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blake 3:17
30th August 2012, 05:44
From today's Toronto Star:
Ontario is falling behind as an equitable society

Were 10th out of 10. Ontario has dropped to last place in Canada in supporting its most vulnerable citizens, according to a new report by the Ontario Common Front, a coalition of community groups, immigrant organizations, unions, First Nations and students.

The statistics in the Falling Behind report, released Wednesday, are not new. What is new is that the study zeroes in on Ontario and compares it to the nine other provinces.

As the richest, most populous province Ontario ought to be a leader. It has a thriving financial sector, a highly educated workforce, the highest concentration of millionaires and the strongest tradition of caring for the poor and disabled.

But today Ontario also has the fastest-growing gap between rich and poor, the lowest funding for social services and programs, the worst record of investing in affordable housing, the fewest hospital beds per capita and the highest university fees. And on income disparity and child poverty, only British Columbia does worse.

We dont do badly on every front. Our minimum wage remains one of the highest and our social assistance rates are higher than most.

But when all of the indicators are taken into account, Ontario long seen as the standard for Canadas just and equitable society is backsliding the fastest.

Part of the reason is that the industrial heartland bore the brunt of the 2008-2009 recession. But an equally important factor, according to the reports author Natalie Mehra, director of the Ontario Health Coalition, is that the province is the most aggressive tax cutter. Starting in the mid 1990s, Ontario led the country in a precipitous race to cut both corporate taxes and income taxes.

As a result, provincial revenues have shrunk by roughly $15 billion a year. The benefits have gone disproportionately to the wealthy who dont rely on provincial social services. The price has been paid chiefly by the poor who have been forced to tighten their belts.

The fact that incomes are becoming so skewed in favour of the wealthy that almost half of the population of an entire generation now finds itself falling behind these are the most important issues of our times, the report says. Yet there has been little debate among mainstream political parties nor in most of the media.

The Ontario Common Front is by no means the first to sound the alarm. The Occupy Movement last fall forced citizens and policy-makers to look at the top-heavy distribution of income in Canada. But by spring, it was superseded by a new round of deficit-cutting. Social activists, academics and a few think-tanks such as the Conference Board have been urging policy-makers to address the widening rich-poor gap for years. But their entreaties were ignored.

Reams of policy recommendations have been made, Mehra says. It is not by necessity, but by choice that our governments are making policies that benefit the few at the expense of the public interest.

Full article: http://www.thestar.com/opinion/editorials/article/1248847--ontario-is-falling-behind-as-an-equitable-society#.UD7Br3cC1BA.

For news and updates see the Ontario Common Front page on FB: https://www.facebook.com/OntarioCommonFront

cynicles
31st August 2012, 00:51
This isn't surprising, but what are we going to do about it? I know people like to complain about Alberta being a rightwing haven but the sub-urban areas of Ontario tend to be worse in my opinion for this type of neoliberal teabaggery.

The Intransigent Faction
1st September 2012, 20:03
This isn't surprising, but what are we going to do about it? I know people like to complain about Alberta being a rightwing haven but the sub-urban areas of Ontario tend to be worse in my opinion for this type of neoliberal teabaggery.

Both places are probably 'right-wing havens'...but it seems to vary more in Ontario as a whole than in Alberta, at least judging from what I know of Alberta. This is the province that gave us Mike Harris and Jim Flaherty, among others...but it also has its pockets of more progressive groups, and correct me if I'm wrong but Alberta seems consistently more socially conservative.


Anyway, as for what really matters...what we're going to do about it (or perhaps more accurately, how will the political momentum to do it be built)---I'm not sure. What are your suggestions? I've been hoping that our so-called "education Premier"'s recent move against teachers would be a start of something by leaving yet another Premier vulnerable on the edcation issue in the context of what's going on next door in Quebec, but it seems that will either pass unhindered or be left to the courts. It's clear that something needs to be done, but how do we break the usual regulated cycle of struggles and hegemony in these right-wing havens? If there's a bright spot to the wave of austerity coming, the breaking of that cycle will hopefully be it (I'm not suggesting that we roll over and let things get bad just so people get fired up, but I don't see stopping these cutbacks as likely at this point).