My friends,
Thank you for stumbling upon my little corner of the internet. I'll try to keep it as tidy and well stocked as possible for you all. Let me start this whole thing off with a little bit about who I am, and why I believe what I do:
My name is Adam James Osborne, and I am concerned.
I am concerned about the state of my once great province: Ontario. A province which I have lived most of my life in, and one in which I have called multiple regions and municipalities home. Petawawa, Owen Sound, London, Whitby, Windsor and Toronto. Though there are several parts of this great land I still wish to spend an extended time in, I feel as though I have experienced some wondrous places to dwell with the brief 28 years I have had on this planet.
But, as I've stated, I am worried.
Over the last ten years, as you probably all know, our debt has sky-rocketed,
the total projected debt stands at $257.3-billion as [of] March 31, 2012. Our credit has been downgraded. But to me, one of the most alarming facts isn't just a statistic. It's the human cost.
I spent about a year and a half in Windsor until about six months ago (when I moved back to Toronto), and let me tell you... what an eye opening that experience was.
If you haven't been to, and especially lived in, a city that was once prosperous because of a strong manufacturing industry that has been gutted, it is something to behold. To make it even more sobering for me, the only job I could find within the municipality? A Senior FCSR position for a payday loan/wire transfer corporation.
The first of the month was always the most alarming to me. People literally lined up an hour before we opened our doors to be the first to cash their Ontario Works or Ontario Disability cheques. Regular people- people who once had lucrative and productive careers. I witnessed first hand how our private sector has been decimated, and continues to drown; a once proud and economically powerful municipality reduced to a shell of its former self.
Now, there's another wrinkle to this story. One that will stick with me for the rest of my life.
A close friend of mine (no need for names) worked for the City of Windsor and belonged to CUPE. His job paid north of $20/hr and was only a little short of a full time schedule. He had no post secondary education and no trade skills of which to speak.
What was his position?
He worked at a front desk at a community center, registering children for after-school classes and summer camps. Sometimes, he would go into work on the weekends to pick up some extra hours. His duties during that time were often to sell candy at dances when the local elementary and middle schools would rent out the gymnasium.
I can't say I blame him for staying at such a job. Many of us with high levels of education and trade skills would bend over backwards to make $20/hr in this economy. But isn't this just a microcosm of the problem?
In Tim Hudak's recent presentation,
When The Money Runs Out, he spoke of the bulging public service sector, and the financial cost to all of us that is incurred.
At about 11:18 of his presentation he hit the proverbial nail on the head.
Think about that for a moment. Over half of our provincial spending goes into payment and entitlements for public sector employees, while our tax-dollar and revenue-generating private sector continues to languish; a rusty ship put out to sea without much notice. How can the only growth sector in this province be bureaucracy and public services?
This is not the Ontario where I grew up. This is not the way towards a prosperous society.
We need change, and I intend to do my part, for what its worth.
I welcome you all to share and comment and debate here. The beauty of the internet is the free exchange of thoughts and ideas. We are the voting populace, and we can enact change through education on the issues and through shared sweat-equity.
I was raised in a province that was never afraid of a little hard work.
Lets be that province again.