PCPC : Parent Co-Operative Preschool Corporation

PCPC: Parent Co-operative Preschool Corporation

e-newsletter 19: Day Nurseries Act Information Checklist

Information Corner

Day Nurseries Act: Information Checklist

(To be included in the Centre Operations Binder)

A new tipsheet category called “Legal Compliance” has been created in the Governance section of the PCPC Members’ only section.

http://www.pcpcontario.org/day-nurseries-act-information-checklist

Full-day Learning

October 27, 2009 — Premier Dalton McGuinty announces Ontario will start phasing in full-day learning for four- and five-year-olds next fall. Learn more about the Province’s plan for full-day learning.

http://news.ontario.ca/opo/en/2009/10/ontario-moves-forward-with-full-day-learning.html

This year it’s a different flu season!
Protect yourself against the flu — go to the Ontario Ministry of Health for up-to-date information — “http://www.health.gov.on.ca/en/ccom/flu/“http://www.health.gov.on.ca/en/ccom/flu/

PCPC 35TH Anniversary

Motivation and Passion in Life with Kids!

We were excited to kick off our 35th Anniversary at our Annual General Meeting October 8th with guest speaker Mary Stuart, who spoke on “Motivation and Passion in Life with Kids!” — Members commented: “Fantastic” “That was awesome!” “Great tips for Parents and Teachers — thanks!”

From that meeting PCPC is excited to announce a PCPC Members’ Only Section on Childlife’s website: www.childlife.ca

Check out the moving and motivational compilation of Life Affirmations on the Recipe for Life PowerPoint presentation — use your PCPC Members’ Only Code to access it.

Co-operators Insurance and You!

Please remember that your Co-operators Insurance policies were due with payment by October 15th, 2009!

To celebrate the 10th anniversary of its award-winning Buckle Up Bears car seat inspection program, The Co-operators and the Infant & Toddler Safety Association (ITSA) have launched a new website that will help keep Canadian children safe on our roads.

The new site, www.infantandtoddlersafety.ca, hosts educational materials including printable brochures, checklists and videos designed to help adults learn the proper use of child car seats.

The website includes Car Seat Safety Check, the instructional video released last year that provides step-by-step instructions for selecting appropriate car seats and installing them properly. The DVD was released by The Co-operators and ITSA last year, and is being made available online for the first time.

Over the past 10 years, the Buckle Up Bears program has provided parents and caregivers with tools and support to confidently install their car seats. Representatives of The Co-operators, ITSA, local volunteers and dignitaries gathered in Guelph, Ontario earlier this month to celebrate the program’s 10th anniversary.

Childlife.ca!

Successful Classrooms, Successful Boards, Successful Families don’t just happen!

It takes combined energy, talent, desire, vision and determination. Things you really care about take time, commitment, thought, planning and prioritizing. You have to work at it, make sacrifices. You have to want it and pay the price.

We can create environments when we are intentional and purposeful. As parents, teachers and board members we are powerful influencers who impact and inspire children’s healthy growth and development!

Those who don’t create the future they want must endure the future they get…

Let us reclaim childhood. Let us be the change agents! Let us be the leaders of the next generation!

Mary Stuart, E.C.E.D.H.
Early Childhood Specialist
Director
childlife …inspire their best!
www.childlife.ca
justask@childlife.ca

What’s happening in… Your Centre? Your Community? Your Province? Your Country? Your World?

November is Adoption Awareness Month! Adoption Awareness Month promotes adoption as a way of forming a family! For more information on adoption visit the Adoption Council of Canada website (http://www.adoption.ca)

November is Diabetes Month! Diabetes Awareness Month aims to raise public awareness of diabetes and to improve the quality of life for diabetics. For more information about diabetes visit the Canadian Diabetes Association website (http://www.diabetes.ca)

November 1st to November 7th is National Down Syndrome Awareness Week! Down Syndrome Awareness Week is a public awareness campaign focusing on the unique strengths and abilities of people with Down syndrome — by doing so; we work to ensure equitable opportunities for all Canadians with Down syndrome. For more information visit the Canadian Down Syndrome Society website (http://www.cdss.ca)

November 11th is Remembrance Day! Remembrance Day pays tribute to Canadians who died while serving in the Canadian Forces. For more information regarding Remembrance Day ceremonies in your area contact your local branch of the Royal Canadian Legion or your community representatives.

November 14th is World Diabetes Day! World Diabetes Day is observed on the birthday of Frederick Banting, who helped discover insulin. World Diabetes Day is part of a worldwide awareness campaign sponsored by the World Health Organization and the International Diabetes Federation. For more information regarding World Diabetes Day events and celebrations visit the International Diabetes Federation website (http://www.idf.org)

Fundraising Ideas

Remember that all of these fundraising ideas, and many more can be found in the Governance Series Workshops (Members’ Only Section) of the PCPC website www.pcpcontario.org

Dances: Dances are a great way to involve parents in socializing with other parents and staff of the Centre. They can be held for any purpose, at any time of the year, and they can also take on a theme or be held in a special place. Some examples of different themes or variations include:

Organization of a dance is time-consuming but fairly easy and the results are usually fun and profitable!

