For starters, I don’t think ‘government’ is the mechanism through which we solve societies problems. People, organizations, and communities solve problems, and government is responsible for supporting, codifying, and protecting the solutions that community creates for itself. If nonprofits like Disability Matters, Make Poverty History, Manitoba Child Care Association, and dozens of others in this province had access to legislate health improving, cost saving, economy boosting, and community improving measures, we’d have crime, poverty, homelessness, and civic awareness solved in a decade.
I will continue my work in community building, bringing together contentious developers and community groups, activists and policy makers. I will sit and meetings endlessly, and at endless meetings (the committee Mennonite in me is strong, if you think the legislature is a tough sit try a split conference church council meeting ????) I will continue to work in a diversity of faith communities to build spaces for care, continue to work with industry to improve health and environmental standards, and amplify and activate the organizers work for good todays and better tomorrows.
I’ve grown up around tremendous family and community supports, and I’ve had the privilege to speak with public intellectuals, CEOs, community board members, and business leaders, as well as people experiencing homelessness, mental health issues, and poverty. I’ve got to talk with Pride organizers and participants, church leaders, doctors and philosophers, police officers and social workers. I’ve had coaches and teachers that have taught me well and given me life gifts, work ethic, and critical insight.
We can build community with community, and if the government supports that then we are doing well. The only true government of the people is one that respects and protects the commons; the collective work of our global civilization and the nurture of Mother Earth. To work for these goals means transparency, cooperation, and accountability for our legislators. We live in a technological world, and there is no good reason why we can’t have connect and manage the needs of community while still supporting creative innovative and robust economies. There is no good reason we need to subject the environment to lower standards for the sake of our economy. The cure for this is universal civics education, health and nutrition standards across provincial schools, and the alleviation of unnecessary financial and social burdens on families and people experiencing crisis.
Maybe most importantly, we will learn from the mistakes of colonialism, learn to speak a new shared language of respect, elevate the voices of indigenous leaders to act on the calls to reconciliation, we can work out a better way of being together, in parliament, in our earning life, and in our giving live. Massive change is built over years of perseverance and dedication, and set in big moments. Look to your elders, your community, and your young people about where to go. Help them to get there. Many small differences is the only sure path to change, and the many can make a difference.
Affordability
Childcare
Green's promises
Food prices
Green's promise
Fuel and transportation costs
Green's promise
Pensions
Green's promise
Post-secondary costs and loans
Green's promises
Poverty and the minimum wage
Green's promises
Public transit
Green's promises
Tax measures and rebates
Green's promise
Climate Change & the Environment
Active transportation
Green's promises
Climate adaptation
Green's promises
Energy generation
Green's promise
Green construction and retrofits
Green's promises
Public transit
Green's promises
Reducing greenhouse gas emissions
Green's promises
Waste
Green's promises
This would include mandating:
- The availability of parts at reasonable prices;
- Provision of free and publicly available service manuals;
- Publicly available repair information such as software tools and schematics;
- Repairability labeling to inform consumers of the likely lifetime and fixability of the product; and
- Enforcing repairable designs (e.g., replaceable batteries, long-term software support, etc).
Water
Green's promises
Education
K-12 funding
Green's promise
Post-secondary costs and loans
Green's promises
School curriculum
Green's promises
Student mental health
Green's promises
Healthcare
Drugs and addiction
Green's promises
Gender-affirming care
Green's promises
Mental health
Green's promise
Sexual and reproductive health
Green's promises
Housing & Homelessness
Affordable housing
Green's promise
Homelessness
Green's promises
Jobs, Businesses, & Labour
Poverty and the minimum wage
Green's promises
Society & Government
Electoral Reform
Green's promises
Public safety
Green's promises
Biography
For those that might care, I’ve worked in the trades and construction for most of my professional life. I drive heavy equipment now. I’ve never been one who believes that our professions define us (although they certainly describe us), and I’ve seen too many bad ‘bosses’ to believe that profession equals expertise, but it has given me a chance to work with a lot of people and take me a few places. I have worked and volunteered with enough nonprofits to know that determined and caring individuals and groups can accomplish amazing things.
I’ve lead house builds for Habitat for Humanity, worked overnights at the 1JustCity overnight shelter, delivered food to St Matthews commons, coordinated community art projects with Synonym Art Consultation, sat on the SNA Holistic Housing committee, coached youth basketball at MERC, and done dozens of community clean ups, walks, and visits in communities around this province and beyond. There are so many kind and caring people and they deserve leadership and representation that understands the impacts from your front step. We need radical alternatives and reasonable solutions, and this is what community does best!
I run for the Greens because we occupy a necessary political space. The only answer to “who should win this election.” is Manitoba, and what I hear is Manitobans asking for a minority government that is accountable, with a diversity of voices and opinions. We want proportional representation to remove ‘strategic’ voting and encourage participation. A strong democracy requires a literate and active population. We want universal basic income, because the most cost effective way to broadly support our health system, care systems, policing systems, economy, and ecology.
This, as they say, is not my first rodeo. I’ve ran federally and provincially, and met some amazing organizers, but none impress me as much as the young people taking charge of their futures and getting involved in political activism. Our provincial party has some of the most impressive persons I’ve ever had the pleasure to plan with, and I’m working with them to build to the party into a force for the future.
This election has given me the opportunity to connect with people doing the good, hard, and under-recognized work that keeps the fabric of our society stitched together. I have seen that we can make plans together that don’t require the favourable whims of government, and that we can sometimes change those whims if we are united in speaking up for our communities.
When politicians give you numbers, ask a nonprofit if that is a reasonable number. When they make promises for change, ask your community leaders if they’ve been consulted. Governance is a skill and we aren’t picking from a field of experts. I believe in the Reading Rainbow school of politics (don’t take my word for it), abundant living and the Anthony Keidis school of economics, and in the promise that young people carry in a kind and sustainable future.
geddert4elmwood.ca www.geddert4elmwood.ca