T.O. Greenspiration Events: Just Do It

Angela Bischoff greenspi at web.ca
Mon Oct 8 21:51:51 EDT 2012


T.O. Greenspiration Events

Pass this onto a friend. -a

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Calling all young leaders!
 
This October 26-29th, PowerShift 2012 will take place in Ottawa, ON bringing together hundreds of youth from across Canada to build a just and sustainable future. Join in for 4 days of workshops, trainings and more to build, grow, empower and tool up the youth climate movement to take action for our future. Find out more and register at www.wearepowershift.ca
 
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Homeless Memorial

Tues. Oct. 9, 12:15 p.m.
Church of the Holy Trinity (behind Eatons Centre, off Bay, south of Dundas)

Homeless Memorial remembering those who died while battling homelessness in the city of toronto. A great tragedy and injustice to us all. They were all once a child, someone that was once loved that we neglect to love in hardship ,trials and tribulation. We come together to acknowledge our regrets and show love.

https://www.facebook.com/events/499622426719857/

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Pipe Dreams - Hosted by Olivia Chow

Tues. Oct. 9, 6:30 p.m.
Bloor Cinema (Bloor and Bathurst)

Two tar sands pipelines. Two highly acclaimed films. One common threat. Pipe Dreams (shortlisted for an Oscar) by Leslie Iwerks, documents the Keystone XL pipeline battle. Pipedreams Project is a film about three kayakers paddling British Columbia’s pristine coast, now threatened by the Northern Gateway pipeline. There will be a post-screening discussion with Greenpeace Canada and MP Olivia Chow.

Tickets are free. RSVP with your name, phone number, address and number of tickets to 416.533.2710 or Olivia.chow.c1c at parl.gc.ca.
 
http://bloorcinema.com/movies/Pipe-Dreams-Hosted-by-Olivia-Chow/

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MOVE: Energy - Presenting Challenges: Beyond the Car and Energy way

Tues. October 9, 7–9pm
Evergreen Brick Works, 550 Bayview Avenue, Toronto

By 2050, transportation will become Canada’s highest energy-consuming sector. We need to reconsider not only what modes of transportation we use, but also what kinds of energy and infrastructure will fuel them. Can a green-powered transportation system propel us into the future?

Panelists:
	• Cara Clairman, Plug’n Drive Ontario
	• Tom Rand, MaRS Discovery District
	• Henry Vehovec, CleanTech North
	• Hunter Tura, Bruce Mau Design

http://ebw.evergreen.ca/move/calendar/innovation-talks 

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Climate Justice meeting

Tuesday October 9,  6 pm - 8 pm
OISE Rm #2199, 252 Bloor (St. George subway)
All are welcome

100 million deaths by 2030 due to climate change?  (from Toronto Star and UK Guardian):  A report commissioned by the Climate Vulnerable Forum  [DARA],  a partnership of 20 developing countries threatened by climate change, found that  five million deaths occur each year from air pollution, hunger and disease as a result of climate change and carbon-intensive economies, and that toll would likely rise to six million a year by 2030 if current patterns of fossil fuel use continue. More than 90 per cent of those deaths will occur in developing countries, said the report that calculated the human and economic impact of climate change on 184 countries in 2010 and 2030. “A combined climate-carbon crisis is estimated to claim 100 million lives between now and the end of the next decade,” the report said. You are invited to discuss and work on crucial questions:   What is the geopolitical context of climate justice?  What actions need to be taken?  What research needs to be done (such as military emissions and the role of militarization)?

Sponsored by Science4Peace Climate Justice working group

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Freedom For Birth
Movie Screening

Tuesday, October 9, 6:30 - 8:30 p.m.
Toronto Women's Bookstore, 73 Harbord Street
Admission: PWYC (suggested $5)

In the US, Australia and other countries around the world, many midwives have been arrested and charged. Many leading experts claim there’s an international witch-hunt against midwives. But this is just the tip of the iceberg when it comes to injustice and denial of women’s human and civil rights. As birth increasingly becomes seen as a “medical event”, so women have frequently been denied the right to decide the circumstances and location of where and how they give birth. Now it’s time women took back those rights. Our hope is that through watching this film, millions of women are empowered with the knowledge of precisely what they need to do to take back those rights, to take back childbirth.There is a promise of hope. This film will reveal something huge that could be the catalyst to revolutionise maternity systems worldwide but no-one knows about it….yet.

