The Globe and Mail - 19.10.2019

(Ron) #1

O2| OPINION O THEGLOBEANDMAIL| SATURDAY, OCTOBER 19, 2019


2


here is a reason that climate change is top of
mind for voters in the federal election, and it
isn’t just because of Greta Thunberg. Citi-
zens are seeing the consequences. Hurri-
canes. Typhoons. Wildfires. Droughts. And the con-
sequences aren’t just measured in money – al-
though the losses are in the trillions. They are mea-
sured, too, in human lives. People know this, are
deeply worried, and want and expect leadership and
action.
Nationally, we haven’t seen nearly enough of ei-
ther. The current Liberal government, despite good
intentions, has made no substantial progress. The
Conservatives have proposed no goals, targets or
material actions to address climate change – unsur-
prising, given the provincialconservative govern-
ments’ actions in Alberta and Ontario. Canada is a
country with some of the largest per-capita emis-
sions in the world. We are part of the problem – and if
we don’t do our part, persuading others, such as Chi-
na and India, to do theirs will be impossible.
As a country, we are stalled. Inaction is the order
of the day. But it doesn’t need to be.
There is every sign of a federal minority govern-
ment, in which the NDP and Green Party will have
significant influence. Such a Parliament could ad-
dress climate issues with vigour. There are real ac-
tions we can take today that can materially reduce
our greenhouse gas emissions and get Canada on
track toward scientifically required targets, starting
by learning from mayors of leading global cities.
More than 30 mayors announced last week at the
C40 World Mayors Summit in Denmark that their ci-
ties have already peaked emissions – by addressing
transportation, electricity, buildings and other ar-
eas. There are Canadian best-practice examples to
learn from, too. None of these require the invention
of something new, simply doing what works some-
where, everywhere.
First is clean electricity – under the leadership of
Mayor Eric Garcetti, Los Angeles recently released its
climate plan in which it will stop the generation of
electricity through natural gas and rely entirely on
clean energy.
There is abundant clean electricity in Canada,
much of which is exported to the United States. Con-
necting these intraprovincial grids and ending the
burning of fossil fuels, particularly coal, in Canada is
technically feasible today. The only obstacles are po-
litical; in the climate emergency we face, it’s time to
find a political solution
to that political problem.
Clean buildings are
another best practice. All
new buildings should be
mandated to dramatical-
ly increase energy effi-
ciency on a path to being
carbon neutral by 2030;
existing commercial and
multiresidential units
must dramatically re-
duce emissions by the
same date.
Vancouver has used
the new B.C. building
code to create regula-
tions designed to ensure
all new buildings meet
that goal, and New York has mandated all existing
large commercial buildings to dramatically lower
emissions by 2030. Both these provisions can be du-
plicated everywhere in Canada – and have the added
benefit of creating significant numbers of jobs.
Third is clean transport: Milan, Italy, Shenzhen,
China, London and Los Angeles have made massive
progress on electric buses – part of a change move-
ment that has led to more than 66,000 electric buses
in international markets from a handful five years
ago. Ottawa should be mandating that all future pur-
chases of public transit vehicles are electric – and
building on this, all fleets. Using existing technolo-
gies, all new vehicles added to taxi (traditional or
app dispatched), post office, courier and utility
fleets could be mandated to be electric. And there
are thousands of General Motors workers in Oshawa,
Ont., who would love the chance to build those vehi-
cles.
Fourth, capping emissions: Under former pre-
mier Rachel Notley, Alberta worked with the oil in-
dustry and environmentalists to achieve a workable
cap on emissions from the province’s oil industry.
The industry was clear it could succeed economical-
ly while meeting simple and enforceable targets. It’s
time to bring it back.
And finally, a just transition for workers. People in
affected industries need jobs where they live. They
have significant skills and the government must
lead the creation of new work in those communities.
A good place to start is Oshawa. If GM won’t retool
its plant to take advantage of the highly skilled and
productive work force there, the federal govern-
ment should lead the effort to ensure that the elec-
tric buses, vans and cars we need are built there by
another manufacturer. Those workers deserve no
less.
Do these steps work? Undoubtedly. Leaders such
as United Nations Secretary-General Antonio Gu-
terres, Michael Bloomberg, Al Gore and Alexandria
Ocasio-Cortez came to the summit in Copenhagen
to praise the efforts of leading mayors and cities, and
to learn more. These cities are already dramatically
reducing carbon emissions, while continuing to
prosper.
In Toronto, for example, by taking similar mea-
sures, greenhouse gas emissions are down 33 per
cent over 1990 levels, the base year mandated in the
original climate agreement, the Kyoto Protocol.
By taking the best of these ideas and replicating
them at scale, we can help Canada to quickly get on a
path to cut emissions in line with the scientific evi-
dence, and thereby prevent climate breakdown. A
sustainable future that benefits every Canadian citi-
zen and resident is possible. We just need to choose
it.

:hatwecan


actuallðdoabout


cliatechan‚e


DAVIDMILLER

OPINION

AuthoroftheforthcomingbookSolved:Howthe
World’sGreatCitiesAreFixingtheClimateCrisis,
directorofinternationaldiplomacyattheC40Climate
LeadershipGroupandaformermayorofToronto

Thereisabundant
cleanelectricityin
Canada,muchof
whichisexportedto
theUnitedStates.
Connectingthese
intraprovincialgrids
andendingthe
burningoffossil
fuels,particularly
coal,inCanadais
technicallyfeasible
today.

