Category Archives: Vancouver

Vancouver Votes 2018 | Colleen Hardwick About to Rise Above

Translink Skytrain traveling through east Vancouve

This past Monday, two days after being elected Mayor of Vancouver, Mayor-elect Kennedy Stewart suggested he would be inclined to support Surrey Mayor-elect Doug McCallum’s bid to convert the 10 years in the making, approved & funded 40-year light rail plan for Surrey to the orphan SkyTrain technology, as he told The Vancouver Sun reporter Jennifer Saltman …

“I just have to wait and hear what the details of (mayor-elect) McCallum’s plan are and see what other support he’s been able to build, and also to make sure that he’s familiar with my push to get the Broadway subway built all the way to UBC,” Mayor-elect Kennedy Stewart said.

If Kennedy Stewart were to vote in favour of exploring building SkyTrain in Surrey, McCallum would need only 10 more votes on the Mayor’s Council to make his dream of a Surrey to Langley Skytrain line a reality.
Of course, there’s the issue that costs for a Surrey Skytrain line would double the $1.65 billion in monies already allocated for the approved light rail plan for Surrey-Langley, Surrey-Guildford & Surrey-Newton-White Rock, the latter two lines that would be sacrificed in favour of the former.
As UBC urban geography professor Patrick Condon was saying to VanRamblings earlier in the week, “This is Kennedy Stewart’s first huge mistake. Why he would throw his support to McCallum beggars belief.”
No sooner had former Vancouver Mayoral candidate Patrick Condon uttered those prophetic words than Vancouver Mayor-elect Kennedy Stewart was walking back his support for Skytrain in Surrey.
From an Ian Bailey story in Wednesday’s Globe and Mail

In the aftermath of last weekend’s municipal elections in British Columbia, (Kennedy) Stewart has said he backs the transit upgrade efforts of Doug McCallum, elected in Surrey, which is B.C.’s fastest-growing city. But Mr. McCallum’s position threatens to undo years of painstaking compromises to come up with a 10-year plan for the region because other mayors are worried that if Surrey takes a more expensive route, it will cost all of them more money.

After voicing hearty support for Mr. McCallum’s position on Monday, Mr. Stewart added a caveat Tuesday: “At the same time, we cannot put in jeopardy any infrastructure dollars that have already been committed, including funds earmarked for the Broadway Subway line,” he said in a statement released to the press … “Replacing the approved light rail with an extension of an existing SkyTrain rail line, mostly elevated above ground, would double the cost from the planned $1.65-billion for light rail. Some leaders re-elected or elected last weekend are saying they are wary about supporting more money for Mr. McCallum’s transit agenda.”

In fact, one of the few returning mayors in Metro Vancouver, re-elected to a fourth term in office this past Saturday, has some advice for Surrey’s mayor-elect, Doug McCallum: Switching from light rail transit to SkyTrain would be throwing away money and time already spent, while delaying expanded rail transit by years …

“The plan is approved, implemented, money has been spent on it,” Richard Stewart, re-elected mayor of Coquitlam told The Globe and Mail. “We’re well down the path.”

The Mayors’ Council, established by the B.C. Liberal government and then Minister of Transportation Kevin Falcon in 2007, is comprised of 21 municipalities, the electoral area that includes UBC’s Endowment Lands, and Tsawwassen First Nation. It’s the governance body that assembled the current transportation plan in conjunction with the communities affected.
The Mayor’s Council approved Vancouver & Surrey rail expansion (SkyTrain on Broadway in Vancouver, light rail transit in Surrey) along with bus and other expansions. About $50 million has already been spent on LRT, according to Translink. Surrey has spent $20 million in pre-construction.

“I don’t think it’s a case of just switching technologies, from light rail to SkyTrain in Surrey,” Mayor Richard Stewart told the Vancouver Sun. “It will be interesting to see the argument put forward. I worry, though, that if someone succeeds in getting the current work cancelled, it could result in another decade of work to get SkyTrain for Surrey. It took a decade to get the current plan.”

