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DSU Elections 2012

DSU elections on CKDU 88.1 FM

The CKDU Yeti can't wait to interview all the DSU candidates and the societies running a referendum question!

CKDU will be doing dedicated coverage of the 2012 Dalhousie Student Union Elections! We’ll be hosting an in-depth 2 hour feature on Monday, February 13th at 1:30pm, during the Presidential Debate, for those who can’t make it in person. We’ll also be airing portions of the two Studley debates, and interviews with all the societies running referendum questions.

This blog will be your one stop location for all of our audio content produced on the elections, so keep checking back here for updated audio, pictures, and written info.

In the meantime, mark your calendars, and check out these events on campus:

All candidates Studley Debate
Wednesday, February 8 at noon in the SUB

All candidates Sexton Debate
Thursday, February 9 at noon in the A Building

Kandidate Karaoke
Thursday, February 9 at the Grad House

Ye Grande Presidential Debate
Monday, February 13, 1:30 in the Grawood

Voting takes place February 14th to 16th at polling stations around campus and at dsuelections.ca. Check their website for elections info. And listen to CKDU’s coverage at news.ckdu.ca.

Tough-On-Crime agenda costly, misinformed: researcher

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Book: Fearmonger, by Paula Mallea

Fearmonger, by Paula Mallea, Lorimer Press, 2011.


It is expected this week the Federal Conservatives will fullfill their election platform promise of pushing Bill C-10, the Omnibus Crime Bill, through Parliament. In her Donner-award nominated new book, author, researcher, and former criminal law counsel Paula Mallea uncovers the steep costs of Stephen Harper’s Crime Laws, pointing out that the Conservatives have been operating in a fact-free zone, turning a deaf ear to provinces, lawyers, and numerous experts and researchers. The book, Fearmonger, was published by Lorimer in 2011. CKDU News spoke with author Paula Mallea to discuss the far-reaching, negative effects of Bill C-10, and the Stephen Harper Tough-On-Crime agenda.
Download
Audio: 6 minutes, 30 seconds
Format: MP3 128 kbps stereo
License: Creative Commons, Non-Commercial, Non-Derivative, Attribution.


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#G20REPORT: podcast 5, June 25

Podcast 5: Canada can’t Hide Genocide

Welcome to the fifth installation of the G20 Report for Friday, June 25th 2010. The G20 Report is your daily rundown of news about communities’ resistance to the G8 and G20 capitalist agendas, from the streets of Toronto to you, produced by the G20 Alternative Media Centre.

Thursday marked the 4th day of themed resistance to abolish the G8 and G20. The theme was Indigenous Sovereignty and featured a rally and march in downtown Toronto. 2,000 indigenous people and allies gathered at Queen’s Park — Ontario’s Provincial Legislature – to expose Canada’s continued legacy of colonization, assimilation, and genocide. The event was titled: Canada Can’t Hide Genocide: An Indigenous Day of Action, and was co-coordinated by Defenders of the Land, a network of indigenous communities united in defense of our lands, indigenous rights, and mother earth.

Following the march, 100 people gathered at the Urban Native Centre, to further discuss strengthening the ties between aboriginal nations in the fight for indigenous rights and sovereignty. Eight people from across Turtle Island addressed the gathering, mainly focusing on the need to build on the growing unity and grassroots movements they said were demonstrated at the march.

Later in the evening, around 200 people gathered for a night of solidarity and resistance at Steelworkers’ Hall. The forum was titled Confront the Invasion: Down with the G8 and G20, and featured music, spoken word poetry, videos, as well as a panel discussion with native youth from across Turtle Island.

This edition of G20 Report was produced by Tim McSorley and Candace Mooers, with special thanks to John Bonnar and all members of the G20 Alternative Media Centre. The G20 Alternative Media Centre is a temporary autonomous hub for independent media-makers to cover resistance to the G8 and G20 in Toronto. For more G20-related news, visit 2010.mediacoop.ca

June 24: #G20REPORT, podcast 4

Podcast 4: G20REPORT, June 24

Welcome to the fourth installation of the G20 report for June 24th 2010. The G20 Report is your daily rundown of news about the resistance to the G8 and G20, straight from the streets of Toronto produced by the Alternative Media Centre.

Wednesday marked the 3rd day of themed resistance to abolish the G8 and G20. The theme was Climate and Environmental justice and featured a toxic tour of Toronto and a people assembly on climate justice. University of Toronto students also held an action outside the Munk conference reflecting concerns of the University of Toronto’s relationship to the G20.

Produced by Omme Salma-Rahemtullah in Toronto.

