Category Archives: Vancouver

Vancouver Votes 2018 | A Primer on Civic Affairs Coverage

As loathe as we are to admit it, VanRamblings is not the only place for you to turn to for coverage of the upcoming 2018 Vancouver municipal election.
Outside of VanRamblings, here are your primary sources for coverage of Vancouver’s critically important election, the folks you should turn to …

Turn to Bob Mackin's indispensible Breaker.News website for coverage of the 2018 Vancouver civic election

Not familiar with, don’t know about, never visited the curries no favours with politicos, tells it like it is and gives you the straight goods, the source, your source for real reporting on the civic events of the day, and the must-visit muckraking site, in the fine tradition of I.F. Stone — theBreaker.news — your source for breaking news on Vancouver’s municipal affairs scene.
Last Monday, VanRamblings reported out on the Five Reasons Why sitting Vancouver Non-Partisan Association (NPA) City Councillor Hector Bremner’s application to be the party’s Mayoral nominee was rejected by the NPA.
The NPA Board had conniption fits reading that column, and when a letter was posted to Hector Bremner’s campaign manager, Mike Wilson, the next day, little reference was made to the issues raised in the VanRamblings column, the focus instead placed on allegations of “conflict of interest” as the reason why the NPA scuttled Bremner’s mayoral bid. Gosh. Really, huh?
The NPA’s conflict of interest allegation couldn’t have anything to do with an April 12th column Bob Mackin published on theBreaker.news

Hector Bremner’s continued vice-presidency of a firm that lobbies for real estate, construction and retail companies has sparked a complaint to city hall that the rookie politician is breaching the code of conduct.

Bremner lost a run for the BC Liberals in New Westminster in the 2013 election and was an aide to BC Liberal cabinet ministers Rich Coleman and Teresa Wat before joining the Pace Group in 2015. The firm’s clients also include developers Concert Properties and Intracorp, architecture and engineering firms Stantec and Omicron, and Save-On-Foods’ parent Overwaitea Food Group.

Bremner was registered to lobby the provincial government for Steelhead LNG. He has also appeared at city council meetings in North Vancouver and Maple Ridge on behalf of the B.C. Wine Institute and Save-On-Foods’ applications for liquor retail licences. In September 2016, he was a guest speaker at the Canadian Institute’s Canadian Cannabis Business Week conference on the future of government relations (aka lobbying) and cannabis. In his bio on the city hall website, Bremner promotes himself as Pace Group’s vice-president of public affairs, where he “puts his unique experience and special capabilities toward navigating the process of public policy making and ensuring his clients’ messages are heard.”

The Vancouver Charter states that a council member must not use information obtained in the performance of duties for the purpose of “gaining or furthering a direct or indirect pecuniary interest.”

If conflict of interest was a concern to the NPA Board of Directors, as they stated last week, why did they not act sooner on the allegations first reported in Bob Mackin’s April 12th column? Or, did the members of the NPA Board come up with last-minute allegations of Bremner conflicts of interest to mislead the public, misdirect Mr. Bremner’s campaign, and not have to get into the muckier business of an alleged Pay for Play scheme involving Bremner’s ties to a deep-pocketed Vancouver developer, as VanRamblings reported last week as one reason for Bremner’s rejection?
Whatever the case, Bob Mackin and theBreaker.news was the original source to break conflict of interest allegations, making theBreaker.news an invaluable source for reporting on Vancouver civic news.
Bob Mackin consistently both breaks critical news of interest to the public on Vancouver’s political scene, and reports civic political news not reported elsewhere. As such, theBreaker.news should become one of your primary sources for unbiased breaking news on Vancouver’s civic political scene.


The Mainstream Media

Turn to the mainstream media for coverage of the 2018 Vancouver municipal election.

