Monday, March 22, 2021

VULCAN PORNO
Thousands flock to Iceland's erupting volcano

Thousands of curious onlookers have flocked to an erupting volcano in Iceland to marvel at the hypnotic display of glowing red lava, the bravest of them grilling hot dogs and marshmallows over the smoldering embers.

© Jeremie RICHARD The volcano lies just 40 kilometres west of Reykjavik

The eruption of a fissure near Mount Fagradalsfjall, which began late Friday, was the first in the same volcanic system in about 900 years.

© Jeremie RICHARD Visitors gather as Icelandic volcano subsides following eruption

The volcano is located only about 40 kilometres (25 miles) from the capital Reykjavik and can be reached after a 90-minute hike from the nearest road.

"It's absolutely breathtaking," says Ulvar Kari Johannsson, a 21-year-old engineer who spent his Sunday visiting the scene.

© Jeremie RICHARD Sunday hikers watch the lava flowing from the erupting Fagradalsfjall volcano

"It smells pretty bad. For me what was surprising was the colours of the orange: much, much deeper than what one would expect," he tells AFP.

The incandescent lava bubbles and spurts from a small cone in the Geldingadalur valley, piling up in the basin and slowly turning a thick black as it cools.

Some 300,000 cubic metres (10.5 million cubic feet) of lava have poured out of the ground so far, according to experts, although the eruption is considered relatively small and controlled.

"For me it's the heat that really surprised me. When we approached the lava flowing on the ground, the temperature rose by 10-15 degrees and our faces flushed," says Emilie Saint-Mleux, a French exchange student in Iceland who came with two friends.

"It reminds you a little of a barbecue in summer," jokes her friend Lucille Fernemont.

Access to the site was blocked in the first hours after the eruption. Authorities then lifted the roadblocks but discouraged visits, but by Saturday afternoon visitors were allowed -- under strict guidelines.
© Jeremie RICHARD The eruption of the fissure near Mount Fagradalsfjall began late Friday

"We are just here to look after the people and see that everything is okay. And just watch that the people are not going too close to the lava and asking them step back," explains Atli Gunnarsson, a 45-year-old police officer, donning a yellow hardhat with a gas mask in hand.

© Alain BOMMENEL Icelandic volcano erupts

Rescue teams also had to help dozens of freezing and exhausted people find their way back to the road on Sunday in the dark as weather conditions deteriorated.

A small recurring beep can be heard around the emergency crews. They're carrying devices that measure gas pollution, especially sulphur dioxide, which can pose a danger to health and even be fatal. 
© Icelandic Coast Guard A no-fly zone was established in the area around the volcano.

Early Monday, authorities again blocked the site due to high levels of gas pollution.

- Rare opportunity -

This is the first volcanic eruption on the Reykjanes peninsula in more than 800 years, and it has been more than 900 years since the Krysuvik volcanic system, to which Fagradalsfjall belongs, has erupted.

© Jeremie RICHARD It has been more than 900 years since the Krysuvik volcanic system, to which Fagradalsfjall belongs, has erupted

While eruptions are common in Iceland, with one taking place about every five years on average, they usually occur far from populated zones, in inaccessible areas. Others are too dangerous to allow public



This time, the curious can inspect the lava up close after a six-kilometre (four-mile) hike from a road near the fishing port of Grindavik, the closest populated town with 3,500 inhabitants, not far from the famed tourist destination, the Blue Lagoon geothermal spa.

By Sunday, the throngs of hikers trodding across the volcanic moss had already left a visible trail to the Geldingadalur valley.

Others chose to break their piggybanks for a spot in the many helicopters flying over the volcano at the weekend.


While the number of tourists in Iceland has plunged because of the pandemic -- tourism usually accounts for more than eight percent of the economy -- the island is trying to kickstart the industry.

It recently opened its doors to any international travellers who can prove they have either been fully vaccinated against Covid-19 or recovered from the illness.

It remains to be seen however if Iceland will be able to capitalise on the volcano.

According to experts, the eruption could die out quickly, possibly within a few days.

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A 6,000-year-dormant Icelandic volcano just erupted — and it’s awesome

The eruption near Reykjavik followed months of earthquakes, and led to beautiful orange and red skies.

By Anya van Wagtendonk Mar 20, 2021, 

The March 20 eruption near Mount Fagradalsfjall in Iceland.
 Vilhelm Gunnarsson/Getty Images

After months of earthquakes, a long-dormant volcano in the southwest of Iceland erupted on Friday night, leading to dramatic videos and splendid red skies near the country’s capital city.

According to the Icelandic Meteorological Office, the eruption near Mount Fagradalsfjall, about 20 miles southwest of Reykjavik, took place at 8:45 pm. Though considered small, the eruption created a fissure about 1,640 feet long, and spewed more than 10 million square feet of lava, sometimes in fountains reaching heights of more than 300 feet.



It was the first volcanic eruption in this part of Iceland — the Reykjanes Peninsula, home to Reykjavik, where most of the country’s residents live — in 781 years. And it was the first time this particular volcano had gone off in about 6,000 years.