Without a doubt the most informed and dedicated member on Vancouver’s newly-elected City Council when it comes to issues of planning, urban development and transportation is Councillor-elect Colleen Hardwick.

Vancouver City Councillor Colleen Hardwick, the Councillor most informed on transit issues

Vancouver Councillor-elect Hardwick, currently completing work on her PhD in urban studies at the University of British Columbia, studying with founding Chair and professor at the Urban Design programme at UBC’s School of Architecture and Landscape Architecture, Patrick Condon, is the one current elected official in our region who is the most passionate, well-informed and well-studied proponent of light rail across our region.
Many the hour VanRamblings has engaged in lengthy discussion and debate with Councillor-elect Colleen Hardwick, who does not exactly hide her bright light under a bushel — nor should she — our region’s most fervent proponent of slow-growth, human-scale, community and neighbourhood consulted urban development, a key component of which is a low-cost, environmentally-sound, readily accessible, easily expandable, respectful of neighbourhoods region-wide light rail infrastructure programme.
Something else about Councillor-elect Hardwick? Ms. Hardwick also demands the best from those around her. During the course of the 2014 Vancouver civic election, at 4:30pm one rainy summer’s afternoon in July, VanRamblings received an irate call from our friend and supporter …

“What is this crap you’re publishing every day on VanRamblings? Your blog has devolved into little more than a scurrilous gossip rag. I know you. I know you can do better. Given your wide readership and your outsized influence in the political sphere, do yourself and the voters of the city a favour, and get serious. Do better. When I wake up tomorrow morning, I want to read something you’ve written where I can say, “That’s my friend Raymond Tomlin. He done good. Now get started!”

Who were we to refuse Colleen Hardwick (note. for the record, no one refuses Colleen Hardwick, a force of nature if there ever was one)?
VanRamblings immediately got to work on At Issue: Form of Development, and the Livability of Vancouver, which we published at 6:30am the next morning, probably the best piece we published during the 2014 Vancouver civic election cycle. At 7am, we received a text from Ms. Hardwick …

“Good. Better. Now get to bed!”

When the newly-elected Vancouver City Council takes office next month, know this: Vancouver City Councillor Colleen Hardwick is going to come at Mayor Kennedy Stewart like a freight train for his ill-considered faux pas on the transit file, with a reasoned and thoughtful evisceration of our new Mayor. Kennedy Stewart? He won’t know what in the blue blazes hit him.

Vancouver Votes 2018 | Your New Park Board | Oh Thank God

Vancouver Park Board Office

There was a time in the not-so-distant past when life on the Park Board was riven with dysfunction and division, when Commissioners derived satisfaction from scoring points off the opposition, as if politics is all about one upmanship, with nothing to do at all about responsible governance in service of voters who elect civic bodies to represent our collective interests.
VanRamblings is pretty sure that re-elected Park Board Commissioners Stuart Mackinnon and John Coupar recall those woeful days of their previous tenures on Park Board. For here we speak of the days when Vision Vancouver led governance of the Park Board, as a stepping stone to higher office, all but ignoring their responsibility to the people who placed them in office. And then 2014 rolled around, and Vision Vancouver was all but no more on Park Board, and the birds sang and all was well with the world.

Vancouver City Hall, Council chambers

Why on God’s green earth are pundits talking post 2018 election night of a “divided Council” where decisions will be hard come by, where pundits all but celebrate the potential for fist fights between the dastardly folks elected from the Non-Partisan Association, while the “progressives” on Council attempt to hold their own against an onslaught of evil from NPA electeds.

