Category Archives: Politics

BC NDP | David Eby, MLA | Accomplishing What He Set Out To Do

David Eby, MLA, BC Attorney General & Minister of Justice, On Accomplishing What He Set Out to Do

David Eby, British Columbia’s Minister of Justice and Attorney General — the latter portfolio making Cabinet Minister David Eby, the Minister Responsible for the administration of our criminal justice system in British Columbia, including family law, court services, gaming policy and enforcement, liquor control and licensing, and the British Columbia Lottery Corporation — in his role on the government’s Executive Council, Minister David Eby also the Minister Responsible for ICBC, BC Ferries and the BC Human Rights Tribunal … well, as you can see, it’s all la-di-da for Minister Eby, not busy at all, not a whole lot on his plate, gosh its a good thing he needs only three hours sleep a night … and did I mention what a good and moral and principled man Mr. Eby is, and that he is kind and generous of his time, and probably B.C.’s single hardest working MLA, most sensitive to the needs of his constituents — with an almost beyond belief coterie of constituency assistants, competent, passionate, informed, their lives almost solely dedicated to serving the needs of those of us who live in Kitsilano, or the Point Grey neighbourhood on the west side of Vancouver, and out at the University of British Columbia and the University Endowment Lands.
On a regular basis, David Eby posts a newsletter to his constituents, meant for those whose interests he represents in the British Columbia Legislature. In the interest of openness and transparency, and without having secured the permission of the good Minister and unbelievably great MLA of service to Kitsilano, Point Grey and UBC / UEL — I’ll wait to be given heck by David’s unbelievably great constituency staff, the spectacularly wonderful Dulcy Anderson, Nicolas Bragg and Thea Dowler (who somehow find a way to put up with me, not an easy chore for any of you who know me) today on VanRamblings please find below, the expansive and informative June newsletter from Vancouver-Point Grey MLA, the indefatigable David Eby.
(Note: the photos and — hopefully helpful — links have been added by me)

David Eby, MLA, BC Attorney General & Minister of Justice, On Accomplishing What He Set Out to Do

Dear Neighbours:
The legislature has officially wrapped up and I’m back from Victoria for the summer and September. It’s great to be home with my family and back in our neighbourhoods on a daily basis.
For our family, June has meant that Cailey has wrapped up her epic medical school journey at UBC and will be starting her residency in family medicine on Canada Day — July 1st! I’m trying to get some time with her and our son at home this month before she’s back to an extended full time schedule as a new doctor, so my apologies in advance if you have to wait a little longer than expected for a face-to-face meeting with me.

David Eby, MLA, BC Attorney General & Minister of Justice, On Accomplishing What He Set Out to Do

As you may have heard, watched on Facebook live, or seen in person, our second run at holding our townhall meeting, this time at the Hellenic Community Centre, was a great success. Hundreds of you came out and had your voices heard, and we had five outspoken community experts and advocates share their opinions on where the government has succeeded, and where we need to continue to do work to improve.

David Eby, Housing Townhall at the Hellenic Centre, June 6, 2018 | Photo credit, Elvira LountDavid Eby, Housing Townhall, Hellenic Centre, June 6, 2018 | Photos credit, Elvira Lount

More than 50 volunteers came out from the community to staff our meeting and ensure our event was, as intended, for constituents first, and that everyone felt welcome to share their thoughts and opinions. A special thank you to those volunteers, and to my hard working staff Dulcy, Nic and Thea who worked overtime to organize this meeting on the very first Monday after the legislative session wrapped up.

Generation Squeeze author and University of British Columbia professor Paul Kershaw speaking at David Eby’s June 6th 2018 Housing Townhall 2.0, held at the Hellenic Hall in the Arbutus Ridge neighbourhood, a well-attended event comprised of activist and involved citizens of conscience spanning the political spectrum.

The school tax debate was a big part of the evening, and I’d like to thank those on both sides of the discussion who ensured that the meeting was as constructive as possible. We even arranged a venue with enough room for the school tax protesters who came to our community event to make their voices heard! I had a very anti-school tax protester come up to me after our town hall and thank me for organizing the event, even though she clearly disagreed with the government’s position on this policy.

