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.

Civic Election Spending: Vision Pot Calls NPA Kettle Black

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Vision Vancouver is in no position to play the money card against the NPA in this fall’s civic election after condo developer Bob Rennie hosted a $25,000 a plate fundraising lunch for Vancouver mayor Gregor Robertson in March, according to IntegrityBC’s Executive Director Dermod Travis, in a statement issued last week. The luncheon caused outrage across the city.

“Political parties that live in glass money houses shouldn’t throw stones. Neither of Vancouver’s two major civic parties is holier-than-thou when it comes to political fundraising and neither of them seemed pressed for cash in 2011. The Bob Rennie lunch will also likely set a Canadian record for the cost of admittance to a political fundraising event.”

Rennie’s luncheon for Vision Vancouver also included a private “roundtable” discussion granting special access to Mayor Gregor Robertson. “It’s a pretty safe bet that they weren’t discussing the Vancouver Canucks for two hours over canapés,” said Travis.

Coalition of Progressive Electors members Daniel Tseghay, Maria Wallstam, Nathan Crompton, Sean Antrim and Tristan Markle, writing in The Mainlander, recently asked the pertinent question, “When developers give Vision $25,000, what kind of government do they get in return?”

Corporations and the real-estate industry donate to Vision Vancouver because it pays off.

The ruling party strategically approves developments that make their donors rich. Most notably, Wall Financial was a founder of Vision Vancouver and donated $280,000 in 2011. Since Vision came to power in 2008, Wall has seen its profits increase from $18 million to $61 million. Rize Alliance (who donated $10,950 to Vision in 2011) had their 26 story tower approved at Broadway and Kingsway, right in the heart of working class Mount Pleasant, despite community opposition of 80%.

Westbank, which donated $11,705 to Vision and $31,000 to the BC Liberals in the last municipal and provincial elections, was given a rezoning in Chinatown right in the middle of a community planning process. The Aquilini Family, who donated at least $10,000 to Vision over the last two elections … got a $35 million tax exemption for their project next to GM Place. Concord Pacific, which donated $36,250 to Vision in 2011 … is allowed to use urban farms to evade property taxes.

Under Vision’s corporate governance, condos are targeted at the most affordable existing neighbourhoods: Marpole, Grandview Woodland, the DTES, Mt. Pleasant, and the West End. Corporations see affordable and social housing as a threat to the market and an unwelcome competitor in the scarce supply of housing. As a result, Vision has worked to liquidate the existing affordable housing stock.

In the 2011 election, Vision Vancouver raised $2.2 million, mostly in five figure donations from corporations/developers and unions. The NPA raised $2.5 million. Last time out, campaign spending in Vancouver hit $5.3 million, in a city with 419,000 eligible voters. In 2008, it was $4.5 million.
Meanwhile, under Mayor Gregor Robertson’s leadership, the city has seen rents soar and its street homelessness population more than double this year, a 249 per cent increase since the last regional count in 2011. In 2014, there were 1,798 people without homes in Vancouver, and more people sleeping outdoors than in any other MetroVancouver municipality.
In March, candidates in Calgary’s 2013 election filed their campaign disclosure reports. Calgary Mayor Naheed Nenshi — who ran his campaign on a self-imposed limit of 65 cents per eligible voter — spent $391,124. In April of this year, a Vision Vancouver-led majority City Council defeated a motion by Green Party of Vancouver City Councillor Adriane Carr urging voluntary campaign finance restrictions for the November 2014 election.

“I think we have, in the public, a feeling of distrust of politicians,” said Carr. “I hear us not trusting ourselves, not trusting each other in terms of holding to a voluntary pact together. I know that (my motion) would be voluntary, it would not be enforceable. It would however be ultimately trackable. I think perception here is critical, and it is related to the confidence in democracy, and the democracy in our decisions, and that we should as a Council extend the hope that speakers have asked us to uphold, the hope that we can work together in terms of setting some voluntary limits, and adhere to them.”

Meanwhile, in Calgary, with 668,000 eligible voters, Mayor Naheed Nenshi underspent his own cap by six cents per voter and ended the campaign with a surplus of $120,000, most of which he donated to local charities.
Three provinces — Quebec, Ontario and Manitoba — have existing campaign finance rules for local elections that could easily be adopted in Vancouver, argues IntegrityBC, which goes on to state that since Vancouver is the only major Canadian city that doesn’t have a ward system, Vancouver should adopt Ontario election spending rules as a basis for discussion among the parties and candidates, where campaign expenditures for Mayor, Council and School Board trustee candidates top out at 85¢ per elector.

