NATIONAL ETHNIC PRESS AND
MEDIA COUNCIL OF CANADA
Conseil
national de la presse et des medias ethniques du Canada
Canada’s Other Voices
Minutes
of the monthly meeting held at Queen’s Park on May 14, 2007
Present:
Thomas
Saras
Greek Press
Srmial
Abeyawardene
Sri Lankan Press
Clyde
McNeil
Chin Radio
Neel
Nanda
Indian Press
Maryam
Aghvami CBC
Radio International
Dr.
Bikram Lamba
South East Asian Communities
Ahmed
Shah Hotaki
Afghani Press
William
Doyle Marshall
Trinidad and Tobago
Mona
Feng
Chinese Press
Emmanuel
Ayiku
African Press
Iraj
Emad
Iranian Press
Saud
Soultanpour
Turkish Press
Niaz
Salimi
Iranian Press
Trifon
Haitas
Greek TV
Teshome
Woldeamanuel
Ethiopian Press
Almeiri
Brasil News
Brasilian Press
Tanas
Joyabovski
Former Yugoslavian Press
Josivaldo
Rodrigues
Brazilian Press
Amir
Mahim
South East Asian Press
Luba
Cherny
Russian Press
Longendialigan,
Nage
Tamil Press
Saraidaris
John
Greek Press
Suku
Balasubramaniam
South Asian Press
K.
Arasaratnam
Tamil Press
Ned
Blair
Caribbean Press
Mohammad
Tajdolati, Dr.
Persian Press
Kathy
Lin
Chinese Press
Hai
Tien Lin
Chinese Press
Katayun
Pujirun
South
Asian Press
Abdul
Rahim Moton
Burmish Press
Danielle
Zhu
Chinese TV
Syed
Narvi
Pakistani Press
Alamgir
Hussein
Bagladezi Press
K.
Davis Lim
Chinese Press
Mahesh
Abeyawardene
Shri Lankan Press
Massood
Mashadi
Iranian Press
Cindy
Gu
Chinese Press
Aaron
Behrane
Eritrean Press
Absent
Irene
Keroglidis
Dumitru
Popescu
Agenda:
Opening
Remarks by the Chair
Minutes
of the Previous Meeting.
Presentation
by Ontario Premiere Hon. Dalton McGuinty, MPP
Presentation
by Jean Augustine (former federal cabinet minister)
President’s
Report/ Discussions
End
of meeting
Opening
Remarks by the Chair:
The chair
welcomed everyone to the meeting and asked the members to approve the
minutes of the previous monthly meeting, if there were no reservations.
The chair
laid the guidelines for the meeting with Premiere scheduled at 6:pm and
informed the members that he would accept questions from the floor, only
pertaining to the Provincial jurisdiction.
Minutes
of the previous meeting:
Dr.Lamba
moved a motion to approve the minutes of the monthly meeting held on April
16, 2007. Iraj Emad seconded it. The motion was carried.
Presentation
by Hon: Dalton McGuinty, Premiere of Ontario.
The
chair welcomed Premiere Dalton McGuinty to the meeting and invited him to
address the members of the NEPMCC. The Premiere made a presentation on the
progress of his government to the Council followed by a question and
answer period. Dr. Lamba, Srimal Abeyawardene, Iraj Emad, Alamgir Hussain,
Trifon Haitas, Masood Manzoorzadeh and others participated in the
roundtable discussions.
The
following are the highlights of the presentation and roundtable
discussions.
·
Premiere
McGuinty briefed the members on the progress his government has made in
the course of three and a half years. He also mentioned the challenges
facing the province in moving forward.
·
The
Province made significant progress in the areas of health
care, economy and education.
·
The number of students who graduate after five years in high school
has gone up from 68 per cent in 2003-04 to 71 per cent in 2004-05. There
are 6000 more students in the apprenticeship program.
·
14,800 more cardiac procedures since 2003
·
. The Ontario Government is not only measuring wait times, but it
is bringing it down.
·
Wait times for
elective by-pass surgery dropped from 30 days to 15 days over the last
year; Wait times for elective angiography dropped from 23 days to 14 days
·
Added 7 new and/or
expanded MRI services, replaced 7 old machines with new ones and replaced
31 old CT scanners 64 new ones
·
Wait times for radiation treatment are down more than a week –
about 16 per cent.
