Girls Can Marry at 15,
Colorado
Court Finds. [United
States] A 15-year-old girl can enter into a common-law marriage
in Colorado, and younger girls and boys possibly can,
too, a state appeals court ruled
Thursday. While the three-judge panel stopped short of setting a specific minimum age for
such marriages, it said they could be legal for girls at 12 and boys at 14 under English
common law, which Colorado recognizes. The
ruling overturned a lower-court judge's
decision that a girl, now older than 18, was too young to marry at 15. The panel said
there was no clear legislative or statutory guidance on common-law marriages,
and that Colorado
courts have not determined an age of consent. For traditional ceremonial marriage, Colorado
law sets the minimum age at 18, or 16 with parental or judicial approval. |
Iowa Senator Seeks Tax on
Pimps, Prostitutes. [United
States] Republican Sen. Charles Grassley of Iowa is hoping
to stamp out the sex trade by taxing pimps and prostitutes, then jailing them when they
don't pay. The Senate Finance Committee is expected to vote Wednesday morning on the pimp
tax. The bill also calls for more jail time for sex workers. If passed, the provision will
authorize at least $2 million toward the establishment of an office in the Internal
Revenue Service Criminal Investigation unit to prosecute unlawful sex workers for
violations of tax laws. "Recent headlines have focused on sex trafficking in
connection with the World Cup in Germany," Grassley
said. "This vile crime is
under our noses in the United States,
and it's a no-brainer to have the IRS go after sex
traffickers. Prosecuting these tax code violations can get these guys off the street and
yank from their grasp the girls and women they exploit." Grassley said the problem is
"especially horrible" when underage girls are involved. Asked if taxing sex
workers would legitimize their trade, a Grassley spokesman said the goal was simply to
find "yet another alternative to track the money flowing in this industry to get at
potential criminals." Currently, the IRS has to prove a prostitute's or pimp's income
to pursue a tax law violation. But under Grassley's proposal, a pimp could get up to 10
years in prison for each prostitute for whom the pimp hasn't filed a W-2, which means a
pimp caught with 10 unregistered prostitutes faces a century in prison. |
Louisiana
Governor Expected To Sign Strict Abortion Into Law Soon. [United States] Gov. Kathleen
Blanco was expected to sign a strict abortion ban into law after the Senate on Monday gave
the measure final legislative approval. Blanco has said she planned to sign the bill that
would ban nearly all abortions in Louisiana, though only if the U.S. Supreme Court's 1973
Roe v. Wade abortion rights ruling is overturned. The bill by Sen. Ben Nevers, D-Bogalusa,
could only take effect under two circumstances: the U.S. Constitution is amended to allow
states to ban abortion; or the Supreme Court strikes down Roe v. Wade. Under the measure,
doctors found guilty of performing abortions would face up to 10 years in prison and fines
of $100,000. Originally, the bill would have allowed abortions only to save the life of
the mother, with no exceptions for victims of rape or incest. The House added a provision
to allow abortions in cases where the mother's health faces permanent harm. The Senate
voted 27-0 to approve the change and send it to Blanco. |
South
Dakota Voters to Decide Fate of Abortion Ban. [United States] Voters will have the
final say on South Dakota's tough new
law that bans almost all
abortions. Secretary of
State Chris Nelson said Monday that the law's opponents had collected enough signatures to
put a question on the Nov. 7 ballot asking voters if the law should go into effect as
planned or be dumped. The state's abortion law, among the strictest in the nation, bans
the procedure in all cases except when necessary to save a woman's life, with no
exceptions for rape or incest. Supporters hoped it would prompt a court challenge that
would give the U.S. Supreme Court an opportunity to overturn its 1973 Roe. v. Wade
decision that legalized abortion. Instead of challenging it in court, opponents, who argue
the law is too extreme, gathered enough petition signatures to put the question directly
to voters. |
Top
Court to Decide Second Abortion Law Case. [United
States] The U.S. Supreme Court said
on Monday it would expand its review of a federal law banning some abortion procedures and
would decide a California case on whether the
law was too vague and imposed a burden on
women. The justices in February agreed to rule on a Nebraska case on whether the
Partial-Birth Abortion Ban Act of 2003 is unconstitutional because it lacks an exception
to protect the health of a pregnant woman. The California case
involved additional issues
on whether the law imposed an undue burden on a woman's right to seek an abortion and
whether it is unconstitutionally vague. A U.S. appeals court declared the law
unconstitutional and upheld an injunction barring its enforcement. Both cases will be
decided in the upcoming term that begins in October. The law represents the first
nationwide ban on an abortion procedure since the Supreme Court's landmark 1973 ruling
that women have a constitutional right to abortion. |
Morning-After Pills Free
on Friday in Colorado. [United
States] Planned Parenthood of the Rocky Mountains will