Councillor Elects on Civic Election Night in Vancouver, B.C., on Saturday, October 20, 2018

As if somehow, Sarah Kirby-Yung is going to go toe to toe with Michael Wiebe and make his life on City Council a living hell, or Lisa Dominato will target Christine Boyle with the sort of name calling and acting out that was rife on the last Council and was the usual operating procedure of Tim Stevenson and Kerry Jang, as if on the new Council Colleen Hardwick has her sights set on that dastardly Pete Fry (we mean, just because she voted for him in the past, and considers him to be a friend, and respects the beejeezus out of him, isn’t it somehow Ms. Hardwick’s new job to make Mr. Fry’s life a living misery on Council this next four years?), as if Melissa De Genova just can’t wait to get Jean Swanson in a corner to show her who’s boss, and how about NPA newly-elected Rebecca Bligh, dollars to donuts she has her sights set on her neighbour Adriane Carr because …
Because why? Because that’s what the press wants, because cynics in our community believe our newly-elected City Council is all about the same ol’ same ol’, when voters sought change at the polls when they went into the voting booth, and now somehow change is no longer on the agenda? Oh, puh-leeze. We know every single one of the newly-elected members of Vancouver City Council, and occasional family disputes to the contrary, we know each and every one of our newly-elected members of Council to be persons of honour and integrity who mean well for the city. Those of you expecting Gun Fight at the O.K. Corrall, well, you’re just going to have to wait til next time to elect a Council that will meet your low expectations.
What does all this have to do with the newly-electeds on the Vancouver Park Board? Everything, and more. Because it was Sarah Kirby-Yung who, after years of misery on Park Board following Vision Vancouver’s tenure, created a Park Board of reconciliation, where Commissioners were focused on the work that was to be done, in order to do themselves and the people of Vancouver, proud — by creating the best galldarn parks and recreation system to be found anywhere on the continent. Because Melissa De Genova (now about to start her second term on City Council) fought — yes, because she did fight for what is right during her tenure on Park Board, and in her first term of office on Council, because that was what was required, not because opposition and unpleasantness is fundamental to one of the kindest, most thoughtful political figures VanRamblings has ever witnessed.
Don’t believe us? Just wait to see how much good Vancouver City Council gets done on our new, halcyon post-partisan City Council of reconciliation.
Dr. Janet Fraser, recent Chairperson on Vancouver’s Board of Education set a tone of reconciliation this past year at Vancouver School Board — and woebetide the Trustee who did not accede to her instruction that interaction among Trustees should be one of economium over vituperation.
In the last term at Vancouver Park Board, although things got off to a rocky start (recovery from Vision’s tenure took awhile), by the end of the term, with Stuart Mackinnon as Board Chair, as was the case the previous year with his colleague Michael Wiebe (now, newly-elected to City Council) in the Chair, an environment of co-operation washed over Commissioners — the process begun under the tenure of Sarah Kirby-Yung, the focus on what Commissioners could do together to make Vancouver’s parks and recreation system the best of its kind on the continent, all the while protecting our beaches, waterways, the natural environment, and our urban forests.

At Park Board in the last term, as was the case the past year at Vancouver School Board, a team of rivals worked together in service of the public, in service of creating, maintaining or working towards the realization of the best public education system in the province, and the most welcoming and accessible to everyone parks and recreation system anywhere in the world.

Park Board | Electeds | 2018 Vancouver civic election

Take a gander at who you elected to Vancouver Park Board on Saturday.

Stuart Mackinnon, who always comes out on the side of the issues that: protect our environment, the sustainability of our parks and beaches, the viability of our community centres — among a host of others issues — all the while emerging as Park Board’s most compelling & articulate speaker of heart and conscience, perhaps the best off the cuff orator around the Park Board table we’ve ever heard, quiet, authoritative, unassuming and bereft of ego, who marshalls his arguments in such a fashion as to make them unassailable, and in this new term working with his newly-elected Green colleagues, Dave Demers and Camil Dumont, hold much promise for the stewardship for Vancouver’s parks & recreation system;

John Coupar and Tricia Barker, the former who loves Park Board, and lives, eats and breathes the life of the natural environment in our city, and his newly-elected colleague, Tricia Barker (both of whom VanRamblings heartily endorsed), who believes as her colleague John Coupar does, in slow, responsible and well-considered incremental change, and a re-commitment to building a new, replacing, or renewing a community centre every term, and who believes in sustainability as a core value and in preservation of our natural environment;

And then there’s Gwen Giesbrecht, far and away our favourite new elected at Park Board, her fellow Commissioners about to see why.