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The Hazards of the Darlington Nuclear Station: A Panel Discussion
 
Wed. Oct. 10, 7 p.m.
Metro Hall, Rm #303 (King and John St.)
 
While other countries are abandoning nuclear power post Fukushima and investing heavily in renewable energy, the Ontario government is spending billions to keep nuclear on life support.

This November the Canadian Nuclear Safety Commission (CNSC) will hold public hearings to consider Ontario Power Generation (OPG)’s request to spend $8 – 14 billion to rebuild the Darlington nuclear station in order to stretch out its operational life to 2055. 

This Panel will seek to answer the following questions:
• What are the environmental risks and hazards of keeping Darlington running in light of Fukushima? 
• Has the Canadian Nuclear Safety Commission done its job to adequately protect the people of the Greater Toronto Area from the risks that will accompany Darlington’s continued operation?
• What can we do to promote a nuclear-free Ontario?

- Angela Bischoff, Outreach Director with the Ontario Clean Air Alliance (OCAA), will moderate and share OCAA’s work to promote alternatives to the Darlington nuclear station. 
- Mark Mattson, President of Lake Ontario Waterkeeper, will discuss the harm Darlington causes to ecosystems of Lake Ontario and how this could be stopped. 
- Shawn-Patrick Stensil, Nuclear Analyst with Greenpeace Canada, will discuss lessons learned from the Fukushima disaster, accident risks at Darlington, and the adequacy of Toronto’s nuclear emergency plans.
- Cathy Vakil, Board Member of the Canadian Association of Physicians for the Environment (CAPE), will discuss the human health risks associated with the continued operation of Darlington.

The event is sponsored by the Canadian Association of Physicians for the Environment, Greenpeace and the Ontario Clean Air Alliance.

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Casinos in Downtown Toronto?

Toronto and East York Community Council wants to hear from residents about their views on the potential location of a Casino in downtown Toronto. There are a number of impacts to locating a Casino in an established community. Please plan to attend the upcoming public consultation:

Wednesday October 10, 6 pm
Toronto City Hall, Council Chambers, 100 Queen Street West

To read the report follow this link: http://app.toronto.ca/tmmis/viewAgendaItemHistory.do?item=2012.TE18.55
To register to speak, please contact the Clerk: Ros Dyers, 2nd floor, West Tower, City Hall, 100 Queen St. W. Toronto, ON M5H 2N2
email: teycc at toronto.ca    phone: 416-392-7033

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13th Annual Planet in Focus Environmental Film Festival

October 10 – 14
TIFF Bell Lightbox

Don’t miss five full days of film premieres, receptions, workshops and gala presentations during Canada’s largest environmental film festival. With approximately 100 Canadian and international films to choose from, and artists and filmmakers from all over the world, festival-goers have a chance to get up close and personal with those that are helping to shine a light on the stories and issues that matter most. Be entertained and inspired in October.

www.planetinfocus.org

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Herman's House Toronto Theatrical Opening

October 10 - 15 
Bloor Cinema, 506 Bloor Street Wes

After winning Best Documentary at the Harlem International Film Festival and playing to sold out audiences at Hot Docs in Spring 2012, Herman's House opens for a week of screenings at Toronto's Bloor Hot Docs Cinema. Tell all your family and friends!! "The injustice of solitary confinement and the transformative power of art are explored in Herman’s House, a feature documentary that follows the unlikely friendship between a New York artist and one of America’s most famous inmates as they collaborate on an
acclaimed art project."

www.hermanshousethefilm.com

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A Living Wage in Ontario - Why It Matters

Thur. October 11, 7 pm - Evening keynote address:
The History and Potential of the Living Wage Movement: The B.C. Experience, featuring Seth Klein, Director of the Canadian Centre for Policy Alternatives–BC.

