Monday, April 19, 2010

65 Red Roses up for Banff TV award a documentary about a Victoria, B.C., girl Eva Markvoort with cystic fibrosis and a powerful will to live,

65 Red Roses up for Banff TV award
26 Canadian shows nominated in international competition




Eva Markvoort, shown in image from nominated documentary 65 Red Roses, died in April. (CBC)Eva Markvoort, shown in image from nominated documentary 65 Red Roses, died in April. (CBC)





65 Red Roses, a documentary about a Victoria, B.C., girl with cystic fibrosis and a powerful will to live, has been nominated for a Banff World Television Award.
The documentary about Eva Markvoort, created by Force Four Entertainment and CBC, is competing for best social and humanitarian documentary with the TVO/Nomad Films production Empire of the Word, a four-hour documentary that explores the history of reading.
Markvoort died earlier this month, after her body rejected a lung transplant she had two years ago — a part of her life covered by the documentary that was named for her online moniker 65 Red Roses.
The two Canadian works compete with documentaries from the Netherlands and Sweden for the TV awards, known as the Rockies, which are presented annually at the Banff Television Festival.
Nominations in 34 categories were announced Wednesday from among 900 international entries.
Four CBC productions earned nominations, including Little Mosque on the Prairie, reality TV show Make the Politician Work and mini-series Diamonds.
An episode of Little Mosque is competing with comedy programs Scrubs, Two and Half Men and Curb Your Enthusiasm from the U.S., and U.K. sitcom FM.
The drama series category has U.S. programs Criminal Minds and Fringe vying for the Rockie with Blue Sky Blue from Norway, The Street from Britain and Radio-Canada's Mirador.
There are 34 nominees from the U.S. networks and 31 from Britain, as well as a handful from France, the Netherlands, Australia, Japan and Brazil.
The 26 entries from Canada include:
Le Printemps de Melie/ Molly in Springtime from the NFB.
Pitchin' In: Shrimp from Frantic Films and the Food Network.
Til Debt Do Us Part from Frantic Films and Slice.
Mastertracks from GlassBox Media.
Karsh is History, a documentary about the great Canadian photographer.
Documentary The Language of Al Qaeda (The Al Qaeda Code)
Reality TV series Ice Pilots.
Also nominated in the category for cross-platform project is the Olympic Torch Cam seen on CTV during the 2010 Winter Games in Vancouver.
The Banff World Television Awards will be given out in Banff, Alta., on June 15.Read more: http://www.cbc.ca/arts/tv/story/2010/04/14/banff-tv-awards.html#ixzz0lZTvz5xI

Saturday, April 17, 2010

Vancouver General Hospital (VGH) made famous by Eva Markvoort star of 65_Redroses

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia


Vancouver General Hospital
Vancouver General Hospital's Centennial Pavilion




Vancouver General Hospital (VGH) is a medical facility located in Vancouver, British Columbia. VGH is the second largest hospital in Canada, after The Ottawa Hospital. The Vancouver Coastal Health Authority (VCH) is responsible for VGH.
Contents[hide]
1 History
2 Facilities and amenities
3 Facts & Figures
4 Divisions
5 External links

