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Archive for August, 2015

Scotia Toronto Waterfront Marathon – Fran Odette!

Posted on: August 27th, 2015 by Nellie's No Comments

Race day is fast approaching. Fran is ready. Are you? On Sunday, October 18th, Fran Odette will be participating in The Scotiabank Waterfront Marathon as part of Nellie’s Team. And you can join us! One of Nellie’s most ardent supporters, Fran first came to Nellie’s to train staff on issues pertaining to violence against women with disabilities. She was thrilled when she was invited to join Nellie’s Board of Directors. Now, six years later, Fran is the president of the Board. Fran is also an integral member of the Fund Development Committee, and a quintessential voice on disability and accessibility issues as the chair of Nellie’s Accessibility Advisory Committee.

Although her involvement with Nellie’s may seem like a full-time job, Fran is also a consultant at the Institution on Research and Development on Inclusion and Society (IRIS), and a faculty member at George Brown College; she teaches in the Assaulted Women and Children Counsellor Advocate program, and co-developed and teaches a general education course in critical disability studies. Fran’s instinctive abilities as an educator and trainer are prevalent in whatever she does. And Fran’s enthusiasm for her work and for Nellie’s has inspired many of us to make a difference in the lives of women and children facing violence. For the second consecutive year, Fran will be raising funds for Nellie’s as part of the Scotiabank Charity Challenge. What fuels Fran to cross the finish line in October?

  • The camaraderie. It’s a great opportunity to spend time with fabulous volunteers and have fun!
  • The chance to support Nellie’s essential and innovative work. For over 40 years, Nellie’s has helped to rebuild the lives of women and their children facing violence, thanks to generous supporters like you.

The anticipation is building for Fran and the others on Nellie’s Marathon Team. It’s not too late to get involved and share in this excitement! Join Nellie’s Team andhelp us reach our goal to raise $20,000 and end violence against women.  Run, walk or stroll. All money raised goes directly to Nellie’s to support our work with women and children. If you can’t run, you can still make a difference. Please consider sponsoring Fran and the Nellie’s Team with a donation of $25, $50, or $100.

FranSTWM2
Click here http://www.torontowaterfrontmarathon.com/en/charity/nellies.htm to register or donate!

If you have any questions or need help registering, please contact us at fundraising@nellies.org. Or call us at 416.461.8903 and ask to speak with Janna or Amran. Our heartfelt thanks to Fran—and to you—for making a difference in the lives of the women and children at Nellie’s

AGM 2015

Posted on: August 17th, 2015 by Nellie's No Comments

Board_AGM

Notice of 42th Annual General Meeting 

 

6-8:00pm, Wednesday September 16, 2015

Ralph Thornton Community Centre

765 Queen Street East, 2nd Floor

 

Food, Childcare & Sign Language Interpretation Available

 

AGENDA
6:00 – 6:30 Business Meeting
6:30 – 6:45 Volunteer Recognition Ceremony
6:45 – 7:15 Buffet Dinner
7:15 – 8:00 Entertainment by Rosa Cervantes and her band *

 

* Rosa Cervantes is a professional songwriter, singer, guitarist and independent musician, she has done activist work with her music participating in different events, Mexican Revolution, Mexican independence, Women abuse awareness month in Toronto and she writes about different issues for the Latin-American on Latinos Magazine.  She plays with her own band called “la Rana Sabia”.  Rosy studied psychology in Mexico specializing in women facing abuse and violence

 

BUSINESS
1 Approval of Minutes of 2014 Annual General Meeting
2 Report from Board President
3 Auditor’s Report
4 Appointment of Auditor
5 Election of New Board Members
6 Meeting Adjournment

 

 

Please RSVP to Janna at 416-461-8903 by Friday September 4 to register for childcare

Int’l Prisoners Justice Day

Posted on: August 10th, 2015 by Nellie's No Comments

AshleySmith

August 10 is a day set aside to remember all the men and women who have died unnatural deaths in Canadian prisons.   One such woman was Ashley Smith[1] who died by self-inflicted strangulation on October 19, 2007 while incarcerated at Grand Valley Institution for Women.  From her early teenage years Ashley had frequent run-ins with the criminal justice system, mostly for minor offences and ended up in youth custody and eventually the Grand Valley Institution for Women.  She died there at the age of 19.

 

Following a lengthy inquest into her death, a coroner’s jury returned a verdict of homicide and provided 104 recommendations to the coroner which included recommendations on how the Correctional Service of Canada could better serve female inmates and inmates suffering from mental illness.[2]

 

What is clear from the publicity surrounding the inquest and the jury’s findings is that prisons are poorly equipped to deal with mental health issues.  In his annual report for 2013-2014, the Office of the Correctional Investigator was critical of the Correctional Service of Canada for failing to follow up on the jury’s recommendations to the coroner and his own recommendations for dealing with the growing number of incidents of self-injury among federally sentenced women offenders.[3]

 

In the same report, the Correctional Investigator notes that a large percentage of the women in the federal correctional system experience symptoms consistent with a diagnosis of a psychiatric disorder and eight in ten women have a history of substance or alcohol abuse.  His most troubling finding is that the number of self-injury incidents among federally sentenced women is increasing at an alarming rate noting that in 2013-2014 there were 559 incidents of self-injury among women offenders, a 40% increase from the previous year. He stressed the importance of moving these women to outside treatment centres.[4]

 

The Correctional Investigator’s concerns are echoed in a newsletter published by the Women’s Legal Education and Action Fund in 2014.[5]  The newsletter notes the failure of the corrections system and provincial health care in providing women such as Ashley Smith with appropriate care and goes further to consider the issues related to the situation of women in prisons:

Women in detention are an extremely marginalized group who are often in prison as a result of larger systemic reasons.  While the jury recommendations are welcome, the root causes of women’s detention such as poverty, racism, colonialism, and violence – fundamental issues affecting women’s equality that start outside prison walls- must be addressed in order to prevent women being incarcerated in the first place.

 

As the October 2015 Federal election approaches ask your candidates what they would do to prevent other deaths like Ashley Smith’s before another woman dies in prison from a self-inflicted injury.  And this Prisoner Justice Day, take a moment to reflect on the short and troubled life of Ashley Smith and her avoidable death in prison.

 

[1] Born January 29, 1988 and died October 19, 2007

[2] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ashley_Smith_inquest

[3] Annual Report 2013-2014 of the Office of the Correctional Investigator, pp. 30 -31

[4] Ibid, p.45

[5] http://www.leaf.ca/seeking-accountability-by-the-correctional-service-of-canada-csc-for-its-treatment-of-women-with-mental-health-concerns/