All posts by Raymond Tomlin

About Raymond Tomlin

Raymond Tomlin is a veteran journalist and educator who has written frequently on the political realm — municipal, provincial and federal — as well as on cinema, mainstream popular culture, the arts, and technology.

Vancouver Votes 2018 | The Politics of Personal Destruction

Christine Boyle: the people of Vancouver are tired of the politics of personal destruction

On Sunday, VanRamblings was approached by a candidate for one of the right-wing parties campaigning in the 2018 Vancouver civic election. This entitled individual, employing a threatening tone, “warned” us that we had better not write anything negative about her in this civic election cycle — which we thought was a pretty rich ask given that this candidate’s husband has been all over social media calling VanRamblings’ favourite candidate in this civic election, OneCity Vancouver’s Christine Boyle, “a commie”.
Nonetheless, we have no intention of deriding this person’s candidacy nor her character — politics is tough enough without that kind of nonsense.

The must-elect OneCity Vancouver team in the 2018 civic election

Folks from across the political spectrum seem to have it in for OneCity Vancouver (full disclosure: VanRamblings is a member of the party), directed more at their City Council candidates than their must-elect School Board hopefuls, each of whom you must cast a ballot for next month.

OneCity Vancouver: opening all neighbourhoods across the city for all citizens

Ms. Boyle’s City Council able and energetic running mate, Brandon Yan — not to mention the party itself — has found himself the target of a take down social media campaign for most of the summer months, revolving around his and his party’s “arrogance”. As if having a point of view and promoting your values is somehow untoward & deserving of condemnation.

Brandon Yan, working to build community, diversity, acceptance and love in Vancouver

At the centre of the criticism of both Ms. Boyle and Mr. Yan is a belief that both represent, or that somehow OneCity Vancouver is “Vision Lite” — which is pure, unadulterated poppycock. VanRamblings will address this criticism about the activists in OneCity in another column, but we’ll say this for now: Alison Atkinson and Anna Chudnovsky are co-chair founders of OneCity Vancouver, who have worked closely with Cara Ng and Christine Boyle to build OneCity into a potent political force in Vancouver. Feminists, social democrats, women of conscience and community activists, each represent the hope of our future — as has long been the case — and each of whom is very much their own person and nobody’s fool or pawn, and woebetide the individual who tells them what they “must” do.

Melissa De Genova, the toughest, brooks no nonsense political figure in Vancouver

Current sitting Vancouver Non-Partisan Association City Councillor and candidate for re-election Melissa De Genova has also found herself in for a rough ride on social media this summer, partly revolving around her party affiliation, but mostly around an utter lack of knowledge about Ms. De Genova’s many, many accomplishments while in office, sitting as a Park Board Commissioner, and over the past four years, a City Councillor.
Good thing for all of us who believe that a woman’s place is in elected office making a difference for the better for all of us that Melissa De Genova is the toughest, brooks no nonsense political figure in Vancouver politics, who although most often reasoned in response to unwarranted criticism will, if you step over the line, tear a well-deserved strip off you (just ask Aaron Jasper and Niki Sharma at Park Board, and Andrea Reimer at City Council).

Politics and life in society and around the globe | We're all in this together

Let’s face it, the dehumanization of politicians and public figures is not a new phenomenon — it’s just that it’s gotten much worse since Donald Trump entered politics, migrating with new and bilious force into Canada to our collective detriment. Malicious personal attacks and commentary where political figures are “taken down” only serves to discourage good people from seeking public service lest they become the subject of the destructive instincts that have come to plague the political arena in recent years.
Towards building a better society, our job as citizens, as political candidates and as journalists ought to be to build bridges, to find common ground, to be community ambassadors, to expect better, to act on conscience and for the betterment of our community and for our city, for the benefit of everyone in each one of the 23 neighbourhoods the comprise Vancouver.

Towards a better future

In 2018, when you go to the polls next month, vote for better — as most Vancouverites did in last year’s provincial election — vote for parties and candidates committed to building affordable housing, vote for candidates who have a vision for the future that serves your needs and those of your family, vote for fairness and equity, vote for social justice, make sure that more than half of the candidates for whom you cast a ballot are women, vote for members of Vancouver’s vibrant and diverse ethnic community, and fer damn sure, vote for many members of our LGBTQ2+ community.
In Vancouver in 2018, we need a City Council which reflects us, all of us.

