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.

Sandra Thomas Reports on the Kits Community Centre AGM Fiasco


Kitsilano Community Centre AGM, Sandra Thomas in the Vancouver Courier


Vancouver Courier journalist Sandra Thomas’ article on the Kitsilano Community Centre AGM

Award-winning Vancouver Courier journalist Sandra Thomas has composed, as is indicated on VanRamblings’ Facebook post above, a particularly well-conceived and researched article on last Thursday, April 18th’s Kitsilano Community Centre Annual General Meeting.
In a town that is sometimes given to lazy journalism, that Thomas chose to interview (and quote) a broad cross-section of the ‘players’ in last week’s delirious KitsCC passion play, that in a very short time (deadline looming) Thomas found her way clear to crafting a piece of writing not only seamless in its presentation of argument, but peerless in its command of the issues, emerges as an accomplishment worth noting and commenting on.
The original VanRamblings article to which Ms. Thomas refers, near the end of her piece, was published under the title, Besieged at the Kits Community Centre Annual General Meeting, and may be found here.

Day Eight: NDP Step Up to the Plate on Earth Day


BC ELECTION PREDICTION PROJECT APRIL 23, 2013

We’ll check in each week with Milton Chan and his Election Prediction Project, to track where pundits and those on the ground believe Decision BC 2013 appears headed, riding-by-riding, as we approach E-day, just three weeks from today, on May 14th, 2013. The change this week from last, a pickup for the NDP’s Gabriel Yiu in Vancouver Fraserview, third time lucky it would seem for the affable Mr. Yiu. Otherwise, third time around, Maple Ridge-Mission NDP candidate Mike Bocking, former Union Prez from VanRamblings’ days working at Pacific Press (when NDP Provincial Secretary Jan O’Brien was the Union’s Business Agent) appears set to find himself spending a fair bit of time in British Columbia’s ‘high tea‘ capital, as well.

Earth Day

On Earth Day, while campaigning in Kamloops (the quintessential bellwether riding), the increasingly well-travelled BC NDP leader Adrian Dix made a dual campaign announcement: his administration would dissolve the Pacific Carbon Trust, and deploy at least some of the carbon tax revenue to fund transit or other green initiatives. The surprise second-part of the green campaign announcement was this: the BC NDP are opposed to an expansion of the Kinder Morgan pipeline, which would turn Vancouver into an oil port if the proposed twinning of the existing Kinder Morgan pipeline was to be approved. The announcement was met with huzzahs by environmentalists, and skepticism by the always quizzical Vancouver Sun provincial affairs columnist, Vaughn Palmer. And it was ever thus.

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BC Election 2013: Wrap Up For The Day
On Monday, Christy Clark and the BC Liberals attempted, unsuccessfully and in a woeful fashion, to defend the indefensibile, that the budget presented by Liberal Finance Minister Mike de Jong in the legislature, back in February, would move British Columbia towards a balanced budget. Yeah, sure, right, said the bond-rating agencies. So much for that gambit.
The BC Conservative Party, meanwhile, named Allan Molyneaux as their new candidate in North Vancouver-Lonsdale, who replaces the disgraced Jeff Sprague, who stepped down amidst allegations of impaired driving.
And that’s the kind of day it was on Day 7 of Decision BC 2013.


BC ELECTION: LIBERALS SET TO LOSE BIG ON VANCOUVER ISLAND


The Liberals are set to lose big on Vancouver Island

(For the latest VanRamblings election coverage, click on Decision BC 2013)
(For those of you who arrived here looking for coverage of last week’s Kitsilano Community Centre AGM — as sorry an example of untoward democratic engagement as you’re ever likely to witness — VanRamblings’ coverage of the KitsCC AGM may be found here. The Vancouver Courier’s Sandra Thomas has written about the KitsCC AGM, as well, her coverage of the delirious, anti-community meeting to be found here.)