History
The Canadian Pacific Railway (CPR) first opened in 1886 as a nine-bed tent, its primary use to treat railway workers. On June 13, 1886, a fire destroyed the tent hospital and by July, a new, one-storey building was built. In September, the City of Vancouver took over the facility, which became the City Hospital. In 1888, located at the southern edge of the original Gastown settlement, a 35-bed hospital opened, as the tent infirmary becomes too small. The upstairs ward was for female patients, the downstairs ward for males. In 1899, the Vancouver City Hospital Training School for Nurses was opened. In 1902, British Columbia provincial legislature transferred control from the City's Board of health to a board of 15 directors. Vancouver City Hospital was renamed to Vancouver General Hospital. In 1906, in Fairview Ridge, overlooking False Creek, a new building, the Heather Pavilion, began housing staff and patients. The University of British Columbia Medical School opened clinical facilities at VGH in 1950.
In 1959, VGH opened the “Centennial Pavilion” (named in commemoration of the centennial of the founding of British Columbia as a British Crown colony, in 1858), which at the time was the largest part of the VGH facilities.
In the 1960's, VGH build Canada's first intensive care nursery, equipped with the first effective apparatus used for natural breathing in infants with respiratory failure.
In 1996, VGH opened the first three floors of its newly constructed Laurel Pavilion. In 2000, the Laurel Pavilion was renamed to the Jim Pattison Pavilion and construction of the final 12 floors began in 2001. The Jim Pattison Pavilion opened in 2003.
In 2004, the ground-breaking for new Gordon and Leslie Diamond Health Care Centre began. This new building, adjacent to the Jim Pattison Pavilion, opened in August 2006 to provide acute day care services in a variety of areas.
The Blusson Spinal Cord Centre, the world’s largest, most advanced and most comprehensive facility devoted to spinal cord injury research and patient care was opened in November 2008. The six-storey, $45-million centre is home to ICORD (International Collaboration on Repair Discoveries) and is a partnership of the University of British Columbia the Rick Hansen Foundation, Vancouver Coastal Health Research Institute, and the VGH & UBC Hospital Foundation.
Ground was broken September 2009 for the new Robert H.N. Ho Research Centre. The seven-storey, 69,350 sq. ft. (6,442 sq.m.) facility will house three of VGH’s key research programs: the Vancouver Prostate Centre at VGH; the Centre for Hip Health and Mobility; and the Ovarian Cancer Research Initiative.
[] Facilities and amenities

Vancouver General Hospital's main pavilion, the Jim Pattison Pavilion.
VGH is the largest hospital in British Columbia, offering specialized and tertiary services to residents in Vancouver. The hospital accepts patients referred from other parts of the province requiring highly specialized services. Approximately 40% of the hospital's cases come from outside the Vancouver region.
In addition to providing specialized and tertiary medical services, VGH is also a teaching hospital in affiliation with the University of British Columbia Faculty of Medicine, providing training and advanced education to students from all disciplines. Unique in Canada is the Gordon and Leslie Diamond Health Care Centre at VGH which includes the UBC Faculty of Medicine facilities. The facility houses teaching space for about 250 third and fourth year medical students and 500 postgraduate residents, and nine Faculty of Medicine programs as well as the UBC medical school library.
VGH's main cafeteria, Sassafras Cafeteria, is located on the second floor of the Jim Pattison Pavilion. The Jim Pattison Pavilion also has a café at its main entrance called Café Ami.
Facts & Figures
•One emergency department •18 operating rooms •62 outpatient clinics •25,000 inpatient (overnight) visits per year •297,000 clinic visits per year •69,000 emergency department visits per year •33,500 outpatient and inpatient surgical cases per year
Divisions
Alzheimer Clinic
Anxiety Disorders Unit
BC Injury Prevention Centre [1]
Centre for Cardiac Rehabilitation and Risk Factor Management
Breastfeeding Centre
Domestic Violence Program and Outpatient Clinic
Eye Care Centre
Leukemia/Bone Marrow Transplant Program
Mary Pack Arthritis Centre
Trauma Services/Orthopedic Trauma Service
Outpatient Psychiatry Clinic
CIBC Centre for Patients and Families [2]
Prostate Education and Research Centre [3]
Short Term Assessment and Treatment Centre (STAT)
Skin Care Centre [4]
Work Adjustment Program
Vancouver Coastal Health Research Institute [5]
Centre for Hip Health
[edit] External links
Vancouver Coastal Health - VGH
VGH & UBC Hospital Foundation
GF Strong Rehabilitation Centre
Vancouver Coastal Health
Vancouver Coastal Health Research Institute

Friday, April 16, 2010

U.S. broadcast of 65_redroses!.

U.S. broadcast of 65_redroses
Mar. 31st, 2010 at 12:01 AM
Cracking the U.S. television market is challenging. It appears many Americans would like to view the (full length) version of the film. Networks can purchase the right to broadcast the film from the production company that helped produce the film. Interested individuals should lobby the networks to do this. U.S. Networks should contact: Rob Bromley Executive Producer of 65_RedRoses & President of Force Four Entertainment rob@forcefour.com Tel: 604.669.4424

Thursday, April 15, 2010

Eva Dien Brine Markvoort of 65 Red Roses Obituary. :(!!






