Archive for March, 2008

Whistler for the Disabled – Making a big impression

Thursday, March 20th, 2008

originally printed in Pique Newsmagazine
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One incredible huge “Thank You” goes out to Grant Lamont. A Chinese delegation of journalists came to Whistler last Friday. Representing Whistler for the Disabled, I was asked by Foreign Affairs and International Trade Canada to hold a press conference for our honored guests visiting from China.

We started the press conference off by thanking them for visiting Whistler and Canada and introducing ourselves. We then told them how and why I created Whistler for the Disabled and accomplished so much on my own, without funding but with the passionate support of good friends dedicated to helping others out and supporting the Whistler and disabled communities.

Some of the items that were discussed and brought up in the hour-long press conference that I would like to share with everyone:

1. Inclusively and how important it is for people with disabilities to show what they can do.

2. Planning must incorporate people with disabilities into initial planning and not just in band-aids and hand-outs.

3. Spiritual value of the acceptance and inclusion and the healing value it has.

4. Transportation and access in a community and the many good things that Whistler is now trying to do.

5. Economic benefits with many people traveling to destinations that embrace and consider those with disabilities who they are with.

6. Why Whistler and Beijing, along with the rest of the world, need to make sure that there is follow through from the Games and not just let it ride once the spotlight is off.

They asked Grant how much he makes by helping me or if he is volunteering. Grant responded: “I am here as a friend and supporter. It is funny how our society has so much money for sports stadiums and ski jumps but little time for the things that really matter. Hopefully the work Hugh is doing can influence a small degree of change in these attitudes. I know it has with many and with one corporation already benefiting the Whistler Resort community and people with disabilities.”

The delegation thanked us for our time and efforts but were perplexed how one person could do so much with so little support.

They were honoured to meet us and we were honoured to meet them as well. They were all so respectful of everyone; it was nice to see.

Media coverage in China from just one of the journalist’s newspapers is more than 200 million people. There were seven journalists from China in attendance.

Grant Lamont was truly incredible in this press conference with such a large, important delegation. He was as professional as someone who was being paid six figures a year to host such an important information session — but he did it on his own time and expense.

A huge “Thank You” goes out to Grant for helping me out once again. You came through for our community and for the disabled like so many others have for me over the years, time and time again.

Hugh Tollett

Whistler for the Disabled

Vancouver / Whistler

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Globe 2008 – Environmental Film Afternoon in Vancouver

Wednesday, March 12th, 2008

The Czech Embassy in Ottawa, a participant at the Globe 2008 Trade Fair, is presenting in addition to environmental technologies and solutions by Czech companies, an ancillary event in the form of a film series to be screened the afternoon of Friday March 14 2008 from 1 pm to 6 pm at the Fairmont Waterfront Hotel.

The environmental award winning films that were previously shown at the EKOFILM Festival in the Czech Republic and at other international festivals of equal significance come from diverse countries each showing specific yet globally impacting environmental issues.

As a global community what happens in any country will ultimately have consequences for all of us.

The films to be presented in Vancouver include:

Prapodivný svět (Bizarre World) (2006, 26´, director Steve Lichtag) a Czech documentary on micro-life in the waters of Czech and Slovak rivers and streams; a tragic life of small fish in an often brutal and apparently legal fishing environment.
Starts at 1pm

A Killer Bargain: (2006, 57´, director Tom Heinemann) a movie about the availability of cheap consumer goods, imported by Western companies, whose prices don´t reflect the actual human and environmental costs of the production in the developing world. The connections are shockingly clear.
Starts at 1.30 pm

Proklatě smutné kuře (Damn Sad Chicken) (2005, 11´, director Ivo Bystřičan) A documentary expedition through the vicious circle of consumer buck-passing. The tragedy of a chicken within the framework of an impersonal system of production is not something worth a consumer’s attention; it shows how a man in the midst of a humanistic society loses the ability of being able to influence his surroundings. I am hungry: What more is there to it?
Starts at 2.30 pm

The End of the Glacier: (2005, 47´, director Uwe Muller) Large areas of Earth are covered with ice. It is an unfriendly environment for life. People stand no chance in these icy regions, still the ice masses have a great importance even for them. However, this frozen beauty is in the retreat. Whether it be the Alps, south America or the polar regions, it is getting warmer all over the world. What will happen when the glaciers recede even further?
Starts at 2.45 pm

Crude Impact: (2005, 98´, director James Wood) A powerful exploratation of the interconnection between human domination of the planet and the discovery and use of oil; a movie on our deep-rooted
dependancy on the availability of fossil fuels and the implications of the impending threat of a global peak in oil availability.
Starts at 3.40 pm

Ropáci (Oilgobblers) (1988, 20´, director Jan Svěrák) directed by one of the most popular Czech filmmakers Jan Svěrák; awarded in 1989 a Student Oscar by the American Film Academy; a fictional documentary about the discovery and research of a unique animal the “ropák“ („oilgobbler”) who lives in the Northen Bohemian region, and lives on coal and above all loves exhaust gases…
Starts at 5.20 pm

Má vlast (My country) (2002, 13´, director Alana Hynková) Immense floods damaged the capital of the Czech Republic Prague in 2002. A documentary about frustration, fear and hope.
Starts at 5.45 pm

EKOFILM FESTIVAL (www.ekofilm.cz) is the oldest film festival in the environmental domain, founded in 1974 in the city of Ostrava. Since 1997 the festival has been held in the very picturesque towns of Český Krumlov and in České Budějovice. In addition to the screening of films the festival hosts seminars with special guests, and other additional activities. The festival is held in the Czech Republic every year in October.

Where: Malaspina Room, Fairmont Waterfront Hotel, 900 Canada Place Way, Vancouver
When: Friday March 14, 2008, from 1 to 6 pm

Free admission

All movies are in English or with English subtitles

For further information, please contact Petra Klobusiakova at the Czech Embassy in Ottawa, tel. 613 562 3875 ex. 26 or email: ottawa@embassy.mzv.cz

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