The eruption, in the Geldinga Valley, was remote enough that evacuations were not necessary, and no structures were endangered.

“As of now it is not considered a threat to surrounding towns,” said Iceland’s prime minister, Katrín Jakobsdóttir, on Twitter on Friday night. “We ask people to keep away from the immediate area and stay safe.”

Experts warned residents to beware emissions of dangerous gases, including carbon dioxide and sulfur dioxide, and there were some resulting traffic jams. Drones were temporarily prohibited from flying over the area, to allow scientists first access, but flights in and out of the international Keflavik


 Airport have not been affected.

The head of emergency management in the country told people to close their windows and stay inside to avoid volcanic gas pollution, which could spread as far as Thorlákshöfn, a city about 30 miles south of Reykjavik.

But on Saturday, the meteorological office said, “Currently, gas pollution is not expected to cause much discomfort for people except close up to the source of the eruption.”


The eruption is ongoing, and could last for “a day or a month,” Magnús Tumi Gudmundsson, a geophysicist at the University of Iceland, told RÚV, the Icelandic National Broadcasting Service.

That makes this latest Icelandic geologic event starkly different than than the large-scale earthquake at the Eyjafjallajokull volcano in 2010, which caused more than 100,000 flights across Europe to be canceled for weeks afterwards as ash spread across northern Europe and Great Britain. That was described as the largest shutdown of airspace since WWII.

“The more we see, the smaller this eruption gets,” Páll Einarsson, a geophysicist at the University of Iceland, told the Associated Press on Saturday.

Despite the relatively small size, the eruption provided residents with unique views — and people across the region shared photos of the skies, as scientists set up a livestream of the flowing lava.



Iceland’s location makes it particularly susceptible to earthquakes — and eruptions


Iceland is no stranger to volcanic activity. There is usually an eruption every four or five years because the island is in a region that is particularly susceptible to seismic activity. The most recent one, in 2014, was at Holuhraun, a lava field in the Icelandic Highlands.

Earthquakes are a familiar experience, too; since 2014, the country registered between 1,000 and 3,000 earthquakes per year. But since December 2019, that number has dramatically increased, according to the New York Times; scientists are still working to understand why.

In the last week alone, Iceland experienced more than 18,000 earthquakes, with more than 3,000 on Sunday. At least 400 had taken place in the area of the volcano the day before the eruption — and that was a relatively calm day, according to state meteorologists.

“This is somewhat less seismic activity in comparison to previous mornings where the numbers have been around 1,000 earthquakes,” the meteorological office said.

Many of those earthquakes were undetectable to ordinary people, but some were of magnitude 3 and greater, so that they could be felt. The largest was a 5.7-magnitude quake on the morning of February 24, followed by a magnitude 5 tremor 30 minutes later.

“I have experienced earthquakes before, but never so many in a row,” Reykjavik resident Audur Alfa Ólafsdóttir told CNN earlier this month. “It is very unusual to feel the Earth shake 24 hours a day for a whole week. It makes you feel very small and powerless against nature.”

According to Thorvaldur Thórdarson, a professor of volcanology at the University of Iceland, the cause of this dramatic increase in seismic activity is still being studied.

“We are battling with the ‘why’ at the moment. Why is this happening?” he told CNN. “It is very likely that we have an intrusion of magma into the [Earth’s] crust there. It has definitely moved closer to the surface, but we are trying to figure out if it’s moving even closer to it.”

Icelanders were warned about possible volcanic activity as a result of the earthquakes beginning on March 3. Officials at the time did not expect the event to be life-threatening or affect property.

Iceland’s location along a series of tectonic plates — known as the Mid-Atlantic Ridge — has made it uniquely susceptible to activity.

As the Times’s Elian Peltier writes, “The country straddles two tectonic plates, which are themselves divided by an undersea mountain chain that oozes molten hot rock, or magma. Quakes occur when the magma pushes through the plates.”




Officials, including Justice Minister Áslaug Arna Sigurbjörnsdóttir, the Coast Guard, and first responders shared overhead images of bright lava spilling through the fissure.




And many Icelanders shared images on social media of the eruption’s aftermath, which cast an orange hue into the sky. At night, from certain angles, its glow merged with the famed green and blue of the northern lights.


Pop star Björk — perhaps Iceland’s most famous resident — was one of those expressing excitement about the historic event and ensuing beauty.

“YESSS !! , eruption !!” she wrote on Instagram on Friday. “We in iceland are sooo excited !!! we still got it !!! sense of relief when nature expresses herself !!!”
Amber Ruffin Puts The Spotlight On The Long History Of Anti-Asian Racism In The U.S.
Sarah Curran 
CTV ET
3/21/2021
© Photo by: Lloyd Bishop/Peacock/NBCU Photo Bank via Getty Images Amber Ruffin

Amber Ruffin is using her platform to highlight America's "long and well-documented" record of bigotry against Asian people.

During the latest episode of her late-night Peacock show, the comedian took a deep dive into the history of anti-Asian racism in the United States, including the recent spike in hate crimes.