The five newspapers above represent Vancouver’s mainstream media, which means that the reporters and columnists employed by these five Vancouver news outlets observe strict journalistic codes of conduct, and the principles, values and obligations associated with the practice of journalism …

1. Truth and Accuracy

Journalists cannot always guarantee ‘truth’, but getting the facts right is the cardinal principle of journalism. Journalists always strive for accuracy, give all the relevant facts available and ensure facts have been checked. When journalists cannot corroborate information such is stated.

2. Independence

Journalists must be independent voices, who will not act, formally or informally, on behalf of special interests whether political, corporate or cultural. Journalists must declare to editors — or readers — any political affiliation, financial arrangements or other personal information that might constitute a conflict of interest.

3. Fairness and Impartiality

Most stories have at least two sides. While there is no obligation to present every side in every piece, stories should be balanced and add context. Objectivity is not always possible, and may not always be desirable (in the face for example of brutality or inhumanity), but impartial reporting builds trust and confidence.

4. Humanity

Journalists should do no harm. What journalists publish or broadcast may be hurtful, and journalists must be aware of the impact of words written and images captured on the lives of others.

5. Accountability

A sure sign of professionalism and responsible journalism is personal and professional accountability. When journalists commit errors, remedy must be made throught correction; expressions of regret must be sincere, not cynical. Journalists must listen to the concerns of readers. Journalists must strive for fairness, and seek to provide remedy if an unfairness has been identified.

The Vancouver Courier

Vancouver Courier civic affairs columnists and reporter.l-r, Mike Klassen, Mike Howell, Michael Geller, John Kurucz, and eminence gris Allen Garr

The gentlemen above (and more’s the pity that there are no women pictured above), represent the retinue of Vancouver Courier newspaper civic affairs columnists, and reporter. If you’re involved in #vanpoli, you sure as hell better know who these men are, and set to reading what each has written in 2018, all easily accessible on The Courier website.
VanRamblings is constantly surprised — stunned would be more like it — at how absolutely and utterly bereft of knowledge a broad range of political activists and campaigns strategists are, the hardy but clueless folks who are involved with all six of Vancouver’s political parties spanning the spectrum —&#32parties offering candidates for office —&#32about the role and impact of the media in determining the party’s or candidates’ futures.
And who it is, exactly, writes about Vancouver civic politics, what they have to say, how they keep candidates honest, and the role the media — the columnists and journalists above, and the ones you’ll read about below — play in determining how candidates and parties are perceived, and the impact journalists, columnists, reporters, broadcasters, podcasters and bloggers have on the election night results which so consume politicos.
There’s much talk about low information voters. There’s little talk about low information political activists, strategists and party apparatchiks so wrapped up in political ideology or lack thereof, so self-involved and just plain downright narcissistic and unrealistic about their prospects for office — given their utter lack of anything approaching depth of knowledge of civic affairs — that it, to employ a colloquial term, just blows our mind.
Read up. Go online. Research. Inform yourself.
Get involved with your life, as if what you read and research about civic politics actually matters — because it does, not just for you, but for your family, the folks who live in your neighbourhood, and all of us who live in all the neighbourhoods that encompass the city of Vancouver.
Care about the future of Vancouver, inform yourself about issues involving transit, how we’ll go about responding to the crying need for affordable housing, how we’ll achieve the elimination of childhood poverty in our city, and the unending wont of parents or caregivers who cannot adequately provide for our city’s most vulnerable citizens — care for our homeless population, care for the vulnerable, care for your daughters, wives, sisters and mothers and work to ensure ours is a safe city. Read. Inform yourself. Act. Be the change. Do everything in your power to make a difference.
As we’ve written previously, sitting at home and reading John Pilger, Chris Hedges and Noam Chomsky is a good thing to do, but if you don’t use what you’ve read to become active in the movement for change, your reading amounts to little more than narcisscism, self-involvement utterly useless to the rest of us, academic masturbation.
Act as if your life matters. Act as if the lives of others matter.
Vancouver’s Mainstream Media

Vancouver's mainstream media who cover civic politicsl-r, Jen St. Denis, Gary Mason, Frances Bula, Dan Fumano, Charlie Smith & Carlito Pablo

