Vancouver Votes 2018 | NPA Choose Their Mayoralty Candidate

Novice political candidate Ken Sim Chosen as 2018 NPA Mayoral candidate

Ken Sim, The Once and Forever Saviour | Part 1
Forever Cagey Peter Armstrong Chooses NPA Mayoral Hopeful
Results of the Non-Partisan Association Mayoral nominee contest …

1. Ken Sim: 977 votes;

2. John Coupar: 602 votes;

3. Glen Chernen: 379 votes.

There were 2 spoiled ballots.

Novice political candidate Ken Sim chosen as 2018 NPA Mayoral candidateNovice political candidate Ken Sim chosen as 2018 NPA Mayoral candidate

Tomorrow, Tuesday, June 5th, VanRamblings will explain what the sub-headlines above mean for the Vancouver Non-Partisan Association, for Vancouver’s progressive parties, and for the voters of Vancouver.
On Tuesday, at the top of the column, we’ll also run newly-chosen Non-Partisan Association Mayoralty candidate Ken Sim’s victory speech.
Today, we’ll post the speeches for the three candidates vying for the Vancouver Non-Partisan Association Mayoral nomination. Order selected alphabetically, by surname, first up: Glen Chernen, who while dressed to the nines gave one of the best speeches we’ve ever heard him give. Not good enough for a victory, nor anything close to it, garnering only 20% of the nearly 2,000 votes cast, chances are Mr. Chernen will get to be the disruptor he wants to be as a Non-Partisan Association candidate for Vancouver City Council, where he’ll shake things in his inimitable fashion.
Introduced by NPA Board of Directors President, Gregory Baker …

3. Glen Chernen ask NPA party members to select him as their Mayoral nominee

Next up was the Vancouver Non-Partisan Association establishment candidate — not necessarily a bad thing, Mr. Coupar our favourite of the three NPA nomination Mayoral nominees, and the only one who spoke about affordable housing, the homeless, a culture policy for the city and support for the arts, and continuing the progressive initiatives undertaken by the current civic administration, while returning services to the people for which monies were either cut or eliminated, as a class issue of prominence for all persons of conscience, proper funding of renewal of our community centres, construction of pools, and ensuring more park space.
VanRamblings apologizes for the shaky camera work in the John Coupar video below. We’ll acquire a tripod soon to ensure steadier recordings of the 2018 municipal candidates for Vancouver civic office, going forward …

John Coupar seeks support from NPA members to become party’s Mayoral nominee

And here he is, the successful, winning candidate for the Vancouver Non-Partisan Association mantle for the party’s 2018 Mayoral nominee, Ken Sim, a novice candidate for political office, but an astute businessman, family man, life long Vancouver resident, who by this time next month will emerge as the single most-informed candidate for Mayor ever, after a series of tutoring sessions by 2014’s NPA Mayoral candidate Kirk LaPointe, current Park Board Commissioners and in both cases likely Vancouver City Council candidates, John Coupar and Sarah Kirby-Yung, and a raft of NPA electeds and veteran party political politicos, who will turn Ken Sim into the winningest NPA candidate for Mayor this century.

Businessman Ken Sim emerged as the NPA’s 2018 Mayoral candidate, on June 3rd 2018
See ya back here tomorrow for analysis of what Mr. Sim’s win means.

Vancouver Votes 2018 | Erin Arnold for School Board Trustee

Erin Arnold | Vision Vancouver Campaign Launch for School Board Trustee | June 3, 2018

Earlier this afternoon, VanRamblings attended the Erin Arnold campaign launch for Vancouver School Board, at Kitsilano’s General Gordon elementary school, where she is a Parent Advisory Committee member, and where her son Keegan attends Grade 5, today’s launch in support of Ms. Arnold’s bid to win a Vision Vancouver nomination for School Board.
At present, there are six candidates seeking a Vision Vancouver nomination for School Board. The nominating meeting to choose Vision’s 2018 candidates for School Board will take place this upcoming Sunday, July 8th.

