Tuesday, September 19, 2006

Status of Women grants help citizens

Times & Transcript Opinion - As published on page D6 on September 7, 2006

Ginette Petitpas-Taylor

A woman's view

There are an enraged few in Canada trying hard to create the illusion that there is a bandwagon calling for an end to funding of equality-seeking groups and of government sections such as Status of Women Canada. The rest of us know that "equality-seeking groups" is a term that "people from away" use for the groups that work in our communities to end violence, get people out of poverty or ensure there is quality child care.

When I've come across arguments for the abolition of government support for equality-seeking groups lately, two things have come to mind.

One is, "What support?"

Women's groups in New Brunswick work with little government assistance, with at most occasional project funding. Any financial assistance they have received from Status of Women Canada has been good for New Brunswick communities.

The other thought is, "When did it become a liberal - with a capital or a small 'l' - or left-wing thing to support reducing poverty, violence and discrimination?"

A rose grower who lived on the route of the 1995 Québec women's march against poverty was so inspired that he brought 10,000 roses to the crowd. Was he being leftist or anti-family?

When New Brunswickers rally in support of groups such as Moncton-based Coalition for Pay Equity, or the New Brunswick Coalition of Transition Houses, are they all by definition - gasp - radical feminists?

Some people have time and inclination to debate these points. Others don't, and just get on with the work of improving their community and working for greater fairness and opportunities.

Canadians are fair-minded people, but mostly they are practical - few of us have the time or inclination for American-style name-calling and false divisions of right and left. Few New Brunswickers will support the abolition of funding for Status of Women Canada, since it means even less funds for local groups.

Canadian families have a vivid and recent example of attempts to create false divisions that did not serve them well. During the federal election campaign earlier this year, the Conservative and Liberal promises on child care presented two solutions to two different problems. Both were attempts to answer real needs and both solutions are needed.

But somehow, politics and media requiring the appearance of conflict, families were presented as divided into two warring camps, stay-at-home and working-parent families. The reality is different.

A stay-at-home parent today may be working for pay, outside or inside the home, next month. Stay-at-home parents need child care when they are sick, have other responsibilities or want to have their child benefit from the stimulation of child care programs.

That is how most women see it, not in the us-versus-them view being projected.

For ordinary New Brunswick families - those that don't judge people or groups based on whether they are "feminist," "right," "left" or indifferent - child care is what you need to raise a family, and it includes supports to stay-at-home and to working parents, home-based services and day care centres.

Women remain seriously under-represented in decision-making positions - there are only 33 female candidates in the current election campaign, fewer than in the last five provincial elections. Women still face unequal opportunities in many aspects of their lives, and for certain groups, notably women with disabilities and Aboriginal women, the inequalities are especially severe. The work of creating equality is a work in progress that has the support of most Canadians and certainly most New Brunswickers.

With the small amount received from Status of Women Canada in the last few years by the Coalition for Pay Equity, they have gained respect and support, from individuals, groups and institutions in the province, for the idea of valuing women's traditional work.

Saint John's Urban Core Support Network has used its grants to bring together business, government and community to find ways of reducing poverty. This is the kind of thing reasonable people want governments to encourage.

Making Waves, another New Brunswick group that has received a few dollars from Status of Women Canada, has been applauded by schools, provincial politicians and youth for its work with youth to prevent violence.

An Ottawa-based women's group called Realistic, Equal, Active and For Life, has asked its supporters to send letters urging the federal government to abolish its Status of Women Canada. The group is now concerned that their campaign has recently been met "by a massive counter offensive with letters pouring in to the Prime Minister and his Cabinet and individual MPs from across the country expressing concerns about the disbandment of the Status of Women."

At this point, only the federal government can put an end to this silliness by stating that Canada stands for more, not less, equality and diversity.

These enraged few misrepresent the position of what they insist on calling their "opponents" and then pretending to refute it. They pretend Status of Women Canada wastes millions on ideology-based groups, whatever that is.

Tell that to the many groups dividing up the $300,000 that Status of Women Canada spends in New Brunswick - or better yet, please don't bother them. They're busy working on preventing dating violence, on supporting women moving from income assistance to employment, on improving the value we give to traditional female work.


Ginette Petitpas-Taylor, of Moncton, is Chairperson of the New Brunswick Advisory Council on the Status of Women.

Her column on women's issues appears in the Times & Transcript every Thursday.
She may be reached via e-mail at acswcccf@gnb.ca

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