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 world19News #159
Jan. 18, 2005

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Best wishes for 2005 to all our subscribers, new and old.

A somewhat more global newsletter than usual:
In this issue:
1. Wal-Mart comes to the neighbourhood
2. Main Streets retail: public meeting Jan. 19
3. Tsunami and other disasters
4. Ukrainian elections:
   a) Welcome back to world19 subscribers
   b) US and Ukrainian election
5. BWV Visioning Study
6. world19 Mailbag: 
   - Bring back the kolbassa
  - door-to-door solicitation
  - Swansea bus

1. "WELCOME" TO WAL-MART
The world's largest private corporation (by revenue - $256 billion in 2004) is about to open its doors in this neighbourhood.

Those who attended the November Bloor West Village Residents Association meeting will recall a number of speakers expressing concerns: not only fear of its impact on neighbouring retailers, but also over the fact that the store could be approved with virtually no public knowledge. (Originally the site was to be a branch of the now-defunct Building Box chain).

We've posted a Wal-Mart page on our website (www.world19.com) with a few items of interest items. A few excerpts:

Last week, Wal-Mart launched a "fight-back" campaign against its many detractors. See the Globe & Mail Report on Business story: http://makeashorterlink.com/?A16A22E3A. The story began by succinctly describing how Wal-Mart can prosper despite the fears and distrust it creates. It quotes a woman in Washington DC saying "I hate Wal-Mart more than anything in the world... They're just too big". At the time she was leaving a Wal-Mart store, and admitted she is a regular customer -- and a shareholder. "I come because the prices are so good".

What is the "cost" of those low prices? We report on some commentators' opinions about Wal-Mart's role in damaging American manufacturing and other suppliers, its labour practices, and its larger cost to society. Among the news items:

  • PBS's Frontline documentary: "Is Wal-Mart good for America?" http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/pages/frontline/shows/walmart/. "US manufacturers ... better move their American plants to China and Asian if they want to survive".
  • Fast Company: "The Wal-Mart You Don't Know". www.fastcompany.com/magazine/77/walmart.html. "Are we shopping our way straight to the unemployment line?"
  • New York Review of Books (Dec. 12, 2004). http://www.nybooks.com/articles/17647
    A review of 6 books and papers documenting in great detail many of the accusations that Wal-Mart is trying to counter. The article suggests that working conditions are so harsh that "Some 50 percent of Wal-Mart workers employed at the beginning of 2003 had left the company by the end of the year. It also cites a Congressional report claiming that Wal-Mart's wages and benefits are so low that nationwide, American taxpayers foot a $2.5 billion welfare bill to help support the company's 1.2 million US employees".
  • "Wal-Mart Sovereignty": the New York Times Magazine describes the corporation's attempt to ask the citizens of Inglewood, California "to hand it the reins of government". http://makeashorterlink.com/?G4E71224A

Welcome to the world of Wal-Mart! It becomes understandable that members of the Walton family who own the company occupy 5 of the positions in Forbes magazine's list of the 10 richest people in the world.

 

2. "Have you been shopping in the neighbourhood lately?"
PUBLIC MEETING - Wed. Jan 19

More retail struggles...

(Some readers may have seen this announcement in the current Villager, but the paper neglected to print the location or contact information!)

The Dundas West Residents Association (http://www.dwra.ca) is sponsoring this meeting, and provided the following announcement.

"Main street businesses are the heartbeat of Toronto's neighbourhoods. Come and hear your local businesses talk about the challenges they face and the strategies they use to succeed."
Featuring retailers, residents, and Ron Nash of the City's Economic Development department.
Wed. Jan 19, 7-9:00 pm
Indian Rd. Crescent School 285 Indian Rd. Crescent at Humberside Ave.
Teachers Lounge. For more info: 416 766-5509, info at dwra.ca." [replace with "@"]

 

3. TSUNAMI AND OTHER DISASTERS
Our newsletter comes out sometime after the immediate outpouring of attention and concern for the tsunami disaster. Major media and other information sources have done an excellent job of providing information on the disaster, and showing ways and methods that people can help in this huge disaster. We can offer little that other sources haven't done sooner and better. .