Friday, October 12, 8:30-4:30 pm - Full-day workshop
The workshop will draw on real-life examples of living wage successes and it will provide space for participants to consider what a living wage could mean in the context of reducing income inequality in Ontario.

at Ryerson University, 7th Floor, 55 Dundas Street W., Cara Commons, Ted Rogers School of Management
www.policyalternatives.ca

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Supplies not Lies - Honour Treaty Rights!

Thur. Oct. 11, noon
Toronto AANDC Office, 25 St.Clair Ave. East

Despite ordering them 5 months ago, Six Nations schools STILL do not have all supplies. At some schools, reports are emerging of supply teachers not being paid, the hot water being shut off, and photocopiers are under threat of being repossessed. While teachers and kids are scrambling to make do, Six Nations parents have been continuously disrespected by Director of Education Peter Jones and Minister John Duncan. Enough is enough. Parents, teachers , allies demand SUPPLIES NOT LIES.  This racist injustice shows the colonial face of the fierce austerity agenda we all are facing. It is occurring in a context of massive underfunding for First Nations schools, fierce austerity measures, and Conservative plans to undermine existing treaty responsibilities through attempts to pass a national First Nations Schools Act. Join Six Nations parents to protest the regional Aboriginal Affairs and Northern Development Canada office. We are all treaty people. Let's all take a stand together and demand treaty rights to education be honoured. 

For more info: CUPE 3903 First Nations Solidarity Working Group at cupe3903fnswg at gmail.com
Check out the last protest and call out from Six Nations parents and allies: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YzkKc8XnFdI&feature=player_embedded
https://www.facebook.com/events/366839806727115/

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Security for All: But How and at What Price?
With Helmut Burkhardt, Professor of Physics Emeritus, Ryerson University.
 
Thur. Oct. 11, 7 – 9 p.m.
University College, 15 Kings College Circle, U of Toronto, Rm. 144
All welcome. No charge.
 
Co-Sponsored by University College Health Studies Programme, Canadian Pugwash Group, Science for Peace, and Voice of Women for Peace.
 
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Bike Smut 6 - Turning TriXXX, Erotic Bicycle Film Festival

Thur. Oct. 11, 8:30 p.m.
Cinecycle, located behind 129 Spadina Avenue

Bike Smut is a shared experience and only available in theatres. At first you may not see the connections between sex and cycling. Some are attracted to the sleek designs, some champion the liberation of women, (eg how bikes put pants on women) while others think bikers are hot and want to fuck them. We can help. Our program of short, DIY bike pornography is specially designed to provide you the tools to meet, converse and potentially reach orgasm with bikers in your area! Movies are a powerful medium, but even more impressive is what creative ideas come from a community gathering to appreciate the cause of better sex and better transportation! Workshops, dance parties, lectures and discussion groups, potlucks, craft nights, naked/underwear bike rides, and more take part in bettering your community by helping to define obscenity for yourself.

Tickets: http://www.goodforher.com/bike_smut_6_turning_trixxx

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Passive Passion

Thur. Oct. 11, 5 p.m.
TIFF Bell Lightbox
$5 screening 

Tracing the roots of the Passive House movement, Passive Passion looks at applications of its innovative energy-efficient design principles in Germany and Sweden and its slow progress in the United States.

http://planetinfocus.org/festival-films/passive-passion/
 
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The Carbon Rush
 
Thur. Oct. 11, 9:15 p.m.
TIFF Bell Lightbox
 
Narrated by Daryl Hannah, The Carbon Rush takes us around the world to meet the men and women on the front lines of carbon trading. Using carbon credits as a means to offset pollution created in another part of the world, carbon trading projects have a lasting impact on the environment and the communities involved: indigenous rainforest dwellers are losing their way of life, waste pickers at landfills can no longer support themselves and dozens of farmers in Honduras have been assassinated. So far community voices have gone unheard in the cacophony surrounding this multi-billion dollar carbon industry, nicknamed “green gold” by its beneficiaries. The Carbon Rush travels across four continents and shows the connection between these tragedies and the United Nations’ Clean Development Mechanism. Investigating hydroelectric dams in Panama, incinerators in India and biogas production in Honduras, this groundbreaking documentary reveals the true cost of carbon trading and shows who stands to gain and who stands to lose.