The #G20REPORT podcast is aired on campus/community radio stations:
CKDU FM, Halifax
CKUT FM, Montreal
CKLN FM, Toronto
CHRY FM, Toronto

The podcast is also available at:
toronto.mediacoop.ca

For up to the minute videos, tweets, photos, reports, and news, visit 2010.mediacoop.ca

June 23: G20 Toronto podcast #3

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Podcast #3: #g20report at the Queer Kiss-In

Welcome to the third installation of the G20 report for Jun 23rd 2010. The G20 Report is your daily rundown of news about the G8 and G20 summits in Toronto and Huntsville straight from the streets of Toronto produced by the Alternative Media Centre.

In today’s report: Queering the G20, building stronger anti-mining coalitions, and a look at actions to come.

Tuesday marked the second day of themed resistance to the G20. It was highlighted by the Queering the G20 Kiss-In, organised by queer activists and allies. Amy Miller reports.

People are coming to Toronto from across Canada to express their outrage and solidarity against the closed door summits and the security lock-down of the city. One of these groups is the Feminist League for Agitation Propaganda. It began in Halifax as a women and trans space for organising against the G8 development ministers on April 26th and as a response to what many saw as an anti-capitalist movement too heavily dominated by men.

Kaley McSwain and Kaley Kennedy are two of the FLAP activists who joined in the Queering the G20 actions. McSwain explains to us why they came to Toronto, and Kennedy the message they brought to the march.

While a completely peaceful demonstration, there were reports of one incident of arrest and police brutality. According to observers, one man was pinned to the ground and beaten by several officers as he was cuffed. He was repeatedly kneed in the back while officers smashed his face against the ground as police formed a bike chain around him, trying to block the view of the beating from media and march participants, before Hauling him into Queen subway station. Organisers reported that the man was held for six hours and initially charged with possession of a weapon. All charges were dropped when the weapon turned out to be a clear plastic water bottle. Police were unavailable to confirm the incident.

Mining activists from Montreal and Toronto also gathered on Tuesday to discuss how to continue to strengthen the movement against extractive industries in Canada and abroad. Recognizing that extractive industries are a key part of the Canadian economy, and that the actions of these companies at home and abroad often feed social conflict and lead to displacement and environmental destruction, they issued a call for a continent wide solidarity against increasing mining activities in Latin America. They will be organizing together towards an international day against open pit mining on July 22 2010.

Many of the participants of that forum will be found on the streets of Toronto today for the latest themed day of action, this time focusing on environmental and climate justice. Cameron Fenton explains how the Toxic Tour of Toronto came about.

The tour will be followed tonight by a People’s Assembly on Climate justice at 7pm. The forum takes place at room SCC115 at the Ryerson Student Campus Centre, 55 Gould St.

The Toronto Community Mobilisation Network will also be holding its last fundraiser of the week. The Go Fly A Kite dance party is taking place at The Boat (158 Augusta avenue). Along with dancing, people will be making kites: Kite flying is an act of resistance in Toronto these days. It has been banned along with other high flying activities like hang gliding, parasailing and launching rockets.

The G20 report is produced by campus community radio and independent journalists at the Alternative Media Centre dedicated to covering the G8 & G20 summits. For daily podcasts visit http://news.ckdu.ca; for late breaking round-the-clock coverage, visit http://2010.mediacoop.ca.

June 22: G20 Toronto podcast #2

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Podcast #2: #g20report at the March for All

Monday, June 21st marked the First day of the week of Resistance to Abolish the G8 and G20 in Toronto. Demonstrators converged downtown in the first of many mobilizations, as G8 and G20 leaders meet in Huntsville and Toronto later this week. Actions have been called by multiple community organizations, ranging from peaceful rallies to confrontational direct action.

Monday’s themed day of resistance focused on migrant justice, an end to war and occupation, income equity and community control over resources. The first street action of the week began at 2pm in Allan Gardens, and marched down Dundas Street and up Yonge street to the Children’s Aid Society of Toronto headquarters. The March, titled ‘All Out in Defense of the Rights of All’, was organized by autonomous ant-poverty groups Kingston Coalition Against Poverty, Sense of Security from Guelph, and Stratford Action for Equality.

The march briefly occupied an ESSO gas station on Dundas avenue. Rushing in to the station, activists prevented business from operating for 10 minutes. Activist Claudia Calabro said, “The ESSO station and shop was occupied for a reason. ESSO is one of the 70 corporations that were bailed out during this crisis that has impoverished communities and ensured the survival of the rich. The G20 has given over a billion dollars in subsidies to oil and gas companies like ESSO just this year – these companies are responsible for massive ecological destruction and must be held accountable.”

This podcast was produced at the Alternative Media Center in Toronto. the AMC is a temporary, autonomous media making space for independent journalists to cover the G8 and G20 summits.

