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http://www.dominionpaper.ca/articles/4100
"...For a four-year period in the '70s, the poorest families in Dauphin, Manitoba, were granted a guaranteed minimum income by the federal and provincial governments. Thirty-five years later all that remains of the experiment are 2,000 boxes of documents that have gathered dust in the Canadian archives building in Winnipeg. Until now little has been known about what unfolded over those four years in the small rural town, since the government locked away the data that had been collected and prevented it from being analyzed. But after a five year struggle, Evelyn Forget, a professor of health sciences at the University of Manitoba, secured access to those boxes in 2009. Until the data is computerized, any systematic analysis is impossible. Undeterred, Forget has begun to piece together the story by using the census, health records, and the testimony of the program's participants. What is now emerging reveals that the program could have counted many successes." -- - http://zzzoot.blogspot.com/ - |
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Idle thought, Hewlett Packard has a program that gives retired engineers an office for them to work on anything that catches their fancy. They aren't paid but work how ever much they feel like because it interests them.
Ottawa has a lot of civil servants retiring at the moment. Some might be interested in entering the data or working with it in some capacity. Because they are retired civil servants they have basic security clearance already and many are graduates with a background in the area. Don't forget many are ex IT professionals so there might be some potential here as well if it can be tapped. Cheerio John On 24 September 2011 06:34, Glen Newton <[hidden email]> wrote: http://www.dominionpaper.ca/articles/4100 |
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