However, we share the concerns of many about the potential negative impact to other organizations and issues -- we urge people not to forget them, or to divert support from other causes.

The UN's humanitarian chief, Jan Egeland has reminded the world that 30,000 people around the world die each day of starvation, disease and neglect. In the first 10 days following the tsunami disaster, about 300,000 people died in other humanitarian emergencies -- many of preventable causes.

He welcomed the outpouring of support -- as long as it was in addition to what countries had been planning for give for other emergencies.

What may be the greatest disaster in human history has received comparatively little attention for example:

On Jan 18, special UN AIDS envoy Stephen Lewis held a press briefing on a recent trip to Malawi and Tanzania. The full text is available at: http://allafrica.com/stories/200501180893.html. He emphasized that this is a treatable disaster; with enough commitment, the world can help make a huge difference. :

He pointed out that within 3 weeks, the governments of the (primarily western) world have raised $5.5 - $6 billion -- almost exactly the same they have raised for the Global Fund to combat HIV/AIDS

Lewis pointed out that last year "510,000 children under the age of 15 died worldwide of AIDS; 640,000 were newly-infected; two million, two hundred thousand were living with the virus, at least two-thirds in Africa", and overall 6 million people (over 4 million in Africa) are dying of AIDS.

"I don't begrudge a penny to South-East Asia. But what does it say about the world that we can tolerate the slow and unnecessary death of millions, whose lives would be rescued with treatment?"

"The Tsunami must be seen to be the turning-point. The publics of the world have shown their desperate concern for the human condition: how long will it take for Governments to do the same?"

Lewis cites yesterday's UN report urging world governments to meet their long-forgotten aid commitments to attach world poverty. "The targets for Official Development Assistance ... are entirely attainable. Indeed, the industrial world has been toying with the '.7% of GNP' figure for thirty-six years, overlapping the centuries with hypocritical disdain.

"For whatever inexplicable reason, the western countries, so magnificently responsive to South-East Asia, bridle in the most unseemly way when it comes to Africa. Nowhere has this been more dramatically underscored than on the question of debt. It took but days for the Paris Club to espouse a debt moratorium for all of the countries affected by the Tsunami, but time and time again --- most recently just last fall --- the G8 refuses to cancel African debts".

 

4. UKRAINE ELECTIONS :
Our last issue (#158) also included some notes about the Ukrainian presidential election. Our newsletter was published just as demonstrations began in Bloor West Village in front of the Ukrainian Consulate. We also published an analogy that was sent to us designed to (humorously) explain the situation to Canadians unfamiliar with the background.

We have two follow-up items to that issue:

a) Welcome back!
First, congratulations and welcome back to two of world19's subscribers who were part of the Canadian government's team of election observers in the recent Ukrainian presidential election: Greg Hamara and Peggy Nash.

b) US and Ukrainian election
Second, another subscriber sent us a news article that has received quite a bit of attention around the world. The article, printed on Nov 26 in The Guardian (U.K.), by that paper's Eastern European correspondent was titled "U.S. campaign behind the turmoil in Kiev".

It didn't deny the legitimacy of the determined protestors and activists in Ukraine, but claimed that "the campaign is an American creation... that in four countries [Ukraine, Georgia, Yugoslavia and Belarus] in four years, has been used to try to salvage rigged elections and topple unsavoury regimes".

"The operation -- engineering democracy through the ballot box and civil disobedience -- is now so slick that the methods have matured into a template for winning other people's elections." ... The article describe these campaigns as uniting "behind a single candidate if there is to be any chance of unseating the regime... even if he or she is anti-American." http://www.guardian.co.uk/ukraine/story/0,15569,1360236,00.html

The Nation on Dec. 12 discussed the same issue: http://www.thenation.com/doc.mhtml?i=20041220&s=steele "Ironically, while there has been much made of Russia's interference in the Ukrainian campaign and elections, the Nation claims "the degree of American involvement appears to be more comprehensive than anything emanating from Moscow".