June 21: G20 Toronto Podcast #1

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Podcast #1:People’s Summit, week of action

The first podcast in a five part series, all week long on campus/community radio stations across the country.

Why are people opposing the G8 and G20? What groups are involved? What was the People’s Summit, and why is it important?

In this first of five daily podcasts, we hear from the Toronto Community Mobilization Network, Ontario Coalition Against Poverty, the Canadian Peace Alliance, the People’s Summit, and volunteers.

Length: 10 minutes.
Quality: mp3, 128 kbps.
Filesize: 10 MB.

CKDU presents: G20 in Toronto

The Group of 8 Leaders and the Group of 20 Leaders are meeting in Ontario, from the 25th to the 27th of June, 2010. Organizations of women, people of colour, indigenous peoples, the poor, the working class, queer and trans people and disabled people are organizing a people’s convergence, and calling for a disruption of the summit.

The CKDU News Collective will be reporting from the Alternative Media Centre in Toronto to bring listeners coverage of the G8/G20 summit protests in the streets.

Programmers from CKDU, CKLN, CKUT and other stations will be collaborating to produce daily 10 minute podcasts from June 21 to June 25 to air on campus/community radio stations across the country.

You can also follow our tweeting from the streets in Toronto:

twitter.com/CKDUnews

Tumultuous year in DSU politics, Hobbs still kicking

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Audio: interview with Mark Hobbs.mp3, 30 minutes.

Mark Hobbs recently finished a full year as the Dalhousie Student Union Vice President Internal. He spent some of the year in the spotlight, as he defended himself against a motion for his recall. Some councillors were dissatisfied with his performance, while student societies came to the council meeting to defend his performance.

In an exclusive year-end interview, Hobbs talks frankly about the recall motion, as well as his role in defending student societies behind the scenes, a student petition to end corporate confidentiality contracts, and more.

Recorded live on Operation Wake Up, CKDU 88.1fm campus/community radio, on June 7, 2010.

Budget cuts affect residential school survivors

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Click Here to Listen

-Jane Kirby of CKDU’s Operation Wakeup interviews Maya Rolbin-Ghanie, a member of Missing Justice Montreal, and Tarry Hewitt, of Aboriginal Survivors for Healing on Prince Edward Island, about the cutting of the Aboriginal Healing Foundation in the recent Federal budget. The cuts, which took effect March 31, will impact 134 programs for residential school survivors nationally, including 7 in Atlantic Canada.

Advocates speak out against the cutting of the Aboriginal Healing Foundation

By Jane Kirby

“Residential school survivors and their descendents respond more positively to traditionally-based healing services than conventional methods” says Tarry Hewitt, Project Coordinator at Aboriginal Survivors for Healers on Prince Edward Island.

But it is precisely these services that are at risk with recent federal budget cuts to the Aboriginal Healing Foundation (AHF), which funded over 130 programs for survivors of residential schools across the country.

Coming just one year after the Canadian government’s apology to survivors of the residential school system, these cuts came as a great surprise to many of those who were involved in AHF-funded programs. Funded programs included community and grassroots projects like suicide prevention programs, youth groups, traditional healing services, men’s groups and women’s shelters. Seven AHF-funded programs existed in Atlantic Canada. Many of these services, including Aboriginal Survivors for Healing on Prince Edward Island, may be forced to close their doors as a result of these cuts.

“The residential school system was in operation for decades, and the effects are not going to be addressed in ten or fifteen years”, says Hewitt. The legacy of residential schools includes the splitting of families, physical and sexual abuse and cultural genocide, and the effects of the schools continue to plague indigenous communities. The last residential school in Canada closed in 1996.

Although the AHF funding will be reallocated to survivor’s programs provided by Health Canada, advocates of the AHF insist that Health Canada cannot provide the kind of community-driven and traditional healing services that made the AHF so successful.

Campaigns have been initiated across the country to protest the cuts, including a sit-in by six non-native women in Minister of Indian Affairs Chuck Strahl’s office on March 29. One day later an emergency debate took place in Parliament to discuss the cuts, but so far the funding has not been restored.

Maya Rolbin Ghanie, a member of Missing Justice in Montreal and a participant in the sit in, says the cuts to the AHF are indicative of the Canadian government’s broader attitude to indigenous people

“It is important to draw the links between the Aboriginal Healing Foundation, missing and murdered native women, poverty on native reserves and the countless land struggles that native communities engage in”, says Ghanie “We need to take note of our government’s policies, and hold them accountable”.

Both Rolbin Ghanie and Hewitt encourage concerned community members to take action by contacting MP Chuch Strahl’s office to oppose the cuts.