RELATED: Olivia Munn Talks Stopping Asian Hate & Biden’s ‘Powerful’ Proclamation That U.S. Federal Buildings Fly Flags At Half-Mast To Mark Atlanta Massacre

"It's really impossible — Trump — to say — Trump — why something like that — Trump — would happen," Ruffin said. "But I do know that anti-Asian violence spiked after Trump and other Republicans started referring to the coronavirus as the 'China virus' and other racist terms."

She continued, "It doesn't surprise me that this kind of rhetoric would lead to an increase in violence. Partly because I have the common sense God gave a housefly, and partly because America has a long, violent history of scapegoating Asian people."

RELATED: Charles Melton Vows To ‘No Longer Remain Silent’ On Anti-Asian Hate Crimes

Ruffin went on to take a look back at America's lengthy record of anti-Asian racism, from the 1871 Chinese massacre in Los Angeles to the Chinese Exclusion Act of 1882, which barred Chinese immigrants.

"America does not get to hide from its racist past or present," she added.

RELATED: Daniel Dae Kim Calls On Other Communities To Speak Up Against Asian Hate During Time 100 Interview

"What we're not gonna do is act like white supremacy isn't at the root of all this," she added. "Contrary to everything this country was built on, white men don't get to decide who lives and who dies. White people don't get to decide our humanity."

Ruffin's comments come in the wake of Tuesday’s horrific shooting in Atlanta, which left eight people dead, the majority of them women of Asian descent, after a shooter targeted three different spas in the area.

ET Canada stands with the Asian community in working together to stop anti-Asian racism in Canada, the United States, and around the world to #StopAsianHate.

Canadians can stay informed by following community groups and leaders, including but not limited to: https://nextshark.com/,

If you or someone you know is experiencing hate-crimes related to xenophobic attacks in Canada you can file a report at: https://www.elimin8hate.org/fileareport.

Bystander intervention training to anti-Asian and xenophobic harassment is available at: ihollaback.org/bystanderintervention/


Why Asian women are uniquely vulnerable to violence in Canada and the U.S.

Emma Sandri
POSTMEDIA
3/20/2021

The intersection between race and gender has made Asian women uniquely vulnerable to violence, experts and advocates say in the wake of the killings of six Asian women in Atlanta, Georgia.

© Provided by National Post People hold a banner during a candlelight vigil in Garden Grove, California, on March 17, 2021 to unite against the recent spate of violence targeting Asians and to express grief and outrage after a shooting that left eight people dead in Atlanta, Georgia, including at least six Asian women.

The 21-year-old accused gunman, who is white, carried out his violent rampage at three spas on Tuesday, killing eight people.

A spokesperson for the Cherokee County Sheriff’s Department said the gunman confessed to the shootings and indicated that he had a sex addiction and “wanted to eliminate” the temptation the establishments represented to him.

Probe into killing of 6 Asian women, 2 others 'far from over,' Atlanta police say

While investigators have said it’s too early to say whether the gunman’s crimes were racially motivated, anti-Asian hate crimes have been on the rise, in both the U.S. and Canada, over the past year.


“Whether or not they were actually sex workers or self-identified under that label, we know that as massage workers, they were subjected to sexualized violence stemming from the hatred of sex workers, Asian women, working class people and immigrants,” wrote Red Canary Song , a grassroots collective of Asian and migrant sex workers, in response to the killings.

Sexism and racism not mutually exclusive

As Sunny Woan wrote in the Washington and Lee Journal for Civil Rights and Social Justice, Asian women are often fantasized as “small, weak, submissive and erotically alluring … existing solely to serve men and be sexually consumed by them.”

Over the last century, the media and the arts have continued to over-sexualize Asian women, while portraying them as meek and inferior — such as in the hit Broadway play, Miss Saigon, in which an underage sex worker in Vietnam falls in love with an American Marine — wrote Woan.
WHICH IS BASED ON THE OPERA MADAME BUTTERFLY ITSELF A WORK ABOUT AN AMERICAN IMPERIALIST AND AND ASIA WOMAN HIS LOVER WHOM HE ABANDONS AND SO SHE COMMITS SUICIDE

Russell Jeung, a professor of Asian American studies at San Francisco State University,
told NBC that the intersection of racism and sexism — including the stereotype that Asian women are subservient — has factored into the disproportionate impact of anti-Asian violence on women. In particular, Asian women have often been perceived as “easier targets.”

More than 68 per cent of reported incidents of anti-Asian harassment and violence (in America) have been from women,” said Sung Yeon Choimorrow , executive director of National Asian Pacific American Women’s Forum, in a statement on the Atlanta shootings. “Even before the pandemic and the racist scapegoating that came in its wake, AAPI ( Asian Americans and Pacific Islanders) women routinely experienced racialized misogyny.”








The ‘Shecession


Asian-owned businesses have been particularly hard hit by the pandemic, as lockdown restrictions have been compounded by racism.

