Monthly Archives: September 2021

Special Event at the WWI Memorial

This up-coming event may be of interest to some members.


Special Event at the WWI Memorial

General Pershing color portrait square

Honoring

General John J. “Blackjack” Pershing’s 161st Birthday


Schedule of Events for Monday Sept. 13, 2021


Taps Bugler at Flagstaff with crowd

5:00pm – Regular Playing of “Daily Taps” at the WWI Memorial Flag Staff.

As we do every evening at 5pm at the WWI Memorial, a bugler dressed in a World War I period uniform will play “Taps” — the distinctive bugle melody played at U.S. military funerals and memorials.

Taps bugler at the Pershing Memorial statue

6:00pm – Wreath laying and “Echoing Taps” at the Pershing statue and around the Memorial.

On this special occasion, there will be a wreath laying at the Pershing statue followed by “Echoing Taps”, a musical experience where taps will sound from multiple buglers around the WWI Memorial.

U.S. Army band "Pershing's Own" playing at the WWI Memorial

6:30pm – A Concert at the WWI Memorial by the U.S. Army Band.

The General’s birthday will be topped off with a performance by the U.S Army Band, known as “Pershing’s Own”. (weather permitting.)


Support the Doughboy Foundation Programs

News Release: 20th Anniversary of the Flight 93, Pentagon, and World Trade Center Attacks, September 11, 2021

An item from the Merchant Navy Commemorative Theme Project.


Dear Sir/Madam:

Please find attached the News Release: 20th Anniversary of the Flight 93, Pentagon, and World Trade Center Attacks, September 11, 2021, for reference.

My very best regards,

Stéphane Ouellette
President and Chief Executive Officer
Merchant Navy Commemorative Theme Project (MNCTP)/
Executive Director
Colonel John Gardam Lifetime Achievement Award

Tel: 613.421.9005
E-mail: ouellettes@rogers.com
Website: www.alliedmerchantnavy.com

Attachment: NEWS RELEASE- 20TH ANN FLIGHT 93, PENTAGON, AND WORLD TRADE CENTER ATTACKS, SEPTEMBER 11, 2021.pdf

Today We Remember

An item from a fellow veterans organization in the Bay Area.


“Time is passing. Yet, for the United States of America, there will be no forgetting September the 11th. We will remember every rescuer who died in honor. We will remember every family that lives in grief. We will remember the fire and ash, the last phone calls, the funerals of the children.” —George W. Bush

Today marks the 20th Anniversary of the Terror Attacks of September 11, 2001.

This morning, and every day, we remember the many souls who were lost on 9/11. We remember the airline passengers traveling in each of the 4 aircrafts, the men and women innocently going about their morning routine in the World Trade Center, the 412 first responders who lost their lives through heroic acts, and those who have succumbed to the repercussions in the two decades since.

 

The photo above shows not only the unforgettable image of the Twin Towers, but also a rescue truck with 6 firefighters from FDNY’s Ladder 118 headed in to help.  All 6 of those men perished that day.  20 years later, we remain humbled by their bravery.

One of the worst days in our history saw some of the most courageous acts in our history. Images from that day ignite an array of emotions: grief, disbelief, anguish… but ultimately, as we remember those lost on 9/11, we feel a renewed sense of unity.

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Marines’ Memorial Association & Foundation

609 Sutter St.

San Francisco, CA 94102

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🗽We’re in an Empire State of Mind | We’re hiring for two positions | In conversation with Sukhinder Singh Cassidy

An item from one of our fellow Canadian organizations in the Bay Area.


C100 TAKES ON NYC!

Calling all Canucks in the Big Apple, on October 13th, we’re celebrating the launch of C100’s newest chapter – New York!

In celebration of C100’s growing presence in New York City, we’re hosting an evening outdoors to connect New-York based Members who make up the founding community of this Chapter.

Who: C100 Members based in NY or visiting in town. Not a Member? Apply here
Where: Manhattan (details to be shared with registered attendees)

Join us for an intimate fireside chat with Sukhinder Singh Cassidy, one of Silicon Valley’s most admired leaders, a valued C100 Charter Member and author of her most recent book, CHOOSE POSSIBILITY: Take Risks and Thrive (Even When You Fail). Check out a preview of her book here in Tech Crunch.

Sukhinder Singh Cassidy is a leading digital CEO and entrepreneur with more than 25 years of leadership experience founding, scaling and advising companies including Google, Amazon, StubHub, Yodlee and more. She is currently Founder and Chairman of theBoardlist, a premium talent marketplace for diverse leaders to be recommended and discovered for board and executive opportunities. Most recently, Sukhinder served as the leader of StubHub, the premiere global consumer ticketing marketplace for live entertainment, which her and her team sold for $4 billion in February 2020.