“This isn’t a big leap for Vancouver’s municipal parties,” says IntegrityBC’s Travis. “The four parties that have sat on Council in the past eight years have all supported motions calling for electoral finance reform. This is a chance to show some leadership and put into practice what they’ve already agreed to. The will is there and there’s sufficient time before this fall’s elections to find the way.”

From CityHallWatch: Donation declarations are done on an “honour system.” No independent audit is conducted. Of particular concern, CityHallWatch suggests, is the non-reporting of “in-kind” donations (think: the undeclared 2011 CUPE BC Vision Vancouver election “donation” of $1.5 million, which months later magically transformed into a precedent-setting 6.85 per cent wage increase over three years for Vancouver civic workers, setting the stage for municipal employee contracts across the province).
And where does this leave the average Vancouver citizen, minimum and low wage workers, our homeless population, senior citizens living on a fixed income, and all the rest of us? At best, of secondary concern to a cynical, Vision Vancouver-led City Council, who are more focused on paying off their friends and supporters than in representing the needs and aspirations of the diverse, majority population who reside in the city of Vancouver.

VanRamblings Revives to Cover the Vancouver Civic Scene

2014 Vancouver Political Parties

Five months from today, on November 15th, 2014, Vancouver voters will head to the polls to elect a civic government to a four-year term in office at Vancouver City Hall. No municipal election in recent Vancouver civic electoral history will prove as critical to the vision for, and livability of, our city going forward than the current civic election campaign that is already underway.
At present, there are eight declared municipal parties in Vancouver that have announced for office, ranging from …

  • Vision Vancouver, the relatively new, only 9-year old municipal political party, a breakaway party from the leftist Coalition of Progressive Electors, which had held civic power from 2002 through 2005. Vision Vancouver first elected candidates to office in 2005, and since the 2008 Vancouver municipal election have held majority power at City Hall, where Mayor Gregor Robertson, his Vision Vancouver councillors, and political eminence gris/political fixer/Chief of Staff to the Mayor, Mike Magee, have embarked on a revolutionary development plan for the city that knows no precedent in our city’s 128-year history;

  • Non-Partisan Association (NPA), Vancouver’s oldest civic political party, first formed in 1937, a fiscally conservative party that many feel to be the city’s natural governing party, out of office since 2008, and (we would suggest) completely renewed and re-constituted, the only civic party than has a chance in hell of unseating the Vision Vancouver civic administration, a party that now fashions itself (and rightly so, we believe) as the New Progressive Association. In the next short while, the NPA will announce their Mayoral candidate, although general consensus is that it will be former broadcaster, journalist and current publisher-editor of Self Counsel Press, Kirk LaPointe;

  • Coalition of Progressive Electors (COPE), Vancouver’s second oldest political party, long the conscience of our city, a party that over the years has found broad support across the 23 neighbourhoods that constitute the Vancouver we love, a party that some feel has fallen on hard times, with a retinue of former COPE members having recently broken away to form One City Vancouver, a left-progressive party, largely dominated by provincial NDP party stalwarts, and former Green Party leader Stuart Parker and recently resigned COPE Executive member taking regular potshots at COPE. Still, if we know COPE Executive Director Sean Antrim, and Tim Louis and Tristan Markle, who count themselves among a most committed group of social activists working to change Vancouver to transform our city into a much fairer, and more just, city (and we do), there’s simply no counting COPE out in 2014 — there’s just too much on the line this time around;

  • Green Party of Vancouver. Vancouver City Councillor Adriane Carr, who just squeaked into office in 2011, has done our city proud. Consistently the conscience of Vancouver City Council, the signal voice at Council and in the civic sphere representing and speaking for the interests of all Vancouver citizens, the Greens look to do well come November 15th, and based on Ms. Carr’s fine work in office this past almost three years, she will in all likelihood have coattails that will see relative political newcomers, and her Green Party of Vancouver running mates Pete Fry and Cleta Brown ascend to elected office, and a seat at the Council table, following the 2014 Vancouver civic election.

As to the remaining four Vancouver civic parties, although each of the parties is constituted of publically-minded citizens of good conscience, no one of them will come close to electing candidates to Vancouver City Council. That said, we are supportive of the aims of some of these political entities, and will in time write at length about each one of them. We realize in this first post, that our writing will be viewed by many as enigmatic — let us assure you, you will be left with no doubt in the coming months as to what VanRamblings believes are the issues of most importance to all of us as we head to the polls on November 15th, and who civic-minded citizens must consider as worthy candidates for elected office in Vancouver.
In closing, we’ll write a bit on the four remaining Vancouver civic parties …

  • One City Vancouver. Migawd, do we like these folks. Even though they ain’t gonna elect anyone to Council, One City is a definite threat to elect several candidates to Vancouver’s Board of Education, and we would suggest, as well, to Vancouver Park Board. At a future date, we’ll dedicate an entire column to One City Vancouver, and write at length (and supportively) about their candidates, once they announce;