Vancouver Votes 2018 | Affordable Housing | The Election Issue

Society will pay a price if public housing is ignored

On a warm and pleasant Tuesday evening, a friend and I were walking through my old stomping grounds, the Grandview-Woodland neighbourhood where I was raised, proselytizing about COPE – The Coalition of Progressive Electors and OneCity Vancouver, the only two civic political parties where all five of the City Council candidates — from COPE, Order of Canada recipient Jean Swanson, must-elect rabble-rouser Derrick O’Keefe, and his principled running mate and well-experienced City Councillor, Anne Roberts, to OneCity’s must, must-elect Christine Boyle, and her indefatigable running mate, Brandon Yan — are committed to a massive public sector housing construction programme, ensuring that the concerns of the 18,000 families in Vancouver who are paying more than 35% of their income for housing will be addressed through ready availability to affordable housing in public, purpose-built housing co-ops, co-housing & truly affordable rental housing.
Make no mistake: the 2018 Vancouver civic election is about one issue and one issue alone: the provision of affordable housing, housing as a human right that will guarantee to each and every one of us that we will not have to move elsewhere because housing in Vancouver is the preserve only of the wealthy, a Vancouver where families of every description may be assured that if living in truly affordable housing is a necessity for themselves and their family, comfortable, well-constructed housing which will require no more than 35% of their income to put a roof over their heads, in safe, secure, warm and inviting public housing — you know, a place you can call home, your home, where you can grow a garden, paint your walls, and sleep each evening in comfort and security, surrounded by neighbours and within a community that truly cares for you, is on its way.
A pipe dream, you say? “Unrealizable, not going to happen,” you’re thinking to yourself. Just because life, and providing a safe, secure home has been hell these past few years doesn’t mean that will always be the case.
Certainly the candidates running with OneCity Vancouver and COPE — for whom it is mandatory you cast a ballot on October 20th — don’t think it’s a pipe dream — they’ve got their heads screwed on straight, and have a plan.

An example of affordable row housing that could be built in Vancouver

Here’s how it works: Vancouver has $15 billion of city-owned property in their much-ballyhooed Property Endowment Fund (established by the TEAM civic administration of Mayor Art Phillips, in the early 1970s) — parks, school grounds, City Hall and industrial lands, as well as leased commercial, office and retail properties — $1.7 billion of which is available on a leasehold basis for development of affordable housing co-ops, co-housing and rental housing. Factor in the Crown land owned by the provincial and federal governments, and their commitment to turning over Crown land for the development of affordable housing, and you have a land bank of billions of dollars all set and ready on which to construct affordable housing.
Cost to citizens of acquiring lands to construct affordable housing: zero.
Construction cost to citizens to build affordable housing? Nada, nothing, zero, zilch. Read on and we’ll tell you why.
Each time a Vancouver developer — you know, big-time real estate developers like Terry Hui’s Concord Pacific, Michael Audain’s Polygon Properties, Ian Gillespie’s Westbank Projects, Andrew Grant’s PCI Developments, Robert Fung’s Salient Group, the Aquilini Investment Group, BOSA Properties, Peter Wall’s Wall Group, Peter and Ron Toigo’s Shato Holdings, just to name a few of Vancouver’s more prominent real estate developers — each time any developer builds a massive tower or two, the city is due what is termed a “community amenity contribution (or ‘CAC’)”.
Here’s a recent example of a community amenity contribution made by a developer: upon approval of the Reliance Development of the Jimmy Pattison-owned property at Drake and Howe / Burrard and Drake, Reliance / Pattison were required to pay the city $42.6 million in CACs, monies that should have been applied to the construction of social and affordable housing — but wasn’t, because Vision Vancouver’s Mayor Gregor Robertson and Councillor Kerry Jang actually had the temerity to suggest that there was “no shortage of affordable housing in the West End” — although a new community centre, child care centres, the Jim Deva Plaza, among other necessary amenities contributory to the livability of our city were built.
Much the same thing occurred when the Amacon and Onni Group built the Brava condominium development at Davie and Seymour — part of their CAC required them to construct the Vancouver International Film Centre, home to our annual film festival, and the much-beloved Vancity Theatre.
All of the CAC information provided directly above is in aid of answering your next question. If the properties on which affordable housing — housing co-ops, co-housing, rental housing — are provided “free” on a leasehold basis, who pays for the materials & housing construction? The answer? Easy, peasy, nice & easy: the developers do, out of their CAC.