Day Seven: 22 Days Remaining in Lackluster Decision BC 2013


308 BC Election Provincial Projections by region

Following a rather sleepy weekend, Decision BC 2013 heads into the final three weeks of British Columbia’s 40th provincial election.
Thus far, nothing has taken the NDP off message, and no issues of burning concern have arisen that have caught the public’s attention. As Globe and Mail BC columnist Gary Mason writes in today’s newspaper …

Liberal Leader Christy Clark and her party did not have the opening week for which they were hoping. It wasn’t that it was particularly bad; they just didn’t get the kind of clear win they needed to start gnawing away at the NDP’s lead in the polls. Now Ms. Clark and her team have one less week in which to start making those critical inroads.

For Mr. Dix, the challenge will be to avoid taking the kind of hit that gives the electorate second thoughts. For Ms. Clark, the task is more complicated. If she enters the debates sensing she needs a big, gravity-defying moment, she might overreach and end up portraying herself in a way that is not at all beneficial.

As the latest ThreeHundredEight.com polling indicates, the NDP maintain a solid lead heading in to Week 2 of Decision BC 2013.

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First Peoples' Cultural Council

In important news, culturally sensitive news, news that you’re not likely to see reported elsewhere, unless you make a habit of visiting the darkest regions of the provincial NDP website, in an announcement made last week, the BC NDP committed a new NDP provincial government to support for the preservation of Aboriginal languages in British Columbia.

“B.C. is home to 60% of the First Nations languages spoken in Canada, but many of them are in danger of disappearing,” Scott Fraser, the NDP candidate in Alberni-Pacific Rim, and New Democrat aboriginal affairs critic during the last legislative session told the media on April 18th. “As a matter of respect for First Nations peoples, we need to work together to prevent that from happening.”

“Language is a critical part of First Nations history, culture and identity. If a language is lost, traditional oral histories in their original form are also lost. We will work with First Nations to help save at-risk languages.”

Scott announced that an NDP adminstration would provide The First People’s Cultural Council, a crown corporation run by First Nations, with an additional $1 million in funding, dedicated to support the preservation and revitalization of First Nations languages, arts and culture in British Columbia. Fraser said the loss of language is largely attributable to federal residential school policies which took children away from their families, and punished them if they spoke their own language.

“Most fluent speakers of aboriginal languages are over 65 years old,” said Fraser. “Only 1.5 percent of fluent speakers are under the age of 25. Clearly, now is the time for action to begin to bring change for the better to First Nations communities.”

A responsible government responds not only to the big ticket items like health care and education, but dedicates itself to meeting the needs of the broadest cross-section of the British Columbia electorate, in every region of the province. And, in the case of the announcement directly above, most particularly, the often neglected priorities of language and culture.
BC Election 2013: A Round-Up of News from Elsewhere
Truth to tell, we’re hard-pressed to come up with a lot of reporting by the mainstream press, but here goes …

  • Vancouver Sun. How much does the Vancouver Sun not like federal NDP leader, and how in the tank are they for any party but the NDP? All you have to do is take a look at the photo of Tom Mulcair at the top of this story. Editorialize in your photo choice much, Vancouver Sun editors? Anyway, back to matters at hand: federal New Democrat leader Tom Mulcair joined the BC election campaign this past Friday (while we were still recovering from the shenanigans at the Kits Community Centre AGM), telling a cheering crowd of 350 people gathered at the Vaisakhi event in Surrey that a provincial NDP victory on May 14th will serve as a warm up for a federal NDP win in 2015.”

    Next. We would take a moment to editorialize on the Vancouver Sun’s shakedown story but, really, why bother? And, oh yeah, don’t forge to read - or not - Vaughn Palmer’s barely even-handed wrap-up of Week One of the provincial election campaign.

  • Alex Tsakumis. BC’s resident political shit disturber publishes his usual, but interesting and readable, online report taking the apparatchiks in the Christy Clark administration to task. The allegation this time? According to Tsakumis, the BC Liberals are waging an all out war on Global TV legislative reporter Keith Baldrey, and his beleaguered wife Anne Mullens, for failing to be in the tank enough for the BC Liberals. And here, all along, VanRamblings thought that Baldrey was all but bought and paid for by the BC Liberals. Apparently not, if the snide rumour the BC Liberals are spreading around — that Baldrey will be leaving the employ of Global TV to take a job as Communications Director for NDP leader Adrian Dix, post election night victory, May 14th — is true, which is doubtful at best. Those Liberals.
  • The Straight. The folks at The Straight have created their very own BC Election page, replete with news respecting NDP campaign announcements on lower fees for infant and toddler care and reducing child poverty (which First Call, the BC Child and Youth Advocacy Coaltion, called pathetic), as well as a commentary by Vancouver Langara NDP candidate (and good guy, as it happens), George Chow.