Eva's Obituary
Apr. 7th, 2010 at 4:38 PM

“full of love and hope and the colour red, … your girl, eva”
Eva Dien Brine Markvoort … what a life! She lived passionately, with purpose, and died on Saturday, March 27. She left a legacy of love and made a difference in the lives of thousands of people both in her personal life and in her online community. Eva’s life, almost 26 years long, was defined by her challenges related to cystic fibrosis. She knew how to live for the moment and her magnetic personality drew people in at every turn. Eva took nothing for granted and she had no time for complainers. Her life was full of vibrant moments and she appreciated all the beautiful aspects of her surroundings, constantly adjusting to the limitations presented by her health. Eva filled every room she entered, she engaged herself in the present and she learned to turn the most challenging situations into positive experiences. She was a force! Eva has enriched the lives of her parents, Janet Brine and Bill Markvoort, her siblings Annie and Hunter, her loving extended family of aunts, uncles and cousins, and her dearest core ‘team’. Eva's family expresses their gratitude for the tremendous support provided by friends, family, neighbours, colleagues, the medical team, and Eva's online community. In lieu of flowers, donations in Eva’s memory to the Vancouver Cystic Fibrosis Foundation will be gratefully accepted at www.cfvancouver.ca . All who read this are also encouraged to register as an organ donor at www.transplant.bc.ca . For her online community, Eva’s Celebration of Love will be streamed online on April 30 beginning at 4:00 p.m. Pacific Standard Time.
“The greatest thing you will ever learn, is just to love and be loved in return” Moulin Rouge

RIP Eva Markvoort of "65 red roses" :(

Eva Markvoort gave all her life away The young actress with cystic fibrosis shared her life and

