
Thursday, August 16, 2007
Sunday, August 12, 2007
HOMELESS NATION . ORG

Homelessnation.org is produced through a non-profit Canadian organization, Homeless Street Archive. It was formed in 2002 in Montreal by filmmaker Daniel Cross, who had just finished completing the documentary films "The Street: A Film With The Homeless" and "SPIT: Squeegee Punks In Traffic". Having met hundreds of people from the street community across the country, Daniel searched for a way to present as many people's experience as possible, without the need for the editing process that often left left stories on the cutting room floor. It became clear that the web provided a direction for a more participatory and inclusive approach to media.
With a beta release in 2005, and this official release in April 2006, the Homeless Nation is now a national project, with outreach teams in Montreal, Vancouver and Toronto. These teams work in shelters, day centers, and on the streets, actively engaging the street community to share their stories and participate on the site. Each user creates their own unique web page and email address. Outreach teams also record location-specifc videoblogs with interested members, posting these on the site immediately.
above picture - Daniel CrossSaturday, August 11, 2007
A Hit of Coke and a Dose of Urban Reality
Somewhere in the realm of Plato’s ideal forms, nestled in the “fringe” subsection, there is an economical one-hander with scatological humour and sacrilegious zings on Christianity, plastered with the adoring stars of 1,000 divine critics. If this play existed, its audiences would laugh themselves hoarse. It would make a million, billion dollars.
Then there’s David Trimble. One of the most recognizable ducks in the cozy Calgary pond, the prolific character actor is preparing to mount a production with Ground Zero Theatre that flies in the face of traditional fringe fare. Simply, Urban Reality is a bit of a downer.
As its title suggests, Urban Reality sees the first-time playwright return to some of the city’s darker recesses, the kind seen in Trimble’s award-winning solo fringe run of Eric Bogosian’s Drinking in America in 2006. A two-hander featuring Trimble and Lena M. Davis, Urban Reality begins as a young drug addict named Sandy enters a tattered apartment, ready to buy and shoot cocaine. With her newfound dealer, Jimmy, seeming to play the voice of reason to Sandy’s desperation with offers of cold Kraft dinner and gentle words of advice (in addition to the cocaine), the scene soon twists into a cycle of dependence and abuse whose graphic climax offers some small hope of redemption at the cost of shocking brutality.
“It’s hard and terrifying,” says Trimble of creating and assuming the role of a bottom-feeding exploiter. “(The play) goes to the darkest place you can go, so it’s hard. You have to commit to it. The piece is so visceral, you have to play it for real. But we’ll get around it.”
The play is based on the experiences of Trimble’s wife, a former social worker whose ultimately tragic work with an underage prostitute led to her leaving the profession. Trimble is suitably upfront about the play’s message. In addition to the play’s clear social content, one dollar from every ticket will go to Woods Homes’ EXIT Community Outreach Program that helps at-risk teenagers living on the streets.
It’s engaging theatre of the kind that Trimble prefers himself, even if it doesn’t quite fit the mould of the traditional, escapist fringe show. “For me, in my taste, I like seeing visceral theatre, dark comedy,” he says. “I love satire, seeing past (the play), through it. For me, what keeps me coming back is that I get it, and I like it, and it serves more than just pure escapism, even though there is a place for that.
“Theatre is so visceral,” he adds. “To see it live might compel someone to make a difference, or look at (the disadvantaged) differently.”
For better or worse, though, any artistic decision always comes with commercial costs. Somewhere in the hazy world of ideal forms, the perfect fringe show is still waiting for its box office-bursting revenues, ready to dispense escapism and absurdity to an eager fringe-going public. Here in the physical world, however, there’s another ideal at stake. For Trimble, the play’s commercial viability doesn’t enter into the equation.
“It doesn’t diminish what I honestly believe is the necessity of the piece,” he says. “If you change one person’s perspective, that’s more important than revenue at the door.”
City of Origin: Calgary, Alberta, Canada