Perhaps more than any other “newcomer” to the Board, Gwen Giesbrecht, along with her newly-elected COPE colleague, Dr. John Irwin, not only has a handle on the issues, both have a well thought out philosophy of governance and activism that serves all of our interests. As Gwen says …

  • Building neighbourhood pools, which were closed by the seemingly anti-park Vision Vancouver majority Park Board (always under the thumb of then City Manager, Dr. Penny Ballem) is a top priority for her;

  • Renewing our community centres, many of which are ten years past due renovation, or replacement, while also ensuring the proper funding of our community centre programmes, of such value to the community;
  • Fighting against the 12-foot wide asphalt bike path through Kitsilano Beach, through the basketball court, and the children’s play area that HUB, for years, and Vision Vancouver have tried to shove down the throats of residents;

  • Resisting Vision Vancouver’s VanSplash initiative that would close Lord Byng and Templeton pools, replaced by a gigantic, multi-million dollar destination Olympic competition pool in the midst of a Kitsilano neighbourhood, all the while destroying scarce green space, which is to say Connaught Park to the west of the Kits Community Centre, which would come down, as would the hockey rink attached to the Kits Community, VanSplash all in favour of an environmentally irresponsible Olympic competition pool paid for out of your dollars, but meant to be inaccessible to the public for large portions of the year.

And those are just some of the issues that the new Park Board will face.
Make no mistake, it is the newly-elected members of Vancouver Park Board who will set the stage and the table for tone and style in civic body governance in this next term, as will be the case should Dr. Janet Fraser be elected by her Trustee colleagues to another term as Chairperson, and as will be the case at Vancouver City Council if the cynics, the media and academic ne’er-do-wells give our new Council an opportunity to show their stuff, to let the people of Vancouver know that finally, finally, finally after all these past years of miserable civic governance at Vancouver City Hall, School Board and Park Board, hope for a better day is on the near horizon.

Vancouver Votes 2018 | Middle of the Road School Board Elected

VanRamblings | A New Board of Education Elected in Vancouver

Saturday night was quite the night in Vancouver politics.
At Vancouver City Council, voters chose a majority progressive Council, led by Mayor-elect Kennedy Stewart, who will work with fellow progressives, the Green Party of Vancouver’s Adriane Carr, Pete Fry and Michael Wiebe, One City Vancouver’s Christine Boyle, and the conscience of the new and incoming Council, COPE’s Jean Swanson.
All of the above is not to say the cadre of five NPA Councillors who were elected to Council on Saturday evening are not progressive — they are. They’re just not in quite the hurry their ‘more progressive’ counterparts are to bring substantive change, much sooner than later.
At Park Board, it was pretty much the same story: three Greens and two COPE elected, five progressives on a renewed Vancouver Park Board.
At School Board, though? Tch, tch — naughty, naughty Vancouver voters.
One supposes that the most salutary outcome of Saturday’s election, in respect of Vancouver’s Board of Education newly-elected crew of trustees for office, is that the new make up of the Board will provide narrative fodder for The Straight’s first-rate education columnist, Patti Bacchus — who we expect shed some hot tears at Saturday night’s outcome (note. Patti is neither given to tears, nor other displays of emotion, given her stoic, working for the betterment of public education ethos).