her final weeks with the worldBY DOUGLAS TODD, VANCOUVER SUN APRIL 1, 2010

Beautiful, vivacious Eva Markvoort proved an accomplished actress in the theatre department at the University of Victoria. But when she began applying for roles beyond the campus, she often didn't receive the final call.Directors told the talented actress they worried she would at unexpected times cough, have trouble breathing or not be able to show up for rehearsal, due to her lifelong battle with cystic fibrosis.As Eva's disappointment expanded, film and theatre friends began telling the New Westminster-raised actress she was forgetting there was a far bigger role in which she should star.The story of her life.In the end, Eva became an icon of strength in the midst of suffering to countless people around the world: By fearlessly telling the harrowing story of what it is like to exist with the rare genetic disease.Eva played out her role in many ways, including through the award-winning documentary made about her double-lung transplant in 2007, in which viewers literally saw inside her troubled body.Eva enjoyed that the two-year-old film was called 65 Red Roses, since "65 red roses" was a child's malapropism for "cystic fibrosis." And she adored the flower. Organ transplants increased after the documentary aired.Perhaps more impressively, in the past two years Eva connected with more than a million Internet readers and viewers through her blog, also called 65 Red Roses, by revealing in intimately frank detail what it was like each day for her to live and, as she would often write online: "love, love, love."In the past six weeks, the tragically beautiful story of Eva's life came to a climax.Eva decided to reveal to her worldwide community of Internet followers, which was particularly strong in Canada, the U.S. and Europe (especially Poland), what it was like to be a few weeks from death's door.Eva's parents, Bill Markvoort and Janet Brine, talked about the remarkable short life of their daughter on Wednesday in their home in New Westminster, on what would have been Eva's 26th birthday.More than 20 of Eva's friends, many from the theatre community, were coming to the Markvoort-Brine home later in the day to mark the anniversary, with a party.Moving among rooms stacked with letters and cards from Eva's online admirers, Bill described the moment in February when their strong-willed daughter told them to gather around her VGH bed to make a video for her blog.No one in the family knew what was going on. "She could be a bit imperious. A bit of a diva," said Bill. When Eva wanted something, she got it.With the camera rolling and her family hugging close beside her, gaunt Eva suddenly began to talk about how she was soon going to die. Her agonizing battle was ending.She loved everyone.Within hours of the video going onto the 65 Red Roses site, a tsunami of affection swept through the Internet.Eva's last spoken words to her web community immediately drew more than 150,000 page views, in less than 24 hours. Tens of thousands more people would click with each passing day.They still are, even with Eva passing away last Saturday in Vancouver General Hospital, waiting in vain for a donor so she could have a second double-lung transplant.* * *The walls of the large living-room in Eva's long-standing family home in the Queen's Park neighbourhood of New Westminster were this week blanketed from floor-to-ceiling with cards, letters, drawings, poetry, prayers, paintings, collages, mosaics and other gifts from Eva's horde of far-flung well-wishers.The living room included a bed, which was itself smothered with cards and gifts. This had been Eva's bedroom during her many rough months, in which she was linked up to tubes and ingesting painkillers and other medications.Of the thousands of gifts that have arrived for Eva through the family mailbox, the most common image is a red heart, in every shape, size and variation.Eva's death is making news headlines this week across Canada and in Europe."It's been unbelievable. It's so overwhelming," said Bill, vice-president of Probyn Log Ltd., sitting with his wife, Janet, principal of Peace Arch Elementary School, who spent the past seven weeks sleeping in Eva's hospital room.Eva's parents have been reluctant to speak to the media, but decided to talk to The Vancouver Sun about their daughter, whose Internet life began four years ago.That's when Eva began a private blog to keep in touch with others with Cystic Fibrosis, which strikes roughly one in 2,000 people, mostly of European extraction.Due to the complex infectious nature of the illness, medical specialists strongly discourage people with CF from spending any time in each other's company.But, after a while, Eva opened her site beyond the CF community, to the public.At first Janet was against the idea. "But eventually I came around. I could see it was a real focus for Eva. It was benefiting her and others."The page views and comments on 65 Red Roses began mounting at a feverish pace. Eva was having an impact far greater than expected.In their living room, the parents told a few of the many remarkable stories about how Eva inspired an online network.One story was of a suicidal U.S. woman who said she was "saved" after watching Eva online. The despairing woman couldn't help but be inspired by the strength Eva showed; living with someone else's lungs, which frequently become overpowered by mucous. The family ended up meeting the woman.Another account of Eva's Internet influence revolved around the hundreds of letters she received from black students in gang-infested ghettos of Los Angeles. An L.A. school administrator had encouraged students at 18 schools to follow Eva's blog, from which he wrote they learned no one was "worthless," and they themselves became "more empathetic."There were also many young men who fell in love online with Eva, confessing their unrequited desire to rescue the brave, sensual young woman from the unfairness of her terminal ordeal.In general, Bill found young men and women responded incredibly to Eva's blog, in part because for many of them it was their first grave experience of the dying process, particularly with someone their age.There were also, as expected, many, many patients and families struggling with cystic fibrosis who considered Eva a heroine.Perhaps most intriguingly, Eva became a media star in Poland.She was a top story on newspapers and on TV in the country of 38-million people, to the extent that a Polish TV crew came and filmed a story about her during the Vancouver 2010 Olympics.The family, including brother, Hunter, and sister Annie, were asked to give a rough idea of what kinds of people had been sending the tens of thousands of comments Eva received on 65 Red Roses.The family estimated about 10 per cent of the blog's traffic came from people struggling with Cystic Fibrosis. The rest came from "healthy" people, many from Canada, but with about 25 per cent from the United States and another 15 per cent from Poland.Trying to understand the mystery of the Polish phenomenon, Bill had a few theories.The documentary about Eva aired at least twice on Polish TV, which doesn't' have as many channels as in North America, he said. Nor does Poland have a health care system, he said, that can afford lung transplants. As well, "Eva" is a common Polish name, even while "Markvoort" is Dutch.Bill and family believe, in addition, that Eastern Europeans may have a more open and healthy attitude than North Americans to difficult and "dark" themes, such as the life and death struggles of Eva.Whatever the case involving the Poles, Bill found Eva's widespread Internet community astounding."I think the Internet is the most powerful thing imaginable. It provides immediate contact. It creates circles of friendship."* * *In addition to exposing her vibrant life and passions on the world wide web, Eva received many accolades in her short life.Hearing of her troubles, the University of Victoria decided to rush through her bachelor's degree in fine arts in February, even though she had not quite finished her electives.The House of Commons was told of her death this week. She had already received the Queen's Jubilee Service Award.Meanwhile, the documentary, 65 Red Roses, continues to be aired around the world, including again this Friday evening in Canada on CBC.The Cystic Fibrosis Foundation, as well, gave Eva its prestigious Summerhayes Award in March, for raising awareness. As a result of her online influence, the foundation will be switching much of its educational and outreach campaigns to the Internet.Bill choked up as he read out a tiny sampling of the letters people have written Eva, including how she was "remarkable and strong." They thanked her for "giving all her love away" and being "one of the most beautiful people I've ever been able to know."Bill and Janet said they feel a duty to respond publicly to the outpouring for their daughter. But, eventually, Bill said, the family will likely return to a more private life.Just as Bill finished speaking, the mail carrier dropped another two dozen brightly coloured cards and letters through the family mailbox.Some had red hearts.dtodd@vancouversun.comRead Douglas Todd's blog at www.vancouversun.com/thesearch

Wednesday, April 14, 2010

Red Cross was losing track of 'possibly all' detainees, ex-diplomat says.