offer free emergency contraception Friday in response to the governor's veto of
legislation that would have made the pills more easily available. Gov. Bill Owens vetoed
House Bill 1212 in April. It would have made it possible for women to get emergency
contraception from a pharmacist without a doctor's prescription. "Governor Owens
denied the women of Colorado Springs, but Planned Parenthood won't," said Katie Groke
Ellis, public affairs coordinator for Planned Parenthood in Colorado Springs. Owens'
office declined to comment, but a news release issued in April said. Owens vetoed the bill
because of concerns that minors would have been able to obtain the pills without the
counsel or guidance that would be provided by a doctor. Owens vetoed similar legislation
in 2005. Dubbed the morning-after pill, emergency contraception has the same ingredients
as birth control and keeps a fertilized egg from implanting in the uterus. The Rev. Bill
Carmody of the Catholic Diocese of Colorado Springs joined other abortion opponents in
hailing the governor's veto. "Good Christian women are aborting fetuses every day,
and they don't even know it," Carmody said about the use of contraception, including
birth control pills. Birth control pills and emergency contraception have no effect once
an egg is implanted. |
More
Women Graduate. Why? [United
States] This gender imbalance is present at most college
graduations. More women than men apply to college in the first place. And once there, more
women than men make it through. According to the most recent data from the Department of
Education, only about three in every 10 boys who enter four-year colleges emerge four
years later with a bachelor's degree, compared with four in every 10 girls. Although
university officials tend to point to inadequate preparation in high schools, the problems
begin far earlier. In preschools, more boys than girls get booted for bad behavior. In
elementary schools, boys slip behind girls in reading skills. In middle schools, the
gender gap widens. By high school, girls are so far ahead the boys don't feel like playing
catch-up. At that age, trying too hard is seen as uncool. Poor motivation and lackluster
academic backgrounds follow many boys into college, where they find a mostly unsupervised
living environment. Plenty of time for drinking, chasing girls, staying up all night and
playing poker and video games. Not a recipe for academic success. Many educators,
especially feminists, say academic gender gaps don't matter because men end up running
things anyway. Some conservatives argue that doing nothing about the gender gaps is better
than creating a new class of "victims." |
Women on Faculty Still
Lag at Harvard, Report Finds. [United
States] A year after Harvard's president,
Lawrence H. Summers, promised a major effort to make the faculty more diverse amid a
controversy about his remarks about women in science, a university report released
yesterday indicated that most of the work remained to be done. Women represent
considerably less than half of the faculty in all but one of Harvard's schools, and while
the number of women in tenure-track positions grew slightly from the last academic year to
the current one, women still make up a small fraction of the university's tenured
professors. These were among the findings in the first report from the Office for Faculty
Development and Diversity, which Dr. Summers established at Harvard in May 2005. He also
pledged to spend at least $50 million over the next decade to improve the university's
efforts to recruit and promote women and minorities. Dr. Summers announced the initiatives
after months of controversy over his remarks suggesting that "intrinsic
aptitude" could help explain why fewer women than men reached the highest ranks of
science and math in universities. Much of the data in the report was assembled to
highlight where women and minority members had been making progress and where efforts and
resources needed to be concentrated, said Evelynn M. Hammonds, senior vice provost for
faculty development and diversity, in a preface to the 49-page document. |
Women
Catch Up in Diplomas, Lag in Pay. [United States] Women now earn the majority of
diplomas in fields men used to dominate--from biology to business--and have caught up in
pursuit of law, medicine and other advanced degrees. Even with such enormous gains over
the past 25 years, however, women are paid less than men in comparable jobs and lag in
landing top positions on college campuses. Federal statistics released Thursday show that
women earn the majority of bachelor's degrees in business, biological sciences, social
sciences and history. In undergraduate and graduate disciplines where women lag, they are
gaining ground, earning larger numbers of degrees in math, physical sciences and
agriculture. The number of women in undergraduate classes has grown more than twice as
fast as it has for men. Women outnumber men on campus by at least 2 million. In business,
by far the most popular degree field among undergraduates, women earn slightly more than
half of all bachelor degrees; it was one-third in 1980. Women who work full time earn
about 76 percent as much as men, according to the institute. They are underrepresented in
full-time faculty jobs, particularly in physical sciences, engineering and math. |
College Names First Female President.
