April 28, 2009

Your Money or Your Life

In a country with supposedly universal coverage, some of the most vulnerable must pay cash for health care. It costs them their livelihoods — and sometimes their lives Nurse Jennifer D'Andrade and Dr. Paul Caulford consult with patients at the volunteer clinic in Scarborough. Photos by Arantxa Cedillo. Dr. Paul Caulford will never forget what happened to Patricia. An 18-year-old girl from Grenada,... [More >>]

April 28, 2009

Autoholics

Tim Falconer, author of Drive: A Road Trip through Our Complicated Affair with the Automobile proposes a 12-step program for breaking our addiction to cars As individuals and as a society, we love our automobiles — even as we hate how they screw up our planet, our cities, and our lives. Environics Research Group, a Toronto based research firm, found that 32 percent of Canadians see their wheels as... [More >>]

April 28, 2009

Strong Feelings On: Proportional Representation

We’re loving Fair Vote Canada… The brainchild of three concerned citizens, Fair Vote Canada is devoted to reforming Canada’s first-past-the-post electoral system. Formed in 2000, it currently has members in every province from across the political spectrum, more than 2,000 dues-paying members and a contact list of 10,000 people. FVC’s ultimate goal, explains Larry Gordon, one... [More >>]

April 28, 2009

Land of the Lost

Canada finally restores citizenship to thousands stripped of their status On April 17, thousands of “Lost Canadians” will finally have the opportunity to claim their longdenied Canadian citizenship, thanks to Bill C-37. Intended to restore citizenship to those stripped of their nationality without their consent or often even their knowledge, Bill C-37 will also rectify what some see as... [More >>]

April 28, 2009

HPV: A shot in the arm for boys

They’re often unwitting carriers of HPV, so why no vaccinations? Last November, the findings of the first study on boys and Gardasil — the vaccine that protects girls from four types of human papillomavirus — were released by pharmaceutical giant Merck. The good news is it works, preventing 90 percent of male HPV cases. The bad news is that Canada, unlike Australia and some European countries,... [More >>]

April 28, 2009

Traffic Jamming

Around the world, cities are finding ways to drastically reduce, or even eliminate, car use. It could happen here too In cities around the globe, World Carfree Day is a nice little break from the everyday. Every year on September 22, dozens of large cities shut down some of their main streets to traffic, leaving them open to pedestrians and cyclists for parties, rallies, mass bike rides, and the sort... [More >>]

April 27, 2009

No Country for Old Men

Illustration by Alexei Vella Baby boomers: drop the watercolours, back away slowly In last spring’s flimsy caper comedy Mad Money, an uneasy truth lingered beneath the slapstick thievery and rolling-in-greenbacks hijinks: the fabled baby boomers, now hitting their early 60s, have no idea how to deal with the diminishing returns of their impending senior citizenship. Pardon me if I gloat. The... [More >>]

April 27, 2009

The Colour of Money

Illustration by Dave Donald Marketers will slap the “green” label on just about anything. Don’t be fooled I have no qualms with calling myself a conscious consumer. If there’s a label, I read it. If there’s not, I ask. I like to know what’s in the products I buy, where they come from, and who made them. I care about the price, sure, but I also care about the environmental... [More >>]

April 27, 2009

Interview: CAW President Ken Lewenza

Illustration by Peter Mitchell He’s in the CAW driver’s seat — but where’s he going? When Ken Lewenza became president of the Canadian Auto Workers last September, he had no idea it would soon be begging for government loans — $14 billion in the U.S. and $3.4 billion in Canada — to stay afloat. Lewenza spoke with This in January about the challenges the CAW faces in these most... [More >>]

April 27, 2009

Online Exclusive: Big Questions about a Tiny Car

The “people’s car” of the 21st century could spur international development — or wreck the climate. Perhaps both. A look at the tiny car that’s making big waves. In 1908, a car changed the world. The Ford Model T made personal car ownership a reality for millions of people in the United States, introduced mass motorization to the world, and revolutionized the way cities are... [More >>]

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