Well, that’s it for today, folks.
By the way, you’re probably looking at a sparse Decision BC 2013 posting Tuesday, as VanRamblings will attend (and speak at, it would seem) tonight’s regularly scheduled and always contentious Park Board meeting.
For the latest VanRamblings election coverage, click on Decision BC 2013)
(For those of you who arrived here looking for coverage of last week’s Kitsilano Community Centre AGM — as sorry an example of untoward democratic engagement as you’re ever likely to witness — VanRamblings’ coverage of the KitsCC AGM may be found here. The Vancouver Courier’s Sandra Thomas has written about the KitsCC AGM, as well, her coverage of the delirious, anti-community meeting to be found here.)

Besieged at the Kits Community Centre Annual General Meeting

Kitsilano Community Centre AGM

The Kitsilano Community Centre held its annual general meeting this past Thursday evening, April 18th, a gathering of the members of the community which can only be described as high farce.
A group of longtime Kitsilano residents, concerned about the tenor of negotiations between the City and the community centre associations respecting a renewed joint operating agreement, had come together in recent weeks with the objective of placing their names on the ballot for one of the 21 Board of Director positions to be decided at the Kits CC AGM.
This group of concerned Kitsilano residents had chosen to identify themselves as the Independent slate, which is to say independent of Vision Vancouver, the municipal party that slate members believe is intent on imposing an onerous, and potentially destructive, joint operating agreement on Vancouver’s volunteer run, non-profit community centres.
As members of the Independent slate arrived at the Kitsilano Community Centre Thursday afternoon the scene was set almost immediately for a troublesome night of democratic engagement and electoral politics.
Soon after his arrival, Lewis Pierce, who led the Independent slate, and who has lived in Kitsilano his entire life, found himself approached first by the senior Recreation supervisor at the Kits Community Centre, Doug Taylor, who informed him that he would have to leave the premises if he wished to distribute information on the AGM. Taylor’s approach was followed by the intervention of the chair of the Kits Community Centre Seniors Committee, who instructed Mr. Pierce and another member of his slate that “you should leave the building, you don’t belong here, we don’t want you, we don’t want your ‘coup’, there’s the door, get out!” Pierce exited the building, distributing literature he had in his possession off premises.
Thus the stage was set for the Kitsilano Community Centre AGM, and what soon became clear was a campaign of fear that was being waged against the otherwise well-intentioned members of the Independent slate.
As meeting time approached, members of the Independent slate, and their supporters, heard reports that …

  • Staff had been told that ‘independent slate’ members were intent on converting the Kitsilano community centre into a fully volunteer-operated facility, which meant the firing of all union staff.
  • Seniors present at the AGM reported that the Kits Community Centre President, Robert Haines, had told them in the days leading up to the AGM that a group of ‘radicals’ were going to conduct a ‘coup’, and were intent on shuttering all seniors programmes in favour of their ‘radical endeavours’, Mr. Haines instructing the seniors to get all their friends out to vote if they wanted to preserve seniors programming.
  • Vision Vancouver supporters present, of which there appeared to be many, had circulated reports that the Independent slate consisted of the “same crew” of COPE Independents who had triumphed at the recent April 7th COPE AGM, with nefarious intentions to convert the Kitsilano Community Centre into a ‘beachhead’ for their radical politics.

