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ENCOUNTER EARTH BLOG

eeUPGRADE Pics

[Canmore, AB 03-23-09] So here are the new digs at encounter earth. We took about 3.5 hardworking days to take the shop from the old canoe style to the beginnings of the ee-xperience. Big thanks to Hans at Hans Painting, Adam at Epic Custom Woodwork and the ee team (Leah & Corey) for all the effort made! Take a look at the pics and please give some feedback! Stop by the shop when you are near main street in canmore.

logo-on-wall

This is our logo on the wall behind the counter.

front counter 01
Looking in from the front door towards the counter.

close up front counter
A few steps closer to the counter…

jewelry table
In front of the counter is the indigenous jewelry table.

front corner
This is the corner of the shop next to the front door… lotsa windows.

front corner looking back
This is still the front corner but continuing along to the beginning of the men’s wall.

front O corner
Now you are looking in the middle of the store looking towards the front at the women’s wall.

front O corner 2
Another angle of the last pic with some customers looking at the women’s clothing.

looking up from way back

Yet a few more steps back looking towards the front door.

looking back
Here is a shot looking towards the back of the shop.

seating/jean wall
The new chill area where people can sit and read with jean wall behind.

seating/jean wall 2
A different angle of the seating area and jean wall.

jean wall close up
Close up of the jean wall… well done Adam at epic woodworking!

ee sign looking out
A look at the outdoor ee sign from the interior of the shop.

Well this is a start… I have a few more to post but that will have to wait for a day or two. Thanks for taking the time to take a look. Please give some feedback by clicking on the comment link below.

“Invisible Army” of exploited workers in UK

[Canmore, AB 03-20-09] The article below was written for the BBC in mid 2008. As the globalized world becomes more blurred with people from poor nations crossing borders for employment exploitation will become more rampant in developed nations. Even here in Canmore we have workers on one or two year work permits from Colombia, Sri Lanka, and the Philippines. Based on what is written in the article below it is interesting that human nature has an inherent evil to manipulate and leverage for gain. The call for integrity and value of others continually needs to be the clarion call for the “least among us.” We need to live by example to counter the malice and avarice with kindness and generosity.

EXPLOIT UK

BBC Article - Two Million Workers ‘Exploited’

Up to two million workers in Britain are at risk of exploitation because of their vulnerable work status, a report by the TUC has suggested.

Its research found some employees being paid £1 an hour, some working 70 hours a week and others facing sexual abuse.

The union body, which set up a commission to uncover the extent of such poor treatment, described the situation as a “national scandal”.

The government said it was boosting penalties for rogue employers.

The TUC, which set up the Commission on Vulnerable Employment last year, said exploitative employment practices seen in the 19th Century were still being used by some employers today.

It found home-workers being paid £1 an hour, fast food employees working 70 hours a week and domestic staff facing physical and sexual abuse.

‘Blind eye’
Kate Wareing, director for UK Poverty for the charity Oxfam, said there was an “invisible army” of exploited workers in the UK, who were doing some of the “lowest paid, most insecure and unpopular jobs in the country”.

The report called for a campaign to raise people’s awareness of workers’ rights, extra funding for bodies such as the Heath and Safety Executive and the setting up of a special Fair Employment Commission to police rogue employers and enforce workers rights.

Commission member Kevin Beeston, chairman of public service management company Serco, said it was “time society stopped turning a blind eye to these workplace abuses”.

TUC general secretary Brendan Barber said the treatment uncovered by the commission was a “national scandal” and said urgent action was needed.

“Good employers have nothing to fear - and much to gain - from policies that stop them being undercut by bad employers who break the law or use loopholes to get round it,” he added.

‘Clear exploitation’
As part of the commission’s report, a Community union survey of 8,000 workers also found three out of four workplaces used temporary and agency workers, with some on contracts of a week or under. Some were on just two hours’ notice.

General secretary Michael Leahy said this was “clear exploitation” of agency workers, who, he said, were being used to undermine the pay and conditions of permanent staff.

Employment relations minister Pat McFadden said the TUC’s report would be looked at as part of the government’s vulnerable workers’ forum, which is due to report back in the summer.

But he said the exploitation of such workers was “unacceptable” and the government had worked hard to bring in extra employment rights such as the national minimum wage, paid holidays, health and safety regulations, statutory maternity and paternity leave and sick pay.

“Most employers do the right thing, but some are doing the wrong thing, so it’s vital we enforce the law,” he said.

“That’s why we’re boosting penalties and enforcement to catch those who don’t pay the national minimum wage and doubling the amount of agency inspectors to investigate abuses.”

New regulations also ensured bosses could not unfairly deduct accommodation and other expenses from people’s wages, he added.

The “Sustainability Transformation”

[Canmore, AB 03-12-09] Jeffrey Sachs, the Director of the Earth Institute at Columbia University and the author of bestseller books “End of Poverty” and “Common Wealth,” believes that GM/North American auto industry is vital for the future of the planet as we transition from the combustion engine for vehicles to battery/fuel cell. He refers to this transition as the “sustainability transformation.”

