Tag Archives: tesicca truong

#VanElxn2022 | Three Outstanding Women Candidates for Office


Stephanie Smith, 2022 Green Party of Vancouver candidate for Vancouver City Council

At the outset of the campaign, when taking in the Chinatown Festival on Keefer Street, VanRamblings was introduced by Green Party of Vancouver incumbent City Councillor,  the gregarious Pete Fry, who all but took us by the hand to meet Stephanie Smith, who Pete told us is running in her first election for a Council position at Vancouver City Hall. After an in-depth and utterly humane discussion of the core issues in the 2022 Vancouver municipal election, this President of the Lore Krill Housing Co-operative in Gastown, catapulted herself into the position of VanRamblings’ favourite candidate in the 2022 civic election campaign for office.

A labour and social justice activist living in the Downtown Eastside of Vancouver, since the late 1990s, Stephanie Smith has worked in the non-profit sector as a front line legal advocate across the city and most recently in the Downtown Eastside at First United, providing legal advice to those who’ve come to her expressing a concern about the conditions of their lives.

“What that’s meant is that representing tenants on the DTES, we’ve worked to save one tenancy at a time, one eviction hearing at a time. In labour terms, ‘One job, one grievance.’ One person’s income, one person’s disability benefits appeal at a time. Over the years, my colleagues and I have won countless battles, but sometimes it feels to us like we’re losing the war.”

For Stephanie Smith, entering this campaign as a Green Party candidate for Council, she has come to feel a new sense of possibility, of optimism in places that she hasn’t felt it for a long time.

“This is a terrible moment in a lot of ways. The forces aligned against people seem so overwhelming, and there’s so much suffering. So many people in Vancouver feel like they’re on the bubble, they’re one eviction notice, one demoviction, one renoviction away from never being able to come back to the city.

If they’re artists, their studio space has been purchased and converted, and they can’t produce their work here.

That profound insecurity is destructive to people, destructive to community, and destructive to our city.

I feel like, working together, we can change that dark scenario. There are things we can do together, if we are bold, if we are thoughtful, and if we are collaborative, that will bring security and a sense of belonging, a sense that we’re going to be able to remain here and not be pushed out of the city we love by a cabal of developers, and the politicians they have in their pocket.”

Stephanie Smith believes with all her heart, and will dedicate every waking moment as a Vancouver City Councillor to working towards creating housing in our city that is genuinely affordable housing for wage earners, for the working poor, for seniors and single parents, for all those who are in need, priced at half of the market rate, where no tenant or co-operative housing member would pay more than 30% of their income to be housed, and real tenant protections would be assured.

“Despite everything, I believe we are all here together in a moment of profound optimism & a sense of the possibilities in front of us.”

Imagine having a well-experienced, grassroots community activist and people’s advocate, like Green Party of Vancouver’s Stephanie Smith, as a City of Vancouver Councillor, sitting in Chambers at City Hall. You can make that happen, you must make that happen, by marking your ballot for Candidate #141, for the people’s advocate, Stephanie Smith — to help transform Vancouver into a City for All.


Arezo Zarrabian, NPA candidate for Vancouver City Council, in which Ms. Zarrabian blows the roof off the rafters at the Vancouver Police Department’s all-candidates forum! Watch. Listen. Cheer!

NPA Vancouver candidate Arezo Zarrabian, running for a seat on Vancouver City Council is, by far, the loveliest, the strongest, the best informed, the most articulate and the candidate with the most commanding presence that we’ve come across and become acquainted with during the 2022 Vancouver civic election season.

Does the fact Ms. Zarrabian just so happens to be a lovely human being detract from the fact she is exceptionally strong-minded and a phenomenally committed and principled community activist, that Arezo Zarrabian is one of the most accomplished candidates in the 2022 civic election, that she is a woman who loves her husband and child with all her heart — and her very fortunate friends, too — or that Ms. Zarrabian is a person who enjoys her Arbutus Walk neighbourhood?

Hell, no!

Just watch and listen to the video at the top of this second portion of today’s VanRamblings column, where we introduce you to Vancouver’s première crime data analyst, a decorated 13-year veteran of the Vancouver Police Department, where in the video she blows the roof off the rafters because she, and she alone, knows what’s going on in our city, was the first to identify that there are four random, unprovoked attacks occurring in our city, across every one of Vancouver’s 23 neighbourhoods, on unsuspecting, innocent victims, each and every day.