In particular, politicians’ rhetoric has been blamed for fueling anti-Asian racism and business boycotts, such as president Donald Trump’s labelling of COVID-19 as the “Kung-flu” or “Wuhan virus.” Amy Go, president of the Chinese Canadian National Council for Social Justice, said that language has done “tremendous” harm to the Chinese-Canadian community.

“There’s so much pain and grief,” she told the Canadian Press about her initial reaction to the attack. “At the same time, as Asian Canadian women, none of us were surprised. There was no sense of shock. It was as if we knew this was coming … it just happened to be in Atlanta.”

Many Chinese businesses and restaurants experienced a drop in sales before the start of the pandemic, as customers opted to stay home — or buy from somewhere else — after hearing about the virus.

The pandemic has also been especially hard on Canadian women — with the economic recession being dubbed a “shecession.” When the pandemic first hit, women lost 62 per cent of the jobs shutdown in February and March 2020 — almost all in the service sector. Compared to white women, women of colour — including Asian women — have faced higher rates of unemployment during the pandemic.



According to Reuters , these women tend to work in some of the hardest-hit job sectors, such as retail and hospitality, and care for children or relatives. In particular, South Asian women have experienced the highest unemployment rates in the country over the summer, with 20 per cent of South Asian women aged 15 to 69 reporting they were without a job in July.

“The Asian women murdered yesterday were working highly vulnerable and low-wage jobs during an ongoing pandemic speaks directly to the compounding impacts of misogyny, structural violence and white supremacy,” said Phi Nguyen, a litigation director at Asian American Advancing Justice – Atlanta, in a statement .
Violence and harassment stoked by COVID-19

According to Statistics Canada , media outlets and police services have reported an increase in anti-Asian discrimination since the start of the pandemic — reminiscent of reactions to the 2009 SARS outbreak.

In May 2020, more than 43,000 Canadians submitted responses on how COVID-19 has impacted their perceptions of safety. Data from Statistics Canada shows that Canadians with Asian backgrounds were more likely to report noticing increased racial or ethnic harassment during the pandemic. In particular, Korean, Chinese and Filipino participants perceived that discriminatory incidents — such as harassment or attacks — were happening often or sometimes in their communities.

Among the women surveyed who were identified as visible minorities, 26 per cent reported feeling unsafe while walking alone after dark. The highest proportion of those who felt unsafe were Korean, Filipino and Chinese participants — the same groups who perceived an increase in harassment and attacks since the onset of COVID-19.

British Columbia has also surpassed any sub-national region in North America for having the most reported anti-Asian hate crime incidents “per Asian capita,” according to community-based reporting tool Project 1907 . Women have been disproportionately impacted in particular, and make up nearly 70 per cent of all reported incidents in the province.

“Just because we look Chinese or look Asian, we’re suddenly not Canadian,” Go told the Canadian Press .


 ABC News
Duration 2:05
Neighbors across the US are standing strong against anti-Asian American bias




Stanford women's basketball coach Tara VanDerveer calls out NCAA on 'blatant sexism'

Erick Smith, USA TODAY 
3/21/2021

Stanford women's basketball coach Tara VanDerveer became the latest high-profile figure to offer criticism of the differences between how the NCAA is administering the respective men's and women's tournaments.

Jocelyn Willoughby reacts to NCAA Tournament womens' weight room: 'Did not sit well with me at all'

VanDerveer, whose No. 1-seeded Cardinal are making their 33rd consecutive tournament appearance, posted a statement on Twitter that outlined grievances with amenities and COVID-19 testing.

The NCAA acknowledged its failure to provide suitable weight training facilities for the women's teams compared to what was offered to men's teams. There were issues also with differences in food and COVID-19 testing, with men's teams getting more accurate PCR tests, while the women's teams are getting daily antigen tests
© The Associated Press Stanford head coach Tara VanDerveer reacts toward players during the first half of her team's NCAA college basketball game against Southern California in Santa Cruz, Calif., Sunday, Jan. 24, 2021. (AP Photo/Jeff Chiu)

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She called the differences "blatant sexism" and claimed it was "purposeful and hurtful."

"I feel betrayed by the NCAA," VanDerveer, who has led the Cardinal to two national championships, said in the statement. "I call on University Presidents and Conference Commissioners to demand accountability. Who made these decisions and why?

"Women athletes and coaches are done waiting, not just for upgrades of a weight room, but for equity in every facet of life. Seeing men's health valued at a higher level than that of women, as evidenced by different testing protocols at both tournaments, is disheartening.

"This cannot continue to be business as usual. There are necessary changes that need to be made."

OPINION: NCAA's mea culpa isn't enough

OPINION: Women's tournament promises wild, wacky ride

The NCAA moved quickly to address the weight training issue. On Saturday, photos and videos on social media showed that the space that earlier held one set of weights and a few yoga mats had been expanded to include more equipment.

NCAA President Mark Emmert told three news outlets, including USA TODAY Sports, there are no different risks from either of the COVID-19 tests.