Housing Townhall 2.0 June 4, 2018

It might seem strange to hear given the controversy of the last couple of months, but I have never been more hopeful about the future of our community, more confident in the importance of the work you sent me to Victoria to do, and more sure that the results we will achieve will be a legacy for our children’s children.

Under B.C. Liberal government, the economy and real estate made British Columbia "the wild west"

It is a bit hard to remember, but in March of 2016 we hosted another townhall in the very same Hellenic Community Hall on the same topic — housing. Back then we were having a very different discussion than we are now. We had a broken political system where unlimited donations from the wealthy and well connected bought access to the province’s leadership at private and secretive dinner parties. Our system was so broken that BC was featured on the cover of the New York Times as the “Wild West“, where a premier could collect a second salary paid for entirely out of corporate donations to her political party, and her MLAs would defend it in the legislature as the cost of democracy.
These donations, which brought us a government sponsored in no small part by those profiting from the housing and the climate crisis, were surely a consideration when rather than taking action, the Premier and her then housing minister told those feeling the pressure of the out-of-control housing market in Metro Vancouver to stop complaining and move to Fort St. John or Prince Rupert.
In March of 2016, many people showed up to tell me, and the then government, that you would no longer be put off. You wanted real action.
Well, you now have a new government, and real action.
There have been a lot of changes — both big and small — in a short period of time, and not just on housing. A recent CBC analysis showed we’ve delivered on, or made significant progress on, more than 75% of our platform commitments in less than one year in government. For those of you who couldn’t make it to the town hall, I’d like to share our progress with you.

David Eby, MLA, BC Attorney General & Minister of Justice, On Accomplishing What He Set Out to Do

First, the big. Those donations featured in the New York Times as so egregious are now illegal. No more union or corporate donations. No personal donations in excess of $1,200 are permitted. There are new rules restricting lobbying by former government insiders, banning them for two years from lobbying government, and ending the rotating door between lobby shops and government in BC.
We are introducing legislation to impose an innovative new tax on real estate speculators with vacant homes in the parts of the province hardest hit by the housing crisis, including Metro Vancouver. We’re building a beneficial ownership registry so we know exactly who owns property in our province, not numbered companies, but what real people own property. We’re tracking, and reporting to the Canada revenue agency, the activities of people flipping pre-sale condos, with a brand new law passed last session.

David Eby and the BC NDP deliver on affordable housing for British Columbians

We’re making the largest investment in housing supply in BC’s history, $7bn, which includes (but is not limited to) direct funding for 37,000 affordable rental units; a housing hub at BC housing to build more affordable homes that has already announced a blockbuster deal with the United Church to build affordable rental housing; increased rental assistance for seniors and working families through the SAFER program; the opening of over 2,500 modular housing units with badly needed services for those living outside or in tent cities; and, 1,500 new transition and long-term housing units for women and children fleeing domestic violence.
I haven’t forgotten that many of you raised concerns with me about conditions in our classrooms during the campaign. Our government is hiring 3,700 new teachers, reducing class sizes and getting kids the support they need to succeed. Parents don’t have to fundraise for playgrounds anymore – they’re considered part of a new school and funded by government.

David Eby, MLA, Commitment Kept to Replace Bayview School, in his Vancouver-Point Grey Riding

On that note, we’re investing $2bn to maintain and replace schools in our communities across the province that desperately need it. Here, in our community, our government green lit the Bayview Elementary replacement, to the delight of the Parent Advisory Committee there. These parents were sick and tired of sending their kids to an under-maintained school that waited, and waited, and waited for seismic repairs that never came. Instead of working on collecting and delivering petitions to my office, the PAC is now working on planning out a brand new school.
Many renters asked for better protection from out of control rents. We closed the fixed term lease loophole, and the geographic increase loophole, giving renters more protection from unfair evictions and rent increases. Instead of asking my office for help that is impossible to deliver, these renters can now focus on their work, school and families.
Many parents struggle with the cost of childcare in our community, and many have for the first time seen their childcare bills go down, not up, because of the largest investment in childcare in BC’s history, providing monthly savings of up to $350 per month per family. As of today, 37,209 families are receiving these monthly savings, including many hundreds of families in our community at local childcare facilities. In September, the second half of the program, the enhanced direct benefit to families, will be rolled out.

