Following a 415-day break from publishing on VanRamblings, we return in 2024 to cover municipal, provincial and federal politics, and much much more.
In the coming months, VanRamblings will cover the second full year of the ABC civic administration at Vancouver City Hall, British Columbia’s upcoming provincial election — to be held on Saturday, October 19th, the first election for David Eby as Premier of the province of British Columbia — and the state of federal politics.
Fifty per cent of the countries across our globe go to the polls this year, so it is likely we’ll cover aspects of some of those elections, most particularly the morass that is politics in the United States.
As has been the case dating back to VanRamblings’ first column — published in February 2004 (the VanRamblings blog created by current Vancouver City Councillor Mike Klassen — who told us, “Raymond, you need a blog. Let me see what I can do.”) — more often than not, Monday through Thursday we’ll write on a number of topics, ranging from homelessness to health, politics to tech, and more.
Friday will be given over to Arts Friday— mainly cinema, we think you’ll find, in a bit of a change, this Thursday focusing on VanRamblings’ Best Picture Oscar predictions, and on Friday, our Best Actress / Actor, etc. predictions — Saturdays to Stories of a Life (although, for the next while we’ll focus on a Redux re-telling of previous Stories), and Sundays to Music, with a focus on the identification of our favourite 100 albums of all time, replete with audio, video and lots of storytelling.
After having been “away” for 59 weeks, chances are that it’ll take us a while to build back our readership — we’ve begun publishing now, in preparation for daily coverage of 2024’s British Columbia provincial election when, if history offers any indication, VanRamblings’ “daily hits” spikes to 10,000 to 50,000+ each day of the 60 days we publish prior to election day, in this case, as above, on October 19th.
As we wrote elsewhere recently, the central thematic structure of VanRamblings going forward will be kindness.
In a world rent with division, misinformation, rabid and accusatory partisanship, a spiritual hollowness, loneliness, anger, and so much more that is disquieting, VanRamblings will make every attempt to be kind to those about whom we write (although, we may / likely will take “entities” to task, when we feel it is deserving).
We do, however, reserve the right to disparage federal Conservative party leader Pierre Poilievre, who we believes represents an existential threat to the Canada we know and love. Even at that, we will acknowledge Mr. Poilievre’s humanity.
Pierre Poilievre says the quiet part out loud: he disdains ‘brainy people’, knowledge and expertise.
It’s why he and the CPC pose an existential threat to Canadian institutions and our way of life in this country.
Wherever possible, we’ll also attempt to keep columns to under a thousand words (we’re striving for 750 – 800 words), and on some days may publish a much shortened column. The exception, this week, will be Stories of a Life Redux — a republishing of an earlier Stories of a Life column (we will publish original content in this category in the weeks and months to come) — which will run long, at 1400 words.
VanRamblings will celebrate its 20th anniversary next month.
At 73 years of age, the writer-editor of VanRamblings — after several years of health challenges (hey, this getting old thing, it ain’t for wimps, although we’re feeling much better health-wise, at present) — is twenty years older than when we first began publishing on this peripatetic blog and, sad to say, we lack the “sit in front of the computer for 72 consecutive hours to publish a column” energy we once did.
The above said, we don’t believe we’ve lost a step when it comes to forming an opinion, and the recording of that opinion, which some may see as salutary, while others may have feelings on the matter that are not exactly in accord.
As of today, Friday, November 18, 2022, David Eby becomes the 37th Premier of the Province of British Columbia. Glad tidings for our province, and glad tidings for the British Columbia New Democratic Party, B.C.’s current sitting government.
David Eby, the duly elected three-term Member of the Legislature, who since his election to Victoria in 2013, has more than ably represented his many grateful constituents who reside in his Vancouver Point-Grey riding, as a community activist extraordinaire, and an on the ground advocate for any constituent who walks through the doors of his constituency office located on West Broadway just west of Macdonald, in the heart of the welcoming westside Kitsilano neighbourhood.
David Eby and David Eby alone will salvage a somewhat long in the tooth BC New Democratic government, as a steady as she goes but decidedly activist Premier intent on getting things done for all British Columbians, resident in the North, throughout the Interior, on Vancouver Island & across B.C.’s urban metropolises.
David Eby may well be the most sympathetic and authentic political figure this province has ever seen — just you wait and see — and as such represents not just the great hope of the BC NDP to retain government past the 2024 provincial election, but the great hope for all British Columbians who, over the next 24 months, will come to cherish David Eby as the once-in-a-generation inspirational leader who will lead our province through the certain-to-be challenging times ahead.