As if the video above, featuring Arezo Zarrabian as she goes up against Mayor Kennedy Stewart and ABC Vancouver Mayoral candidate Ken Sim — where she calls them out for their hapless foolishness and divisiveness —  is not impressive enough — and we’re here to tell you that it’s damned impressive — when Arezo Zarrabian, a first generation Iranian-Canadian born citizen, spoke at last Wednesday evening’s University Women’s Club of Vancouver all-women candidates Women Transforming Cities forum, as she began her address to the audience, she broke down as she spoke about Mahsa Amini, whose death in police custody in the jails of Iran, has triggered nationwide and worldwide protests, recovering to give the strongest, most well-received candidate speech of the evening.

Impressive and moving.

TEAM … for a Livable Vancouver Mayoral candidate Colleen Hardwick approached Ms. Zarrabian as the event drew to a close, so impressed was she with Ms. Zarrabian’s impassioned and reasoned expression of her opposition to both the Broadway Plan and The Vancouver Plan, how implementation of both developer-initiated plans would prove detrimental to the interests of Vancouver’s citizens.

If you haven’t already voted at an advance poll, or are holding off to vote on Election Day, Saturday, October 15th, we strongly encourage you to save a vote for Arezo Zarrabian, number 150 on your ballot. Quite simply, we need more persons of character and integrity, informed decision-makers like Arezo Zarrabian involved in the life of our city. Believe us when we write: Arezo Zarrabian is a difference maker, from whom you will be hearing much in the months and years to come.


Meet Tessica Truong, the outstanding Forward Together candidate for Vancouver City Council!

Meet Tesicca Truong, the single most eloquent — and we’re here to tell you, heartbreakingly so — candidate for civic office in the 2022 Vancouver municipal election, a must-elect candidate to Vancouver City Council, a transformative candidate who — although Ms. Truong will be Premier of British Columbia one day (we just hope we’re  around to experience that glorious, certain-to-occur day) — at present is seeking your necessary support to elect her to a seat around the Council chambers table, for the next four years, as your advocate at Vancouver City Hall.

An Environmental Science Honours graduate student, at present, Ms. Truong works in the field of community engagement, her passions meeting at the intersection of youth empowerment, citizen engagement and resilience building.

A co-founder of City Hive, a non-profit on a mission to transform the way young people shape their cities and the civic processes that engage them, Ms. Truong also co-created the inaugural Vancouver School Board Sustainability Conference, currently in its tenth year and kick-started the Vancouver Youth4Tap Coalition, a city-wide campaign which led to the installation of new water fountains in every public high school in Vancouver. As she makes clear in the video above, Ms. Truong has also worked closely with British Columbia’s Minister of the Environment, George Heyman, working not just municipally and provincially, but also federally.

Says Tesicca Truong about her current candidacy to become a City Councillor …

“What I know is that political decisions are made by those who show up, and I want to show up for Vancouverites.”

Tessica Truong currently works as the Manager of Engagement and Social Enterprise at Simon Fraser University’s Morris J. Wosk Centre for Dialogue.

In the latest internal party polling shared with us by the various campaigns, Arezo Zarrabian has come out of the blue, and currently sits in the fifth spot, a seeming lock to be elected to Vancouver City Council come the evening of Saturday, October 15th. Meanwhile, Tesicca Truong currently sits at 8th, while pollsters have registered Ms. Truong’s fellow Forward Together Council colleague, Dulcy Anderson at 9th. There are 10 open seats on Vancouver City Council.

Here are a few more internal party polling results …

The Greens’ Adriane Carr, ABC Vancouver’s Sarah Kirby-Yung, and COPE’s Jean Swanson — incumbents all — are the only true locks for Council, hunkered down as they are in the top 3 slots. ABC’s Mike Klassen is in at #4, the NPA’s Arezo Zarrabian has a lock on 5, while TEAM’s Bill Tieleman sits in the 6th spot. Currently sitting at 7th, outstanding TEAM candidate for Council, Sean Nardi. Eight and ninth spots you know. The 10th spot?