Erin Arnold | Vision Vancouver Campaign Launch for School Board Trustee | June 3, 2018

Erin Arnold | Vision Vancouver campaign launch for School Board trustee

On the front page of Erin Arnold’s campaign website, Ms. Arnold writes …

“I spend a lot of time working on communities, bringing together as many different people with unique voices and experiences to find common ground and make the world a safer, stronger place for all of us.

Since 1998 I have worked for various ministries including Attorney General, Public Safety and Solicitor General, Children and Family Development, and Public Services Agency of BC. I also hold a certificate in complex trauma and child sexual abuse intervention, an undergraduate degree in Child and Youth Care Counselling, and have over 18 years of facilitation, victim services, and trauma based work experience. I have managed multi-year government contracts and assisted in drafting public policy on various progressive issues.

Difficult conversations will need to be navigated at the school board, and new voices will need to be represented. I have waded through many difficult conversations in my professional life, including as a Victim Services Program Manager, Family Services Social Worker, and Foster Home Recruitment Project Manager. Indeed, I’m not one to shy away from the tough conversations and I have a demonstrated ability to make wide changes at the municipal and other levels of government.”

Erin Arnold is Vice-President of David Eby’s Vancouver Point Grey NPD riding association, in addition to her work with the federal Vancouver Quadra NDP riding association. VanRamblings has worked with Ms. Arnold on all three of David Eby’s campaigns for office, where she played a key role, and on Scott Andrews’ 2015 Vancouver Quadra federal NDP campaign for office, where her humanity and people skills shone, where she was a daily inspiring presence, hard working, friendly and well-organized each and every day. To say that we’re over-the-moon with the announcement of Erin’s candidacy for School Board is to dramatically understate the matter.
VanRamblings wholeheartedly endorses Erin Arnold for School Board, as we know her to be an articulate, community-involved advocate for children, a woman of conscience, and a true community advocate and activist.

Support community activist & child advocate, Erin Arnold, for School Board trustee

Vancouver Votes 2018 | More and More Bizarro

NPA Councillor Hector Bremner Set to Announce Creation of YesVancouver, a New Civic Party

As per Vancouver Courier civic affairs reporter Mike Howell’s May 25th story, VanRamblings was told yesterday by informed sources that Hector Bremner — current sitting City Councillor with the Vancouver Non-Partisan Association, who recently had his NPA mayoral nomination bid rejected by the party — will hold a press conference tomorrow morning, June 4th, informing the public that he is leaving the NPA to form a new civic party, to be called YesVancouver, for which he will be the party’s Mayoral candidate.

Hector Bremner's mantra: "Let's Fix Housing", otherwise known as towers everywhere, with nary a thought to social or affordable housingLet’s Fix Housing for the rich, with nary a thought to building social or affordable housing

As per Howell’s story, disgruntled NPA members Adrian Crook, Wade Grant and Scott de Lange Boom, who all intended to seek council nominations with the NPA, are expected to join Bremner. Reports are, as well, that Bremner’s new YesVancouver civic party will run a full slate of candidates for both Vancouver School Board, and Park Board — the star candidate for the latter civic body expected to be disaffected former NPA Park Board member Erin Shum, and current independent Park Board Commissioner.
All of the above comes as bad news for the Vancouver’s oldest and most established civic party, the Non-Partisan Association, who are holding their Mayoral nomination vote today at the Hellenic Hall, in the Arbutus Ridge neighbourhood. The NPA and YesVancouver — both of them corporate parties, arms of the right-of-centre B.C. Liberal party, and largely developer-funded — look to knock each other out heading into the autumn civic election, voting day Saturday, October 20th, with former Vancouver South Conservative MP Wai Young looking to land a knockout blow to both the NPA and YesVancouver, for the right-of-centre conservative crown.
Ain’t politics luvverly in our town?