R


ecently, Senator Bernie Sanders asked
Americans to share their most “absurd”
medical bills, and he received a tidal wave of
ludicrous numbers in response. The obvi-
ous message was don’t get sick in the United States,
unless you’re hoarding gold under the mattress or
you run a tech startup.
Canadians responded on social media as well, let-
ting Mr. Sanders know that we occasionally have to
pay exorbitant hospital parking rates, or get hosed
when buying a muffin at the clinic coffee shop, but
that’s about it. My heart swelled reading those re-
sponses, because that’s been my experience, too:
When we need the medical system it’s there for us,
and we don’t have to sell a kidney to access it.
But as I watched the heartwarming responses roll
in, I realized that everyone was talking about the
cost of their physical health, not their mental well-
being. What would it have looked like if everyone
totted up the price of maintaining their family’s
mental health – the visits to a ther-
apist or psychiatrist, the private in-pa-
tient clinics, the monthly expendi-
tures on medication for those who
don’t have company drug plans?
We’re told, endlessly, to talk about
our mental health, but so much of it is
just hot air. For one thing, even
though a significant portion of us will
experience mental-health challenges
in our lives, we still are worried about
the repercussions of opening up, even
to colleagues. A recent survey con-
ducted by Ipsos Mori for Teladoc
Health revealed that more than 80 per
cent of respondents had not revealed
their mental-health problems to any-
one at work, worried about the possible negative
consequences for their careers.
For a country of price-complainers – did you see
how much cauliflower costs this week? – we seldom
talk about how much we shell out to keep our
minds in good running order. Maybe it’s a mis-
placed sense of shame, or a concern about privacy,
or fear of being seen as “less than” in a society that
values only triumph and success. Those are all un-
derstandable reasons.
But until we talk about how much it costs us all
individually, we’re not going to go far collectively
toward making mental-health services affordable
and accessible for all.
In my case, there were many months when my
family’s mental-health bill hit several hundred dol-
lars, mainly for therapy. I’m not complaining; in
fact, I would personally throw a parade for ther-
apists if they’d let me, and I’d buy all the balloons
and cake. My family is among the lucky ones. My
husband and I have health benefits through our
employer, which pay for drugs and for some ther-
apy, but the cutoff is quickly reached – especially if
you’re paying for more than one person’s regular
treatment. After the cutoff, we pay out of pocket.
Again, we’re fortunate that we’re able to; we can buy
our way around the endless lines for publicly sub-
sidized care. So many Canadians are not in the same
position. If our health-care system is going to seri-

ously tackle the mental-health crisis, and if it’s go-
ing to fulfill its legislated pledge of universality, that
has to change.
It’s a godawful cycle: The poorer you are, the less
likely you are to be in a position to afford private
care. The more you suffer from a debilitating illness,
the less able you are to do the grinding work of ad-
vocating for yourself. There’s a chapter heading in
journalist Anna Mehler Paperny’s invaluable new
book on living with depression that sums it up:
Mental Health is for Rich People.
“As far as national chauvinisms go, Canada loves
being The One With Universal Health Care. But if
your illness is in your brain, that universality is a
lie,” Ms. Paperny writes inHello I Want to Die Please
Fix Me: Depression in the First Person.She outlines the
ways in which Canada fails the legions of people
who need mental-health support – Indigenous
youth, those on waiting lists, children, the not-fully-
employed. “If you don’t want mental wellness to re-
main the purview of the privileged, if you don’t
want poverty to doom people to debilitating an-
guish, you need to cover pharmacotherapy and psy-
chotherapy like you mean it. Universally. For every-
one.”
The cost to individuals and families may be
quietly swept under the carpet, but
the cost of untreated mental-health
problems to society as a whole has
been widely studied. According to the
Conference Board of Canada, depres-
sion and anxiety cost a cumulative
$50-billion in lost productivity. Ac-
cording to a recent report from Chil-
dren’s Mental Health Ontario, the pro-
vincial economy loses $420-million a
year when parents stay home from
work to look after children who strug-
gle (and some of those children are on
wait lists of up to one and a half years
for treatment).
As the Canadian Mental Health As-
sociation’s research has shown, more
than half of us consider depression and anxiety to
be at “epidemic levels” and yet 1.6 million Cana-
dians feel they’re going untreated. The CMHA has
called for a federal parity act to bring mental-health
spending “into balance” with spending on physical
health (right now, only 7.2 per cent of health-care
spending goes to mental health).
This has not exactly been a hot-button issue on
the election trail, although both the Liberals and
the NDP have pledged to increase their funding
commitments, as well as supporting a national
pharmacare plan. But the evidence of crisis is there,
especially among young people. At one campaign
stop, a young woman told NDP Leader Jagmeet
Singh that she and her friends struggled with de-
pression and anxiety. He listened and told her,
“Please get the help you need.” “I can’t afford it,” the
woman interrupted. “A therapy session is $200” and
there’s “a long wait time” for publicly available sup-
port. (At this point, I was hoping the young woman
would run for office so I could vote for her.) Mr.
Singh responded that his party would make the sys-
tem work for her, with “all the checks and balances
... I don’t care what the cost is.”
It takes guts to admit these things, especially
publicly, and the young woman became emotional.
I’m glad she spoke up, because someone needs to.
Whether anyone listens is an entirely different
matter.

:hodeserves


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tÌseasytopatourselíesontheQac–forouramaôing
Canadianhealthcaresystemvuntilyouneedatherapysession

Foracountryof
price-complainers–
didyouseehow
muchcauliflower
coststhisweek?–
weseldomtalk
abouthowmuchwe
shellouttokeepour
mindsingood
runningorder.

ELIZABETH
RENZETTI

OPINION

ILLUSTRATIONBYHANNABARCZYK
Free download pdf