School Board | Electeds | Vancouver civic election

No, what voters did on Saturday night, in electing a majority centrist / leaning right Vancouver School Board was just short of a high crime and misdemeanour, electing a contingent of mean well folks not ordinarily given to challenging the status quo or the provincial government. Except …

Yes, that’s newly-elected OneCity Vancouver elected Jennifer Reddy above — who, along with OneCity’s Christine Boyle (who ran for, and was elected to Council) represented our two favourite new candidates seeking elected office in the 2018 Vancouver municipal election. In time, you’ll see why.
Trustee-elect Reddy will play the same role on the incoming Board of Education, as did her OneCity running mate, Carrie Bercic (about whom we will be writing more in just a moment), the conscience of the School Board over the past year — who it was imperative be re-elected, but was not.
Trustee Jennifer Reddy, then, will emerge as the new conscience of the Board of Education (VanRamblings is looking forward to covering the new Board, and Ms. Reddy, in particular) — just listen to what incoming Trustee Reddy has to say in her campaign video, above.
At this juncture, VanRamblings wishes to say that for many (and for us) the most heartening outcome of the 2018 Vancouver civic election was the re-election of the entirely extraordinary Allan Wong to Vancouver’s Board of Education, who will begin his seventh term, and 20th year on the Board of Education next month. Allan Wong was the only candidate running for office with Vision Vancouver, elected to office on a devastating evening for a progressive political party of conscience that deserved better, much better.
On the progressive side of the ledger, Trustee Wong and incoming Trustee Reddy are joined by COPE’s Barb Parrott, who was just floating on air on Saturday night at COPE’s Election Night celebration, and about whom Patti Bacchus wrote the following in endorsing Ms. Parrott’s run for office …

Parrott is a retired teacher and vocal public-education advocate who would be a tremendous asset to the VSB. Parrott’s experience working in the school system has given her a deep understanding of what students need in order to be successful in school, and she would work hard to ensure the board is doing everything it can to guarantee that teachers have what they need to do the best job they can in their classrooms. Parrott is a past president of the Vancouver Elementary School Teachers’ Association (VESTA) and would be a valuable asset in helping the board build and maintain a respectful collaboration with its education partners.

All of the above said, VanRamblings is not unhappy about the re-election of the Greens’ Janet Fraser and Estrellita Gonzalez — both of whom VanRamblings endorsed — nor are we necessarily displeased with the re-election of the NPA’s Fraser Ballantyne, and his colleague, Carmen Cho.
For the moment, VanRamblings will hold our fire on Green newcomer, Lois Chan-Pedley, with whom we are not quite familiar — although, we are pleased voters elected a person of colour to office, in an election year when that proved to be an unusual circumstance. A young mother, and an accomplished woman, we hold out much hope for Ms. Chan-Pedley and the contribution she will make to the incoming Board of Education

Still and all, VanRamblings is verklempt that the conscience of the last Board of Education, Carrie Bercic, was not re-elected to office.
A correspondent asked us a couple of days back why Carrie Bercic was not re-elected? Without wishing to offend, VanRamblings offers the following …

  • As we did in the 2014 School Board by-election, when we sang Carrie Bercic’s praises to the skies, we failed to be as supportive (correspondents might suggest more accurate phraseology, such as “over-the moon” and “enthusiastically florid”) as we were in the 2017 School Board by-election. VanRamblings had enough readership in the past month so as to make a difference — and we failed to do so;