Get to know potential funders!

The Joshua Foundation Inc.
Address: 1504-201 Portage Avenue, Winnipeg, Manitoba, R3B 3K6
Contact: Leonard Asper, President
Telephone/Fax: (204) 989-5530 (telephone); (204) 989-5536 (fax)
Funding Interest: Children
Granting Region: Ontario

The Kiwanis Club of Toronto Foundation
Address: Sievert & Associates LLP, 43 Colborne Street, Toronto, Ontario, M5E 1E3
Contact: Administrative Office — Kiwanis Club of Toronto
Telephone/Fax: (416) 285-7903 (telephone); (416) 487-5784 (fax)
Email: torontokiwanis@rogers.com
Funding Interest: Children
Granting Region: Toronto Area

The Lang Family Foundation
Address: P.O. Box 747, 2500-181 Bay Street, Toronto, Ontario, M5J 2T7
Contact: Harold Lerner
Telephone/Fax: (905) 764-7922 (telephone); (905) 764-5106 (fax)
Funding Interest: Children
Granting Region: Ontario

Did you know? (Fun facts and quotes)

Rubber bands last longer when refrigerated!

Going Green!

Part One: Gearing Up to Go Green — Considering motivations for change!

When the benefits of changing to greener products or systems are expressed in terms of money, risk or brand, organizations start to sit up and take notice.

Remember: Carbon dioxide and its equivalents, such as methane and nitrous oxide (referred to collectively as CO2e) are the main focus of concern or governments and other organizations. These harmful emissions provide a yardstick by which progress can be measured with respect to climate change. Some activities connected to IT harm the planet and the people on it in other ways as well. Certain manufacturing processes pollute the air, the soil and the water and deplete non-renewable resources. Such actions bring short-term benefits but they’re unsustainable over a longer timescale.

IT-related CO2e emissions alone have been estimated at 2% of the world’s total. Not only can everyone work together to reduce this figure, but IT itself can support the greening of other processes as well (the remaining 98%)!

Don’t restrict your thoughts to CO2 emissions only — think in terms of ‘before, during and after’ a product’s lifetime when considering the impact on the environment. Whether its energy, equipment or ancillary supplies, each comes with:

The good news is that manufacturers are improving their processes at each of these life stages, from minimizing harm ‘before’ use by employing cleaner and leaner sourcing and manufacturing techniques, by designing products that consume less energy and materials ‘during’ use and helping with reuse and recycling ‘after’ use. Manufacturers are also beginning to produce environmental information that you can use when making your buying choices.

Part Two: Cleaning Up IT — Balancing benefits and costs!

The reach of IT is wide, and every element provides an opportunity to reduce environmental harm. Sometimes the benefits accrue immediately and sometimes they take longer. Sometimes you need to change behaviour and at other times you need a change in procurement or operational systems.

Before: Purchasing Strategies

A good way to start cleaning up your IT is to include environmental questions in your purchasing requests. You can find many public databases where suppliers offer information about themselves and their products (check out EPEAT and the Carbon Disclosure Project). Many goods come with labels certifying their environmental standards, such as their recyclability, their avoidance of harmful chemicals and their energy efficiency and so on.

Remember: Your aim in purchasing should be to look at the whole life implications of your acquisitions, including the opportunities for reusing or recycling products when you’ve finished with them!

During: A Day in the Life of IT Products

Once you’ve chosen the products that meet your specifications and environmental expectations, you need to think about how they’re used.

In the office…

Look around any office and you’ll probably see computers and printers lying idle — unless the devices have a recognized environmental certification or label, or they have a sleep mode, they’re burning up at least half as much power when idle as when they’re working flat out.

Tip: When you’re not using them, drop devices into sleep mode, ready for when you come back. Ideally, if you’re going to be away for a while, you can just turn things off. Don’t forget that machines with external power supplies draw current, even when the device itself is switched off. If the charger feels warm, it’s drawing current.

Consider your printers — use draft and duplex modes to optimise your use of consumables and paper. You can review and share documents on screen and print on demand only, reducing the number of unnecessary prints. Many companies have found that consolidating a large number of personal printers into fewer central models can improve cost management, while saving on energy and paper use.

Tip: Think about replacing your monitor screens, especially if they’re cathode ray tubes, which consume power continuously and were designed with no thought to recycling. Instead, buy flat screen monitors that consume little or no energy when in standby mode. Some computers shift to standby mode automatically after a certain period of inactivity.

Out of the office…

Most people use either a laptop or a PDA, or both, when they’re on the move. These bring new issues — do you leave mobile phone, notebook and PDA chargers plugged into a live power supply, even when nothing’s being charged? What do you do with your mobile phone at the end of its life? Most people put them away in a drawer ‘just in case’ rather than reusing them or recycling them. Instead, look out for recycling schemes, ranging from bulk collections (ideal for out-of-date office mobiles) to freepost addresses for small quantities. Equipment is refurbished when possible or stripped for precious metals and components when not (remember to include the power supply when returning used equipment).