[United States]
Rosalind Reichard of Meredith
College takes reigns of the 170-year-old
institution. Emory & Henry
College announced Wednesday that Rosalind Reichard would
become the college's first female president in its 170-year history. Reichard, the senior
vice president and vice president for academic affairs at Meredith College in Raleigh, N.C.,
will be the college's 20th president. "The college is pleased to welcome Dr. Reichard
as our new president," Thomas McGlothlin, chairman of the college's Board of
Trustees, told a crowd of about 100 people who cheered for Reichard. "She will bring
strong leadership and a fresh perspective from her extensive and highly successful
experience in higher education." Emory & Henry's board chose Reichard from a
short list of two finalists. The other candidate, David Wood, is the senior vice
president/operations and planning at Wofford
College in Spartanburg,
S.C. About 100 people
applied for the top job, said Dirk Moore, director of public relations. |
Dean Stresses Need For Female
Role Models. [United States]
Judy Olian, dean of UCLA Anderson School of Management,
is one of the few female heads of top business schools in the United States. But Olian is
rather modest about it. "I don't get up in the morning and think about
that. Anderson
is a good school and I happen to be a woman dean of that school," she said in a
recently interview with The China Post. "I don't think of my career in gender term
but in performance term." Olian does consider herself as a role model for women as
they pursue a leadership position in their careers. She said having a role model is
important when encouraging more women to get into business -- especially the senior level
of companies and enterprises. "Whether in Taiwan or in the United States there is
just that many women who are at the senior level of businesses, and that's a missed
economic opportunity as there is a lot of talent among women that I'd like to see present
in businesses," she said. In Olian's words, the biggest challenge facing women in a
serious work role is juggling and balancing career with everything else that women do. She
said men face the same challenges, too, but "it's just a little tougher for
women." |
Schools
Try Single-Sex Classes to Close Gender Gaps. [United
States] Chances are you won't see
three boys sharing lip balm during a typical eighth-grade social-studies class. Girls do.
You probably won't hear girls call each other stupid in class - then add a playful shove
for emphasis. Boys do - at least when girls aren't around. Such differences in behavior,
reflected in recent brain research, have inspired half a dozen public schools in the Twin
Cities area and more than 200 nationwide to try single-sex classes. Some advocates say
such experiments could help close a gap in male/female academic performance. Girls tend to
get better grades, and women outnumber men in college, for example. "Guys tend to
glaze out in class," said Michael Gurian, a national advocate for boys. "Women's
brains are hardly ever off duty." The National Association for Single Sex Public
Education reports at least 209 U.S. public schools are offering separate-gender classes.
Of the 44 schools that have completely converted to single-sex instruction, only one is in
Minnesota. That's Minneapolis Academy, a
two-year-old charter school with 60 boys and 40
girls in fifth to seventh grades. Founder Leon Cooper said the school's new fifth-grade
classroom has both boys and girls, although they're seated separately, but the other
grades are separated by gender. The separation, along with required uniforms and a strict
discipline code, "put a damper on sexual tension," he said. Most
Minnesota
public schools with single-sex classrooms offer them as a limited option. But some
officials would like to increase their number. |
Female War Vets Honored This
Memorial Day. [United States]
Veterans of all ages and genders were honored this
Memorial Day at Fort
Snelling National Cemetery, but female veterans took on special focus
this year. Veterans Mary McGee and Liz Whitbeck never miss Memorial Day ceremonies
at Ft. Snelling.