To make matters worse for the once beloved and still loved by many Non-Partisan Association, sources tell VanRamblings that current NPA members who will vote at today’s Non-Partisan Association mayoral nomination shindig, and who will officially join the nascent civic YesVancouver party tomorrow morning, plan on disrupting the announcement of the NPA’s 2018 mayoral candidate when the announcement is made by NPA President Gregory Baker, in full view of the gathered NPA party members, and more egregiously the media assembled at the Hellenic Hall to report out on the — let’s hope not booby prize — winner of the NPA 2018 mayoral nomination.
Left-of-centre political pundits and party members with the so-called “progressive parties” offering candidates in the 2018 Vancouver civic election — OneCity Vancouver, the Green Party of Vancouver, the Coalition of Progressive Electors, Vision Vancouver, and Team Jean — might set to thinking “Whoopee, the election is ours!“, but, nope, hold on a galldarn minute there, the progressive coalition seems, too, to have ridden off the rails spelling electoral disaster for the left-of-centre progressive parties who seem to be in just as much disarray as the right-of-centre evil-doers, with Vision Vancouver set to go it alone, as would appear to be the case with the Greens, all of which blows the notion of a progressive coalition to fight the evil-doers of Vancouver’s right-of-centre parties to smithereens and back.
Alas and woe is all of us, particularly bewildered civic voters of Vancouver who are set to cast a ballot at the polls this autumn civic election season.
Good thing then, one supposes, that 95% of Vancouver’s voting public could give a good galldarn about all the political shenanigans afoot this civic election season — more focused on going to the pub, falling in love (oh, the spring’s good for that), getting set for the start of the Vancouver Canadians 2018 baseball season, or focused on the Stanley Cup playoffs (yeah Ovechkin! — it’s your year … finally), or just setting about to live their lives, unconscious and socially bereft lives mind you, but lives nonetheless.

Happier times for newly-elected NPA Vancouver City Councillor Hector Bremner at a 2017's Vancouver civic by-election celebration.Happier times for newly-elected NPA Vancouver City Councillor Hector Bremner at a 2017 civic by-election celebration. The NPA Councillor’s mayoral hopes were dashed when the NPA Board rejected his candidacy in early May. But he seems to be landing on his feet. Photo by Dan Toulgoet, for the Vancouver Courier. Used without permission.

Maybe it is as former much-beloved Vancouver Sun civic affairs columnist Allan Fotheringham wrote each early summer for years — and as our friend Mike Klassen also wrote recently in his regular and often poignant and astute Vancouver Courier civic affairs column — summer is the silly season in politics, it’s just arriving quite a bit earlier than usual this unsettling year.

Stories of a Life | My Mother’s Frustrated Dreams | Country Music

The New Westminster-based Rhythm Pals trio throughout the late 40s, 50s and 60s was considered to be Canada's best country music groupMike, Mark & Jack, New Westminster’s The Rhythm Pals, Canada’s best country group

In the 1950s my mother sang with the The Rhythm Pals, a New Westminster-based country music trio that was all the rage in the late 1940s, 50s and into the 1960s, in 1965, 1967, and 1968 winning the Juno Award as best Canadian country group, a few years after which they were inducted into the Canadian Country Music Hall of Honour, in 1989.
In my household growing up, it was Mike, Marc and Jack this, and Mike, Marc and Jack that, my mother keeping up her friendship with The Pals throughout the entirety of my young life. My mother loved to sing, sang all the time around our home and in the car, loved music of every description — when she was home there was always music in the house, Patti Page and Teresa Brewer her two favourite 1950s singers, later turning to Patsy Cline, all of whose music invested almost my every waking moment for years.
Looking back on it, I suppose my love for female vocalists originated with my own mother’s, if not exactly angelic but still melodic voice, her entire demeanour the very definition of joy when she sang. Driving around with my parents in the family car, the radio was turned up loud, my mother singing along with all of the artists of the day, save Nat King Cole, who she worshipped, and would not as his daughter did years later, ‘duet’ with him.
Above all else, though, my mother loved country and western music, a mix of Americana, folk and roots music that spoke of struggle and love lost, of tragedy and wont and lives not fully realized, the heartfelt music I grew up on and which, later in life, would emerge as my favourite musical genre, coming around to appreciate country music, after having as a teenager and for many years after rejecting the music my mother loved, finally coming around in my early 40s — I’ve loved Iris DeMent, Alison Moorer, Shelby Lynne, Kasey Chambers, Lucinda Williams, Lori McKenna, Miranda Lambert and Kacey Musgraves ever since. whose music has become the melancholy and thoughtful soundtrack that has informed my life this past 30 years.