  • The NPA. The NPA got their vote out; witness the 5 elected at Council. There is no way under the sun that NPA voters would support Ms. Bercic’s re-election, as over the past year, Trustee Bercic emerged as the re-birth of public education advocate, Patti Bacchus. In an election with only a 38% voter turnout, and given how important the NPA has deemed School Board to be (we could say mean things, but we won’t), the NPA got their vote out in sufficient numbers so as to quash Trustee Bercic’s re-election. All of which leaves VanRamblings despondent;
  • Morgane Oger. Make no mistake, our admiration and respect for Ms. Oger is deep and abiding. VanRamblings believes, however (rightly or wrongly), that Morgane Oger’s last minute entrance into the run for School Board, and the 27,157 seventeenth place votes she secured, ended up taking votes away from Trustee Bercic, and her OneCity running mate, Erica Jaaf, both of whom are longtime, effective public education advocates;
  • NDP voters. Carrie Bercic challenged the status quo, and (respectfully) challenged B.C. Minister of Education, Rob Fleming. In other words, Carrie Bercic stood as a countervailing force to our hanging-by-a-thread provincial NDP government. VanRamblings surmises that there were enough NDP supporters in Vancouver who said to themselves when they arrived at the polls, “Carrie Bercic has proved a staunch defender of public education. But she’s also been critical of the NDP Minister of the Education, and our tremulous progressive NDP government. Gosh, maybe I should just vote for the progressive candidates running with the Greens and Vision Vancouver. Although, with the white guilt I’m feeling, I guess I’d better cast a vote for Jennifer Reddy, who seems articulate and bright, and perhaps not too challenging in her approach to governance. Yeah, Jennifer Reddy, that’s the ticket. Otherwise, I’ll plump my ballot.”

How voters failed to re-elect the strongest, most articulate democratic parent and child advocate in the city of Vancouver since Patti Bacchus left office in 2016, who has performed service on the Board of Education this past 12 months to a fair-thee-well, we just don’t know? But it’s done now.
Tears have been shed, and what might have been is no longer, and — if we might — VanRamblings believes we are all a little, perhaps more than a little, worse off that Carrie Bercic will not sit on the Vancouver School Board in this next term, as our public education advocate extraordinaire.
Carrie Bercic’s penetrating, insightful voice and presence at Vancouver’s Board of Education table, her keen intelligence and staunch advocacy of public education and the some 548,000 students enrolled in British Columbia schools, will be missed, more than words can express.
And you know who will miss her the most?

Vancouver Civic Election | Re-elected to School Board Candidates | Janet Fraser & Estrellita Gonzalez

The Greens’ Estrellita Gonzalez and Janet Fraser, who have sat at the Board table alongside Carrie Bercic this past 12 months, who more often than not voted with and advocated for Trustee Bercic. Returning Trustee Allan Wong, who always seconded Trustee Bercic’s motions, will miss her as a colleague, and for her support of his endeavours at the School Board table. The cause of public education is just a little worse off for the absence of Carrie Bercic as a clarion public education voice in the province of British Columbia.
We trust this is not the last we’ll hear from Ms. Bercic in the political realm.
One heartening election night note: 97,809 voters cast a ballot for Vancouver School Board, while for Council only 90,851 voters cast their ballot, and at Park Board, 95,834 — so something was going on when so many more voters in 2018 came to the polls to vote for School Board.
When all is said and done, the voters of Vancouver — at least the 38% of Vancouver voters who cared enough to vote — made their decision, as faulty as we believe that decision to be, given how imperative was the need to elect an activist Vancouver Board of Education who would staunchly defend our public education system, sitting around the Board table over the next four years, representing the largest, most diverse school district in Canada’s western most province, and long the Board of Education that has set the political education agenda in the province of British Columbia.
Godspeed to Vancouver’s incoming Board of Education.
May wisdom govern your decisions, and may your advocacy for student success remain your paramount endeavour this next four years.

Vancouver Votes 2018 | Eight Good Women, and Two Good Men

Vancouver Votes 2018 | Election Outcome | Hope Progress Change

This past Saturday evening, the voters of Vancouver averted disaster.
Considering what might have been, the circus the next Council might have turned into, the results of Vancouver Votes 2018 represents one of the best possible outcomes for those of us who care about the life of our city.
As we wrote on Sunday, October 14th, Blue Lake City in Humboldt County California elected an all-woman City Council in 2017.
Other than the Blue Lake example, on Saturday night Vancouver citizens voted for the only City Council on the continent where 80% of our municipal representatives are women of heart, wit, substantive policy ideals, and on the ground, real life accomplishment, who we believe mean much good for our city over the course of the next four years.