http://planetinfocus.org/film-festival/the-carbon-rush/
 
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Just Do It: A Tale of Modern Day Outlaws

Thur. Oct. 11, 9:30 p.m.
TIFF Bell Lightbox
 
Making a cup of tea is just one of the strategies for change that Marina Pepper, a classified domestic extremist in the UK, uses to fight against climate change and the political and corporate interests involved. She is part of a group of renegade activists in the UK who have something to say and are willing to go to great lengths to create change. Filmmaker Emily James is given unprecedented access to their group as they organize innovative actions in which they blockade factories, attack coal power stations and glue themselves to the trading floors of international banks. Explore their creative and meaningful acts of civil of disobedience in this humourous, engaging and inspiring documentary.

http://planetinfocus.org/film-festival/just-do-it-a-tale-of-modern-day-outlaws/

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Bicycle Friendly Business Awards

Thur. October 11, doors at 7 p.m.
Horseshoe Tavern, 370 Queen Street West (at Spadina)
$10 - proceeds to Bikes Without Borders a a global non-profit organization dedicated to using bikes as tools for development in marginalized communities.

A super sonic cycling event bringing together the entire cycling community to celebrate community enthusiasts and businesses alike for their achievements.

www.torontobikeawards.org
https://www.facebook.com/events/415302118519413/
 
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Countdown to the 2013 City Budget: 100 Days to Make a Difference!

Thur. October 11, 5 -7 pm (presentation at 6 pm) 
The Wolf & Firkin, 43 Elm Street (Bay & Elm), Basement

Join us for Commitment 2 Community’s 2013 Campaign launch. On October 11, we only have 100 days left to make a difference. Find out more about the campaign, network with community partners and share your ideas! Let’s work together to create the City we want! 

Commitment to Community Campaign (C2C) campaign brings together Toronto residents who care about community services in our city. It includes residents, service users, staff, and volunteers who want to make sure that City Council understands, and supports, the vital role that the City plays in supporting this community infrastructure.

Register: http://countdown2citybudget.eventbrite.ca
For more information, contact Krittika Ghosh, Commitment to Community Organizer at kghosh at socialplanningtoronto.org or 416 351-0095 x 227
Website: http://commitment2community.org/
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/pages/Commitment-2-Community/186185591432821 Twitter at: https://twitter.com/c_2_community

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GM Myths and Truths 
With Lucy Sharrat, Co-ordinator of the Canadian Biotech Action Network (CBAN)

Thursday, October 11 from 7 - 8:30 p.m.
Big Carrot, 348 Danforth, Room 212 - entrance beside Book City
Free

http://www.bigcarrot.ca/
 
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Toronto Socialist Action Presents:
Phil Ochs: There But for Fortune
96 minutes, 2010

Friday, October 12 – 7 p.m. 
OISE, 252 Bloor St. West, Room 2-212 (St. George Subway Station)
Everyone welcome. $4 donation requested. 

From civil rights, to the anti-war movement, to the struggles of workers, folksinger Phil Ochs wrote topical songs that engaged his audiences in the issues of the 1960s and 70s. In this biographical documentary, veteran director Kenneth Bowser shows how Phil's music and his fascinating life story, and his eventual decline into depression and suicide, were intertwined with the history-making events that defined a generation. John Wunderlich, former stage manager at the Winnipeg Folk Festival, and long time socialist, will open the discussion.

Please visit: www.socialistaction.ca or call 416 – 461-6942.

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International Festival of Poetry of Resistance
Theme: Against State Terror

Fri. Oct. 12, Steelworkers, 25 Cecil St. (near Spadina and College), Dinner, panel discussion, poetry, dance, music
Sat. Oct. 13, Bloor United Church, 300 Bloor Street West, workshops and more
Sun. Oct. 14, Q Space, 382 College Street

http://www.poetryofresistance.org/

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2012 Ontario Activist Assembly

Friday, October 12 & Saturday, October 13
University of Toronto, 27 King's College Circle

The Canadian Federation of Students is Canada’s largest student organization, representing over 500,000 college and university students who are members of more than 85 campus students’ unions. The Federation’s Ontario component, the Canadian Federation of Students–Ontario, is hosting a unique assembly of student and campus activists from across Ontario to build a fighting student movement. The assembly will bring together hundreds of rank-and-file student and youth activists, campus labour activists and community activists and will feature a variety of issues-based sessions and skills training workshops aimed at providing an interactive opportunity to develop strong local and inter-campus organizing capacities.

