Tuesday, March 30, 2021

Worrying about “Backyard” Birds

Following is a little piece that I wrote last year before COVID hit and we had other things to worry about then birds in our backyards.   Here is hoping this year we will return to something approaching normalcy.

----------

Last year I had planned to sign up for the Great Backyard Bird Count. I just forgot to do it.  Next year I’ll sign up for sure although it presents some issues for me.

The Great Backyard Bird Count (GBBC) (https://www.birdscanada.org/bird-science/great-backyard-bird-count/) is billed as a free, fun, and easy event that engages bird watchers to count birds.  You can do this for as little as 15 minutes in your backyard or anywhere you want for that matter.  The Count is open to experts, beginners or non-experts like me. 

I wish my excuse for forgetting the GBBC last year was that I was busy. However, for the days in question mostly what I was doing was sitting at my keyboard, concocting excuses for not doing housework and looking out my windows at my bird feeders.  

(I’ve got eight feeders up right now. One family member says eight is too many.  A Port Rowan neighbour has fourteen, I point out, so you can’t really object to eight, right?)

But, back to my point here which is that I’ve been thinking and thinking and thinking some more about backyard birds; the context being that we run a small bed and breakfast and many of our guests are birders.  The contemplation of this conundrum is causing me considerable anxiety.

Do you know any birders? 

I’m generalizing here but birders are much like any other people who adopt an intense interest in a hobby. They are enthused, obsessed;  some even fanatical. 

The French novelist Honore de Balzac has said that,  “a hobby is a happy medium between a passion and a monomania.” 

Humour columnist Dave Barry wrote that hobbies of any kind are boring except to people who have the same hobby.

These insights are not lost on yours truly.  

And then there is the whole problem of what to call the hobby/obsession.

I realized that I wasn’t sensitive to this issue when watching the movie - The Big Year.  In that flick Steve Martin’s character (Stu) is insult put down by a professional for leaving work to go bird watching.  Stu took great umbrage.

“It’s called birding,” huffed Stu!! 

 Our home is located in great birding territory.  Indeed, it is a not so well known fact that more bird species have been seen in the Port Rowan/Long Point area than the much ballyhooed Point Peele vicinity. 

Issues

Carolina Wren seen IN our Backyard

Some have suggested that we ought to keep a list of all birds seen in our backyard. There are, however, a number of vexing issues that the development of such a list would present.

For example, to be counted does a bird actually have to touch down in our yard? That would be a fairly clear-cut definition to use.

But what if, say, one observes a “good” bird flying over one’s yard? We had an immature bald eagle fly past sometime back.   Now, to be frank, it is probably more accurate to say it was over the neighbour’s yard. But let’s face it, our list would be a superior one if I could add that bald eagle. So, I’m leaning to the backyard list inclusion criteria being “seen from my backyard.” That should make for a better quality list.

But here’s another worry. From my front yard I have a distant view of the Inner Harbour of Long Point Bay on Lake Erie and this will surely produce many shorebirds and an enhanced list. In fact, a few years ago on Easter Sunday we recorded a couple of white pelicans flapping and gliding over the Bay. Clearly, it will be more gratifying for my guests, then, if that backyard list captures anything that can be seen from the front yard as well.

White Pelicans seen FROM
our Backyard

 I’m certain the guests will be keen to contribute to the   list. In fact, repeat visitors (some do actually return)   could be encouraged to have their own personalized list.   Perhaps this will be an incentive to return.

 Do I anticipate problems? Well, I’m told that some   birders can be competitive and argumentative.  (Did I   mention that we took photos to document those white   pelicans?)  

 So, if there are disagreements on sightings will it fall to  the reluctant but affable host to resolve disputes?

 And will guests be trampling all over my much-in-need   of  landscaping front yard in an effort to maximize their  viewing range

And what about the neighbours?

Lots to think about....

Tuesday, March 09, 2021

Raising Social Assistance Rates

I just read an interesting policy paper from Open Policy Ontario.

Authored by John Stapleton and Yvonne Yuan the paper looks at the question of whether  higher social assistance rates lead to higher caseloads during recessions.

Well, they don’t.  


The authors conclude that when you take a look at unemployment data and minimum wage levels over time you’ll see that that higher social assistance benefit levels will not result in more people on social assistance. 

Stapleton and Yuan recommend immediate implementation of either: 

1. Raising the single Ontario Works assistance rate by 14.3% to $838 per month to equal 40% of full-time minimum wages along with parallel increases for other family sizes or 

2. Raising Ontario refundable tax credits by $1,365 per year so that all low-income single people can benefit from an increase in income. 

They also recommend that minimum wages be immediately increased to $15.00 per hour.

Read the report at https://openpolicyontario.s3.amazonaws.com/uploads/2021/03/culprits-20210219r-sacs.pdf

----------

Fast Facts


  • There has been no increase in rates since 2018 a continuation of a gradual downward slide in the value of social assistance that began with a drastic cut in 1995.  
  • According to the Ontario government, evidence shows that racially diverse, newcomer and low-income communities have been impacted more significantly by COVID-19 than others.
  • The federal government’s response to the pandemic has identified $2,000 per month as a “basic income” for people who have lost their jobs. The current rates for single individuals on Ontario Works (OW) is $733 and for Ontario Disability Support program (ODSP) is $1,169.00 fall far below this “basic income.”. 
  • The annual cost of poverty in Ontario is between $27.1 and $33 billion taking into account loss of tax revenue and increased expenses in the health and justice systems (Feed Ontario. The Cost of Poverty in Ontario 2019, p.4).  

Here is a link to a chart that illustrates how the buying power of social assistance rates has continued to sink over the years, because of minimal or no annual increases to match inflation. 

https://1drv.ms/w/s!AvRzOEPfSVfDvQTzDtVAYONTQ22W?e=LJGTc5