Premier David Eby has his work cut out for him, but from all reports he’s going to hit the ground running.
In an October 7, 2022 column in The Vancouver Sun, arising from an extensive poll by Angus Reid gauging the rate of satisfaction British Columbians felt for the incumbent John Horgan government, columnist Vaughn Palmer wrote …
“An opinion poll this week from the Angus Reid institute indicated the public is far from content with the NDP’s handling of major issues. On homelessness, the opioid crisis, labour shortages and seniors care — the verdict was negative: “poor/very poor job.”
Those responding to the survey gave the NDP government a 73% negative rating on health care, a 77% negative on dealing with the cost of living, and an 85% negative rating for its handling of housing affordability.
New Democrats should be worried about what happens when Premier John Horgan, the most popular British Columbia leader in decades, exits the Premier’s office, leaving behind only public discontent over how the government has been handling the major issues.”
Then Premier-designate David Eby’s response to the Angus Reid poll, and Mr. Palmer’s concerning column in The Vancouver Sun?
Premier David Eby releases 100-day plan for B.C. housing, health & safety
An article in the Canadian Press reads: “The B.C. New Democrats’ newly minted leader and Premier is promising “significant action” to bolster the province’s affordable housing, health-care system, public safety and environmental policies.”
At a press conference, David Eby rolled out his plans for his first 100 days.
“I’m setting down a marker today on these priorities for our government: housing, health care, the environment, public safety,” he said at a news conference.
“At the end of those 100 days, you will have seen announcements (and) activity from a government focused on delivering results for British Columbians that set out the groundwork for how, in the next two years, we are going to deliver significant change for British Columbians.”
Eby campaigned for leader on a housing plan that includes a $500-million fund to provide grants to non-profits & First Nations to buy rental properties, pledging to fast-track approvals & construction of multi-family housing projects.
On the health-care front, Premier Eby said his government will be looking at the process used to assess people with international credentials “to get them working as quickly as possible” to address a dire need in the health system.
When it comes to concerns over public safety, Premier Eby said there are issues where the criminal justice system is not responding they way it needs to.
“You will see action from our government on this issue. But what you will see is action that actually addresses the core issue that is causing so much chaos in communities: the issues of mental health, addiction, homelessness, and the need to intervene and break the cycle that people are involved in,” he said.
Mr. Eby is also promising to redirect fossil fuel subsidies to clean energy.
“British Columbians are really clear, we cannot continue to subsidize fossil fuels and expect clean energy to manifest somehow. We cannot continue to expand fossil fuel infrastructure and hit our climate goals,” he said.
One week ago, David Eby released a bold plan to take ownership of the DTES.
David Eby, then a lawyer with the B.C. Civil Liberties Association, speaks to reporters in Vancouver’s Downtown Eastside in 2009. Photo by Ric Ernst /PNG
The area is worse than ever, says Eby, who knows whereof he speaks. As a young, activist lawyer, Eby got his start representing the residents of the DTES, writes Vaughn Palmer in a November 11th article in the Vancouver Sun.
Instead of joining the legions of buck-passers, Premier Eby proposes that his government take ownership of the troubled area.
“The key piece that’s been missing has been a single level of government to bottom line what’s happening in the neighbourhood,” Eby declared early in his bid for the NDP leadership.
“The crisis in the Downtown Eastside is well beyond what the city of Vancouver can take on, on their own. Ottawa is too far away.”
“The opportunity here is for the province to take a leadership role and say we will take responsibility. We will co-ordinate this. We’ll work with the city. We’ll work with the feds. We’ll work with the large Indigenous population down there.”
Measures will include replacing the single-room occupancy hotels “that are burning down, that people won’t live in, and replacing them with appropriate housing,” says Eby.
He’ll also replace the sidewalk-clogging tent cities that are the area’s most obvious sign of deterioration.
“I don’t support encampments,” Eby told Richard Zussman of Global TV. “I don’t think they’re a solution to homelessness. I don’t think they’re safe for the people who live in them. I’ve seen too many fires, too many injuries. People have died.”
Another element of Premier Eby’s thinking about the crisis on the streets emerged back in August when he came out in favour of involuntary treatment for people who overdose repeatedly.
“When someone overdoses twice in a day and they show up in the emergency room for the second time, a second overdose in the same day, the idea that we release that person back out into the street to overdose the third time and die or to have profound brain injury or just to come back to the emergency room again, seems very bizarre,” Eby told Postmedia’s Katie DeRosa.