Tiny photos above of the journalists and columnists who cover Vancouver politics, but powerful — some would say, extremely powerful — people in the realm of #vanpoli, the folks who are the opinion-shapers in our community, their contributions and their impact outsized, and as we say above, powerful. Again, if you’re not reading Jen St. Denis in the StarMetro, Gary Mason and Frances Bula in the Globe and Mail, Dan Fumano in the Vancouver Sun, and Charlie Smith and Carlito Pablo in The Straight — each and every time they publish — you cannot consider yourself to be well-informed on civic issues in the City of Vancouver.

Georgia Straight newspaper reporter and editor Travis Lupick, one of Vancouver's most accomplished journalists.The Georgia Straight’s Travis Lupick, one of Vancouver’s most accomplished journalists

Downtown Eastside activist Wendy Pedersen has written, informing us that we have missed the name of the accomplished Georgia Straight writer and editor, Travis Lupick, who we read all the time, and whose work we very much admire — so we’ve remedied that egregious oversight, with a big photo of Travis published above, too. We apologize to Travis and Wendy.
All seven of the writers above are the Jimmy Breslins, Studs Terkels, Allan Fotheringhams, Marjorie Nichols’, Peter C. Newmans, Peter Gzowskis and Barbara McLintocks of our city, and demand to be read, to be listened to, to have what they write be acted upon in order to make ours a better city, one where we will see transparency in government and governance.

The Cambie Report, Vancouver's newest civic affairs podcast - a must-listen.

In the near future, VanRamblings will publish an interview we did with The Cambie Reports’ Ian Bushfield, For now, visit the website, listen to the various podcasts, hear what Frances, Jen St. Denis, and ResearchCo’s Mario Canseco, among other civic affairs ‘reporters’, have to say.
And last but not least, the eastside guy who writes every day on his blog …

Jak's View 3.0, an idiosyncratic look at Vancouver politics, East End Vancouver style

Jak King — writer, historian, artist, photographer, husband, father, poet and anarchist (me, too, except for the husband part, cuz no one will have me) — swore off on both writing and involving himself in Vancouver civic politics, following what he felt (and many others felt) was a dispiriting 2014 Vancouver municipal election. Click on Jak’s View 3.0 to see what we mean.
Reporting out of the East End of Vancouver (where VanRamblings grew up, as it happens), long an activist on Grandview-Woodland resident, community and development issues, where you’re not generally going to get the overlong, ponderous pieces that you get on VanRamblings, but what you will get is a welcome bit of online humanity, some great photos (and great music, too), writing about Vancouver’s eastside, poetry and insight, and if we are very, very lucky, Jak will reverse and rescind his encyclical on “50 reasons why I won’t be writing about civic politics anymore,” and set about to offer his idiosyncratic (and less labourious than VanRamblings) take on all things Vancouver municipal politics. Here’s hoping, anyway.

2018 Vancouver civic election

VanRamblings is slowly burning out, but for now — and through until the end of June, we imagine, when we’re planning on reducing our writing output to two, three or four times a week for the summer months — you can find everything there is to know about the upcoming Vancouver civic election, which for many of those with whom we interact each day is not even a thing, as in, “There’s an election coming up? Where? When? You mean we’re actually going to the polls, again. Christine Boyle, you say. Never heard of her.” (ed. note. oh woe is us. Raymond tears his hair out).
Click on Vancouver Votes 2018 for VanRamblings’ civic election coverage.

A Park Excursion, and An Opportunity for Peace & Companionship

Take the FREE ParkBus service from Vancouver to Golden Ears Park this summer!