C100 IS HIRING!

DIRECTOR OF MEMBERSHIP ENGAGEMENT & GROWTH

Location: Flexible within US & Canada (SF Bay Area, New York or Toronto preferred)

We’re seeking a growth & community builder to join our staff team and oversee C100’s Membership strategy, programs, and products. Reporting to the CEO, you will own and lead C100’s core product (Membership & Charter Membership), developing, refining, and iterating on the Member experience, onboarding, and engagement.

PARTNERSHIPS MANAGER / SENIOR MANAGER

Location: Flexible within US & Canada (SF Bay Area, New York or Toronto preferred)

We are seeking a business development & relationship manager to lead the organization’s partner program, C100’s primary source of revenue. Reporting to the CEO, the Partnerships Manager will oversee all aspects of C100’s funding relationships.

GROW TOGETHER!
SUPPORT THE C100 AS A MEMBER

Join our talented community of builders connecting around the world to advance Canadian founders & leaders in tech.

COMMUNITY UPDATES & MEMBERS IN THE NEWS

🇨🇦 Neo Financial is building a second HQ in the heart of Winnipeg, adding 300+ new tech jobs in the next 5 years. Fun fact: the Winnipeg office space was the previous HQ of SkipTheDishes, where Andrew Chau (#C100Fellow) & Jeff Adamson grew the team to 2500+ employees before starting Neo Financial.

🎉 Montreal-based Hopper secured $175-million in Series G financing, bringing its total raise to date to nearly $600-million and its valuation to $3.5-billion. Fun fact: it had a $2-billion valuation just five months ago. Congratulations to Founder & CEO Fredric Lalonde & the Hopper team!

🤝 Vancouver-based legal tech provider Clio has acquired San Francisco-based and YC-backed Legal Document Automation company Lawyaw This is Clio’s second acquisition (and largest ever) following its $110-million Series E earlier this year. Congratulations to Clio Co-Founder CEO Jack Newton (Charter Member) & Co-Founder & General Manager of Lawyaw Tucker Cottingham.

📖 Crunchbase took a look under the hood of M12, Microsoft’s venture arm as it ramps up investments. Interviewed in the article is C100 Charter Member Michelle Gonzalez, Corporate Vice President & Global Head of M12.

🤝 Toronto-based EdTech company Top Hat has made its fourth acquisition of a traditional course-material publisher, purchasing Denver-based Morton Publishing, a 44-year old independent press that publishes 600+ lab and course materials. Congratulations to Founder Mike Silagadze (Charter Member), CEO Joe Rohrlich & the entire Top Hat team!

📣 Jeanne Lam has been named the first President of Toronto-based Wattpad. Jeanne joined Wattpad in 2015 as the Director of Growth and quickly rose through the ranks. With over 94 million global users, the company plans to grow its team by more than 50% over the next year. Congratulations Jeanne, CEO Allen Lau (Charter Member) and the Wattpad team!

🎉 In Q2, Waterloo Region’s tech ecosystem saw 7 investments totalling $749.7-million, the best quarter the region has seen in the last two years. Big raises that were a part of this included ApplyBoard’s $368-million Series D and Faire’s $314-million Series F funding rounds. Chris Albinson, Co-Founder of C100 and CEO & President of Communitech, shared his thoughts in this interview.

🦄 Toronto-based cloud accounting software company FreshBooks has passed the $1-billion valuation mark​ following an announcement that it has secured $80.75-million in Series E financing and $50-million in debt financing (total $130.75-million). Congratulations to Co-Founder & Chairman of the Board Mike McDerment & the FreshBooks team!

🇨🇦 Meet the 16 Canadian startups​ taking part in Y Combinator’s 2021 Summer Demo Day.

Salute! September 2021

A newsletter from the folks at Veterans Affairs Canada.


September 2021

Please share this e-mail newsletter with your friends and contacts.

Let us know what you think about the new Salute! by emailing consultation-consultation.acc@canada.ca.


In this edition:


Programs and services


Veterans struggling with events in Afghanistan

The current situation in Afghanistan is distressing for many Canadians, Veterans and their families, especially for those who served there. During this time, Veterans may be asking themselves difficult questions or revisiting experiences and relationships formed during their service or deployments. Their families may be struggling along with them.