After: What Happens Next?

After you’ve finished with your IT products, what happens when they’re no longer needed? In nature, organic materials rot down and feed future growth, so why not dismantle products at the end of their lives and use the elements as raw materials for future products? Several reputable computer manufacturers use metal and easily-separated plastics in order to maximize raw material reuse.

Remember: It’s important that the environmental costs of recovery don’t exceed the benefits expected. And that, of course, loops back to design in the first place.

The priorities for all material things are reduce, reuse and recycle — in that order of importance. If you can extend the working life of your IT products, you reduce the environmental consequences of mining, manufacturing, packaging, shipping and disposal.

Can you upgrade something rather than finish using it? If you have to replace it, can someone else inside the organization use it? If not, charities and refurbishing organizations may be able to extend the life of the product. Also, waiting at the end of the line, many organizations, including some manufacturers themselves, are willing to take equipment back and recycle the components into new products.

Part Three: Greening Your Organization — Reusing energy!

IT to the Rescue: Preventing Energy Waste!

Although IT devices consume energy, you can use them to control energy, particularly electricity consumption.

Tip: You can use IT systems to take care of building management. For example, using movement sensors, thermostats can be adjusted, lights switched on and off, and computers switched off out of hours and reawakened for software upgrades.

Part Four: Changing Staff Attitudes and Taking Action!

Tips and Suggestions…

Part Five: Ten Links to Inspire you Further!

  1. Climate Futures: The economic, political, social and psychological consequences of climate change: www.forumforthefuture.org/files/Climate%20Futures_WEB.pdf
  2. Cradle to Cradle: Michael Braungart and William McDonough wrote an influential book called Cradle to Cradle: Remaking the Way We Make Things, which sensibility suggested that manufacturing processes should, as far as possible, mirror nature’s cycles: www.mcdonough.com/cradle_to_cradle.htm
  3. Energy Star: Save money and protect the environment through energy efficient products and practices: www.energystar.gov
  4. EPEAT: Evaluate, compare and select desktop computers, notebooks and monitors based on environmental attributes: www.epeat.net
  5. Green Grid: Follow energy efficiency developments in data centres and business computing ecosystems: www.thegreengrid.org
  6. Green Computing: Find out more about the role of IT in the push towards environmental sustainability: www.freeformdynamics.com/fullarticle.asp?aid=140
  7. Hewlett Packard: The starting point for the company’s many environmental initiatives: www.hp.com/environment
  8. Our Common Future: A full hypertext version of The Brundtland Report, a sustainable development report published by the UN: www.un-documents.net/wced-ocf.htm
  9. The Carbon Disclosure Project: Find primary climate change data from the world’s largest corporations: www.cdproject.net
  10. The Worldwide Fund for Nature: IT solutions that help business and the planet: assets.panda.org/downloads/it_user_guide_a4.pdf

Who’s Green?

This new section of the PCPC electronic newsletter will provide you, your Centre and the families who use your services with the contact information for organizations that care about the environment and it shows in the products and services that they offer!

Mass Environmental Services Inc.
Contact: Marnie Brown
Telephone/Fax: (705) 652-6544 (office telephone); (705) 927-6547 (cell); (705) 652-1757 (fax)
Email: mlb@massenv.com (email)

General Information: Mass Environmental Services Inc. is a solid waste advisory company that assesses company’s waste management systems. MASS believes that we must work towards waste elimination, not waste management.

MASS distributes a complete line of Canadian made biodegradable cleaners. These cleaners utilize the power of nanotechnology and colloidal micelles to tackle the most challenging situations. All MASS cleaners are children and animal safe with a ‘zero’ hazardous rating.

MASS distributes the Wysi Wipe, a completely biodegradable wipe that contains no added chemicals, is compostable, hypo-allergenic and non-toxic.

MASS also distributes oxo-biodegradable clear waste bags.

MASS believes that through education that they can help to change the world, one household at a time.

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PCPC: Parent Co-operative Preschool Corporation
1571 Sandhurst Circle, PO Box 63512, Toronto, ON • MIV 1V0
Tel 416-410-2667 (Toronto)
E-mail info@pcpcontario.org
Website www.pcpcontario.org or www.pcpctoronto.org
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PCPC is a registered charity. You can make a donation
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Printed from www.pcpcontario.org © PCPC 2005-2010.

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e-newsletter 24: Full Day Learning · May 18
Full-Day Learning Act passed: update and links · April 29
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Going Green!

All 'Going Green' articles on one page »

Going Green 23 · January 15
Going Green 22 · December 17
Going Green 21 · December 4
Going Green 20 · November 20
Going Green 19: A Brief Overview of “Green IT for Dummies” · October 27

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