In the late summer of 1958, my parents moved the family to Edmonton, to be closer to family and to be closer to the soundtrack of my mother’s life, roots and classic country music being far more popular on the Prairies than would ever be the case in the Lotusland Vancouver has always aspired to.

12221 81st Street in Northwest Edmonton, one of Raymond Tomlin's boyhood homes, where he attended Grades 5 and 6 at nearby Eastwood Elementary12221 81st Street, in northwest Edmonton, my family home from late 1959 through 1961

In 1960, with the help of my tall oak of a grandfather, my parents bought a house in northwest Edmonton, at 12221 81st Street, a working-aspiring-to-middle class neighbourhood, where I attended Eastwood Elementary for Grades 5 & 6, the new school and neighbourhood a step up from inner-city Edmonton, where we had rented for a year, and where I attended Sir John A. McDougall school in Grade 4 befriending all of the tough kids in school, helping them with their in-class & their homework, in exchange keeping me safe — to say it was a rough neighbourhood is to dramatically understate the matter. Still, I made it out in one piece, and was glad for the move.
As I say, my mother loved country roots music, the music of her youth, the music she sang, and the music that most spoke to her, that I believe kept her alive and her mind and spirit active — amidst the three back-breaking jobs she always held down, working at a puff wheat factory overnight for the entirety of our three-year tenure in Edmonton, working at a local bakery during the day, and the Swift Meat Packing Plant in the late afternoon and throughout the evening, ambitious and anxious to get ahead, or at least keep hers, and our heads above water, my father continuing his work at the Post Office, and surprising to everyone stepping up to the plate as our increasingly competent and loving father, to whom I’d help teach the ability to read, and with whom I’d spend endless hours quizzing him on aspects of his employment, in preparation for the quarterly tests of competence imposed by a draconian employer, the Canada Post Office.
Every now and then, though, my mother would get an evening off — she didn’t want to sit around the house “wasting time”, as she put it, she wanted to go out into the evening, be with people, to live and to feel free and to feel a part of the community, and if there was a country music concert at the nearby and walkable Edmonton Fairgrounds, all the better.
My mother loved to walk. One early Tuesday evening, she told my sister and I to put on our coats, that we were going out, saying to my father, “You’re coming along, too, to keep the kids out of mischief, to keep an eye on them so they don’t run away” — not that my sister and I ever did, we were homebodies, most evenings both my father and mother off at work, my sister and I at home watching TV or doing our homework, or visiting with friends in the neighbourhood, but back at home never later than 8pm.
On this particularly chill October 1960 evening, we made our way down to what appeared to us to be a deserted Edmonton Fairgrounds, although once inside the grounds and the closer we got to as our yet unknown destination, the clearer were the sounds of guitars being tuned up, and voices testing microphones — until we found ourselves arriving at a small tent, chairs for about 75 people, over the course of the half hour we waited for the evening’s festivities to begin, much to our mother’s displeasure, kicking around the sawdust on the floor, while looking around at the others who were in attendance, a few ragtag kids, but mostly adults in heavy, working class clothing, most drawn and seemingly weary with life, until …

Burl Ives, Wilf Carter and Hank Snow performed at a concert held on the Edmonton Fairgrounds in the autumn of 1960, the concert taking place in a small tent, sawdust on the floor, with no more than 75 people in attendanceClassic country music artists extraordinaire, The Wayfaring Stranger, Burl Ives; Montana Slim, otherwise know as Wilf Carter, and the Singing Cowboy himself, Hank Snow.

“Howdy, my name is Burl Ives, and this here to my left is Wilf Carter and standin’ next to him, the singing ranger himself, Hank Snow.”
And with that introduction, the small but fervently enthusiastic crowd came alive, as we were treated to a concert, and musicianship the likes of which I would not hear again till 1998, at a Lucinda Williams concert at The Vogue.
For the first and only time in my life, I saw my mother happy, in her element, dancing off to the side, a look of bliss on her face, her tired and aching bones revitalized with a renewed energy and strength, two and a half hours in my mother’s life that neither she nor I would ever forget, one of the best nights of my life, when I felt safe and loved amidst the music that had long been the soundtrack of my life, as it still remains to this day.