Perhaps you’re a pauper like me, or maybe it is that you are parsimonious of nature. Maybe it’s that the prospect of actually driving out of town seems daunting, finding your way through traffic and searching endlessly for the route to your destination all just a little bit too much for you.
Or, maybe you wish to save the environment, but can’t yet afford an electric vehicle, and renting one is cost prohibitive, driving to Golden Ears Provincial Park in your old beater, or gas guzzling SUV, not the way that you’re choosing to live your life these days as a responsible citizen.
Well, you’re in luck. Today on VanRamblings, something you may have read or heard about elsewhere, but perhaps not.

British Columbia's Golden Ears Provincial Park, only 55 kilometres from the heart of Vancouver.ParkBus | Vancouver to Golden Ears Park | FREE bus service | Weekends | Summer 2018

In any case, today on VanRamblings you will learn about ParkBus, an absolutely FREE bus service that will run over the summer months — sponsored by the Mountain Equipment Co-op (MEC) — that will take you on a pleasant and stress-free out-of-town excursion from Vancouver to Golden Ears Park, each and every Saturday and Sunday, starting this upcoming July 7th, and ending just shy of two months later, on September 2nd.
Operated by Vancouver-based Environmental Sound Transportation, ParkBus will depart from MEC’s Vancouver Store, located at 130 West Broadway, just east of Cambie, each Saturday and Sunday morning, returning in the late afternoon. Did we mention that ParkBus is free?

This summer, Vancouver's Mountain Equipment Co-op will over a FREE bus service — called ParkBus — that each and every Saturday and Sunday, commencing on July 7th, leaving in the morning from the MEC store at 130 West Broadway, will take you on the excursion of your life to Golden Ears Park for the day, returning to Vancouver in the late afternoon.ParkBus | Vancouver to Golden Ears Park | FREE bus service | Weekends | Starting Saturday, July 7th | Running each Saturday and Sunday through September 2nd

Just look at that comfy, spacious and ultra-clean air-conditioned bus above, the ParkBus of which we write today.
You’ll need to pre-book your seat online with a credit card deposit (to prevent no-shows), with reservations set to open up in mid-June, when you can book your seats by calling 1-800-928-7101. Vancouver to Golden Ears Park is a hop, skip and jump 55 kilometres from Vancouver, the journey taking all of one-hour, surrounded by families and folks intent on having a good and responsible time in British Columbia’s welcoming wilderness.
You can learn about Leave No Trace principles from a ride facilitator, too.

Hikers on a day excursion to Golden Ears Provincial Park, who us the FREE ParkBus service.Hikers on a day excursion to Golden Ears Provincial Park | FREE ParkBus service.

At 62,540 hectares, Golden Ears is one of the biggest parks in British Columbia. Known for its extensive trail system for hikers and equestrian use, Golden Ears also is home to Alouette Lake, which is a popular spot for swimming, windsurfing, water-skiing, canoeing, boating, and fishing.
ParkBus drops you off at Gold Creek Parking, inside the park, conveniently located within walking distance of a number of beautiful hiking trails.

Arts Friday | Tom Charity’s Vancity Theatre of Transcendence

The inaugural edition of Rupture is a showcase of innovative, odd and otherworldly films that bend rules, blend genres, explore inventive takes on venerable tropes and elude easy categorization, presented by the Vancouver International Film Festival, at the
Vancity Theatre, May 24th thru May 27th 2018.

In Vancouver there is a cinema of beauty, programmed by the indomitable Tom Charity, who has turned the Vancity Theatre into the most successful year-round cinema attached to a film festival, anywhere on the continent.
Tom, an arts journalist of some note and distinction, and as we are wont to say on VanRamblings, a person of conscience — as is our friend Selina Crammond, the chief programming director of the recently-wrapped, and wildly successful 17th annual DOXA Documentary Film Festival — to employ an oft-used phrase, is a “man of the people”, which is to say that he is one of our city’s true social justice heroes, an activist of substance, meaning and involvement in the affairs of our city, our province, our land and the world, and in simple terms on Vancouver’s arts scene, a creative genius.
Since assuming the helm of the Vancity Theatre in 2012 — yet another acute hire by then Festival Director, Alan Franey, now the festival’s Director of International Programming — Tom has found the pulse of Vancouver’s cinema arts-going public, and programmed the Vancity Theatre to a fair thee well, a reflection of his core values of engagement, equity and humanity, and an extension of the empathetic window on the world values of the Vancouver International Film Festival, of which the Vancity is very much a part. If you’ve not been to the Vancity: GO! Attend! You must!