The female veterans share more than a friendship of 30 years. As soon as she learned she
could be a U.S. Marine in World War II, Witbeck jumped at the chance. "Wow, that was
it. I went right out and enlisted," she said. At the Ft. Snelling ceremony on Monday,
retired Air Force Col. Ginny Johnson talked about how female have faced down difficult
times to become an important part of today's military. "But we female stayed. A lot
of us stayed, because we female knew, like the female before us, that we belonged. That if
we left, our nation's interest would not be well served," Johnson said. Female have
been involved in military service since the Revolutionary War, and
Minnesota has more than
22,000 female veterans. |
District
7s First Female Commander Has Had Memorable Year of Service. [United States]
Jane Ellefson of Dawson was surprised
and honored when she was elected American Legion
District 7 commander during last years convention in Morris. Ellefson is the first
woman to hold the position in District 7. On Saturday, a new commander will be elected
during the American Legion 7th District convention in Marshall. I was nominated and
I was just in awe, said Ellefson. I have been involved with the Legion quite a
bit since I retired from the military. There was something in my life that I was
missing. Ellefson said her husband, Merlin, served as district commander in the
past. My husband was district commander two years ago and the comment was made,
why cant we have a husband and wife, and one thing led to another, my
name was on the ballot and no one opposed me, said Jane Ellefson. |
Supreme
Court Eases Worker Lawsuits. [United States] The Supreme Court on Thursday enhanced
workers' ability to win money damages when employers retaliate against them for filing
discrimination complaints. In a Tennessee case, the justices unanimously sided with former
forklift operator Sheila White, whose employer, Burlington Northern Santa Fe Railway, had
transferred her to a dirtier job on the tracks after she accused a supervisor of sexual
harassment. Writing for the court, Justice Stephen Breyer said employers are liable for
retaliatory actions that a "reasonable" worker would find "materially
adverse" and that could deter the worker from filing a claim. That standard is more
favorable to workers than what has been used in most federal courts and what was backed by
the Bush administration. Lower courts hearing claims of retaliation typically have
required workers to show they were demoted, had their pay cut or faced other actions that
directly affected their job status. The high court said workers could win retaliation
claims by showing they were victims of more subtle reprisals, such as being put on a
different shift, excluded from training or harassed outside the workplace. |
Broker
Sues Morgan Stanley Alleging Sex Discrimination. [United States] A former female
broker of Morgan Stanley DW Inc. filed a class-action lawsuit against the brokerage
Thursday alleging sex discrimination. The lawsuit, filed in federal court in San
Francisco, alleges that the company's female financial advisors are denied the same
business opportunities as their male counterparts, and are therefore paid less. The
plaintiff, Daisy Jaffe, who worked at the company's San Mateo office from 1982 to 2005,
claims the company favored less-qualified male colleagues, who were given more valuable
client accounts. Jaffe, 51, also alleges age discrimination. The lawsuit alleges Morgan
Stanley DW, which has more than 500 retail locations nationwide, has created a system in
which branch managers routinely assign fewer and less valuable accounts to female brokers,
said plaintiff's attorney Kelly Dermody. Dermody estimated that about 2,000 of the
company's 9,500 financial advisors are women. The lawsuit seeks back pay for female
brokers and changes in how the company assigns business opportunities. Mark Lake,
spokesman for Morgan Stanley DW, the retail brokerage arm of New York-based Morgan Stanley
Inc., declined to comment on the lawsuit Thursday. In 2004, Morgan Stanley agreed to pay
$54 million to settle allegations of rampant sex discrimination in the company. |
Three
Female African American Doctors Sue Hospital. [United
States] After wrongfully being
accused of neglecting a caesarean section patient, three female African American doctors
are now suing the hospital. Three African American doctors have filed a lawsuit against
Alta bates Summit
Medical
Center on Tuesday, on grounds of racial and gender
discrimination. The women alleged that the hospital along with the satellite
centers in Oakland
and Berkeley, showed bias towards physicians,
siding with white
male doctors during an
internal investigation in to physicians. It is reported that the women were initially
reported for not immediately helping with a Caesarean section delivery, according to the
lawsuit. The hospitals Medical Executive Board later found that the three women
never acted in an unprofessional manner and that the patient had already been taken care