Vancouver City Council | 2018 - 2022Top, l-r: Michael Wiebe, Christine Boyle, Jean Swanson, Colleen Hardwick, Pete Fry
B (l-r:) Adriane Carr, Melissa De Genova, Lisa Dominato, Rebecca Bligh, Sarah Kirby-Yung

VanRamblings believes voters have fortuitously put in place one of the only post partisan municipal administrations on the continent. The rancour between right and left that defined governance in our city over the past 10 years is a thing of the past. Never again will we see the dispiriting partisan bitterness that was a central feature of Vision Vancouver’s years in power.
And for that, we should all be grateful.
VanRamblings also believes that municipal voters have put in place at Vancouver City Hall the most progressive government since the days of the Art Phillips administration in the early 1970s. The capacity for good outcomes of legislative endeavours in the Council chambers is limitless — and leaves us feeling full of hope towards the building of the city we need.
Voters wanted change. Voter got change. The days of rancour are over.

Vancouver City Hall, Council chambers

Who constitutes Vancouver’s next City Council & what does it mean for us? (list of elected Councillors below, by number of votes secured, top vote-getter to bottom)

2015. Province reporter Cassidy Olivier sits down with Vancouver Coun. Adriane Carr

Adriane Carr. The moral leader of the incoming Council, having served two terms in office, a democrat of the first order, and in 2018 once again the top vote-getter, Adriane Carr’s re-election means much good for the city — working with Mayor-elect Kennedy Stewart, and not just the five-member progressive caucus, but across the aisle as well with the newly-elected or returning members of the Vancouver Non-Partisan Association caucus.

Pete Fry. The city builder, who along with Christine Boyle represent the two most progressive new members of Vancouver City Council, so articulate and thoughtful that he may bring you to tears, not only means well for the city, but working with all of his other Council mates, will do well for the city. Has developed a human-scale Jane Jacobs-like neighbourhood development plan that will put the power back in the hands of citizens. Committed to building the city we need, and to see it come to fruition, sooner than later.

2012. Vancouver City Councillor Melissa De Genova during her tenure on Park Board

Melissa De Genova. Will represent an eighth vote to get Kennedy Stewart’s budget passed (a super majority of 8 Councillors is required to pass the city budget).

Retired Vancouver City Councillor forwards a correction to VanRamblings

As is the case with Sarah Kirby-Yung — both women are former Park Board Commissioners — committed to our city’s parks and recreation system. As outgoing, two-term NPA City Councillor George Affleck said on Global BC’s NewsHour last evening, “There’s going to be some horse trading behind closed doors, in order to get anything done.” NPA Councillor Kirby-Yung & Councillor De Genova will, as a top priority, ensure the proper funding of our city’s parks and recreation system — because they, unlike the left surprisingly, see parks and recreation as a class issue, deserving of our attention and better than adequate funding. Oh yes: tough as nails.

Jean Swanson. In the video below, outgoing NPA City Councillor George Affleck suggests that Jean Swanson will be a disruptor on City Council. Let’s hope so. We’ve had a non-functioning, discriminatory status quo for far too long. Will emerge as the conscience of the incoming City Council. VanRamblings can’t wait to see Ms. Swanson and Colleen Hardwick go head to head — it won’t be pretty, but Jean will emerge victorious.
In the final week of the election, the Vancouver Greens signed onto COPE’s Rent Freeze campaign commitment. One would have to think Green caucus members, and OneCity Vancouver’s Christine Boyle, would join Jean in demanding that the provincial government give Council the ability to freeze rents. If the province doesn’t sign on to the initiative, Council has options open to them to achieve the rent freeze, and a great deal more for tenants. Best part of Jean’s recent election to Council? The pending resolution to 58 West Hastings (across from the Army & Navy), which will finally be converted into, and built as, a 100% low cost social housing rental project.