"I’m not a medical expert so not going to get into a debate about PCR and antigen. All the health experts said the protocol that we’re using in all of our venues and all of our championships has no different at all in terms of our ability to mitigate risk," E
Germany women's soccer stars slam court for sexist judgment

3/21/2021

BERLIN — Germany women's soccer stars are calling for an explanation over why a male coach was apparently ordered to take charge of a female team’s training sessions as part of his punishment for verbally abusing female match officials.

The players from the top two divisions issued a joint statement Saturday condemning the decision made in a case against Borussia Mönchengladbach under-23 team coach Heiko Vogel at the sports court of the West German soccer association (WDFV).

Vogel was made to answer at the court following his comments to Vanessa Arlt and Nadine Westerhoff, who were officiating at a game involving his team on Jan. 30.

The court on March 9 issued Vogel with a fine of 1,500 euros ($1,800), a ban for two league games, and ordered him to take charge of six training sessions of a women’s or girls’ team before June 30.

“The question arises as to how the training of a women’s or girls’ team can be defined as punishment,” the players said in a joint statement that was shared on Instagram by Germany captain Alexandra Popp among others. “There is also no value in offering to compensate for such unsporting behaviour by offering to train a women’s team for a few hours."

The statement said the judgment "discriminates against all women in sport and especially in soccer.”

The WDFV said in a statement on its website that it is also critical of the arrangement and that it has asked the court to review the decision.

“There is no room for discrimination either in soccer or in society,” WDFV vice-president Gundolf Walaschewski said. “The WDFV and with it the soccer family in North Rhine-Westphalia are expressly committed to this. That means no tolerance for sexist discrimination and no tolerance for discrimination in general.”

The German soccer federation (DFB) also backed the players’ call.

“It’s incomprehensible for me that training a women’s team is given as a punishment,” DFB vice-president Hannelore Ratzeburg said. “I can therefore understand the players’ anger and why they make themselves heard in public. We have been in exchange with the WDFV for several days. The fact that the executive committee of the WDFV has clearly positioned itself and ordered a review of the judgment is a correct and necessary sign.”

Gladbach sporting director Max Eberl had already criticized Vogel for his comments to the officials.


More AP soccer: https://apnews.com/hub/soccer and https://twitter.com/AP_Sports

Ciarán Fahey on Twitter: https://twitter.com/cfaheyAP

CiaráN Fahey, The Associated Press

Quebec job post for 'white woman' sparks debate about caring for mentally ill seniors


MONTREAL — Recent news that a Quebec hospital repeatedly posted notices seeking a "white woman" caregiver has sparked a debate about how to care for mentally ill seniors who refuse to be treated by people of another race.

© Provided by The Canadian Press

The heads of two placement agencies in Quebec say those kinds of requests usually come from racist patients who have dementia or Alzheimer's. They say Black and other racialized workers are sent to care for other patients for safety reasons.

But experts in the health field say trying to protect workers of colour by replacing them with white people is patronizing and paternalistic.

"That is racism, that's rationalization, said Bharati Sethi, a social work professor at King’s University College at Western University. Focusing on transferring racialized health-care workers instead of looking at bigger institutional issues downplays the problem, she said in an interview Friday.


"Bluntly, we have to stop rationalizing, look at the problem at the root and do something about it," Sethi, who worked as a personal-support worker before becoming a professor, said.

Earlier this week, Montreal La Presse reported that a hospital in St-Eustache, Que., north of Montreal, sent 10 requests to placement agencies asking for a “white woman only” or a woman with “white skin.” The hospital had reportedly sought a white woman to care for a patient with dementia who was disruptive in the presence of racialized staff.

In response, the regional health authority in Quebec’s Laurentians region said it has opened an investigation.

Jill Eusanio, president of Comfort Keepers Quebec, said her placement agency receives requests for white workers a few times a year. She said, however, the issue is more complex than it may seem.

"Usually, these requests are for senior citizens, clients, that are racist, and who have a mental disease that's set in, like Alzheimer's or dementia, and they're mean to the worker," she said in an interview Thursday.

"What do I do?" Eusanio said. "Do I put a Black worker in this environment who will be verbally abused, who could be physically hit?"

Eusanio, whose placement agency provides personal support workers, nurses and nurses aids for home care, long-term care facilities and hospitals, said she would never promise to send a white worker. But, she said, if one of her

Video: Lack of access to Indigenous midwifery (Global News)


Gravel said those kinds of requests are intended to ensure employees aren't placed in difficult situations when dealing with patients suffering from conditions like dementia and Alzheimer's who have difficulty dealing with people who are different.

In some cases, however, she has received requests from people recovering from surgery or other medical procedures who need temporary home care but don't want a Black person helping them.

In those cases, she said, she refuses to serve the client. She said she doesn't tolerate racism.

Sethi recently conducted a study on racism against personal-support workers at an Ontario nursing home. She found that Black workers frequently experienced racism from patients and their families, and in some cases, from colleagues.

If personal-support workers are subject to racist abuse and believe they will be replaced by white people, then that might encourage them to stay silent out of fear of losing work, Sethi said.


Dr. Sophie Zhang, who oversees 15 long-term care centres in Montreal, said she has had patients who are openly racist against workers, adding that it can be challenging to manage those patients when they're suffering illnesses such as dementia.