An affordable housing manifesto

Let us be very clear here: there is no impediment to building affordable housing NOW in Vancouver. We have the city-owned and Crown land available, on a 66-year leasehold basis. Construction costs would be paid out of developers’ community amenity contributions. And, the city would not charge either development permit application fees for the construction of this public housing, or assess any property tax on public housing either.
Where does the money go, then, that is collected by the City in rental, mortgage and housing charges?
Again the answer is easy: 5% of the monies are set aside to pay for a salaried property manager, and staff; 10% of monies collected are set aside for ongoing annual maintenance of the housing, while another 15% is set aside in a “replacement reserve fund” for — some years down the road — major structural renovations, replacement of boilers, flooring, appliances, kitchen counters and cabinetry, windows and doors, as well as roofing, inner courtyards and balconies, among other items requiring replacement.
And in the interests of democratic engagement, the decisions as to how the monies would be spent on annual maintenance and replacement reserve would be left to the members resident in the affordable co-op, co-and-rental housing, providing them a say & power in the livability of their home.
Remaining monies would be turned over to the City housing department to be applied toward the construction of supportive social housing.
The market could continue to build single family housing with basement suites and coach houses, and market rental would continue to be the purview of the development community. Those persons in our community intent on achieving the “American dream” — private home ownership, and increased equity in their property — would be free to carry on as they wish.
And, the rest of us, who live by the credo, “each according to her need?”

An affordable housing condominium-style building

We’d be living with our families in safe, secure housing — with security of tenure, where we’d pay no more than 35% of our income for our housing, where if we were living in a condominium style building, seniors living on a fixed income, persons with disabilities and those on income assistance would pay only the shelter portion of their income for housing, while one third of the members comprising middle income workers and the creative community would pay much under the “low end of market” rate as determined by the annual Canada Mortgage and Housing Market Survey, while those earning $55,000 or more in 2018 income would pay a “low end of market” CMHC rate of $1100 for a bachelor, $1300 for a one-bedroom, $1600 for a 2-bedroom, and $2100 for a 3-bedroom, a median market charge that although dear is still much under the current market rate.
Surely, every person that my garrulous and engaging friend Daryl Morgan, and a shy and surprisingly reserved me spoke with during our two-hour plus walk through Grandview-Woodland — the woman who is moving back to Montreal with her boyfriend at month’s end because $2780 plus utilities is too much for them in their rental home, even if they’re sharing that home with a single parent friend, and even if they realize $2780 is good rent for a home in this market, leaving that friend wondering where she’ll find housing for herself and her daughter; or the young, professional woman we met along Semlin Drive who is paying $1150 for a tiny bachelor-style, barely livable basement suite, who loves the city and her access to the mountains for hiking, skiing, downhill mountain bike riding and all the outdoor sports that keep her healthy and sane in a city she loves but can’t afford, where hope for a better place to live lies nowhere on her horizon — would love to see Christine Boyle, Derrick O’Keefe, Jean Swanson, Brandon Yan and Anne Roberts elected to Council to ensure the construction of affordable housing that would allow them to live in the city they love.

The woman moving to Montreal, having a yard sale at her home on East 8th Avenue, had the song Billy, by Drama Duo, a dark and passionate musical collaboration between Na’el Shehade & Via Rosa, playing on the stereo. I love, love, love discovering new music!