In reaction to current events in the region, Veterans may:

  • feel frustrated, sad, and helpless
  • feel distressed and preoccupied
  • feel angry or betrayed
  • experience moral distress
  • struggle with questions of the meaning of our time in Afghanistan
  • experience an increase in symptoms of operational stress injuries like PTSD or depression
  • sleep poorly
  • increase alcohol or drug use, or participation in other addictive behaviors
  • overconsume or try to avoid media
  • isolate themselves
  • have more disturbing memories and nightmares about military service
  • worry about those left behind.

All of these reactions are understandable in this distressing context. If you are a Veteran or a family member struggling in reaction to current events, please know that you are not alone. Talk to your friends and family members, connect with your Veteran network and peer support resources, or contact a mental health professional.

Resources available right now:

  • Crisis Services Canada: If you or someone you know is at risk of suicide, please call 1‑833-456-4566 to talk safely and judgement-free. If this is an emergency, call 911.
  • The VAC Assistance Service: Call 1-800-268-7708 to speak to a mental health professional for psychological support. Available 24/7 at no cost to Veterans and their family members.
  • OSI Clinics and Satellite Service Sites: Services include in-person and virtual mental health assessment and treatment to address mental health issues related to service, or that interfere with your rehabilitation. To request a referral, send a secure message via your My VAC Account, or call 1-866-522-2122.
  • Operational Stress Injury Social Support (OSISS): Talk to a peer support worker who understands operational stress injuries and can offer support.
  • HOPE program: Helping Our Peers by providing Empathy provides you and your family with peer support if you have experienced the loss of a loved one.
  • Wellness Together Canada: This online mental health and substance-use support portal provides 24/7 access to free evidence-based tools and resources.
  • PTSD Coach Canada: This mobile app can help you learn about and manage symptoms that can occur after trauma.

Some positive strategies: 

  • Stay connected. Spend time with people who best understand what you are going through, and who give you a sense of security, calm, hope and happiness.
  • Contact the various resources available to you
  • Practise good self-care. Look for positive strategies that help you manage your emotions. Listening to music, exercising, practising breathing routines, spending time in nature or with animals, or journaling are some common ways to help manage overwhelming or distressing emotions.
  • Be patient with yourself. Understand that it takes time to recuperate.
  • Stick to your routines. It can be helpful to stick to a schedule for when you sleep, eat, work, and do other day-to-day activities.
  • Limit media exposure. Limit how much news you take in if media coverage increases your distress.

Shortening processing times for benefits decisions

To make decisions on your application for disability benefits, VAC decision makers need access to your health information. We are working with the Canadian Armed Forces (CAF) to allow select VAC decision makers access to health information on the Canadian Forces Health Information System (CFHIS). This gives them more direct access to the specific information they need to make decisions. The goal is to speed up delivery of benefits.

The CFHIS houses most of the health information for serving CAF members as well as Veterans who served since 2012. In 2018, we began working with the CAF on a solution that would provide up to 50 VAC decision makers with direct access to view and extract key information from the CFHIS.

Protecting your personal information and privacy is paramount. That is why decision makers access the CFHIS information only with Department of National Defence (DND)-issued laptops connected to the DND secure network.

Visit the Disability benefits page to find out how you can apply and our efforts to reduce wait times.


World Suicide Prevention Day: September 10

Asking for help can be hard, but connecting with someone who cares can make all the difference in the world. Please know that you are never alone.

If you or someone you know is at risk for suicide, Crisis Services Canada provides a safe and judgement-free place to listen and talk. Please call 1-833-456-4566 anytime, or text 45645 between 4 p.m. and midnight ET. If you or someone you know are in immediate danger, call 911.

World Suicide Prevention Day is September 10. It’s an opportunity to raise awareness of suicide and to promote action to reduce the number of suicides and suicide attempts through proven means.

Do a buddy check. Reach out to a friend or loved one today and let them know that you’re there for them.


The Shining Light of HOPE marks 15 years

Losing a loved one is one of life’s most difficult experiences. For family members of Canadian Armed Forces members and Veterans living this reality, their grief isn’t always fully addressed by bereavement programs.

The Helping Our Peers by Providing Empathy (HOPE) program offers compassionate understanding and confidential support by pairing volunteers who have lost a loved one in the military with a bereaved military family newly coping with a loss. In this peer-to-peer model, HOPE helps both those who volunteer and those they mentor as they work through their grief together. Peer support has shown to have a significant impact on emotional healing and family well-being.

The program seeks to demystify grief and provides family members with realistic and honest expectations so they can learn how to cope with their loss. It is available to adult family members in the military and Veteran community. The loss doesn’t have to be as a direct result of military service and it doesn’t have to be recent.

