Wednesday 30 September 2015

The halls are orange at Lambton College!



Members of Lambton College's
Aboriginal Student Council
 volunteer to share information.






Thank you to all of you 
who wore orange today 
in support of survivors of 
Indian Residential Schools! 


Lila Bruyere, a residential school
survivor from Couchiching First Nation,
located in Northern Ontario. 

Lila attended St. Margaret's Residential
School
 in Fort Frances, Ontario.



Members of the Aboriginal Students Council
stand with Lila.
Here are a few of Lambton College's second-year Social Service Worker students. 

Tuesday 29 September 2015

Remembering the Victims of Residential School


Tomorrow, September 30, is Orange Shirt Day. Wear orange to honour the survivors of Indian Residential Schools. 
You can check out the Facebook campaign here
Indian Residential Schools, sponsored by the Canadian government and various churches, systematically removed First Nations children from their families for 150 years in an attempt to erase all traces of First Nations' cultures. Earlier this year, the Truth and Reconciliation Commission released a report and a series of recommendations. Acknowledging the history and the pain is an important first step.

You can learn more about the October 30th campaign at orangeshirtday.weebly.com

How to Register and Vote!

1.      Register online: ereg.elections.ca (You might already be registered.)

2.      Decide where you’ll vote.

  •   If you’re not from Sarnia, you can still vote here. Stop by 595 Murphy Road (the old Sport Chek building) or call 1 866 281-4745 for more information.
3.      Find your polling station. (closest to college = Sarnia Christian School @ 1273 Exmouth St.)

4.      Vote! You have options:
  • on Election Day: Monday, October 19, 2015
  •  OR in an Advanced Poll at Fairwinds Lodge @ 1218 Michigan Ave: Friday, October 9; Saturday, October 10; Sunday, October 11; or Monday, October 12, 2015

5.      Remember your ID!
  • Bring your Driver’s License (if the address matches the city you’re voting in).
  • Bring any other TWO pieces of ID (one of these must show your current address).

To learn more, visit elections.ca or call 1-800-463-6868

Can’t decide? Try the CBC Vote Compass: https://votecompass.cbc.ca/

All Candidates Debate: A Packed House!

The room was packed--some attendees
listened from the hallway.
Students, staff, faculty, and community members crowded into the room last week to hear this region's four candidates share their views on student poverty, immigration, marijuana, and more. 

Member were given a few minutes to introduce themselves and their party platform, and then the questions began. 
Lambton College Professor Lois Nantais, our debate moderator,
kept us organized and focused.

To keep the candidates on their toes, the debate featured a "lightning round": each candidate was invited to ding in to answer speed questions including the light (favourite book, favourite band) and the serious (personal relationships with poverty).

One hour was not enough. We spilled into hour two, but still, time ran out, because we all have questions that need answering. Audience members were invited to submit questions via Twitter, and we had more than we could handle: what will your party do to make Sarnia a welcoming place for young people to stay? What steps will your party take to ensure Canadian scientists have access to data? What are your thoughts on a woman's right to choose? What really happened to Marilyn Gladu's Twitter account?

The goal was to encourage students to talk about the election and to remind all of us to vote, and that was certainly accomplished. The event also reminded the candidates that they should be listening to what students have to say.


Wednesday 23 September 2015

Tomorrow: All Candidates Debate!


All four local candidates will join us at Lambton College tomorrow, September 24, at 11:30. This is a student-led debate. The questions will be real, and we hope the answers will be too. Please join us in N105! 

Monday 21 September 2015

Chew on This

Dignity for All has been calling on the federal
government to create a plan to end poverty. 

On Tuesday, October 6, members of the Centre for Social Justice and Vocalize will take part in the "Chew on This" campaign. We'll hand out lunch bags containing an apple and information about the fight against poverty in Ontario. (You'll find us in the South Building, in A-hall, and we'll be there all day.) The goal is to get people talking about poverty, which is an impediment for increasing numbers of college students across the province. We also hope that our participation in this campaign will help to remind everyone that poverty should be a key election issue. 

The Precarity Penalty, released in May 2015 by McMaster University and the United Way, explains the connection between unstable employment and poverty. More and more Canadians are working in "precarious employment," without benefits or a livable wage. Part of the solution is increased access to education: the report notes that "Workers with fewer educational credentials are simply dropping out of the labour force" (14), suggesting that those who complete post-secondary education will have a better chance of success. But education is only part of the answer. Even for those with diplomas and degrees, contract and temporary positions have become increasingly normalized, and the income gap continues to grow. Without national vision, it will be difficult to create lasting change. 

To read more, visit The Precarity Penalty, available here: http://pepso.ca/

To learn more about a federal anti-poverty plan, visit the Chew on This site: http://www.chewonthis.ca/about


Wednesday 16 September 2015

This weekend: The Wizard of Oz!

This weekend, the talented young people who are part of Rebound's Act II program will stage their production of The Wizard of Oz.

The employees and volunteers at Rebound have helped thousands of youth in our community over the years, and the theatre program is a perfect example of what makes Rebound so successful. According to the Rebound website, the Act II program "provides an artistic approach that allows youth to reach their full potential in a fun and safe environment." 

Michelle Shelswell, a Rebound volunteer and a faculty member at Lambton College, is studying the difference this program makes for those involved. You can read more about Michelle's study in this week's edition of The Sarnia Journal. 

If you'd like to support the life-changing work that happens at Rebound, please consider attending The Wizard of Oz this weekend.

Thursday 10 September 2015

World Suicide Prevention Day

Today is World Suicide Prevention Day.

According to CAMH (the Centre for Addiction and Mental Health), " an estimated 4,000 Canadians – and one million people worldwide – die by suicide each year." And as we all know, thousands more contemplate or attempt suicide. Despite the huge portion of our population affected by these tragedies, we too often stay quiet about suicide, and the taboo--that suicide does not make for polite conversation--still lingers.

But more and more people are working to change that. Here at Lambton College, the Jack Project is encouraging all of us to talk about mental health. To show your support for mental health awareness, you can join the Suicide Prevention Sarnia Lambton team at Canatara Park this evening. At 6:30 pm, they'll walk together to bring attention to the ways that mental illness affects us all.

If you'd like to learn more about the Lambton College chapter of the Jack Project, check out their facebook page.