·
Fought on behalf of new Canadians, negotiating the first ever
Canada- Ontario immigration agreement, which quadruples federal spending
on language training and settlement services over the next five years,
from $819 per immigrant to $3,400 per immigrant.
·
$20 million for 35 bridge training projects to help internationally
trained professionals improve language skills, prepare for exams and get
work in their field
·
Launched www.OntarioImmigration.ca to help newcomers and potential
newcomers obtain information
·
$130 million annually in newcomers services and programs; we are
spending twice what the previous government did to help newcomers succeed
·
Doubled the number of training and assessment positions for
internationally trained medical graduates: in the past two years, more
doctors’ certificates have been issued to international medical
graduates than to Ontario graduates.
·
Introduced a proposed acceleration of our plan to eliminate the
capital tax
·
• In 2004-05, the deficit was reduced to $1.4 billion — down
from $5.5 billion
·
• New initiative, Move Ontario, announced in 2006 Budget, puts
$1.2 billion into transit and road and bridge projects
·
• Secured the first new Greenfield auto manufacturing plant in
two decades in Ontario; Toyota invests $1.1 billion in a new facility in
Woodstock
·
• Premier McGuinty is leading the Ministry of Research and
Innovation created in 2005 to ensure Ontario is competing and winning in
the marketplace of ideas
·
• $2.1 billion annually announced in 2006 Budget to the Jobs and
Skills Renewal Strategy to help unemployed, new Canadians, the working
poor and social aid recipients
·
• Almost 230,000 net new jobs since the Ontario Government was
elected in 2003.
·
Added 3,000 megawatts of supply and advanced projects that will
provide more than 11,000 megawatts of new electricity - more than any
other place in North America and enough to power about five million homes
·
• The Government of Ontario are committed to cleaner, renewable
sources of energy having procured over 1,300 megawatts of wind, water and
biomass electricity generation
·
• Set a target to produce 5% of our electricity from renewable
sources by 2007 and ten per cent by 2010, putting Ontario at the forefront
in North America
·
• Wind capacity is increasing from 14 megawatts when we took
office in 2003 to 1,300 megawatts by 2008
·
• Launched a Standard Offer program to encourage the development
of small, community-based generation projects from renewable sources
·
• Ontario's Standard Offer program will generate over 1,000
megawatts of renewable energy over the next 10 years
·
• The legislature recently passed Bill 21 -- The Energy
Conservation Responsibility Act - the first of its kind in Canada
·
• Smart meters in 800,000 homes and businesses by 2007.
·
Invested more in community organizations to help deliver services
to various ethnic communities. The provincial grants were delivered to
community groups with the idea of improving the cultural infrastructure in
the province.
Thomas
Saras, the President of NEPMCC congratulated the Premiere on the progress
made in the last three and a half years in the direction of social justice
and equality. He thanked the Premiere for making this presentation to the
Council despite his busy schedule.
The
Premiere thanked Thomas Saras and the NEPMCC for inviting him to make the
presentation and promised to continue this dialogue and cooperation with
the members of the National Ethnic Press and Media Council of Canada.
Presentations
by Jeane Augustine:
The Hon.
Jean Augustine, former Federal Cabinet minister made a presentation on the
“Reflections on the 200th anniversary on the abolition of
slavery. She also made a presentation on the fairness commission; an
access and resource centre formulated to break down barriers for
internationally trained professionals. Dr. Lamba, Srimal Abeyawardene,
Alamgir Hussain, Milla Garcia and others participated in the discussions,
which followed her presentations.
The
following are the highlights of the presentation and discussions
·
The 69th United Nations General Assembly marked 200TH
Anniversary of the End of Trans-Atlantic Slave Trade. On November 20, 2006
the United Nations General Assembly designated March 25, 2007 as the
"International Day for the Commemoration of the 200th Anniversary of
the Abolition of the Trans-Atlantic Slave Trade
·
Estimates are that during the 4 centuries of the Trans-Atlantic
slave trade, over 50 million Africans were forcibly removed from their
homes and taken to the Americas to labour in sugar, cotton and tobacco
plantations.