by another obstetrician. |
Female
Firefighters Placed on Paid Leave for Own Protection: Trio Who Sued Toledo for Gender Bias
Accused of Secretly Taping Colleagues. [United States] Three female members of the
Toledo Fire Department who sued the city last year over gender discrimination have been
placed on paid leave pending an internal investigation that includes allegations the women
secretly taped conversations in their workplaces. Chief Mike Bell told The Blade the women
were placed on leave for their own personal protection while the internal investigation
continues. He declined to elaborate on why they would need protection or to discuss
specifics of the investigation - including the allegations of surreptitious taping and
whether it involved video as well as audio recordings. The women filed a lawsuit Nov. 21
in Lucas County Common
Pleas Court accusing the city, Chief Bell, and Deputy Chiefs John
Coleman and Robert Metzger of gender discrimination, retaliation, and creating a hostile
work environment for women. Chief Bell said "there is nothing from our
standpoint" that indicates the current matter is related to the lawsuit, adding that
this is a "totally separate issue we're investigating." |
Female Cop Gets Nearly
$2M. [United States] By
the time testimony in the three-week trial was over and the
case was given to the jury, it was her word against a half-dozen police officers. Suzanne
Barth, Mokena's first female cop, claimed she was subjected to a ceaseless stream of
degrading comments by her colleagues. Despite days of testimony from officers who called
Barth a liar, the jury in the federal trial quickly sided with her -- declaring she was
the victim of sexual harassment and gender discrimination. They awarded her nearly $2
million. Barth, a 30-year-old native of Chicago's
West Lawn neighborhood who now lives in
the southwest suburbs, joined the department in 1998. She was warned as early as her days
at the police academy that Mokena had never had a female officer and that she was likely
in store for a rough time. "The longer I was there," she said last week,
"the more I realized that was true." After several years, with Barth's
complaints about incidents of repeated sexual taunting, fellow cops allegedly refused to
provide backup on calls; one sergeant allegedly said he couldn't back her up on a call
because he was eating. She quit in 2002, citing concerns for her own safety. |
Florida Highway Patrol Looking For
Female Troopers. [United
States] The Florida Highway Patrol is looking for a few good
women. Actually, it's looking for a lot of women to become troopers. The agency recently
launched an aggressive campaign aimed at encouraging women to join its ranks. Of the
Florida Highway Patrol's 1,650 troopers, only about 12 percent are women. The agency held
a job fair in Orlando last
month designed specifically to attract women. About 41 women
showed up. In general, experts say law enforcement agencies across the country are seeing
lower numbers in their female ranks. |
Cops
Forced to Make Unfair Choice. [United States] Pull over partner, I gotta run for the
bathroom. Again. The mind marvels at what's possible when a pregnant Suffolk County cop
hits the street. The county police department is in U.S. District Court this week because
it gave pregnant cops a choice, beginning in 2000: Work or stay home. Sounds reasonable.
But, as with so many things about pregnancy, it's not. For one, a department that requires
its officers to wear bulletproof vests on the job doesn't issue ones big enough for two.
And the first notch on department-issue gun belts isn't big enough to handle the job
either. In this case, one size fits most doesn't work. And that's the problem, even with
the most recent revisions in the department's disability and leave policies. Hence, the
department is now in federal court answering a lawsuit filed by six female officers. For
years, the department ignored abuses and favoritism in its light-duty program. But the
program, for all its flaws, let pregnant cops keep working. |
Providence
Fire Department Appoints First-Ever Female Captain. [Unites States] The Providence
Fire Department has its first-ever female captain. Heidi Rivard was among five
firefighters promoted in a ceremony today. Rivard is the first woman in department history
to hold the rank of captain. She joined the department in August 1991 and has served in
the city's East Side, Mount Hope and downtown neighborhoods. Two other firefighters were
promoted to captain today, two were promoted to lieutenant and two new chaplains were
appointed. |
Troutman
Urges Safety For All Women. [United
States] Armed with the conviction that domestic
violence should be eliminated -- and until that time its victims need help -- the new head
of the Center for Women and Families talked about how she sees her job. "No woman
should have to feel as if she doesn't have safety," Denise Vazquez Troutman said
yesterday during a press conference announcing her as the center's president and CEO.