BC NDP Minister of Health Adrian Dix announces of primary care centres across British Columbia

We’re partnering with the federal government to build out the biggest transit investment in BC history, with rapid transit on Broadway, and in Surrey, and three new express B-Lines.
For other community priorities, we’ve responded strongly to the overdose crisis, making life-saving naloxone kits available free at community pharmacies for those likely to witness an overdose, and launching 18 community action teams to spearhead local responses in the hardest hit areas.
Many of you wrote in to my office to celebrate when Minister Doug Donaldson signed the order that ended the grizzly bear hunt, to protect BC’s iconic bears.
We’ve passed comprehensive new laws to ensure ICBC and the car insurance rates paid by British Columbians are sustainable, to begin the work of putting out that financial dumpster fire left for us by the previous government.
We’ve also used every tool in the toolbox to protect BC’s interests in relation to the Trans Mountain Heavy Oil Pipeline project, and the massive expansion in heavy oil shipments by rail as well. We need to know we can clean up the mess when spills happen, and that someone will pay for the cleanup. Too many BC jobs in fisheries and tourism rely on our reputation for a pristine coastline.
In reading all of the above, you may remember that you were told by the previous government that British Columbia couldn’t make these long-needed changes without sinking our economy.
That information was, as we have pointed out for a long time, incorrect.

David Eby, MLA, BC Attorney General & Minister of Justice, On Accomplishing What He Set Out to Do

BC currently has the lowest unemployment rate in Canada, and we have maintained our top rating with all three international credit rating agencies. Showing confidence in our future, big tech companies like Amazon have announced massive expansions in Vancouver – most recently, 3,000 new jobs – backed by hundreds of new post-secondary spaces in engineering, science, technology and math. Smaller companies have also followed suit.
In the meantime, you are all doing the incredible work you do to make this a better place. You are coming in to talk to me about starting not for profit organizations that reduce plastic waste, organizing neighbours to make and learn more about art, assisting refugee families who have joined our community, creating vibrant local sports organizations, doing academic research on transportation planning that you hope to use to make our streets safer, campaigning for better schools and better childcare, bringing your kids in to show us their amazing achievements in science and math competitions, and coming to talk to me about how you want our government to keep improving. So many of you give back and participate in our democracy. Thank you for making Vancouver Point Grey a special place in British Columbia.
Yours truly,

David Eby, MLA, BC Attorney General & Minister of Justice, On Accomplishing What He Set Out to Do

David Eby
MLA, Vancouver Point Grey

Baseball | A Respite from the Madness


 Vancouver Canadians baseball at Nat Bailey Stadium

We are in the midst of grave times of momentous import, and mad times.

In our daily lives, from the time we rise at the beginning of our day, we all step up to the metaphoric ‘home-plate’. We go to our jobs, enjoy our families, and go about our daily lives. We hang in there. We press forward.From our metaphoric use of baseball as our game, to the quintessentially Canadian food we eat at the stadium, baseball resonates deep within us. Pop culture extends and illuminates it in every far corner of our society. I grew up watching baseball, and playing it — baseball is deeply rooted within me, and on some days, good days, game days, baseball serves to act as respite from all the madness and hurt and pain that surrounds me.

Baseball: it’s not just metaphoric idioms, nor is it the crowds at Nat Bailey Stadium — although they are fine and full of good cheer, the families and the young couples filled with love that brims over with hope — nor is it the popcorn, the warm peanuts in the shell & hotdogs, the crack of the bat, the wave, the hot summer days with cold beer and upside down ice-cream helmet cups. It runs deeper. Baseball symbolizes a way of life and, for many of us, has come to act as metaphor for the human condition.

Sometimes, when I walk down the street, people drift by me in a trance-like, almost catatonic, state plugged into the broader digital collective, and oblivious to most things going on around them. There is a near-constant stream of communication fed into our brains via our smartphones and tablets, and the opiate epidemic of our time: information overload. You just can’t escape it, none of us can escape it. Because now, it’s a way of life.

