"I am the Way, the Truth, and the Life"

Father God, thank you for the love of the truth you have given me. Please bless me with the wisdom, knowledge and discernment needed to always present the truth in an attitude of grace and love. Use this blog and Northwoods Ministries for your glory. Help us all to read and to study Your Word without preconceived notions, but rather, let scripture interpret scripture in the presence of the Holy Spirit. All praise to our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ.

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Showing posts with label Saskatchewan. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Saskatchewan. Show all posts

Sunday, February 11, 2018

Sobeys Pulls Sponsorship for Wellness Expo Featuring Father Convicted in Son's Meningitis Death

David Stephan was found guilty of failing to provide the necessaries of life to his toddler son, Ezekiel, who died in 2012. (Canadian Press/Facebook)

By Ashleigh Mattern, CBC News 

The owner of Health and Wellness Expos of Canada is defending his decision to invite David Stephan to speak at events in Saskatoon, Winnipeg, Calgary, and Edmonton.

Sobeys has withdrawn its sponsorship of the events after drawing criticism online over Stephan's participation.

Stephan and his wife Collet were convicted in 2016 of failing to provide the necessaries of life to their son Ezekiel, who died in 2012. The Stephans attempted to treat their 19-month-old son with natural remedies when he fell ill with meningitis.

David Stephan was sentenced to four months in jail, while Collet Stephan was given three months of house arrest, with each also ordered to complete 240 hours of community service. The conviction was appealed and has made it to the Supreme Court of Canada docket, where arguments are expected to be heard in May.

Cynthia Thompson, a spokesperson for Sobeys Inc., confirmed with CBC the sponsorship has been withdrawn. Thompson says Sobeys Inc. was not aware Stephan was a keynote speaker when the company decided to sponsor the event.   

"Supporting the well-being of Canadians is essential to our purpose as a company and we entered this sponsorship with the best intention of advancing our focus on eating well, but we can't support the choice that Health and Wellness Expos of Canada has made on the selection of David Stephan as keynote speaker," she said.

Thompson also said Sobeys Inc. will be taking a closer look at events they sponsor in the future. "All I can say on the front of making the decision is that we're conducting a review of our process and governance on these types of sponsorships," she said.

"This really should not have happened," Thompson added.




Tuesday, July 11, 2017

This First Nations Woman Refuses to Let Ottawa Help Hide Her Band's Finances

Charmaine Stick won her court case to force Onion Lake Cree Nation to make public the finances of the chief and band council

Charmaine Stick of the Onion Lake Cree Nation.Screen grab

Special to Financial Post
By Todd MacKay

It’s a bit odd for a happy dance to break out after a court ruling about financial reporting, but when Charmaine Stick got the decision from her lawyer, she held hands with her kids and did a little jig.

“This is a victory for all First Nations people out there who’ve been fighting for transparency and accountability,” said Charmaine. “In our culture, you know transparency and accountability is first and foremost, especially when you’re in leadership.”

Onion Lake Cree Nation was given 30 days to publish financial disclosures online as required by The First Nations Financial Transparency Act, according to a Saskatchewan Court of Queen’s Bench ruling released on June 15. The band’s lawyers are appealing, but Charmaine is confident that the decision will stand. She will then find out how much her chief and council are paid and what’s happening with her community’s finances. The ruling came after Charmaine partnered with the Canadian Taxpayers Federation to launch the court application last fall.

The First Nations Financial Transparency Act is simple: It requires First Nations to publish salaries and expenses for chief and council as well as basic financial documents online — the kind of information the rest of us can get with a Google search. The overwhelming majority of First Nations follow the law, but Onion Lake is one of six bands that have never complied. The previous Conservative government withheld non-essential funding from those bands, but the new Liberal government suspended all enforcement. 

Charmaine’s victory enforces the legislation and for her it’s a very personal victory. The stay-at-home mom went on a 13-day hunger strike to demand accountability from her leaders during the summer of 2014. They told her she’d never get anywhere. She now has judicial validation.

The most fascinating parts of this ruling are the arguments Onion Lake left out. Rather than contesting matters of fact, Onion Lake asked the court to stay Charmaine’s application until other court proceedings conclude. Justice B.A. Barrington-Foote rejected the stay application.

The minister can leave grassroots citizens like Charmaine to ask courts to enforce the law, while the government does nothing, or she can help

“There is no evidence before me as to the political or economic reasons why Onion Lake has refused to provide and post the specified information,” he wrote.

Opponents of The First Nations Financial Transparency Act often raise vague concerns that transparency causes economic harm, but hundreds of First Nations communities have disclosed that information and it’s obvious those fears are unfounded.

Another omission was even more conspicuous by its absence.

“Curiously, Onion Lake did not defend this application on the basis of the constitutional issues,” wrote Barrington-Foote.

In earlier legal battles, Onion Lake argued The First Nations Financial Transparency Act is unconstitutional. However, it failed to raise those arguments in relation to Charmaine’s application. In fact, those arguments have been on hold.

“Despite the passage of almost two and a half years since the action was commenced (by Onion Lake to challenge the constitutionality of the act), discoveries have not yet been scheduled,” wrote Justice Barrington-Foote.

It seems Onion Lake raised constitutional arguments as stalling tactics.

Charmaine’s victory puts pressure on Indigenous and Northern Affairs Minister Carolyn Bennett. The minister can leave grassroots citizens to ask the courts to enforce the legislation while the government does nothing. She can weaken the legislation to darken this newfound transparency. Or she can enforce the legislation and strengthen it with new protections such as an auditor general for First Nations communities.

But for Charmaine, future legal and political struggles can wait, because right now she’s celebrating, along with grassroots First Nations people across Canada.


Way to go Charmaine. You're a hero.