  • Neighbourhoods for a Sustainable Vancouver (NSV). Another group of civic-minded folks for whom VanRamblings has a great deal of time. Even though CityHallWatch is not, necessarily, the party’s journalistic arm, there are a great many NSV folks who contribute to one of Vancouver’s most critically important websites for democratic engagement. We will write about NSV, at length, at a future date;

  • The Electors’ Action Movement (TEAM). Good-hearted, civic-minded folks to be sure, but sad to say, apart from nostalgic name recognition, hardly a currently effective political force in Vancouver;

  • Vancouver Cedar Party. Largely a vehicle for the political ambitions of west side resident and financial analyst, Glen Chernen, you’ll likely hear a great deal from the Cedar Party in the coming months, signifying, we would suggest, much ado about not very much, a party of smoke and mirrors and anger, without much to say of consequence on the policy front. Still, between now and November, we will give Mr. Chernen, and his running mates, a forum on VanRamblings, as we will to all of the Vancouver municipal parties seeking elected office in 2014.

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Well, that’s it for our first post on the upcoming Vancouver civic election.
In the coming days, VanRamblings will break news stories, and plan on providing every good reason to you to check in with us on a regular basis. Although it may take us a little while to ramp up (we’re a tad rusty, not having written in months), we promise you thorough — and, at times, pointed — coverage of Vancouver’s civic scene, in the coming months.
More tomorrow, thru til the November 15th civic election, and beyond.

Best of 2013: Music, Spanning Genre and Critical Recognition

Best of 2013

VanRamblings’ two favourite times of year occur from mid-July through the end of August, a six-week celebration revolving around the anniversary of our coming to this Earth (at least in this incarnation, in this time and place and history of life on our planet), and the period beginning in mid-
November through until December 31st. We have long been a romantic about most aspects of life, and love the idea of simply taking a bit of time off from the hurly burly of our everyday, and often too busy, life to reflect on the conditions of our existence, a deep and abiding reflection, a process in which we seek to provide meaning, context and, perhaps, resolution.
Within that contextual framework is contained our love for the arts — dance (we love the ballet), music (mostly of the pop culture variety, although we love progressive country), film, anything tech-related, literature, television, and the art of politics, which is to say, the political maelstrom that is public engagement early in this new millennium.

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In this first of five columns on the Best of 2013, we’ll survey a cross-section of critical opinion on the best music of the year, much of which art you may have been utterly unaware of prior to the writing that’ll appear below. As a means by which to introduce new music into your life, there is no more salutary event than that which occurs at year’s end, as you (and I) become aware of the music of our age, through a survey of informed critical opinion — always a life-enhancing event offering steadfast insight, in the most propitious, enlightening and expedient manner possible. Yippee!

Best Music of 2013

There was a time, in recent years, when we turned to Salon (in its heyday, in the late 90s through 2005), Rolling Stone, the now defunct and the much-missed Blender magazine, but since 2009, Popmatters has been the go-to place for insight into the Best Music of the Year. Yes, we know there’s NME and Paste (now available online only), Q, Pitchfork, Mojo and more, but we’ll stick with Popmatters, at year’s end, for our annual hit of unexpected and oh-so salutary musical insight.
Here’s Popmatters ‘best of music’ home page, detailing the 75 Best Albums of the Year, Best Canadian, Country, Metal, Indie-Pop, and more …


Popmatters' 75 Best Albums of 2013


Making Popmatters’ 75 Best Albums of 2013 list, at 72. The Boards of Canada; at 63. the ever-present Lorde; at 47. David Bowie’s The Next Day; 42. Julia Holter (a favourite of our friend, J.B. Shayne); 38. Rhye, to whom we introduced you earlier in the year; 27. Queens of the Stone Age; 24. Our very own Tegan and Sara; at 9 and 8, the breakout bands of the year, Haim and CHVRCHES, and at number one … well, who else would you expect? But you’ll have to read through to be sure you guessed right.
One of our favourite discoveries is a duo out of England, with whom our son Nathan has long been familiar, but is new to us this year: 4. Disclosure, who represent the very best danceable British garage house music of 2013.

Now, make no mistake, there’s more, a great deal more …

And, of course, much, much more.
In the The Best Country Music of 2013 category, we discovered a couple of artists with whom we were not previously familiar, Brandy Clark, and our favourite roots, working class, progressive country find of the year, Kacey Musgraves, who’s making a whole tonne of Best Of lists in 2013.

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We leave you, dear and constant reader, with a survey list of the Best Music of 2013, critical reception from some of our favourite publications …

Lots to listen to, lots to grok. Good luck. Enjoy. Merry Christmas!