Please register.   activistassembly.ca

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Switch 

Sat. Oct. 13, noon
TIFF Bell Lightbox (King and John)

What will it really take to wean an energy thirsty society off coal and oil? This doc film takes us on an eye-opening global journey examining the viability of renewable alternatives.
 
http://planetinfocus.org/festival-films/switch/ 

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OCAP Community Organizing Course – Call for Participants
 
As social cutbacks and other attacks hit our communities, OCAP recognizes that we need to increase the scale and intensity of our resistance. We need new people to join our actions and campaigns.   To reach out beyond our existing base, we are working to support new organizers in neighbourhoods across the city, people who will be able to give a lead and show others that it is possible to fight back and win.  Towards this end, we are now offering a four session course for those interested in organizing with OCAP.
 
Dates: 4 consecutive Saturdays – October 13th, 20th, 27th, and November 3rd, 2-5pm, followed by a meal each week.
 
Find out more (ie. course outline and how to apply): Ontario Coalition Against Poverty at: ocap at tao.ca / 416-925-6939
 
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Introduction to Meeting Facilitation for Change Makers

Saturday, October 13, 1 - 5 p.m.
At U of T

Learn and practice key tools, techniques and approaches that will help you effectively facilitate meetings within your group. Participants will have the opportunity to practice their facilitation skills and receive critical feedback. 

http://www.toolsforchange.net/2012/08/16/introduction-to-meeting-facilitation-for-change-makers/

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Toronto Disability Pride March

Sat. Oct. 13, 1 - 4 p.m.
Check website for location

Why we're marching:
• To bring recognition of the struggles and value of people with disabilities as we fight against ableism and other forms of oppression.
• To be visible and show that we have a voice in our community and a right to be heard by taking to the streets.
• To celebrate and take pride in ourselves as a community of people with disabilities.

Twitter: @DisabilityPM
http://torontodisabilitypride.wordpress.com/
https://www.facebook.com/events/171174786351839/

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Keep on Rolling: The Dream of the Automobile
Spain / 2011 / 56 min / Documentary. Spanish with English subtitles

Sun. Oct. 14, 2 p.m.
TIFF Bell Lighthouse (King and John)

In just over a century, the automobile has revolutionized our way of life. We allocate as much as 62 per cent of urban space to cars, roads, parking and garages, leaving less space for human activity. The car has shaped us into “sedentary nomads,” constantly moving but never really moving. Through interviews with environmental scholars and city planners, animated sequences and archival footage from the 1950s, Keep on Rolling details how our entire way of life is now dictated by our dependence on the automobile. Darkly humorous and satirical, Brenda Longfellow’s operatic short was inspired by the true story of the 1,600 mallard and bufflehead ducks that perished in a mass of toxic bitumen in the tar sands of Alberta.

http://planetinfocus.org/festival-films/keep-on-rolling-the-dream-of-the-automobile-sobre-ruedas-el-sueno-del-automovil/ 
Sponsored by Bullfrog Power

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Semper Fi: Always Faithful

Sunday, October 14, 12:15 p.m.
TIFF Bell Lightbox, Cinema 3, 350 King St. West

Marine Corps Master Sgt. Jerry Ensminger, a devoted marine for nearly 25 years, lived and breathed the “Corps” and was responsible for indoctrinating thousands of new recruits with its motto “Semper Fidelis” (“always faithful”). When Ensminger’s nine-year-old daughter Janey died of a rare type of leukemia, his world collapsed. His search for answers led to the shocking discovery of a Marine Corps cover-up of one of the largest water contamination incidents in US history. Semper Fi: Always Faithful follows Ensminger’s mission to expose the Marine Corps and force them to live up to their motto to the thousands of soldiers and their families exposed to toxic chemicals. His fight reveals a grave injustice at North Carolina’s Camp Lejeune and a looming environmental crisis at military sites across the country.

planetinfocus.org/film-festival

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Choosing a Fruit Tree with Susan Poizner

Sun. October 14 - 10 a.m. - 1 p.m.
Ben Nobleman Park, across from Eglinton subway station

Your orchard's future success can depend upon the trees you choose. In this workshop, Susan Poizner, the coordinator at Growing for Green will review the basics of choosing a fruit tree. Participants will taste a number of disease-resistant fruit varieties not currently available in supermarkets.