“We need to have better interventions and that could include and should include involuntary care for people to make sure they at least have a chance,” he said.
Make no mistake, Premier David Eby means to make a difference, as PostMedia’s Katie DeRosa wrote just two days ago, David Eby, as an …
“Idealist and pragmatist. Activist and member of the establishment. Workaholic and yoga dad. Fixer of the root causes of crime, housing unaffordability and a crumbling health care system, intractable issues he’s under pressure to make progress on before he faces B.C. Liberal leader Kevin Falcon in the 2024 election.
Those around him say the 46-year-old father of two is driven, laser-focused and relentless and will likely expect the same from members of his soon-to-be-named Cabinet, the swearing-in of Premier Eby’s new and revitalized Cabinet set for December 7th. He’s also not afraid to defy those he believes are standing in the way of progress, which is why he has promised to override local mayors reluctant to approve affordable housing projects.
“His approach is calm, methodical, considerate, and broad-thinking,” says Joy MacPhail, the former NDP Cabinet Minister and interim party leader, and ICBC Board Chair when the reforms were underway in 2018, who remains a mentor to Eby.”
Premier-delegate David Eby and his transition team. Left to right: Chief of Staff Matt Smith; co-chair of the transition team, Doug White, chair of B.C.’s First Nations Justice Council & former chief of the Snuneymuxw First Nation; Premier David Eby; and former BC NDP leader and Finance Minister, Carole James, a co-chair of the transition team. Photo by Darren Stone /Victoria Times Colonist
David Eby was sworn in as Premier at the Musqueam Community Centre, the location a powerful symbol of reconciliation with Indigenous Peoples, Eby told PostMedia’s Katie DeRosa.
Mr. Eby took the oath of office at 10 a.m. this morning in front of Lt.-Gov. Janet Austin at the community centre on the Musqueam First Nation.
“I am excited to be taking this important step close to home where my family and the people who have always supported me live,” Eby said Tuesday in a statement.
Mr. Eby said he’s grateful to Chief Wayne Sparrow, the Musqueam councillors and the Musqueam people for hosting the ceremony in their community.
“Because of their efforts, this event will be a powerful symbol of a shared vision for a province that delivers results for all British Columbians, in close partnership with Indigenous Peoples,” he said.
The community centre at 6735 Salish Dr. in Vancouver is in the Vancouver-Quilchena riding, which is represented by B.C. Liberal Leader Kevin Falcon. David Eby, 46, is the MLA for the neighbouring riding, Vancouver-Point Grey.
Moving the swearing-in ceremony to Vancouver is also an indication Premier Eby will likely conduct more government business from Vancouver, to be closer to his family. Mr. Eby’s wife, Dr. Cailey Lynch, is a family physician, and the happily married couple have two children, 8-year-old Ezra and 3-year-old Iva.
Today is the first day of the rest of the lives of overwhelmingly popular Mayor-elect Ken Sim, his new Councillor-elects, ABC (A Better City) Vancouver’s Brian Montague, Mike Klassen, Peter Meiszner, and Lenny Zhou, and former and oh-so-triumphant and returning Vancouver City Councillors, ABC’slovingly re-elected City Councillors, Sarah Kirby-Yung — who topped the polls, yay, Sarah! — the ever-so-outstanding Lisa Dominato and Rebecca Bligh, the wonderfully humane Green Party of Vancouver’s Adriane Carr and Pete Fry, and OneCity Vancouver’s ‘hope of the left’ Christine Boyle, all eleven of whom will be sworn into office at 1:15pm on this, what is supposed to be, sunny Monday afternoon, where there will be glad tidings within the luxuriously comfortable and City-owned Orpheum Theatre.
Monday afternoon’s festivities are an ‘invite only’ affair. Although OneCity Vancouver Councillor Christine Boyle posted two charitable invitations to us, we opted to accept Councillor-elect Mike Klassen’s kind invitation — we have been friends for, I believe, 29 years this year, was present at his wedding, and for the birth of his daughter, helped Michael (we call him Michael) collect his election signs the day after the 2011 Vancouver municipal election when he came so achingly close to being elected to Vancouver City Council that year … so, it seems fitting that VanRamblings would be present — along with his wife Stacey, and Michael’s entire family — for this most august of occasions in Mike Klassen’s life.