 

5. BWV VISIONING
A public meeting was held on Nov. 29 to review and discuss the project now known as the "Bloor West Village Corridor Urban Design Study". Changes have been made to the documents presented there, and the final document should be ready soon. We will make it available on our website.

 

 

6. MAILBAG
A couple of other comments sent to us by subscribers:

a) bring back the kolbassa
In our last newsletter (#158 see www.newsletters.world19.com), we reported on the banning by the City's Health Department of the display of kolbassa in the Village deli's. One of our readers took it on himself to complain to the Ward 13 Councillor on this and another issue:

Dear Mr. Saundercook,

I realize that, in the big scheme of things, this particular issue is perhaps a small one, but I feel the fact that the delis along BWV can no longer hang kolbassa from their windows is representative of a much larger and disturbing trend in Toronto- one of obsessive political correctness and zealotry.

Who makes these inane decisions? I’ve been eating smoked kolbassa from proper delis since The Beatles were together, with nary a problem. Who are these zealots? Must everything come from a giant food conglomerate, pumped full of chemicals and be stored in a fridge? It’s not at all clear to me that the good folks at the Toronto Board of Health have the full set of batteries installed. Somebody over there needs to get out a bit, loosen up and get a life.

Speaking of getting out, I wanted to thank the city for it’s absolutely no-holds-barred, we-know-what’s-right-for-everybody, “smokers are non-entities” stance on smoking in bars. As someone who does a 5K in just under 30 minutes, plays squash, practices karate and walks just about everywhere, I nonetheless enjoy having the option of having a cigarette with my libation at my favourite pub. But thanks to the city, I’m now saving $150+ a weekend because my wife (a non-smoker) and I very rarely go out in Toronto any longer. Who wants to spend money on dinner and drinks when you have to stand outside to smoke like some errant schoolboy? Instead, we’ve organized our networks of friends (the majority of them non-smokers) and have great dinner parties where we get to act like adults and do what we want to, something the City of Toronto obviously does not feel we’re capable of doing without their enlightened perspectives on what should and shouldn’t be.

If these guiding lights really want to go after smokers and the tobacco companies, outlaw cigarettes- simple as that, stop messing about. Finally, with the rise in obesity within our society (and the attendant burden on the health care system from that particular issue), perhaps we should also be boycotting Miller Beer, Kraft Foods, Post Cereals, Maxwell House, Oreo Cookies, Altoids and Toblerone- just a few of the very unhealthy products produced by one of the largest tobacco companies in the world- Phillip Morris.

<signed>

a) Door-to-door soliciting: A teenaged male came to our door last night at about 10:00 pm and said that he was selling chocolates. He did not have any chocolates visible. He asked whether I would make a donation. I asked to see some ID and he said it would be ready in a few days. I refused to give him anything and he left. I am concerned that this is a tactic to scam money from people in the neighbourhood, or perhaps even mug them when they reach for their wallets. I spoke to someone else on the street and he said that the guy came by his house as well. If you can alert people to the danger, that would be great

b) Runnymede South (Swansea) bus
Last December it was striking to me when one late evening I saw busses riding plain empty on Runnymede Rd South route (I live on Runnymede) while at the same time there were rumours of fare hike. Money can certainly be saved if the bus service ends earlier, such as 11pm, on routes that simply have no passengers after. We could have another service time zone (e.g. 6am-11pm) for routes such as Runnymede South.

In addition, the empty buses tend to rush quickly (yes, above the speed limit when I watched the driver's speedometer).

There are also few statutory holidays in the year when the busses ride from 6am for some reason. Everyone is asleep and so should the busses, cutting undue expenses and street noise.

 

For world19,
John Leeson

world19:
Supporting citizen involvement in our community and its future.
Phone: 416 766-8605
email: world19@world19.com
web:   www.world19.com