$45 regular $35 early bird (you must register two weeks prior to event) $25 students/seniors (ID required)
To register visit www.communityorchard.ca or email growingforgreen at gmail.com.

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The case for a fully renewable, all-purpose energy system
 
Mon. Oct. 15
4 - 6 pm, Room 140, University College, 15 King's College Circle. Admission is free. Register: http://www.scienceforpeace.ca/a-plan-to-power-100-percent-of-the-planetw...  and/or
7:30 pm, Bahen Centre in the University of Toronto, Rm 1180, 40 St George Street (just north of College Street). Advance tickets $4.89 online at http://www.eventbrite.ca/event/4423013352 or $10 at the door

Mark Z. Jacobson of Stanford University - Mark has demonstrated why a fully renewable grid is the best way to meet the world's climate change goals, and why we should stop wasting time and money on things like carbon capture, biofuels and nuclear power, and focus instead on breezes, rivers and sunshine.

Ralph Torrie - Ralph has worked in energy planning in Ontario for over three decades. He will talk about the pitfalls of past energy planning and why we need to avoid repeating the costly mistakes of the past.

https://www.facebook.com/events/384441234958832/?fref=ts

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Bow Ties for Boobs - A Rockin’ Burlesque for Breast Cancer Prevention

Thursday, October 18, 7 p.m.
The Revival Lounge, 783 College Street

Great shows - Great prizes - Great food - Great cause - prevention is the cure!  WHEN accomplishes its vision through education, outreach and policy.  Take action for prevention!                         
Get your tickets now: http://bowtiesforboobs.eventbrite.ca/

For more info, call Kerri @ 416 303-0841 or email kerribrock at gmail.com
http://www.womenshealthyenvironments.ca/
A fundraiser for WHEN – Women’s Healthy Environment Network

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Women, Power and Change

A Leadership Training Program for Job Search & Life: 8 afternoons of goal-setting, networking and Q&A with social change leaders from across Toronto. Real change occurs – one determined woman at a time. Each woman will create a social action project and complete a placement for Canadian work experience.

Application Deadline: Oct. 18, 2012
Start Date: Oct. 25 – Dec.13, 2012 (8 Thursdays 1:00 pm – 4:00 pm)

Please e-mail your resume to: women_power_change at newcomerwomen.org
More information can be found at www.newcomerwomen.org

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Communication in Action Workshop Series

Thursdays Oct. 18, 25, Nov. 1, 15, 22, 29, 6:30-9:30pm
Friends House, 60 Lowther Ave. (St. George subway)

Register for the first 4  sessions only or for all six sessions; the first four sessions cover listening skills, raising a concern, personal styles, and negotiation; sessions five and six will cover conflict intervention and facilitation skills

Cost:   $150 ($100 for 4 sessions); if cost is a barrier please ask about a sliding scale space
For more info: 416-731-6605 or 416-596-7328
Or email: peaceworks at primus.ca
www.peaceworkstmm.org

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Room in a house 

Available Nov. 1, $350 inclusive, Danforth and Pape
Room is on the second floor of a house with entrance separate from main floor. Shared kitchen and bathroom with 2 others.
I believe it is suitable for a woman or a man. The existing residents are men who are quiet and reasonable. Landlord lives on the main floor, is from the old school, is sympathetic, manages a quiet and peaceful place with little tolerance for disruptions. His living on the premises means repairs and matters are handled promptly.
1st month's rent due upon acceptance of space, with last month's due when moving in.
For more info call: Sharon 416-604-5783 

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Progressive Metrics is hiring Professional Telephone Fundraisers
http://progressivemetrics.ca/news/

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