC

PCO advised against hiring bureaucrat.

Kathryn May – December 19, 2010

The man who built Canada's first integrity office says he warned the Privy Council Office against appointing a senior bureaucrat as commissioner because most don't have the courage and the independence for the job.

Edward Keyserlingk, a leading expert on bioethics who laid the groundwork for the Public Servants Disclosure Protection Act, said he advised officials at the PCO to recruit candidates from outside government for the integrity commissioner job.

 

Is Quebec the most corrupt province?

Topics: Corruption, Transparency International

Jean-Marc Léger – December 18, 2010

When asked about their perceptions of corruption in Quebec, 72% of Quebecers say they believe that politicians are corrupt. This places Quebec 1st in Canada and 22nd in the world according to the Global Corruption Perception Index. This is one of the findings of a survey covering 86 countries, conducted by Leger Marketing and its international network WIN for Transparency International.

Worse, 56% believe that corruption has increased over the past three years and 13% say they would not even report cases of corruption that they witness.

 

Ouimet: Likely the worst appointment

Topics: Government transparency, Integrity Commissioner

Stephen Maher – December 18, 2010

In the 2006 election campaign, Stephen Harper promised to "establish a Public Appointments Commission to set merit-based requirements for appointments to government boards, commissions and agencies, to ensure that competitions for posts are widely publicized and fairly conducted."

This was an excellent idea, a key plank in the Tories' accountability platform, a series of policy proposals designed to clean up Ottawa after the sponsorship scandal.

 

Lots of advice, few investigations: Ex-integrity czar spent $1.5m on consultants

Topics: Integrity Commissioner, OPSIC

Stephen Maher – December 18, 2010

OTTAWA — In three years, the office of the public sector integrity commissioner didn't manage to find a single example of wrongdoing by a public servant, but it did manage to spend $1.5 million on advice from contractors, a blizzard of bureaucratic processes that do not appear to have helped the organization fulfil its mandate.

Much of the money went for communication advice and management consulting, much of it describing processes that sound impenetrable to anyone who hasn't spend their career in the public service.



About FAIR

Federal Accountability Initiative for Reform (FAIR) promotes integrity and accountability within government by empowering employees to speak out without fear of reprisal when they encounter wrongdoing. Our aim is to support legislation and management practices that will provide effective protection for whistleblowers and hence occupational free speech in the workplace. FAIR is a registered Canadian charity.

FAIR is a volunteer-run charity with slender resources. If you feel that our work is worth supporting, please consider making a donation.

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Hollecrest & Associates Inc   -"Turnaround Consultants"  .

Sunridge Lodge  "Back to Eden" quality 24/7 care
261 Oakhill Drive, Brantford  backtoeden.ontario@gmail.com
"Building elder peer communities that are cozy,caring and comfortable" -
 
Brant Positive Action Group -a positive community affirmative action group that promotes goodwill and timely cost effective creative solutions to enhance the competitive well being of Brant Brantford and Six Nations  

Tuesday, January 04, 2011

People are mighty - focus the power of the people for the good in 2011

People Power is without question one of the most powerful means to accomplish any cause—either for good or evil. As Richard Halverson pointed out "People Power" is a mighty force.

People have the power to close down any operation—or prosper it! For example, pornography prevails because enough people want it, buy it, watch it, listen to it, and read it. It is extremely profitable because countless people prosper it!

People Power has also prospered the tobacco industry, the liquor industry, the movie industry, the gambling industry, the abortion industry and endless numbers of other products and causes—some of great value, some of little or no value whatsoever, and some that are destructive of individuals, families, and society.

--

Hollecrest & Associates Inc   -"Turnaround Consultants"  .

Sunridge Lodge  "Back to Eden" quality 24/7 care
261 Oakhill Drive, Brantford  backtoeden.ontario@gmail.com
"Building elder peer communities that are cozy,caring and comfortable" -
 
Brant Positive Action Group -a positive community affirmative action group that promotes goodwill and timely cost effective creative solutions to enhance the competitive well being of Brant Brantford and Six Nations