The link to the live stream of the City of Vancouver Councillor Inauguration Ceremony will be available at …
Vancouver citizens are invited to the Vancouver Park Board’s Inaugural Ceremony, where the seven newly-elected Park Board Commissioners will take the oath of office. This event — unlike regular Park Board meetings — will not be live streamed, so if you want to see Vancouver’s Park Board Commissioners be sworn into office, you’ll have to attend at …
Date: Monday, November 7, 2022 Time: 7 p.m. Location: VanDusen Botanical Garden
5251 Oak Street
Vancouver, BC V6M 4H1
There’s a 30-70 chance that VanRamblings will attend the Park Board Inaugural, because we love the Van Dusen Botanical Gardens, we love Vancouver’s Board of Parks and Recreation, it’s probable that there’ll be a surfeit of past Park Board Commissioners on hand (and, you guessed it, we love our past Park Board Commissioners) — and we expect the event will be drama free … although in these times of disapprobation, you never know what protesters might have in mind to disrupt this otherwise celebratory event, in this most inviting of settings.
Against our better judgement, VanRamblings will attend tonight’s Vancouver Board of Education Inaugural, which will be held in the School Board’s regular meeting Board Room. Mostly, we’ll be attending this (could be, sadly, contentious) Inaugural to support our friend, re-elected trustee Christopher Richardson — let us say it again, the finest man we know — a former Vancouver School Board Chairperson, and someone we think will well serve the interests of children enrolled in the Vancouver school district — particularly those children with learning difficulties — with honour, unswerving dedication and unparalleled distinction.
Of course, VanRamblings will be delighted to see past Vancouver Board of Education Chairperson, Dr. Janet Fraser — who, as we’ve written previously, as Chairperson always conducts a clinic on how to run a meeting fairly and judiciously — and her Green Party of Vancouver trustee colleague, Lois Chan-Pedley, as well as OneCity Vancouver’s Jennifer Reddy, and her new best friend, COPE’s Suzie Mah, the latter of whom we’re looking forward to seeing being sworn in, and sharing some cake and a (non-alcoholic) beverage with afterwards, in the cafeteria.
Of course, VanRamblings will invite Christopher over to share the celebration with us — after all, Ms. Mah and Mr. Richardson will be professional colleagues for the next four years, and getting together around food often proves propitious, indeed.
Date: Monday, November 7, 2022 Time: 7 p.m. Location: Vancouver School Board offices
1580 West Broadway
Vancouver, BC V6J 5K8
It would seem that VanRamblings has returned to publishing. We have a great deal to say, to write and record in the coming days and weeks. See you back here soon!
Vancouver voters ovewhelmingly elected a new, centrist, common sense municipal government, at Vancouver City Hall, Park Board and School on Saturday night, electing ABC Vancouver’s Mayor-elect Ken Sim with highest vote total in the city’s history, with 85,732 Vancouver citizens having cast a vote for Mayor-elect Sim.
All seven ABC Vancouver Council candidates — including Sarah Kirby-Yung, who topped the polls, along with her Council colleagues Lisa Dominato and Rebecca Bligh, elected to a 2nd term on Vancouver City Council — now includes, ABC Vancouver Councillor-elects Brian Montague, Mike Klassen, Peter Meiszner and Lenny Zhou, all of whom will be sworn into office on Monday, November 7th.
Joining the ABC Vancouver majority on Council, three returning City Councillors, who barely squeaked into office: the Green Party’s Adriane Carr, elected with a paltry 41,831 votes, a full 20,562 votes behind Councillor-elect Zhou. For the first time in Vancouver municipal electoral history a Councillor was elected to civic government with less than 40,000 votes: that would be OneCity Vancouver’s Christine Boyle, garnering only 38,465 votes — 6,990 fewer votes than were cast for her in 2018. Councillor Pete Fry — along with Sarah Kirby-Yung, the best communicator on Council, was elected to a 2nd term on Council, dropping from a second place finish in 2018, having garnered 61,806 votes first time out, dropping almost out of sight in 2022 with a miserly 37,270 votes — for a jaw-dropping loss of 24,536 votes.
VanRamblings will take pains to remind our readers that in our State of the Race column published on Wednesday, October 12th, we predicted — or at least held out the possibility of — a sweep of Council by candidates running for office at City Hall with ABC Vancouver, missing out only on naming Councillor-elect Lenny Zhou.