Curtis Woloschuk, the Vancouver International Film Festival's Associate Director of ProgrammingThat’s Curtis Woloschuk pictured above, VIFF’s ‘RUPTURE’ series programmer

Tom points out that it is not he, but another creative genius (VanRamblings’ wording, but only because it is true!) who is responsible for the inaugural edition of the Vancouver International Film Festival’s RUPTURE series — which, if we had our wits about us, we would have figured out on our own … alas — the one, the only, the very huggable collective hope of our future and Associate Director of Programming at VIFF, Curtis Woloschuk, who has long programmed VIFF’s Altered States (or ALT, if you will) programming, an amalgam of “international genre films come out to play” (read: films that are a little off-centre), having assumed that responsibility when VIFF’s Sandy Gow turned his focus to programming VIFF’s absolutely stunningly beautiful Shorts Programme — a part of VIFF you should never, ever miss.
On Arts Friday, a preview of the upcoming programming at the Vancity

Débuting last December at the 17th annual Whistler Film Festival, film critic Lucy Lau writing in The Straight says of Venus

A feel-good film that admirably defies the conventions of white, straight, and cis-gendered Hollywood, Venus tells the tale of Sid (played dazzlingly by Debargo Sanyal), a transitioning woman whose life takes a surprising turn when Ralph (Jamie Mayers), the 14-year-old biological son she never knew she had, shows up unannounced at her door” … ending her review with, “Heartwarming and an absolute delight to watch — with an infectious bilingual soundtrack, to boot.

Venus will play at the Vancity, as is usually the case at the idiosyncratic and successful Vancity Theatre, on six occasions, beginning tonight, ending next Wednesday, May 23rd. Screening times may be found by clicking here.

ma vie de courgette

Advance tickets for Ma vie de courgette are sold out, but if you get down to the Vancity by 11:30am, there may be some standby tickets available.
Check out the full programme of Vancity screenings this and next month.
Next Saturday, there is what VanRamblings considers to be a very special event occurring at the Vancity, followed by a Sunday once only screening of a film that took Sundance by storm this past January.

Filmmaker David Lowery will participate in a VIFF 'Creator Talk' at the Vancity Theatre.Filmmaker David Lowery ready for his Creator Talk at the Vancity Theatre on May 26th

Here’s the Vancity programme on next Saturday’s ‘Creator Talk’ event …

The Vancouver International Film Festival is thrilled to welcome David Lowery back to our city for the inaugural edition of Rupture (May 24-27), a celebration of films that bend rules, blend genres and uncover innovative takes on venerable tropes. David has always been refreshingly forthcoming with his daily routine as a filmmaker and we look forward to our conversation with him as he shares his insights into a unique creative process that has sent him on a trajectory from beautifully handcrafted short films to an astonishing assured indie début (the lyrical, fatalistic Ain’t The Bodies Saints) to an inspired re-imagining of a storied Disney property (Pete’s Dragon, one of VanRamblings’ three favourite films of 2016) to setting out to make the idiosyncratic A Ghost Story that, in wowing the critics, became a fixture on a surfeit of Best of 2017 lists.

Tickets for the Telus STORYHIVE Creator Talk with David Lowery are still available — Curtis advises that you should go, immediately, to the VIFF website, and click this link to order your tickets to the “you’ll regret it if you miss it (our words),” Creator Talk with David Lowery! Tickets are only $20.