And then you set about to attend a Vancouver Canadians baseball game at Nat Bailey, and upon arrival at the stadium and having taken your seat, you hear someone near you marveling over a ball that was just hit deep into the outfield, and how it bounced off the wall, and ricocheted away from the left fielder. And for just a moment you are transported, life is transcended.


‘Filmed’ with an iPhone, the camera work a bit shaky. Vancouver Canadians baseball.

And sitting back on the uncomfortable benches, you take a moment to gaze upon the perfectly manicured, cross-hatched, green grass on the field reflecting the sunlight. And the shadows from the stadium’s upper façade slowly overtaking the rest of the diamond from earlier innings. You see the Canadians pitcher’s pre-pitch routine unfolding, as he nervously spins the ball in his hand, adjusts the brim of his cap so it sits just off to the left of his head. And for one very special moment, there is a hush in the crowd.

Then the gangly young batter comes up to the plate, some 19-year-old kid from Texas with dreams of “the show”, setting about to rap the bat against his cleats to shake loose the dirt stuck in the heel. Stepping up to the plate, he looks directly at the pitcher as if to say, “Give me your best. I can take it, and knock the ball clear out of the stadium, into tomorrow and beyond.

For many of us, baseball offers us refuge from the madness of our times, because it’s antithetical to the way much of life is today, antithetical to the never-ending flood of rage that we have come to accept as the new normal.

During a baseball game there’s no Trump, no surtax protesting rich folks, no developers, no rank unfairness, no despair, no railing against social injustice, hurt, wont, regretful child poverty and need — not that these issues recede into the background, for they are always there and of present concern — but amidst the madness of our days, there is at times just baseball & you, running to first base, stealing second, watching home runs sail over the far green fence, double plays, curveballs, sinkers & sliders.

Baseball. It’s nice and slow, and easy and safe. And some days, game day, that works just fine for me, and I’m willing to wager, it will for you, too.


Field of Dreams, 1988

Vancouver Votes 2018 | Battle for 58 West Hastings

The Battle for 58 West Hastings | Vancouver, British Columbia | Our Homes Can't Wait2018 COPE Vancouver City Council must-elect candidate Jean Swanson (middle), at City Hall

At 58 West Hastings, across the street from the Army & Navy, there exists in relation to that property, a tale of treachery and political malfeasance, the likes of which our town has rarely witnessed in its 132-year history.
An unconscionable transgressive act of deceit, civic malpractice and faithlessness, as demonstrated by our current Vision Vancouver civic administration, upon vulnerable persons resident in Vancouver’s Downtown Eastside (DTES) neighbourhood, an unconscionable failure to act in good faith, continues to deny some of our city’s most vulnerable and needful residents of what they most desire, and which most every person reading VanRamblings today takes for granted, as a human right: a home.
Yesterday morning, activists, journalists and persons of conscience Nathan Crompton, Steffanie Ling and Caitlin Shane published an expansive chronicle on the sorry history of 58 West Hastings, in a story titled Battle for 58 West Hastings: Broken Promises and Co-optation, 2016-2018.
Today, I have linked above to The Mainlander story, a chronicle that is a must-and-a-compelling read, constituting VanRamblings’ post for the day.
Battle for 58 West Hastings: Broken Promises and Co-optation, 2016-2018 commences with the following paragraph (with excerpted paragraphs from further down in the article, immediately following) …

For years, an empty lot at 58 West Hastings has been at the centre of a fight for social housing in the Downtown Eastside (DTES). Since 2007, it has been the site of numerous actions including the 2010 Olympic Tent Village, when women- and Indigenous-led tent city forced Concord Pacific to abandon its condo plans for the site, followed by a four-month tent city in the summer of 2016.

By early 2017, the 250 units promised by the mayor were reduced to a meagre 77 units — 33% of the overall project. Amidst a sea of condos, less than one hundred welfare- and pension-rate rental units are now planned for 58 West Hastings according to the City’s latest documents. These units will not be built until 2021 at the earliest.