That none of the untoward allegations about the 15 individuals running as members of the Independent slate was true was of little concern for the majority of those in attendance at the Kits Community Centre annual general meeting. They knew what they knew, and that’s all there was to it.
By the time the meeting started, shortly after 7pm, most of those present were in a state of high dudgeon, with allegations of “coup” and “malcontents” hurled at the members of the Independent slate. Thursday evening would prove to be as concerning an example of untoward democratic engagement as may have been witnessed in Vancouver in recent years, and certainly at the community centre level.
As voting got underway, Independent slate members and their supporters publically expressed a number of concerns respecting the process for the election of officers and members-at-large: 1. Doug Taylor, a senior Kits Community Centre staff, would be conducting the election. 2. Staff would be counting the ballots, unsupervised, as no scrutineers would be allowed in the ballot counting room. 3. There were two entrances to the room where the AGM was taking place, with little or no concern for whether those present in the meeting room were Kitsilano Community Centre members, as ballots were distributed to every person present. 4. Staff were seen by many who were present to be casting ballots, a direct conflict of interest.
This was a meeting out of control, anti-democratic and belligerent, with two goals in mind: resist the hordes of ‘radicals’ intent on upsetting the club-
like atmosphere of the Kitsilano Community Centre Board of Directors, while ensuring that a Board of Directors acquiescent to the Vision Vancouver initiated re-negotiation of the joint operating agreement remained in place.
Perhaps most concerning, given that the Independent slate members all resided in Kitsilano, was the fact that seven Presidents, or recent past Presidents, of Vancouver community centre associations from other neighbourhoods in Vancouver, had taken out memberships (in recent days) with the Kitsilano Community Centre, a few of whom — including David Sexton, past President and current member of the Renfrew CCA BoD (whose wife, Hazel Hollingdale, sits as the association’s President), and Alan Baycroft, President of the West End CCA — had come forward to put their names in contention for a member-at-large position on the Kitsilano Community Centre Board of Directors, in an unprecedented interference in the directorial affairs of a community centre association not their own.
When giving their speeches to the meeting, neither Sexton nor Baycroft referenced their Executive positions elsewhere. When their ‘conflict of interest’ came to light, during the voting process, shouts arose from the room that Baycroft and Sexton must withdraw from the contest. Neither did, with Sexton securing the final member-at-large position on the Board.

Kitsilano Community Centre AGM fallout, Elvira Lount's Twitter dialogue with David Sexton

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One of the strange aspects of the KitsCC AGM was that, contrary to the information that those opposing the Independent slate had been given, it was the members of the Independent slate who had been lifelong, or longtime, residents of Kitsilano, or who long had made frequent use of the KitsCC facilities, while the forces for stasis were by-and-large comprised of a group of people who had taken out KitsCC memberships simply to oppose the so-called radical malcontents’ coup, and were not residents of Kitsilano or regular users of the KitsCC facility. There was a pervasive sense of delirium infesting almost every aspect of Thursday evening’s KitsCC AGM.
If the Park Board / City of Vancouver does not dismiss the Kitsilano Community Centre Board of Directors come July 1st (the day after the dead date set by the City for coming to an agreement on a joint operating procedure for the Park Board and the CCAs), what measures will be taken by the newly-elected KitsCC Board of Directors to ensure that the irregularities that defined the 2013 KitsCC AGM will not occur next year?
Robert Haines, once and forever President of the KitsCC attempted to move a motion to adopt a Special Resolution at Thursday’s KitsCC AGM that candidates wishing to run for the KitsCC BoD in 2014 must submit their names to the Board, and the position for which they intend to run, 30 days in advance of the 2014 AGM. The Special Resolution was referred to the Board for approval, and will in all likelihood be in effect for next year.
What measures will the KitsCC BoD take to ensure Kitsilano residents are given sufficient notice of 2014’s upcoming annual general meeting, in order that KitsCC members / residents will be given sufficient time to consider their prospective candidacy for a position on the 2014 KitsCC BoD?

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At present, Mr. Pierce tells VanRamblings that he is weighing his options respecting a challenge to the ultra vires conduct of the Kitsilano Community Centre Board of Directors, including a referral to the provincial government’s Corporate Registry office, respecting possible breaches of the Society Act and the Kitsilano Community Centre Constitution and Bylaws.
Thursday, April 18, 2013’s Kitsilano Community Centre AGM ended shortly after 10pm, with much rancor in the air, and bitter feelings about foul process expressed by supporters of the Independent slate, and others.
None of the 15 Independent slate members were elected to the Board.