Tickets are still available for Damsel, starring Robert Pattinson and Mia Wasikowska — otherwise known as ‘the’ actress of her generation. Here’s what Owen Gleiberman had to say in his Variety review …

A mega-deadpan Western comedy starring Robert Pattinson as a cracker-barrel hero on a romantic mission – who hits the perfect note of drawling flaked-out good cheer – set to marry his beloved financée, Penelope (Mia Wasikowska), but things go awry.

Penelope turns out to be the toughest character in the movie: a righteous and self-protective post-feminist Calamity Jane, who takes out her bent shotgun and uses it only because of how badly she’s been wronged. She has no patience for any man who would destroy her happiness. Wasikowska, under a chopped wedge of blonde hair, gives her true grit; her straight-shooter line readings are punchlines of rationality. She’s as alone in the world as any of the other characters, but she’s the one who won’t be dragged down.

See Damsel at the Vancity on Sunday, May 27th, or miss out on it forever.

Vancouver Votes 2018 | The Hector Bremner Saga Continues

Involvement in the political sphere is critical to your survival in this city, and on this planet.

On Monday, VanRamblings published the reasons why Vancouver City Councillor Hector Bremner’s mayoral candidacy was rejected by the party he sits with on Council, the Vancouver Non-Partisan Association. Since publication, further information has come to VanRamblings attention, in respect of Mr. Bremner’s now truncated candidacy for Mayor, and how his bid for the NPA mayoral nomination came about in the first place.
Given the involvement of longtime B.C. Liberal party fixer Mark Marissen, readers will probably find it rather elementary to put two and two together, to determine that the Andrew Wilkinson-led provincial Liberal party had everything and more to do with novice Vancouver City Councillor Hector Bremner’s decision to seek the Non-Partisan Association mayoral nod.

The 'out of power' B.C. Liberal Party Using Hector Bremner as a Trojan Horse candidate

Part 1: How Hector Bremner Came to Be a Mayoral Nominee for the NPA
On May 9, 2017, the B.C. Liberal party fell out of power, after 16 years in control of the British Columbia legislature. Following the resignation of former Premier Christy Clark as leader of her party, on February 3rd of this year, Vancouver-Quilchena MLA Andrew Wilkinson won the leadership of the renewed B.C. Liberal party.
Once at the helm of the now opposition provincial political party, newly-installed Liberal party leader Wilkinson hired Harvard-educated Vancouver lawyer, Paul Barbeau, as his “special assistant“. Mr. Barbeau, a longtime respected activist in the federal Conservative party, is a founding partner of the prestigious Vancouver law firm of Barbeau, Evans & Goldstein.
Mr. Barbeau’s job for the B.C. Liberal leader: join (or is that, infiltrate?) the Vancouver Non-Partisan Association, with designs on taking over the Vancouver civic party in time for the 2018 Vancouver municipal election.
Andrew Wilkinson told Mr. Barbeau that the B.C. Liberals required a political power base in Vancouver, and an opportunity to test-run the party’s electoral readiness machine, with the upcoming Vancouver civic election providing the best possible circumstance to achieve both ends. Hector Bremner — a B.C. Liberal acolyte — would be their stalking horse.
Consulting with Marissen & Mike Wilson — a veteran B.C. Liberal operative, and Mr. Bremner’s campaign manager in last year’s successful Vancouver municipal by-election — Barbeau brought Marissen and Wilson on board to run a winning Hector Bremner mayoral bid for the NPA nomination.