The City’s lies and inaction on 58 W. Hastings will claim the lives of hundreds unless Mayor Robertson’s promise is followed through. We, the poor and the homeless of the Downtown Eastside will not sit idly as our elected officials deprive us of the housing we need. We are not a statistic; numbers to be counted and shuffled around in the attempt to remake the city for the rich. We will fight for our lives and our right to live with dignity. There will be no business as usual at City Hall unless our demands are met.

We in Vancouver do not live in a consequence free universe, and neither do the political figures who have controlled civic government in Vancouver these past many years.
Arising from the despair many of those who call the DTES home have felt over many, many years of frustratingly heartless government at all three levels of civic, provincial and national governance, a palpable movement for change, and change now, has arisen, an activist movement the likes of which many of us who have called Vancouver home for the past sixty and more years have not seen since the pre-and-unrealized-revolutionary days of the New Left, and the work of activists in the 1960s and 1970s.
The central tenets of the 2018 Vancouver civic election is the realization extant of the movement of change, in a call for The City We Need.

2018 Vancouver Civic Election | The Six Must-Elect Candidates for Vancouver City Council

Coalition of Progressive Electors 2018 Vancouver City Council candidates Jean Swanson, Anne Roberts and Derrick O’Keefe, the Green Party of Vancouver’s Adriane Carr and Pete Fry, and OneCity Vancouver City Council candidates Brandon Yan and Christine Boyle are committed to building The City We Need, an inclusive city, a fair and socially just city, a city for all of us and not the resort city our previous provincial government — and, perhaps even, a Vision Vancouver civic administration holding power at Vancouver City Hall this past 10 years — seemed intent on building, barring many of our citizens from realizing their most cherished hope of a living in a home in the city where they have resided all their lives.
Make no mistake: change is on the way this civic election season!

Downtown Eastside (DTES) resident activists protesting at Vancouver City Hall | Social Housing

As I say above, Battle for 58 West Hastings: Broken Promises and Co-optation, 2016-2018 is a compelling, must-read for all Vancouver citizens.

Battle for 58 West Hastings: Broken Promises and Co-optation, 2016-2018

Vancouver Votes 2018 | Ian Campbell on CBC’s Early Edition

Squamish Nation hereditary Chief Ian Campbell, 2018 Vision Vancouver Mayoral candidate.Vision Vancouver Mayoral candidate, Ian Campbell, is asking for your vote in 2018

On June 7th, Vision Vancouver — the ruling party at Vancouver City Hall for the past 10 years — announced that Squamish Nation hereditary Chief Ian Campbell, had been selected as the party’s 2018 Mayoral nominee.

CBC Radio One Vancouver's The Early Edition | Interview with Ian Campbell, Vision Vancouver's 2018 Mayoral candidate

The following morning, Mr. Campbell visited the downtown Vancouver studios of CBC Radio One, where he was interviewed by respected broadcast journalist Stephen Quinn, the host of Vancouver’s top-rated morning news and information radio show, The Early Edition. The entirety of the often contentious interview is available in the video directly below.

CBC Radio One Early Edition interview with Vision Vancouver Mayoral candidate, Ian Campbell

At the 7 minute,15 second mark of the interview, Mr. Quinn queries Ian Campbell on his thoughts on the implementation of a so-called Mansion Tax, a plank in the platform of Coalition of Progressive Electors’ City Council candidate, Jean Swanson, while also querying Mr. Campbell on the efficacy of the provincial New Democratic party government’s new School Surtax.
As you’ll hear upon listening to the interview, despite Stephen Quinn asking the question of Mr. Campbell several times as to whether he supported both the Mansion Tax and the School Surtax, Vision Vancouver Mayoral candidate Ian Campbell obfuscated on the question, refusing to give Mr. Quinn anything close to what might be considered an adequate reply to a 2018 Vancouver civic election issue of some contention, and an issue that all of Vancouver’s progressive, left-of-centre parties — OneCity Vancouver, the Green Party of Vancouver, and the Coalition of Progressive Electors, save perhaps Mr. Campbell’s own party, Vision Vancouver — will run on.
Perhaps, the individual who was most exorcised by Ian Campbell’s refusal to answer Stephen Quinn’s direct question on the Mansion Tax and the School Surtax was CBC reporter Justin McElroy …