ABC Vancouver sweeps the election, running on their common sense platform, with prominent Vancouverites Chip Wilson and the Rocky Mountaineer’s Peter Armstrong supporting the party’s bid to assume city government — with a panoply of financial backers contributing enough money, so that ABC could spend hundreds of thousands of dollars on television, radio, social media and ethnic press advertising to ensure a Ken Sim victory on Saturday night — are running ABC Vancouver Council candidates, incumbents Sarah Kirby-Yung — who we predict will top the polls — Rebecca Bligh and Lisa Dominato, who’ll be joined by “newcomers” Mike Klassen — a rock solid lock to be elected to Council — and fellow ABC Vancouver Council candidates, Peter Meiszner, Brian Montague and Lenny Zhou. The icing on the cake for ABC: when Peter Armstrong left the Non-Partisan Association, he had the NPA voter and membership lists in his possession. In addition, we understand that — as is the case with Mayor Kennedy Stewart and his Forward Together team, who the BC NDP are pulling out all the stops to re-elect Mr. Stewart — Kevin Falcon’s B.C. Liberal party is only too happy to turn over the party’s provincial membership and voters list to the ABC Vancouver campaign — which lists don’t count for much on Vancouver’s east side, but make a world of difference on getting out the vote on Vancouver’s west side.
VanRamblings will address the lack of generosity in 2nd term Vancouver City Councillor Christine Boyle’s tweet, published the day after the election. Believe us when we write that it wasn’t all that long ago that VanRamblings was quite as partisan as the good Ms. Christine Boyle: left, good; right, evil. Not a great construct we’ve come to believe, counter-productive, and dehumanizing, if truth be told.
Better not to demonize those who hold centrist views — in civic government that means: keeping tax increases low, prioritizing core spending initiatives, laser focusing on creating a safe, clean city, while ensuring the provision of services for citizens that includes timely snow removal, regular garbage pickup, maintenance of the transportation system that includes the filling of potholes, maintaining Vancouver’s water distribution and sewage systems, and processing applications at City Hall in a timely manner, all to serve the interests of Vancouver citizens.
Truth to tell, there’s not a right-winger among the elected ABC Vancouver Councillor-elects. Sarah Kirby-Yung is, by far, the most progressive Councillor at Vancouver City Hall, closely followed by Lisa Dominato, the author of British Columbia’s SOGI 123 programme — that helps educators make schools inclusive and safe for students of all sexual orientations and gender identities (SOGI) — and Rebecca Bligh, long a leading light and fighter within the LGBTQ2+ community.
As we wrote last week, Councillor-elect Mike Klassen is …
“Fair-minded, possessed of an umatched personal and professional integrity, and as a former première civic affairs columnist with the Vancouver Courier newspaper — his writing possessed of an integrity, a heart and a humanity that spoke both to his professionalism as a journalist, and to how Mike has always brought himself to the world.
In his work as a vice-president with the B.C. Home Care Providers Association, Mike Klassen gained a rapport with members of the New Democratic Party caucus that is second-to-none, each member of that caucus having come to respect Mike as someone who gets things done, someone with whom it is easy to work towards change for the better, someone who does his homework, and someone who is non-partisan in the interests of better serving the needs of British Columbians.”
Now, we’ll give you that VanRamblings, at this point in time, doesn’t know a great deal about Peter Meiszner — as it happens, though, Peter played an invaluable role in VanRamblings’ coverage of #VanElxn2022, offering needed advice and succour to us, as a writer and journalist, interacting with us always with heart, humanity and respect — Brian Montague and Lenny Zhou. Give us time, though.
And, no, ABC Vancouver Councillor-elects will not be bulldozing the tent encampments along East Hastings, but have committed to working with the provincial and federal governments that would see those currently housed in tents along East Hastings housed in comfy one-bedroom apartments, and the tents removed.
On election night, Mayor-elect Ken Sim told the Daily Hive’s Kenneth Chan that ABC Vancouver fully intends to implement their 94-point platform plan over their first 100 days in office, tackling crime and public safety issues, as the new majority Council commits to hiring 100 police officers and 100 mental health nurses, expanding the existing Car 87/88 programme of pairing a police officer and mental health nurse in an unmarked vehicle for non-emergency mental health calls.
ABC Vancouver will also target help for Chinatown’s ailing business sector, while supporting the neighbourhood’s cultural organizations, and its residents.
Despite facing increasingly frequent instances of violent attacks, property damage, theft, public disorder issues, and other incidents that are anti-Asian in nature, the Chinatown community’s pleas for effective help went unheeded by the Kennedy Stewart administration, which largely ignored the problem.