According to statistics distributed by the center, one in every three
Kentucky women has
experienced domestic violence. One in every six American women has been the victim of an
attempted or completed rape -- and about 44 percent of rape victims are under the age of
18. |
Female
Anchor's Departure Raises 'Juggling' Issues. [United States] ABC anchor Elizabeth
Vargas' recent announcement that she was giving up her prestigious job in broadcast news
because she is pregnant was viewed with skepticism among some TV-industry observers. They
noted that "World News Tonight" has suffered a sharp ratings decline recently.
(Vargas, 43, has been replaced by veteran ABC newsman Charles Gibson, co-host of
"Good Morning America.") But in the awkward merger of her personal and
professional lives, others have found a very public reminder of the problems facing a
generation of women raised to believe they could do whatever they set out to achieve --
and are finding that difficult to fulfill. For these women -- many of them daughters of
the feminist movement -- Vargas' situation exemplifies the agonizing decisions that define
their daily lives. It has reignited a conversation about balancing a career and parenting.
|
NASA Names Second
Female Shuttle Commander. [United
States] Astronaut Pamela Melroy, a two-time shuttle
pilot, will become the second woman to command a NASA shuttle when she leads the upcoming
STS-120 mission to the International Space Station (ISS), the space agency said Monday.
Melroy, a U.S. Air Force colonel hailing from Rochester,
New York, will command a crew of
six astronauts charged with delivering a new connecting node to the ISS. Built for NASA in
Italy, the
Node 2 module will serve as a link between other habitable space station
compartments. Joining Melroy on the STS-120 mission currently the fifth shuttle
flight to fly after NASAs STS-121 spaceflight launches next month are pilot
George Zamka, mission specialists Scott Parazynski, Douglas Wheelock, Michael Foreman and
Italian astronaut Paolo Nespoli of the European Space Agency (ESA). Melroy is only the
second female astronaut to command a U.S. orbiter after shuttle veteran Eileen Collins,
who led NASAs STS-114 return to flight mission in 2005 and retired in May 2006.
Collins first commanded a shuttle mission in 1999 after serving as pilot on two previous
flights. |
Let's Face It, Looks Count.
[United States] Who says you can't judge a book by its cover? Why not be as superficial as
possible? Why not trust first impressions? We all do it, and sometimes we're actually
correct in doing so. A study released several weeks ago noted women can look at a
photograph of a man's face and assess with high accuracy whether he's the kind of guy who
likes children, and thus shows good potential as a long-term mate. Conversely, the females
identified correctly the men who had the highest testosterone levels and most suitability
for a short-term fling (i.e. someone who won't tolerate nagging over changing diapers,
chauffeuring the kids, doing household chores, keeping beer stains off the furniture,
etc.). |
Bay
Street Still a Man's World. [Canada] While working at CIBC, investment industry
veteran Colleen Moorehead was once caught red-handed in the basement of BCE Place. She was
waist-deep in the trunk of her car, dumping a leg of lamb into a marinade she had prepared
to get ready for a dinner party that evening. "Ultimately, it was just a job that had
to get done," she told a crowd of about 200 people yesterday at the release of a
study on the advancement of women in the investment industry. "Women have the ability
to take multi-tasking to an art form," she noted. The study, released by Women in
Capital Markets and Catalyst Canada, found that the overall representation of women in the
industry has increased only two percentage points since the year 2000, and not at all
since 2002. "Men continued to outnumber women four to one across the industry and
women continued to dominate staff positions," stated the report, which was sponsored
by Canada's biggest banks. Overall, the Canadian capital markets industry had 5,729 women
out of a total 14,647 positions in 2005, amounting to 39 per cent, up from 37 per cent in
2000. When the support staff is excluded, the proportion drops to 20 per cent, or 1,981
jobs. "The numbers clearly demonstrate a persistent lack of progress in women's
representation since 2000," said Catalyst, a non-profit research organization aimed
at advancing opportunities for women in the workplace. |
Women Launch Surf School.