CBC Radio One reporter Justin McElroy takes 2018 Vision Vancouver Mayoral candidate to task for failing to answer the question as to whether he supports a Mansion Tax on homes worth more than $5 million, and the School Surtax enacted by the British Columbia provincial government

CBC Radio One Vancouver's The Early Edition | Interview with Ian Campbell, Vision Vancouver's 2018 Mayoral candidate

At this point, we’ll say that Vision Vancouver Mayoral aspirant Ian Campbell will have to do a much better job of answering questions put to him by reporters during the course of the next four months — VanRamblings notes, in passing, that it is four months to the day today when Vancouver voters will go to the polls to elect our city’s next Mayor and City Council.
During this next four month period, Ian Campbell will have to make it abundantly clear as to which side he is on, whether he supports the initiatives being placed before voters by his coalition One City / Green / COPE partners, and whether he’s ready to build the city that we all need.

Vancouver is at a crossroads | Together, we will Build The City We Need

The City We Need? A Vancouver that is defined by social justice, most certainly, but a city as well that is committed to building thousands, perhaps tens of thousands of homes — as independent Mayoral candidate, UBC professor of urban affairs, Patrick Condon is advocating for: housing co-ops, land trusts, owned homes on city land leases, and all forms of non-market housing, towards the creation of an affordable housing city for all, where 50% of homes in Vancouver will be designated as social housing, as Mr. Condon has explicated, and is often referred to as the Vienna Model.


Vancouver is situated on unceded / stolen Coast Salish territory

Squamish Nation traditional territory includes the settler community of Vancouver.

Each time we write about Ian Campbell on VanRamblings, the same issue is raised by our readers — and some friends and associates — to wit: “Ian Campbell lives in North Vancouver. He’s not even a Vancouver resident.”
The answer to the erroneous charge: take a look at the graphic above, Vancouver is situated on the ancestral lands of the Coast Salish peoples, and in the case of Vancouver, in Squamish Nations territory. Let’s be clear: we in Vancouver are settlers. More than 200 years ago, we stole the lands on which we live from our indigenous peoples, no treaty was ever signed with the Squamish Nation, nor any other First Nations peoples in British Columbia, the Squamish Nation did not relinquish their sovereignty over their land — which, as I point out above, Vancouver is situated on.
To say that Ian Campbell is not a “resident” of Vancouver must be seen as a failure to acknowledge Squamish Nation sovereignty over the lands we call home, and that we are interlopers living on stolen land, resident in Vancouver only by the good graces of the Squamish Nation peoples.
Let us hope, once and for all, that the issue of Ian Campbell’s “residency” is finally put to rest, that we acknowledge Squamish Nation hereditary Chief Ian Campbell is offering his Vision Vancouver candidacy as Mayor of our city on lands that are his ancestral lands, and that he has every right to bring his name forward, and ask for the support of the Vancouver electorate in the crucial 2018 civic election on election day, Saturday, October 20th.
Final note: Should Ian Campbell garner the support of the Vancouver & District Labour Council as the VDLC’s choice for the next Mayor of our city, VanRamblings will enthusiastically support Mr. Campbell’s candidacy, and will do all in our power to see that he becomes our next Mayor. In the interim — all of the first part of today’s column aside, which is not meant as an attack on Ian Campbell’s good name, nor on his unrivaled contribution to the livability of our city, but rather is issued as a plea for clarity from Mr. Campbell as to the tenets of his campaign for the office of Mayor …
VanRamblings continues to believe that Ian Campbell would make a fine Mayor for our city, that not only is Ian Campbell a man of much erudition and accomplishment, but that he is as well possessed of a humane and caring manner, and way of bringing himself to the world, and that he is a humble man of character, integrity, much wit & good humour, with a ready, warm, genuine, engaging and reassuring smile — and dare we say grace — and a man worthy and deserving of your consideration in the coming days and weeks ahead in this civic election season as, perhaps, Vancouver’s next Mayor, and the man to lead our beloved city by the sea into the future.