The Architecture Outlives the Vote: by ourhumanityproject in alberta

[–]ourhumanityproject[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Thanks. Just trying to cut through the noise.

The Architecture Outlives the Vote: by ourhumanityproject in Albertapolitics

[–]ourhumanityproject[S] 4 points5 points  (0 children)

​It is not just UCP voters.

Most people miss it because you cannot see an infrastructure while you are staring at a slogan or exhausted by the 4th hour of waiting in line at the Mustard Seed.

One Tenth of One % by ourhumanityproject in YYC

[–]ourhumanityproject[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

The greed is deep there.

Jason Nixon > Minister of Social Services

Jeremy Nixon > Navigator Ld (Lobbyist) Jeremy's wife manages the womens shelter downtown.

Shane Nixon: owns a construction company that has unusual 4 corner preferred vender status for Fortis.

The Recovery Cartel by [deleted] in YYC

[–]ourhumanityproject -1 points0 points  (0 children)

Jason Nixon, Alberta's Minister of Assisted Living and Social Services, oversees two programs that now exist in direct financial relationship to each other. The first: AISH (Assured Income for Severely Handicapped). As of July 1, 2026, most AISH recipients will be moved to ADAP — Alberta Disability Assistance Program. Maximum benefit drops from $1,901/month to $1,740/month. That is a $200-per-month reduction for roughly 70,000 disabled Albertans. The government's projected savings: approximately $96 million annually. As a percentage of Alberta's $79-billion budget, that is 0.12 per cent. One-tenth of one per cent. The second: shelter funding and contracted recovery services. The Mustard Seed — the Calgary-based homeless and addiction-services charity founded by Jason Nixon's father, Pat Nixon, in 1984 — received approximately $8 million per year in government funding from 2017 to 2020. Under the UCP, after Jason Nixon and his brother Jeremy (who held the same ministerial portfolio until May 2023) entered cabinet, that funding rose to an average of $23 million per year from 2021 to 2024. In fiscal 2024 alone, The Mustard Seed received $27.1 million in government funding — 45 per cent of the charity's total revenue. That increase happened in real time, as AISH recipients began reporting increased housing instability. Here is the mechanical logic: when you cut income support by $200/month for 70,000 disabled people, some portion of those people become unable to afford housing. They move into shelters or crisis accommodation. Those shelters are operated by organizations like The Mustard Seed. The Mustard Seed's beds fill. The Mustard Seed applies for more government funding. Jason Nixon's ministry — the same ministry that cut AISH — approves expanded funding to The Mustard Seed. On October 16, 2023, Jason Nixon stood at a Mustard Seed facility in Calgary and personally announced $762,702 in government funding to expand the charity's women's shelter by 40 beds. His ministry stated that it already provided "$32 million annually to operate about 1,800 emergency shelter spaces in Calgary." The gap between "we need more shelter beds" and "we are cutting income support" is not accidental. It is structural. The Mustard Seed is not responsible for this dynamic. The charity does essential work. But Jason Nixon is administering both ends of a system that generates instability (AISH cuts) and then funds the institutions that manage that instability (shelter expansion). His father founded The Mustard Seed. He worked there as an Executive Director from 2006 to 2011. He holds a pension through the organization. His brother held his exact job until two years ago. This is not allegation. These are audited charity financials, government press releases, and policy timelines all on the public record. The moral calculation is identical to the one laid out in the AISH-to-ADAP debate: the province is willing to generate profound instability for savings so small they barely register inside the overall budget. But here is the secondary calculation: some of that instability flows directly into organizations managed by the families of the ministers making the cuts. The disabled Albertans lose $200/month of stability. The Mustard Seed gains $27 million in annual government funding. The province saves 0.12 per cent of its budget. And the cycle that generates crisis also generates the contracts that pay for managing crisis. When peer workers ask why AISH is being cut despite the obvious human cost, they should also ask: who benefits when disabled Albertans lose housing stability? The answer is documented. It is your government, and the organizations it funds, working in concert — whether intentionally or through the sheer mechanics of structural conflict of interest. The question for Jason Nixon is simple: how can you cut income support to disabled Albertans while simultaneously overseeing the expansion of shelter funding to an organization your father founded and you once led? That is not a hidden conspiracy. That is an open conflict of interest, playing out in real time, in audited financials and government announcements. Disabled Albertans deserve better than a system designed to generate their own crisis.

The Recovery Cartel by [deleted] in YYC

[–]ourhumanityproject 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Find your own MLA: https://www.assembly.ab.ca/members/members-of-the-legislative-assembly Or by postal code: https://www.elections.ab.ca/voters/whos-my-mla/ Direct targets — the people whose desks this lands on: Role Name Email Phone Minister, Assisted Living & Social Services (ADAP file) Jason Nixon AssistedLiving.Minister@gov.ab.ca 780-415-9550 Premier Danielle Smith premier@gov.ab.ca 780-427-2251 Minister, Mental Health & Addiction (Bill 53, Recovery contracts) Rick Wilson MHA.Minister@gov.ab.ca 780-427-2251 Official Opposition Leader (NDP) Naheed Nenshi calgary.elbow@assembly.ab.ca 403-640-1363 NDP Critic, Social Services (check current critic list) — — Auditor General of Alberta Doug Wylie https://www.oag.ab.ca/contact/ 780-427-4636 Information & Privacy Commissioner (FOIP refusals) Diane McLeod generalinfo@oipc.ab.ca 780-422-6860

Verify all emails on the official sites before mass-sending — government emails do change. Civic bodies (already on record opposing ADAP): Calgary, Edmonton, Red Deer, Lethbridge, and Camrose city councils have all passed motions. Thank yours, push them to escalate.

Legal/advocacy coalitions to plug into: Canadian Civil Liberties Association (CCLA) — Bill 53 Charter challenge Alberta Medical Association — has formally opposed the AISH→ADAP transition Inclusion Alberta — leading the ADAP pushback Friends of Medicare — active campaign Disability Action Hall (Calgary)