Shame, Shame
The CBC Offers Up 'Unreality Check'
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Leslie McKinnon, CBC News, Toronto:
Wrong, says a 1997 article in The Toronto Star:
This is -- at the very least -- evidence. Dontcha think? But it turns out Leslie McKinnon's real problem is that she doesn't even understand what Layton was saying in the first place:
Two obvious problems: The two year study in question measures deaths among men who were homeless at some point during a two year period. But the average homeless person is only without residence for 30 to 90 days. So, many -- if not most -- of these deaths would have occurred amongst men who were not actaully homeless when they died. More importantly, McKinnon's cites two studies that both took place after 1995 -- after Paul Martin's affordable housing cuts began . To actually prove, or disprove, Layton's claim one would obviously have to compare a study that took place before Martin's budget cuts with a study that took place after the cuts. This is just what Toronto public health social epidemiologist Diane Patychuk has done. McKinnon's report also falls flat in covering the political steps:
Sounds like a defense of Paul Martin. But read carefully, these facts confirm that Martin excoriated the Tory government for cuts to affordable housing, but when in power himself made an about face -- eliminating federal funding for affordable housing all together. The 'reality' hardly favours Martin. |