Hector Bremner's Facebook page | Let's Fix Housing

On February 19th of this year, Hector Bremner published a Facebook post, writing that he would be running for the mayoral nomination of the Vancouver Non-Partisan Association, writing, “I’m excited today, with the support of my wife Virginia and two kids Carlo and Gianluca, to confirm that I am seeking the NPA nomination for Mayor of our great city Vancouver.”
With successful and experienced campaign managers Marissen and Wilson at the helm of Hector Bremner’s mayoral nomination bid, all seemed to be falling into place nicely for the B.C. Liberal party leader’s plan to take over Vancouver civic politics, and establish an electoral power base for his party.
To seal the deal, Mr. Barbeau — now a member of the Non-Partisan Association — offered his services to the NPA Board, stating that he would be “willing” to sit on the party’s Green Light Committee, if the Board so wished … which they did. At this point, everyone was happy!
But not for long, as it would turn out.
As Globe and Mail civic affairs columnist Frances Bula has written, NPA election readiness has become a real soap opera. But we’re not there yet.
Paul Barbeau, then, would sit on the Green Light Committee vetting Mr. Bremner’s candidacy to become the NPA’s mayoral nominee.
Part 2: How Hector Bremner Lost the NPA Mayoral Nomination
A Tale of Much Sadness and Woe for Everyone Involved. Or, the Destruction of the NPA.

A Tale of Much Sadness and Woe for Everyone Involved. Or, the Destruction of the NPA.
In fact, sources have told VanRamblings, on the three-person NPA Green Light Committee, Mr. Barbeau emerged as the only committee member to heartily endorse Mr. Bremner’s candidacy, with the other two members of the committee expressing reservations, which they would take to members of the NPA Board of Directors, recommending rejection of Mr. Bremner’s nomination application, based on those reservations — as outlined in VanRamblings’ Monday column, and in a column written by Vancouver Sun civic affairs reporter, Dan Fumano, in which he writes …

The Non-Partisan Association shot down their own sitting caucus member’s bid for its mayoral nomination because of, among other things, concerns that his day job left him in an “inherently conflicted” position.

That allegation was among the “serious concerns” outlined in a two-page letter sent Sunday evening from NPA president Gregory Baker to NPA Coun. Hector Bremner, according to a person who had reviewed the document.

Sunday’s letter came at the end of a tumultuous week for the city’s oldest political party, after the NPA board voted last Monday to reject Bremner’s attempt to seek the party’s mayoral nomination, prompting a series of departures from the party, including prospective candidates and two board members, as Postmedia News reported last Friday. By Monday, another director had departed, bringing the total to three.

On Monday morning Baker released a statement saying he had sent a “confidential letter” to Bremner the previous evening, “outlining in detail the reasons why the NPA board did not approve his mayoral application.”

“Although the NPA does not plan to publicly release this information, Mr. Bremner is within his rights to release the information, as well as the contents of the letter, as he sees fit,” Baker said in the statement.

The letter hasn’t been released publicly, but a person who had a copy of it read excerpts to The Vancouver Sun over the phone Monday and described parts of it, including the list of the NPA’s concerns about Bremner’s application.

The letter outlines the NPA’s “serious concerns” about Bremner’s application, beginning with Bremner’s request (ed. note., as was reported by VanRamblings on Monday) that his lawyer could accompany him to the Green Light Committee meeting to discuss his prospects of being on the ballot for the NPA’s nomination meeting May 29.

The letter cites three conflict-of-interest complaints involving Bremner’s work with the Pace Group, a media-relations and lobbying firm. Baker confirmed Monday that the three complaints referenced in the letter were those filed by two locals named Raza Mirza and Justin Fung. Mirza and Fung, both of whom spoke last month to Postmedia about their complaints, said they had recently signed up for NPA memberships. Both expressed concerns about Bremner’s suitability for the city’s top job.

As a reminder to readers, Messrs. Mirza and Fung are co-founders of HALT VancouverHousing Action for Local Taxpayers — and avowed supporters of Bremner nemesis, Glen Chernen, whose mayoral nomination was approved by the NPA Board, Monday, May 7th.
VanRamblings has to ask: are there any winners in this mishegoss?
B.C. Liberal Party leader, Andrew Wilkinson? No. Paul Barbeau? No.
Hector Bremner? No. NPA President Gregory Baker? No. The Board of Directors, and members, of the Vancouver Non-Partisan Association. Definitely not. Mark Marissen, Mike Wilson, Glen Chernen and his acolytes, Raza Mirza and Justin Fung? Only time will tell — but it ain’t lookin’ good.