[Canada] On a wet and dreary weekend, when most people stay inside to avoid the rain,
Caralee Murphy and her friends are at a beach east of Halifax, eyeing the ocean. Murphy is
one of six women who has turned her love of riding waves into what could be eastern
Canadas first women-owned and operated surfing school. "We realized (that)
there lacked resources for women," Murphy said Saturday while at Lawrencetown Beach.
"Most of us were working for male-run surf shops and we just thought we needed more
of a voice." The One Life Surf School, which launched this weekend, is aimed at
bringing women into the mainstream of the sport, though men who want to sign up for a
lesson wont be turned away. Theres no classroom, fluorescent lights or books
at the school just waves, sunshine and surfboards. Students can rent gear,
including wetsuits and surfboards, or bring their own and take part in private or group
lessons for up to six hours. |
Abused Women
Feared For Life. [Canada] More than
three-quarters of Canadian women seeking refuge
from domestic abuse are in danger of being killed, states a study by a
University of Calgary
social work expert. Dr. Leslie Tutty said yesterday she was stunned by results showing 77%
of 368 women surveyed while being admitted to shelters across the country were under
lethal threat. "It's a national embarrassment ... it's not getting better," said
Tutty, who conducted the survey for the YWCA in 10 cities, including Calgary, during eight
months in 2005. She said a danger assessment calculated 77% of the women were in serious
or extreme danger from their partners or those close to them. It's not a case, said Tutty,
of the survey subjects exaggerating the threat to them. |
B.C. Women Say
They Are Victims of 'Marriage Fraud'. [Canada] B.C. women who sponsored their husbands
to come to Canada, and then quickly divorced, say they are victims of sham marriages. They
say they were duped by their husbands and want changes to the province's sponsorship
default recovery program. Under the project, any woman who sponsors her husband to come to
Canada can be held financially responsible for him for up to 10 years. Many of the
divorced men in question are still in Canada and living on social assistance. The women
say they are being forced to pay for it. Nearly 200 people filled a town hall meeting in
Burnaby Wednesday night to hear from women who say they are victims of marriage fraud. The
women described how their husbands, men from Asian countries, used them to gain access to
Canada. |
Female Smokers Aplenty
Here. [Canada] Local
women are considerably more likely to light up a cigarette than
their sisters elsewhere in Ontario and the
rest of Canada, new data
from Statistics Canada
indicate. According to a survey by the federal agency in 2005, almost 27 per cent of
female respondents in Leeds, Grenville and Lanark identified themselves as smokers. That
compares to about 18 per cent of the female population in Ontario and just under 20 per
cent across Canada who say they are smokers.
The figure is the most disturbing from the
massive national survey on health issues released Tuesday, but it is not the only area
where local residents and females in particular fall behind the provincial and national
numbers. Yves Decoste, tobacco control co-ordinator with the Leeds, Grenville and Lanark
District Health Unit, said women can be more susceptible to smoking for a number or
reasons. "Some women see smoking as a way to control weight or control stress,"
said Decoste. |
Why
the Resistance to Female Leadership at St George's? [Jamaica] In a society such as
ours that has long had single mothers fathering their children, and grandmothers filling
in either because, one, their daughters breed faster than rabbits, two, the shiftless
'baby fathers' have moved on to new conquests and three, the young women must spend
unforgivable hours in menial work here or abroad to keep body and soul together and their
children in a viable economic environment, I am utterly amazed that many of us are still
questioning the 'qualification' of our women once they have been earmarked for
professional leadership roles. I make mention of this due to last week's Daily Observer
report that parents of students attending St George's College have protested against the
pending appointment of a female principal because, the way they view it, the boys
attending the school need male presence and authority. |