Regarding requests for white-only workers, Zhang said there are two issues involved: one is about accommodations in the workplace, while the other is about hiring discrimination.

"For me, discriminating at the time of hiring is unacceptable," she said in an interview Friday. "That, I don't think we can make any excuses for."

Sometimes, however, when a decision needs to be made about who will be assigned to a patient, accommodations may have to be made, she said.

"This is not because we want to 'give in to racism,' but it's because sometimes the safety of the worker is at risk because there has been abuse, there has been verbal and physical abuse."

But she said it's the last resort. When patients are able to be reasoned with, she said, the first step is dialogue.

"My first reaction is to tell them that we don't accept racism," Zhang said. "That all our health-care workers are competent, are qualified, will take good care of them no matter what race they are, and that any sort of verbal or physical assault is not tolerated."

Sometimes, Zhang said, the patient ends up trusting the worker who takes care of them, adding that overall, she has had to manage few cases where people have demanded to be treated by non-racialized people.

"It's a very small number of cases where we have to intervene and make these accommodations."

This report by The Canadian Press was first published March 20, 2021.

———

This story was produced with the financial assistance of the Facebook and Canadian Press News Fellowship.

Jacob Serebrin, The Canadian Press


Raylene Whitford Appointed To Federal Task Force On Women In The Economy


(ANNews) – On March 8, International Women’s Day, a federal task force on Women in the Economy was created to advise the federal government on a pathway to a national feminist economic recovery from the pandemic.

On March 15, PhD Student Raylene Whitford was appointed to the task force.

“The setup of this group is very non-traditional,” said Whitford, a PhD student in the Faculty of Native Studies and the Alberta School of Business, and founder of Canative Energy. “They’ve brought together an amazing cross-section of women from different industries and experiences. It’s wonderful to be a part of and contribute to this.”


The task force is co-chaired by Deputy Prime Minister and Finance Minister Chrystia Freeland, and Minister of Middle Class Prosperity Mona Fortier. It also consists of 17 other women from across the country.

THE FEDS HAVE A MINISTER FOR MIDDLE CLASS PROSPERITY AKA THE WORKING CLASS ABOVE MINIMUM WAGE

“Over the past year we have seen the alarming impact of this pandemic on women’s economic participation … Canada’s future prosperity and competitiveness depend on the ability of women to participate equally—and fully—in our workforce,” said Minister Freeland.

The COVID-19 pandemic has had a disproportionate effect on Canadian women as they have faced steeper losses in jobs, wages, and hours. Since February 2020, more than 80,000 women aged 15 and older have left the labour force, compared with about 25,000 men.

“We know that women have paid a particularly high price due to the impacts of the pandemic. The steep job losses have impacted women the most,” stated Minister Fortier. ”

Mothers have had to take on more responsibilities around the home to support children who are learning virtually. And women have been at the forefront of our collective fight against COVID-19, as they represent the majority of essential workers in healthcare, education and other core frontline sectors.

“Today, on International Women’s Day, I am proud to announce the members of the new Task Force on Women in the Economy. Their diverse perspectives will help our government make smart, targeted investments through Budget 2021 and beyond to advance gender equity and address the systemic barriers and inequities faced by women, including Black, Indigenous, and people of color – so that Canada’s economic recovery leaves no one behind.”

The group will be discussing possible recovery strategies over the next year.

“This task force is all women focusing on a feminist recovery, and that’s really special,” Whitford noted. “Most of the spaces I’ve worked have been very male-dominated, so I have rarely had the opportunity to join a group of professional women of various backgrounds and specialities, and they’re able to speak openly and honestly with each other.

“I am the only committee member with an international background in finance, the only one from oil and gas. However, I see my primary role as being an advocate for Indigenous women, as I understand the issues that are faced at the community level.”

The Task Force will hold its first in a series of meetings in early March, in the lead-up to Budget 2021.

Jacob Cardinal, Local Journalism Initiative Reporter, Alberta Native News

COVID-19 pandemic has made Canadian millennials ‘conscious’ moneywise: experts
WELCOME TO YOUR GREAT GRANDPARENTS DEPRESSION ECONOMY

Twinkle Ghosh 
GLOBAL NEWS
3/21/2021

Among several Canadian habits affected by the COVID-19 pandemic, one thing that will likely continue is how people, especially millennials, are rethinking their personal financial positions.

© Provided by Global News Canadian $100 bills are counted in Toronto, Feb. 2, 2016. The registered retirement savings plan (RRSP) is one of the best-known tax shelters available to Canadians, particularly in the weeks before the annual contribution deadline, which is March 1 this year. But financial experts say a tax free savings account (TFSA) is often a better choice over the long run. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Graeme Roy

Even beyond the ongoing tax season, young people appear to be looking at ways to save or invest money for better returns in the future, experts say.

Read more: Coronavirus: COVID-19 and the Canadian economy, one year later

A large percentage of people aged 24-35 are "very committed to saving more and investing," Carissa Lucreziano, vice-president, financial planning and advice, CIBC, told Global News on Friday.