Playwright: David Trimble
Director: Lester Fong
Cast: David Trimble, Leda M. Davies
At MOT: Aug. 10, 7:30 p.m. Aug. 11, 5 p.m. Aug. 12, 1:30 p.m. Aug. 16, 10:30 p.m.
Aug. 18, 6:30 p.m.
Sunday, August 5, 2007
OH Canada!
TORONTO, July 8 (Reuters) - Adolescents and young families are
being hit hardest by the growing rate of homelessness in Canada,
according to ``The Progress of Nations'' annual report by the United Nations
Children's Fund (UNICEF), which was released on Wednesday.
Young people between the ages of 10 and 19 total 4.5 million and
comprise 13.5 percent of Canada's population.
The report estimated Canada has roughly 200,000 homeless people, with
between 5,000 and 12,000 in Toronto, the nation's largest city.
By comparison, the report estimated that there are some three million
homeless people in the 15 member countries of the European Union and
about 750,000 homeless in the United States.
There are no official statistics for the homeless in Canada.
``We have very little in terms of data in Canada about homelessness.
We need more data,'' Dawn Walker, executive director of the Canadian
Institute for Child Health told Reuters. ``Right now we're working on
anecdotal information.''
In Toronto, 6,500 people stayed in emergency shelters on a typical
night in late 1997 -- a jump of two thirds in a single year, the
UNICEF report.
``Canada's homeless used to be older men who often had alcohol and
drugs problems,'' said Walker. ``What's happening now is that that
trend is changing and we're getting more and more young people, more
people with young families.''
Welfare cuts by Canada's federal and provincial governments and the
end of rent control in major cities have made it increasingly tough
for the poor to get affordable housing and to qualify for programmes
that might keep them off the street.
``There was no way out,'' Diane Marlow, Minister for International
Cooperation and Minister Responsible for la Francophonie, said at a
UNICEF's press conference in Toronto. ``We had a huge deficit, and we
dealt with that. I think we have to keep working with what we have.''
Marleau also urged all levels of government to work toward eradicating
Canada's homeless problem.
Canada, the United States, Britain and Australia are identified in the
UNICEF report as countries engaged in what it called the
``demonization of caring government,'' because of declining public
investment in social housing and the waning involvement of local
authorities and nonprofit organizations in trying to solve the
homeless problem.
``We've always had people on the street but it used to be kids who did
it in the spring and summer months and it was an interim part of their
lives,'' observed Walker. ``What we're now seeing are young people who
are on the street for many many years. It's becoming much more their
way of life.''
According to the U.N. Convention on the Rights of the Child, every
child has the right to ``a standard of living adequate for the child's
physical, mental, spiritual, moral and social development.''
By definition, homelessness denies all these rights.
Canada kicking Its Way Up The Rankings

Homeless World Cup
Homelessness 'chronic" in Canada

Canada's homeless population is somewhere between 200,000 and 300,000 people, while another 1.7 million residents struggle with "housing affordability issues," says an analysis of the latest research on shelter.
In a report released Tuesday (June 26, 2007) from the Calgary-based Sheldon Chumir Foundation for Ethics in Leadership, journalist and author Gordon Laird argues homelessness is now chronic and is quickly becoming one of the country's defining social issues. He makes a case for a national housing strategy and a more robust income security program.
Citing statistics from a wide range of organizations, Laird says poverty is the leading cause of homelessness in Canada, not substance abuse or mental illness. "Roughly half of all Canadians live in fear of poverty, and 49 per cent polled believe they might be poverty stricken if they missed one or two paycheques," he writes.
Laird is a media fellow with the foundation, which works to influence ethical actions in politics, business, government and the community.
In his report, Laird writes that street counts of homeless people have increased dramatically — "Calgary's homeless population grew 740 per cent between 1994 and 2006."
He cites government numbers showing a cost of up to $6 billion a year to service a "core" homeless population of 150,000. That cost includes health care, criminal justice, social services and emergency shelter costs.