We are certainly in the midst of a critical shift in so many sectors - financial, transportation, marketplace, etc. This is a global shake up that allows for radical and creative change… an opportunity to change mindsets and patterns that under normal circumstances would have taken years, and more likely, decades.



Help End Human Trafficking

[Canmore, AB 03-10-09] Always good to surf the internet with the world in mind. The shop is very slow as the windchill has kept the street outside in the -20’s C. So I just popped onto the UN site and rummaged around… found a new awareness campaign regarding ending human trafficking led by the UNDOC (UN Office on Drugs and Crime.) If you have read our journey on this website you will know that a human trafficking story in Calgary was the catalyst to beginning the journey towards encounter earth. Please read the below information and join the Blue Heart campaign. Lots of options including twitter and facebook… make a difference and start today!

bluheartbluheart1bluheart2

Human trafficking is a crime that strips people of their rights, ruins their dreams, and robs them of their dignity. It is a crime that shames us all. Human trafficking is a global problem and no country is immune. Millions of victims are entrapped, and exploited every year in this modern form of slavery. To rally world public opinion against human trafficking, UNODC is launching the Blue Heart Campaign.

By wearing the Blue Heart you raise awareness of this crime and join the campaign to fight it. The Blue Heart represents the sadness of those who are trafficked while reminding us of the cold-heartedness of those who buy and sell fellow human beings. The use of the blue UN colour also demonstrates the commitment of the United Nations to combating this crime against human dignity.

Thank you for joining with us in this fight! …click on this link for more info…

Revisiting Myanmar… recovery from a cyclone

[Canmore, AB 03-07-09] In May 08 I wrote two blog entries regarding the tragedy that was unfolding Myanmar (formerly Burma.) This tragedy could have been minimized by the government of Myanmar responding to the need of its citizens and the opening of the country to international aid. The sad results of denial and control led to over 100,000 deaths and millions displaced without shelter and hope.

myanmar girl

As I researched the news this morning I discovered a troubling update. Yes, the government finally opened the doors to international aid after far too many people died before the aid was made available. Now it seems that the long road to recovery and a survivable existence for the people will be cut short for the sake of control and ultimately pride:

HUA HIN, Thailand (Reuters) - Military-ruled Myanmar has cut the timeframe for a post-cyclone recovery plan as the regime gears up for general elections in 2010, officials at a regional summit said on Friday.

A United Nations-ASEAN coordinating group said earlier this month the recovery from Cyclone Nargis, which left 140,000 people dead or missing and 2.4 million severely affected last May, would take three years and cost $700 million (495 million pounds).

But the regime has only agreed to extend the group’s work to the middle of 2010, Thai Foreign Minister Kasit Piromya told reporters after meeting his counterparts from the 10-member Association of South East Asian Nations (ASEAN).

“The reason for a one-year extension is that there will be a general election next year and they didn’t want to make a decision for the next government,” Kasit said.

The military, which has ruled the former Burma in various guises since 1962, has promised elections in 2010 as part of its seven-step “roadmap to democracy.”

Western governments have criticised the poll as a sham aimed at entrenching nearly 50 years of military rule.

It was not clear how Myanmar’s decision would affect foreign aid groups working in the Irrawaddy Delta, where many people are still living in temporary shelters since the cyclone struck last May. Access to clean water also remains a challenge.

One foreign aid worker in Yangon told Reuters he did not think his group would be kicked out of Myanmar in 2010.

But he said it could hurt fund-raising efforts for the coordinating group’s Post-Nargis Recovery and Preparedness Plan (PONREPP) launched in Bangkok earlier this month.

The plan called for $700 million in aid over the next three years to improve nutrition, health and livelihoods in the delta.

The global economic crisis is squeezing foreign donor governments, which have been reluctant to provide aid to Myanmar over its dismal human rights record.

A new report by health care activists on Friday accused the regime of blocking aid to the delta, forced relocations, and using forced labour in reconstruction projects.

The report was based on interviews with 90 relief workers and cyclone survivors compiled by the U.S.-based Centre for Public Health and Human Rights and the Emergency Assistance Team, a group of aid workers based in Thailand.

It called on the U.N. Security Council and International Criminal Court to investigate the regime for rights abuses.

“The charge of crimes against humanity is a very grave and serious one,” Dr. Chris Beyrer, director of the U.S. centre at the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, told a news conference in Bangkok.

“But in the context of a relief effort like this, where you have evidence of forced labour, forced relocation and confiscation of relief aid, these are documented violations that need to be taken seriously,” he said.

(Reporting by Darren Schuettler; Editing by Bill Tarrant)

The Great Pacific Garbage Patch

[Canmore, AB 03-05-09] Back on May 19, 2008 I posted an entry “Beware of the Gyres.” Gyres are really scary huge patches out in the middle of the Pacific Ocean. All of our plastic that is thrown away and caught up in our rivers (on the western side of the Great Divide in North America as well as Eastern Asia) make it out to the ocean and eventually settle to float in these gyres endlessly. It is literally a soup of small bits of plastic from bags as well as caps from water bottles, lighters, etc. Really awful… take a look at this 7 min video to understand the impact of our “throw away” society: “…only we humans make waste that nature cannot digest.”



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