VIDEO
 "Did households get wealthier during the pandemic? A finance expert explains"


While such goals are laudable at any age, it is particularly so "for this demographic as actions now can have long-term benefits," she added.

New findings further show that millennials have grown far more concerned about better managing their money over the last year than they were before the pandemic.

Online search trends, analyzed by Semrush, a data provider of online behaviour, found that Canadian millennials are visiting banking-related websites more than any other age group lately.



During the first wave of the pandemic -- March 2020 to September 2020, and the second wave -- October 2020 to January 2021, nearly "23.6 per cent of people aged between 24-35," and "20.7 per cent of people from the 35-44 age group" were seen visiting banking websites, the Semrush findings showed.


The data "reflects a general snapshot of the market as a whole," Eugene Levin, chief strategy officer at Semrush told Global News.

"Nationwide searches show us that now people are more conscious moneywise," Levin added.

"They are using this time (the pandemic) to plan out their finances to either mitigate their financial insecurity or improve their financial security," Levin said.

Read more: ‘Biggest financial crunch I’ve ever faced’: A year living on COVID-19 recovery benefits

Moreover, searches for tax-free savings account or TFSA have increased by 45 per cent nationwide, the findings show.

Having a tax-free savings account ensures that the money within the account grows tax-free.

Video: Consumer Matters: Tax tips for the time of COVID

While it is similar to how funds grow free of taxes within a Registered Retirement Savings Plan or RRSP, contributions made to a TFSA do not provide an income tax deduction.

Withdrawals from the TFSA, however, are always tax-free.

Apart from increased interest in tax-free savings, there has also been a yearly increase from 2020 to 2021 in searches for “investment app by 173 per cent, along with an increase by 646 per cent in searches for the Wealthsimple app” followed by a 442 per cent increase in searches for the Questrade app,” Levin said.

Given the uncertainty in the job market, people "are more conscious of their options," he suggested.

Read more: No job during the COVID-19 pandemic? Here’s what you can do in 2021

"This reflects a growing interest among Canadians to invest online for themselves as an additional financial source," Levin noted, adding, "it also relates to the spike in TFSA searches, as people can also use them for investment purposes."

A CIBC poll conducted from Feb. 16 to Feb. 17, 2021, based on an online survey of 3,026 randomly selected Maru Voice Canada panelists, reflected similar findings.




Millennials have been "our most digitally active age group," a CIBC spokesperson told Global News in an emailed statement.

"Thirty-eight per cent" of people aged between 25-34 said their "spending has decreased during the pandemic," the statement said.

Further, 36 per cent from the same age group said their savings had "increased during the pandemic," while 35 per cent said "they will use extra money to save for a specific goal."

A large section (nearly 34 per cent) also plans to put more money into investments like TFSA or RRSP, or "use excess money to build emergency savings," the CIBC data showed.

Read more: How the pandemic pushed Canadian millennials to home ownership

However, there has also been a spike in loans, given the nominal interest rates, and the fact that people are still reeling from the economic losses of the pandemic, according to Semrush.

As a result, searches for “installment loans” has increased by 38 per cent, followed by searches for "payday loans" that has seen a sharp 25 per cent hike.

This clearly reflects the "financial insecurity among Canadians who have limited options," and that "people need more time to support their economic recovery," Levin said.



Survey suggests one in two people of colour have experienced online racism in Canada

© Provided by The Canadian Press

VANCOUVER — Noor Fadel says most people assume that the night she was attacked by a racist man on a SkyTrain in Vancouver in 2017 was the worst night of her life.

In fact, the nights that followed were even more harrowing, as her social-media post about the assault went viral and she received a torrent of hateful and threatening messages.

"People think that hiding behind a screen and saying something won't have an impact. It does. It has a huge impact on people," she said.

"That one message that you may think could not hurt someone, it's just a simple message, it can actually be the message to ruin someone's entire day, if not someone's life."

Fadel, 22, is sharing her story in support of a campaign launched by the Canadian Race Relations Foundation and YWCA Canada to highlight the consequences of social-media hate.

The #BlockHate campaign coincides with a separate, unrelated survey by the Association for Canadian Studies, which sheds new light on racism in Canada both online and offline.

To mark the International Day for the Elimination of Racial Discrimination on Sunday, the association commissioned Leger Marketing to ask Canadians about their views on racism.

The survey found that seven in 10 respondents are worried about the degree of racism in the country, a concern held by three in four participating women and people between 18 and 34.

One in two survey participants who identify as visible minorities have felt attacked by hateful comments on social media, and nearly six in 10 said they have witnessed hatred online.

Those who were exposed to hateful internet comments were more likely to be worried about racism, said association president Jack Jedwab.

"It's not so much the violent incidents that we've seen over the past year, which have attracted considerable media attention, that are fuelling people's concerns about racism," he said.

"It's also the extent to which people are witnessing this phenomenon expand in social media."

The survey also suggested that one in three Canadians admit to holding a negative view of Muslims, one in five have a negative view of Indigenous people and one in seven state a negative view of Chinese people, Jews or immigrants.