Says ABC Vancouver Mayor-elect Ken Sim in his interview with The Daily Hive …
“We will take a very pragmatic approach to all the challenges and opportunities that are presented to us, and adopt a science-based approach, while meeting and consulting with healthcare providers and professionals, teachers, parents — just about anyone can contribute to a solution to the problems Vancouverites have faced in recent years. Quite simply, we’ll make better decisions, decisions that serve the interests of the community.”
Having read the above, do you have the impression ABC Vancouver is right wing?
VanRamblings believes that referring to the ABC Vancouver Councillor-elect team as “right wing” is not only dismissive and dehumanizing, it’s just plain, dead wrong.
Cyclists ride on a separated bike lane in Stanley Park
What VanRamblings could not possibly have predicted was that ABC Vancouver would sweep both Vancouver School Board, and Vancouver Park Board.
Vancouver’s incoming ABC Vancouver Park Board Commissioner-elect majority are laying out priorities for their next four years in office.
“At the end of the fall we’re going to remove the temporary bike lane and restore full car access to the park. But then we’re going to spend the winter to come up with an engineered solution to maintain access to both bikes and cars,” Commissioner-Elect Laura Christensen told Global News.”
Park Board Commissioner-Elect Scott Jensen told CKNW’s Jill Bennett that the lane removal will coincide with the arrival of winter weather, expected to result in fewer cyclists. The plan would involve re-opening vehicle access to Beach Avenue. and a return to a “pre-pandemic Stanley Park configuration” over the winter.
Going forward, Jensen said the Board will look at “areas where we can provide a protected permanent bike lane so that cyclists who choose to use the interior bike route will be able to have areas where they will have that protection.”
“We talked a lot to cyclists, and the ongoing message we heard was that cycling up the hill from the bottom portion of the the roadway up to Prospect Point was an area of concern where they felt that was necessary to have a divided protected lane,” he said.
Jensen told CKNW that whatever solution the Board delivers will prioritize access to parking lots and the needs of businesses in the park.
The new Park Board will also move to make the city’s pilot project allowing alcohol in some parks permanent, and launch a new pilot looking at the city’s beaches.
As to the most contentious issue facing the Park Board Commissioner-elects, Christensen said the new majority would take a measured approach.
“The B.C. Supreme Court has been very clear that people have the right to camp in parks when there is no housing available, and we have no plans to evict them at this time,” she said. “However, in the meantime we’d like to increase maintenance and safety in the park, increasing cleanup, garbage pickup, things like that. “And we’ll be working with our ABC majority on council to provide housing options in the future, so that’s housing options with wraparound services and support.”
Vancouver’s new park commissioners will be officially sworn in on Nov. 7.
In a discussion with ABC Vancouver Board of Education trustee-elect, and a former Chairperson at Vancouver School Board, Christopher Richardson, last evening, VanRamblings was told that ABC Vancouver’s school trustee-elects have not, as yet, met to discuss implementation of the Board’s “new priorities”, but as Mayor-elect Ken Sim told the media yesterday, one School Board priority under an ABC Vancouver administration will include the return of the police liaison programme.
The successful police liaison programme — which ran for some ran for 50 years in Vancouver secondary schools — was cut last year by the current and outgoing Board. Mayor-elect Sim was passionate in his defense of the Vancouver School district’s police liaison programme which, as he told the press, kept students like him out of the clutches of the gangs who all but ran secondary schools across the Vancouver school district when he was growing up.
Another ABC Vancouver priority for implementation by the new Board, Mr. Richardson believes: re-instatement of the Honours programmes in Vancouver schools, cut by the current and outgoing Board last year in an attempt to provide lowest-common-denominator “equity” for students enrolled in Vancouver secondary schools. In cutting the Honours programmes in Vancouver secondary schools, the Board may have been well-intentioned in the taking of the decision to cut the Honours programme but were, VanRamblings believes, wrongheaded to deny secondary school students enrolled in the Vancouver school district access to such educational opportunities as the International Baccalaureate (IB) programme, that seeks to “provide an internationally acceptable university admissions qualification suitable for the growing mobile population of young people whose parents were part of the world of diplomacy, international and multinational organizations” by offering standardized courses and assessments for students aged 16 to 19. The IB programme is but one of the invaluable Honours programmes (such as the Honours Math programme at Templeton Secondary School) that were cut by the current and outgoing Vancouver Board of Education last year.