Outgoing NPA Vancouver City Councillor George Affleck suggesting incumbent Councillor Melissa De Genova , and incoming City Councillor Colleen Hardwick may be cray-cray

Colleen Hardwick. Currently completing her PhD with UBC professor of urban development, Patrick Condon. Owner of PlaceSpeak, a location-based community consultation platform. Late father: Walter Hardwick, UBC professor and former City Councillor, developed the Livable Region Plan, determining development across the region. Good on the transit file, and on urban development. Probably the most right-wing of the newly-elected Councillors. If she can keep herself focused on policy — and stay away from commentary on social issues, keeping her feet out of her mouth — Councillor Hardwick will do herself, and her father’s legacy, proud.

Michael Wiebe. Brimming with ideas, as he told VanRamblings on election night, on Saturday. Will be the arts advocate extraordinaire on the incoming Vancouver City Council, taking the place of outgoing City Councillors Heather Deal and Elizabeth Ball. Close to new Council mate, the NPA’s Sarah Kirby-Yung. Ran the strongest campaign of any Councillor seeking office in the 2018 Vancouver civic election. Just completed a term as a Park Board Commissioner and Chair, where he shone. A staunch environmentalist. The articulate, engaging, principled millennial voice of change on the incoming City Council. A force for good going forward.

Christine Boyle. VanRamblings is taken to saying, “Hope of our future” of some young persons of conscience of our acquaintance. Christine Boyle? The hope of our present. Despite yesterday’s VanRamblings column, our belief in Christine Boyle remains undiminished, her capacity for good, to work with others, to achieve the city we need, unparalleled among her peers. Along with Sarah Kirby-Yung, the single most important candidate to be elected to Vancouver City Council on Saturday evening, October 20th.

Lisa Dominato. Recent Vancouver School Board trustee. No fool she. Former Chief of Staff to B.C Liberal party Deputy Premiers, Ministers of Education, as well as a political advisor to the Minister of Management Services, Sandy Santori. Director, Student Wellness and Safety in the Ministry of Education, November 2010 to August 2017. Accomplished. As may be seen in the video, loving mom to her two young daughters, who are clearly destined to become future leaders (like their mom). Fiscally conservative (a good thing). Tends to prioritize market solutions (also not a bad thing). Tends to the quiet side, but will be a blockbuster Councillor behind the scenes to get things done. We’re lucky to have her on Council.

Rebecca Bligh. Impressive on the campaign trail, where she knocked our socks off. Solid on the small business advocacy front. Founded Vancouver’s shoebox project, a non-profit that delivers shoeboxes filled with small gifts and toiletries to homeless women. Tends to the conservative side of the political spectrum. Will emerge as one of the stars of our new City Council. Principled, with a strong social conscience. Means well for our city. Will work across the aisle. Non-dogmatic. Takes no guff. One of two important diversity voices on the new Council. Lives on the eastside with her (très cool) partner Laura, their teenagers & Bernese Mountain Dog, Kingsley.

Sarah Kirby-Yung. Hope of our future and our present. VanRamblings’ favourite win on Saturday night (it was a nail biter). Possessed of immense gifts of intelligence, and personal and & professional integrity. Identified by VanRamblings, along with One City Vancouver’s Christine Boyle and COPE’s Anne Roberts as a member of The Holy Trinity of Vancouver civic politics. Along with Ms. Boyle, the toughest, velvet-gloved ‘can do’ City Councillor in the next term of civic governance. There is no person VanRamblings feels safer around, and holds in higher regard than Sarah Kirby-Yung, whose capacity for good (and achieving that good) outstrips — by a country mile — any of her soon-to-be fellow Vancouver City Council running mates. Doubtful? Just wait and see. Hopefully, will become NPA caucus leader.