People who have never met any members of those groups are more likely to think negatively of them, suggesting that social media is playing a role once again, said Jedwab.

"They get information from social media about these groups ... and the outcome, unfortunately, is that they hold negative or prejudicial views."

The survey of 1,514 Canadians was conducted online between March 12 and 14 using web panels. The polling industry’s professional body, the Marketing Research and Intelligence Association, says online surveys cannot be assigned a margin of error as they are not a random sample and therefore are not necessarily representative of the whole population.

It also suggested Atlantic Canadians and Ontarians are most worried about the degree of racism in Canada, and that Canadians are more concerned about racism in the country and province than in their neighbourhoods.

The findings ring true for Fadel, who said she encountered racism many times in Vancouver before the incident on the SkyTrain in December 2017, when she was 18.

She said a man approached her and yelled that he was going to kill her and all Muslims before grabbing her head and forcing it toward his crotch.

He then struck her across the face, prompting another transit rider to push him off her.

Pierre Belzan, 46, received a suspended sentence and two years probation in 2018 after pleading guilty to assault and threatening to cause death or bodily harm.

Fadel said she took to social media after the incident because she was sick of hearing that racism in Canada doesn't exist. While her Facebook post received thousands of supportive comments, the hateful ones stood out to her the most.

The messages included comments telling the Canadian-born woman to "go back to her country," calling her sexist and racist slurs, accusing her of lying and threatening to kill her.

She said she only realized while isolated during the COVID-19 pandemic that she is still traumatized by the messages, years later, and she is still working on healing.

The #BlockHate campaign launches Monday and aims to encourage regulation to minimize the volume and frequency at which online hate speech and racism is spread.

Online hate is often a precursor to violent, in-person attacks against marginalized people, noted Mohammed Hashim, director of the Canadian Foundation for Race Relations.

People with hateful views will likely always exist, but social media has handed them the biggest microphone they’ve ever had, Hashim said.

“What we’re looking to do is to constrict that. We understand that it’s going to exist, but let it remain in the fringes of society,” he said.

Regulations must ensure that hateful posts can be taken down quickly to decelerate their spread, and include deterrents so posters experience consequences, he said.

Hashim also pointed out that logging off is not an option for victims of online attacks now that everyone's personal and professional lives are increasingly virtual, especially during COVID-19.

"If we don't deal with this now, this is only going to get worse," he said.

"If we leave it the way it is, I want people to think about: what is the world that we're creating for the next generation?"

This report by The Canadian Press was first published March 21, 2021.

Laura Dhillon Kane, The Canadian Press
#DISARM    #DEFUND   #DISBAND THE POLICE
Colten Boushie's family to respond to watchdog report that found discrimination

REGINA — First Nations leaders and relatives of a young Indigenous man shot and killed on a Saskatchewan farm are expected to address findings today from a watchdog's review that concluded RCMP racially discriminated against his mother.
© Provided by The Canadian Press

Colten Boushie died in August 2016 when the SUV he was riding in drove onto farmer Gerald Stanley's property near Biggar, Sask.

A jury delivered acquitted Stanley after he testified that he had fired warning shots and the gun "just went off."


Concerns had been raised about how police handled Boushie's death and the Civilian Review and Complaints Commission studied the RCMP investigation.

It outlined several missteps by police, saying that officers treated his mother so insensitively when they notified her of her son's death that it amounted to discrimination.

The commission says officers told Debbie Baptiste to "get it together," questioned whether she had been drinking, smelled her breath and searched her home without permission.


"After spending the evening fearing that something had happened to her son and just seeing her worst fears realized, Ms. Baptiste saw her home encircled by a large number of armed police officers and had to endure this treatment from the RCMP members who remained in her home for about 20 minutes," the commission wrote.

It also found two officers inappropriately showed up to Boushie's wake to update her on the criminal case.


The commission says the way police notified the public about the shooting caused suffering to the young man's family because it allowed people to form an inaccurate picture of what happened,

It said the initial press release by RCMP focused mostly on alleged property crimes and failed to mention someone had been arrested for murder in Boushie's death.


The commission says the 22-year-old didn't leave the vehicle or touch any of the belongings on Stanley's farm.

Despite issuing other releases updating the public about the progress of the investigation, the watchdog concluded RCMP communications gave the public piecemeal information, fuelling racial tensions online and in the community.

At one point, former Saskatchewan premier Brad Wall called for calm after a deluge of racist and hate-filled messages had been posted online about Boushie's death.

The commission also found RCMP didn't properly protect the SUV Boushie had been riding in, resulting in the loss of blood spatter and other evidence.

"It is not known, and will never be known, what difference this evidence, as well as any other evidence lost as a result of the failure to protect the vehicle, could have had on the outcome of the case," it wrote.

The National Police Federation representing front-line officers took issue with the finding of discrimination, and says the review showed police generally carried out a professional investigation.

This report by The Canadian Press was first published March 22, 2021

Stephanie Taylor, The Canadian Press