But you know what? These exceptionally bright, well-educated and engaging women of substance, wit, toughness and élan, and all the persons Daryl and I spoke with on our sojourn through my old neighbourhood were utterly and disconcertingly unaware that there was a civic election underway, had never heard of COPE or One City, never mind Christine, Brandon, Anne, Derrick or Jean. How do we reach out to this community of despair who are COPE’s and One City’s natural allies and constituent base, to let them know that the way things are is not the way things have to be?
Fortunate for those persons of conscience among us, we have folks like Sara Sg, Chanel Ly, Fiona York, Maddie Andrews, Duncan Martin, Selina Crammond, Riaz Behra, Luis Porte Petit, Ngaire Leach, Shawn Vulliez, Aiden Sisler, Darlene Alice Bertholet, Beverly Ho, Devin Gillan, Alex Kennedy, Ishman Bhuiyan, Jorj Tempul, Qara Maristella and a host of others in COPE, and the incredibly wonderful Alison Atkinson, Paul Finch, Anne Chudnovsky, R.J. Aquino, Cara Ng, Tyler Michaels, Nadja Kom, the ever-inspiring Thea Dowler, and the hope of our future Adi Pick (which appellation also applies to Stefan Avlijas) in One City, and many others, all of whom are possessed of energy, great insight and an unparalleled commitment to the public good, who in 2018 constitute the most spirited and tirelessly hard-working — not to mention, friendly, outgoing, engaged and engaging — cadre of difference makers VanRamblings has encountered in more than 45 years.
In 2018, we can count on Vancouver candidates for City Council Jean Swanson, Anne Roberts, Christine Boyle, Brandon Yan and Derrick O’Keefe to rock the vote, and rock the world for the better of Vancouver’s woebegone citizens of despair, to let them know that hope lies close on the near horizon, a better day awaits, and working with all of the fine individuals whose names were mentioned in the previous paragraph, and many, many, many others in COPE, One City and the Greens’ Pete Fry and Adriane Carr, in 2018 our lives will be transformed, and we will achieve …

2018 Vancouver civic election | The City We Need | Vote COPE and OneCity Vancouver

Vancouver Votes 2018 | OneCity Vancouver | Vote Brandon Yan

OneCity Vancouver candidates Jennifer Reddy, Erica Jaaf, Brandon Yan, Carrie Bercic and Christine BoyleThe must-vote for political party and candidates in the 2018 civic election: OneCity Vancouver’s Jennifer Reddy, Erica Jaaf, Brandon Yan, Carrie Bercic and Christine Boyle

In this, the summer of our political discontent, no Vancouver civic party (save, perhaps, COPE - the Coalition of Vancouver Electors) has been left unscathed by party in-fighting and the ruinous politics of personal destruction — and none moreso than OneCity Vancouver, and their VDLC-endorsed candidate for City Council, Brandon Yan, who while fighting for a “kinder, more just, and more equitable Vancouver” has consistently been made the target of an ongoing untoward, unconscionable and entirely despicable wholesale attack on his character, his heart-filled candidacy, and the edifying and entirely necessary tenets of his party’s platform — where the provision of truly affordable housing stands at the centre of its civic election program — which OneCity Vancouver has assiduously championed on the party’s indispensable Twitter feed throughout these summer months.
In July, given the political climate of our times, Mr. Yan made the entirely necessary decision to delete his old tweets from his Twitter feed, which as The Straight’s Travis Lupick wrote in a column published July 24th “he would have been stupid not to, (given that) an embarrassing old message posted on Twitter or Facebook can torpedo a politician’s entire career.”
Bad enough that holier-than-thou ProVancouver council candidate, and recent NPA member, Raza Mirza, wrote in a tweet published on July 23rd …

“How can people trust you, @CitizenYan, to bring transparency to decisions making at #Vancouver city hall, when you started by hiding all your Twitter history?” wrote Mirza, a Vancouver resident active with the advocacy group Housing Action for Local Taxpayers (HALT).”

What was worse was when failed OneCity Vancouver Council candidate Ben Bolliger jumped on the “take Brandon Yan down” bandwagon, hardly showing loyalty to the party for which he unsuccessfully sought a Council nomination, and the candidate he was to support this election season.
And the hits on Brandon Yan just kept on comin’, right through until last evening when VanRamblings’ longtime friend and former Park Board Commissioner Bill McCreery attacked Mr. Yan for a candidacy that Mr. McCreery wrote he believes is designed to “promote class and racial warfare”, all of this in response to an August 26th Jen St. Denis article in the StarMetro when, as Ms. Denis writes …

Brandon Yan is running for council with OneCity, and he doesn’t agree with (ProVancouver mayoralty candidate David) Chen’s position that the right course of action is to have a dialogue with those on the far right.

As an example, Yan referred to a rally in Vancouver in April where a group opposed to B.C.’s new sexual orientation and gender identity curriculum protested alongside the Soldiers of Odin. The Soldiers of Odin is a street-patrol anti-immigration group whose founder was convicted of racially-aggravated assault in Finland. The group denies ongoing accusations of racism and white nationalism.

“I don’t want to see my elected officials sit down with them,” Yan said. “Dialogue is good, but it can look like they’re trying to placate them and letting them present their ideas.”