·
Commemoration of the 1807 decision by the British Parliament to
abolish the slave trade, acknowledges that this trade in human lives is a
crime against humanity and that the forced transportation of millions of
Africans as slaves, among the worst violations of human rights.
·
This anniversary is a time to honour the memory of those who died
as a result of slavery or who resisted enslavement, and to acknowledge
that the legacy of slavery is at the heart of social and economic
inequality and racism which continue to affect people of African descent.
·
The atrocities of slavery enrage us all. The stories of resistance
inspire us all
·
We are also strengthened by those who stood up for what was right
and fought for the abolition of slavery.
·
Ontario minister for citizenship and immigration, Hon: Mike Colle
named educator and former federal cabinet minister Jean Augustine chair of
the committee charged with overseeing the Ontario Bicentenary
Commemorative Committee on the Abolition of the Slave Trade Act. Leaders,
academics and educators from across the province are among its 15 members.
·
Global Experience
Ontario is an access and resource centre for the internationally trained
professionals.
·
Global Experience Ontario can help internationally trained and
educated individuals find out how to qualify for professional practice in
Ontario. This one-stop centre offers a range of services for
internationally educated individuals.
·
The centre provides information for people who intend to apply to a
regulatory body to obtain licensure to work in their field. Knowledgeable
staff can explain the process for licensing and registration in Ontario.
·
English and French services are available in person, by telephone
and online. Staff at the centre also responds to information requests from
prospective newcomers.
The Chair
thanked Jeane Augustine for making her presentation to the members of
NEPMCC and assured all possible help in relaying this information to the
respective ethnic communities.
President’s
Report/Discussions
·
The President read the list of the new Board of Directors along
with their portfolios. The final list would be emailed to all members
within a few days following this meeting.
·
Sharifa Khan of Balmoral Marketing is working with the Federal
Ministry to organize various workshops and educational sessions with
members of NEPMCC.
·
The President informed the members that the minister of external
affairs probably would meet with the Council by the end of June.
·
The Leader of the official opposition of Ontario, the Hon. John
Tory, MPP would be the special guest in the next monthly meeting of the
NEPMCC. Second guest the same day will be the Hon. Gerry Philipps,
Minister responsible for the Government Advertisings.
·
The Prime Minister would meet with NEPMCC, sometime in July.
·
Alamgir Hussain, publisher of the weekly Shomoy, made a
presentation to the Council on being nominated from NDP as a candidate for
Member of Parliament for Scarborough –Southwest. He appealed for
individual and moral support from the members. He promised he would
provide all possible help to this organization if elected in the next
Federal elections.
·
Milla Garcia, informed the members about a conference organized in
Toronto to put pressure on Canadian and Japanese Governments to apologize
and compensate “Asian comfort women", kept as sex slaves by its
soldiers during the Second World War. A group called Toronto ALPHA -
Association for Learning and Preserving the History of the Second World
War in Asia - is, along with representatives of Toronto's Korean community
and the Filipino community's Alliance for Social Justice, have organized
this conference.
·
Srimal Abeyawardene paid a special tribute to his mother, in his
publication and made a special mention of NEPMCC for the heart warming
condolences sent by its members on the passing away of his mother.
·
Thomas Saras asked the special committee in Federal Advertising to
make a pre-condition for receiving Government advertising that only those
publications that have more than 51% Canadian content in their editions.
He also mentioned that to be eligible for Government advertising, the
publication should print at least 20 pages and should have no more than
60% of their content as advertising.
.
·
NEPMCC is working with a government agency to further develop the
website of the organization.
·
The President will meet with the Secretary of State
Multiculturalism, in order to discuss for one more time the government of
Canada Advertisement policy. To this extend the President will travel to
Ottawa by his own expenses.
·
Thomas Saras mentioned that the committee for organizing annual
event would be formed in the next meeting and that it would be one of the
items on the top of the agenda .in the next meeting.
·
The members of the NEPMCC were also reminded to submit a brief
background of themselves and the organization, which would be published in
the annual book.
End
of Meeting:
Iraj Emad
moved a motion to adjourn the meeting and Dr. Lamba seconded it. It was
carried by all. The Chair adjourned the meeting at 9:30 p.m. The next
meeting would take place on June 11, 2007 at Queen’s Park.
The above
document prepared by Neel Nanda, Secretary General of NEPMCC on behalf of
the executive.

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