Afghan detainee issue a hot potato: Colvin
Red Cross was losing track of 'possibly all' detainees, ex-diplomat says
CBC News
Senior diplomat Richard Colvin says Canadian officials didn't want to deal with the "hot potato" of detainees being abused and tortured in Afghan custody when he was working in the country in 2006 and 2007.Richard Colvin, a former senior diplomat with Canada's mission in Afghanistan, testifies at the Military Police Complaints Commission on Tuesday in Ottawa. (Adrian Wyld/Canadian Press)
Appearing Tuesday before the civilian-run Military Police Complaints Commission, Colvin testified he heard allegations of prisoner mistreatment within a month of his arrival in Afghanistan and said he and his colleagues soon learned the "patterns of risk facing our detainees."
Colvin said his first visit to Sarpoza prison in May 2006 immediately revealed that Canadian delays in reporting prisoner transfers created a "serious problem" for the International Committee of the Red Cross as it tried to keep track of detainees.
Under a December 2005 memorandum of understanding in place at the time, the Red Cross was responsible for monitoring and tracking detainees handed over by Canadian soldiers to Afghan police and the Afghan National Directorate of Security.
When Colvin met with Red Cross officials after his visit to the prison, he said he was surprised at how forceful they were about their concerns and how little information Canada gave them to track detainees after they were handed over.
"They were losing many, if not most — and possibly all — of our detainees," he said of the Red Cross's attempts at followup.
Colvin said he had difficulty finding anyone in the Canadian Forces to take his calls regarding the "high risk" of mistreatment of detainees at the hands of Canada's Afghan allies.
He said Maj. Erik Liebert, his colleague on the Provincial Reconstruction Team, told him "no one wants to touch this hot potato."
Political firestorm
Colvin sparked a political firestorm last November when he told a Commons committee that all detainees transferred to Afghan prisons were likely tortured by Afghan officials. He has alleged Canadian government and military officials were well aware of the problem.
On Tuesday, Colvin reiterated his previous assertion that he and his colleagues soon heard "very credible" information about the "systemic risk" of mistreatment of prisoners, but Canadian heel-dragging on reporting transfers thwarted the Red Cross's attempts to follow up on the detainees' conditions.
He said Canadian officials would often notify the Red Cross about transfers weeks or months after they occurred. The notifications often would only include a name or a village, which wasn't enough for the international agency to locate a prisoner, let alone learn whether there was mistreatment, he added.
"It seems to me intriguing that they are told they have the right to monitor, but then we block them from doing it," he said.
Colvin recalled a comment from an official at NATO's International Security Assistance Force, who told him that getting information from Canadians was "like getting blood from a stone."
Colvin, who worked in Kandahar for the Foreign Affairs Department in 2006 and later as the Canadian Embassy's second-in-command in Kabul, visited Afghan detainees as part of his duties. He wrote reports about those visits and sent them to Ottawa.
The federal government and military commanders have said Colvin's claims are baseless. But opposition parties have called on Prime Minister Stephen Harper to hold a full public inquiry and demanded the government release unredacted copies of all documents pertaining to the Afghan detainee affair.
Citing security and safety concerns, the government has defended the practice of censoring documents but has appointed retired Supreme Court justice Frank Iacobucci to review the material.
In April 2007, after allegations of torture became public, the government rushed out a new agreement that would allow Canada to monitor its detainees.
Colvin said he visited an Afghan prison soon after the new agreement was reached and heard first-hand accounts of abuse. But in the end, Canadian monitors only ended up speaking to about six detainees, leaving at least 96 more who might have been abused as well, he told the commission.
In was in this context that Colvin flew to Ottawa for an inter-agency meeting in March 2007 with about a dozen government officials. When he soon realized his warnings about abuse allegations surrounding the Afghan secret police weren't reaching superiors, he decided to drop his normally cautious and diplomatic language in favour of speaking bluntly.
The Afghan National Directorate of Security "tortures people, that's what they do," he recalled saying at the meeting. "And if we don't want our detainees tortured, we shouldn't give them to the NDS."
Colvin said that statement was met with silence and the note-taker at the meeting put down her pen.
Ex-governor 'a bad actor'
Colvin also said Tuesday that in May and June 2006, Canadian government and military officials knew about the bad reputation of Asadullah Khalid, the governor of Kandahar province at the time.
Colvin said Canadian officials were hearing "credible" reports that Khalid was running a drug network and had a "terrible" human rights record, including reports of his use of private detention facilities to hold businessmen who, in some cases, were never seen again.
He also detailed other reports of abuses swirling around the then governor, including allegations of him using drugs and sexually abusing young girls.
Colvin said he met with Khalid "quite regularly" and described the feared governor as a "charming man" who spoke English well.
However, "he was a bad actor," Colvin said.
"Generally, among people we met, it was quite hard to find someone who had a good thing to say about him."
The commission is holding hearings based on complaints filed in 2007 and 2008 by Amnesty International Canada and the B.C. Civil Liberties Association that Canadian military police didn't properly investigate officers responsible for directing detainee transfers.
Transferring prisoners between countries while knowing they likely face torture is considered a war crime.Read more: http://www.cbc.ca/canada/story/2010/04/13/mpcc-hearings-colvin.html#ixzz0l2jQ7yZI