Brandon Yan stands for openness, humanity and social justice, and stands against hate and oppression, and he finds himself under attack?
Here’s what VanRamblings knows: Brandon Yan is a bright, articulate and socially conscious person of conscience, an activist, involved citizen who …

  • Served on the City of Vancouver’s City Planning Commission from 2014 to 2016 — which means he knows about the development process at City Hall backwards, forwards and inside out, knows all the players, and is intimately familiar with development policy, all that has come before and all that is on the order paper under the current regime at City Hall;

  • Completed his Masters in Urban Studies at Simon Fraser University, researching civic education and public engagement practices, and is …
  • Currently employed as the Education Director for Out On Screen, which on top of all of his other qualifications also means that Brandon Yan is committed to promotion of the arts in our city.

Qualified candidate for Vancouver City Council, thy name is Brandon Yan.

Brandon Yan, OneCity Vancouver candidate for City Council in the 2018 civic election

VIFF 2018 | A Window on the World & Insight into Our Humanity

37th annual Vancouver International Film Festival Panorama programme

One month from today, the always spectacular and utterly humane Vancouver International Film Festival commences, unspooling 375 films from 70 countries spanning our globe, each one political in its own way, exploring the politics of personal discovery as well as personal tragedy, and the politics of how life is lived in every far flung country across our planet, the single most enlightening arts event of the calendar year, sure to remove the dimness or blindness from one’s eyes or heart, and a must attend event for any person of conscience concerned for the state of our world.

Screening at the 37th annual Vancouver International Film Festival this year: acclaimed Japanese director Hirokazu Kore-eda’s latest, Shoplifters, which won the Palme d’Or at Cannes in May, a quietly devastating portrait of family and theft in contemporary Japan, resonant, compassionate, socially conscious filmmaking with a piercing intelligence that is pure Kore-eda, and a film that stole the hearts of the Cannes jury and even the most cynical of film journalists attending Cannes this year, a film made up of delicate brushstrokes: details, moments, looks and smiles, a heartbreaker that draws our empathy, and yet another charming, funny and affecting example of Kore-eda’s very special brand of tough-but-tender humanism.

Another Cannes favourite headed to VIFF 2018, Capernaum, Lebanese filmmaker Nadine Labaki’s politically-charged fable about a child who launches a lawsuit against his parents, a staggering heart-in-mouth social-realist blockbuster teeming with sorrow, yet strewn with diamond-shards of beauty, wit and hope, at once quietly absorbing and fitfully shocking as we experience the sights, sounds and smells of the streets where a one-year-old child can wander around alone without anyone stopping to wonder why, and a film that while choosing dramatic power over narrative finesse makes a powerful statement on human misery and grotesque inequality while tackling its subject with intelligence, heart and furious compassion.

Another acclaimed film set to arrive at VIFF 2018, the much-looked-forward-to Cannes FIPRESCI Prize winner, South Korean director LEE Changdong’s Burning, starring Hollywood actor Steven Yuen (Okja, The Walking Dead). Here’s what Los Angeles Times film critic Justin Chang had to say about Burning

At 2½ hours, Burning is a character study that morphs, with masterly patience, subtlety and nary a single wasted minute, into a teasing mystery and eventually a full-blown thriller. To reveal more would ruin the story’s slow-building pleasures, which are less about the haunting final destination than the subtle, razor-sharp microcurrents of class rage, family-inherited pain, everyday ennui and youthful despair that build in scene after scene, even when nothing more seems to be happening than a simple or not-so-simple conversation.

Defying expectations throughout, offering multiple, murky solutions to a set of mysteries wondrous in their complexity and inscrutability, Burning, with its jazzy score, gorgeously immaculate camerawork, shifting moods and carefully calibrated minimalism emerges as a genre-bending murder-mystery that torches genre clichés, in one of the most scorching and beautifully unforgettable films of the year. Yet another VIFF 2018 must-see.

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The full VIFF 2018 programme will be available across Metro Vancouver, in libraries, coffee shops and book stores late next week.
Weekday Matinée Passes, probably the best deal at VIFF (as is the case every year) — at only $160, allowing you to see all films Monday to Friday screening between 10am and 5:59pm (that’s as many as 50 films that would be available to you, not to mention Sandy Gow’s always can’t miss afternoon international shorts programmes) — are available by clicking here. Ticket pack information is available by clicking here.