If you or someone you know is grieving the loss of a military loved one and needs support, please contact HOPE at 1-800-883-6094, or email HOPE-ESPOIR@forces.gc.ca.

Learn more at HOPE.


Let’s Talk Veterans: Online Engagement at VAC

2,700 Veterans have their say

Thank you to all who participated in the first two online consultations, on the future of remembrance in Canada, and on the application process for disability benefits. The Let’s Talk Veterans platform provided Veterans, families, organizations and stakeholders with the opportunity to make suggestions and provide feedback.

Stay connected at Let’s Talk Veterans and stay tuned for upcoming consultations. Your voice matters—and we want to hear from you!


Save the date: Virtual discussion series on military sexual trauma

Military sexual trauma (MST) has impacted the lives of many still-serving and former CAF members. Join the Canadian Military Sexual Trauma Community of Practice, McMaster University’s Department of Psychiatry and Behavioural Neurosciences and the Centre of Excellence on PTSD for two live symposiums on military sexual trauma.

Clinicians, academics and people with lived experience will discuss such topics as: supports, treatments and resources for those affected by MST, creating a common definition for military sexual trauma and culture change in the CAF.

If you are a researcher, clinician, policy-maker or frontline worker, or if you have been impacted by MST, please tune in to these free events:

Services and Supports for People affected by Military Sexual Trauma: Thursday, 16 September 2021 from 1:00 – 3:30 Eastern Time

A Path Forward: Thursday, 23 September 2021 from 1:00 – 3:30 Eastern Time

To find out more or to register, check out the Centre of Excellence on PTSD’s website.


Commemoration


Commemorate the anniversary of the Battle of Britain

This year marks the 81st anniversary of the Battle of Britain during the Second World War. From July to October 1940, a small group of Allied fighter pilots took to the skies against the much larger German Luftwaffe. The first major battle was fought exclusively in the air.

More than 100 Canadian pilots served in the skies over the United Kingdom during the four months of aerial combat. Twenty-three died in the battle, which was a key turning point in the war. The Allied victory in the Battle of Britain thwarted the planned German invasion of Great Britain.

In Canada, we commemorate the Battle of Britain on the third Sunday of every September. Listen about the battle from Gilbert John Hyde who was there.


Remember Canada’s Merchant Navy 

Merchant Navy Veterans Day was September 3, when we pay homage to the sailors who put themselves in harm’s way to ensure vital supplies reached Europe during the Second World War.

More than 12,000 people served in Canada’s Merchant Navy during the war. They played an important role in supplying Allied forces in Europe with  equipment, fuel, supplies and personnel needed to achieve victory.

The casualty rate amongst merchant mariners was high as they sailed across the frigid and perilous North Atlantic. The heavily-laden, slow cargo vessels offered tempting targets for enemy U-boats. Some 1,600 members of the Canada’s Merchant Navy were killed, and 59 Canadian-registered merchant ships lost.


Celebration of life for Canada’s first female general, BGen Sheila Hellstrom

Brigadier-General (Retired) Sheila Anne Hellstrom CD, BSc, LLD, a Royal Canadian Air Force (RCAF) Veteran and the first Canadian woman to reach the military rank of Brigadier-General, passed away in Ottawa, Ontario on 7 December 2020.

There will be a livestreamed celebration of her life on 23 September 2021 at 1 p.m. ET. Click here to register.

BGen Hellstrom was born in Lunenburg, NS, in 1935. Her military aspirations were kindled during the Second World War after hearing many stories about military life from the Norwegian sailors located at Camp Norway, a military training base in Lunenburg.

In 1954, Hellstrom joined the RCAF University Reserve Officer Training Plan at Mount Allison University. She was promoted to the rank of Flying Officer in 1956 and began her RCAF career in Manitoba as Gimli Station Services Officer.

In 1973, then Major Hellstrom became the first military woman to attend the Canadian Forces Staff College in Toronto. In 1980, she became the Deputy Director Women Personnel and supported and monitored the Service Women in Non-Traditional Employment and Roles (SWINTER) trials.

On 19 June 1987, she became the first woman to achieve the rank of Brigadier-General and assumed the role of Director General Military Personnel. Brigadier-General Hellstrom’s career culminated in 1989 with an assignment as Chair of the Committee on Women in the NATO Forces. After her military retirement in 1990, Sheila continued to champion the recruitment and full integration of military women by serving on the Minister of National Defence’s Monitoring Committee on Change.

You can learn more about BGen Sheila Hellstrom on our website.


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