Tuesday, April 13, 2010

People in Canada reject the possibility of extending the country’s military commitment in Afghanistan beyond the current timetable, .

Canadians Oppose Afghan Combat Beyond 2011
April 03, 2010

(Angus Reid Global Monitor) - People in Canada reject the possibility of extending the country’s military commitment in Afghanistan beyond the current timetable, according to a poll by Angus Reid Public Opinion. 79 per cent of respondents oppose Canadian troops taking part in a combat mission after 2011.
Conversely, 64 per cent of respondents would welcome Canadian troops taking part in activities related to development and governance work, and 54 per cent support Canadian troops training the Afghan military.
Afghanistan has been the main battleground in the war on terrorism. The conflict began in October 2001, after the Taliban regime refused to hand over Osama bin Laden without evidence of his participation in the 9/11 terrorist attacks in New York and Washington. Al-Qaeda operatives hijacked and crashed four airplanes on Sept. 11, 2001, killing nearly 3,000 people.
At least 1,687 soldiers—including 141 Canadians—have died in the war on terrorism, either in support of the U.S.-led Operation Enduring Freedom or as part of the International Security Assistance Force (ISAF) led by the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO).
Canadians renewed the House of Commons in January 2006. The Conservative party—led by Stephen Harper—received 36.3 per cent of the vote, and secured 124 seats in the 308-member lower house. Harper formed a minority administration after more than 12 years of government by the Liberal party.
In May 2006, the House of Commons extended Canada’s mission in Afghanistan until February 2009. In March 2008, the House of Commons voted 198-77 to prolong the military deployment until the end of 2011. The Conservative and Liberal parties supported the motion, while the New Democratic Party (NDP) and the Bloc Québécois opposed it. In September 2008, Harper assured that there would be no new extension of the mission.
On Mar. 29, U.S. state secretary Hillary Rodham Clinton discussed a possible extension of Canada’s military mission, declaring, "We would obviously like to see some form of support continue, because the Canadian Forces have a great reputation, they work really well with our American troops and the other members of our coalition."
Following Rodham Clinton’s remarks, Canadian foreign minister Lawrence Cannon declared: "There will be no military mission post-2011."
Polling Data
As you may know, Canada’s commitment to the military mission in Afghanistan is set to expire in 2011. The U.S. government would like to see Canadian troops involved in Afghanistan after 2011. Do you support or oppose Canadian troops taking part in each one of these activities after 2011?

Support
Oppose
Not sure
A combat mission
16%
79%
5%
A training role for the Afghan military
54%
39%
7%
Activities related to development and governance work
64%
29%
7%
Source: Angus Reid Public Opinion Methodology: Online interviews with 1,006 Canadian adults, conducted on Mar. 30 and Mar. 31, 2010. Margin of error is 3.1 per cent.
Complete Poll (PDF)