At the moment, there’s a wide gap between the 9th and 10th spots. Vying for the final seat on Council: incumbent Greens’ Pete Fry and MIchael Wiebe, ABC Vancouver incumbents Rebecca Bligh and Lisa Dominato, and the NPA’s Ken Charko and Melissa De Genova. Still and all, 10 days out, the election is far from over.

Most pundits, and most campaign staff VanRamblings has spoken with believe the election will be decided in its final three days. Anything could happen, we are told.

Here’s a story we shared with Tesicca Truong and Arezo Zarrabian …

One fine sunny day in late September 2015 during that autumn’s federal election, VanRamblings made a point of visiting each of the campaign offices in Vancouver Centre, where our friend Constance Barnes was the NDP candidate running against incumbent Liberal Hedy Fry; Constance’s office was on Granville Street. We also visited the Green Party office on Denman Street.

Meh, to both.

We then visited Hedy Fry’s campaign office where, much to our surprise and astonishment, we were welcomed with open arms (and this was on a day when we’d published a rousing endorsement of the federal NDP … that went viral, with 100,000 hits by noon our time) … anyway, there we were in the Liberal Party’s Vancouver Centre campaign office, when we were waved over by Hedy’s campaign manager — to save our life, we can’t remember his name — when we sat down for a great 15-minute discussion. And, let us tell you … he was busy … but somehow, he still found time to engage in a conversation with us.

Here’s the piece of wisdom he imparted, which will be good advice for all candidates to follow in the final 10 days of the campaign — particularly those candidates we mention above as being in, or close to, one of the top 10 spots. When we suggested to Ms. Fry’s campaign manager that we’d seen the polls, and that Ms. Fry was running far ahead of her rivals ….

“Raymond, in every campaign I’ve ever managed, and that includes this campaign, no matter how far ahead the polls show us to be, I always, always, always instruct my staff to work like we’re 10 points behind. I work like the dickens, no matter what the polls say, as if my candidate is running 10 points behind. My campaign team and I work through until late election night, at which time we can begin to think about resting, but not til then.”

VanRamblings’ advice to all candidates running for office in the 2022 Vancouver civic election: enjoy yourself, work hard on the campaign trail but find some time for family & friends, try not to take the whole thing too seriously — VanRamblings is constantly surprised at how zealous supporters of various candidates are in responding to the maelstrom that is this election, than is the case with the candidates themselves, who are almost universally far more sanguine about the potential outcome of the election than is the case with their supporters — and cherish the opportunity with which you have been provided to offer yourself for that most important of endeavours: service and fealty to the people of the city you love.

VanElxn2022 | The Latest Behind-the-Scenes Campaign Scumbuggery


Edward Charles Kennedy Stewart. Vancouver’s next Mayor. The same Mayor as there always was.

See that photo of the guy above? That’s Kennedy Stewart, feckless Mayor of Vancouver since 2018. Why’s he smiling if he’s so feckless, you ask? Because, dear and constant reader, Kennedy Stewart is about to get re-elected to a second term as Vancouver’s once-and-forever Mayor. “How can that be?” you ask. Read on …

The provincial NDP, despite all, have decided that Kennedy Stewart is their guy.

A week or so ago, a letter went out to constituency associations telling NDP members that it’s Kennedy Stewart, or no one.

“We know that you’re not a big fan of Mayor Kennedy Stewart. We’ve not been, either. But here’s the thing: unless you cast your ballot for Kennedy, we’ll all be looking at a Council where the Mayor will be a right-of-centre, B.C. Liberal supporting opponent to everything the NDP stand for — equity, human rights, building a diverse British Columbia that is dedicated to inclusion, while building a diverse economy dedicated to job growth, and fulfilling our commitment to build 117,000 units of affordable housing.

None of that will come to pass if you elect right-wingers like …

Mark Marissen — His campaign’s senior advisor, that’d be his ex-wife, former B.C. Liberal Premier, Christy Clark. Mark is deep in the pocket of developers, dedicated to his own self-interest, and not yours. Electing Marissen as Vancouver’s next Mayor would be like Christy Clark redux. We don’t want that. You don’t want that;

Ken Sim, who is that much deeper in the pocket of developers than any of the other candidates seeking to become Vancouver’s next Mayor, who’s a front man for Lululemon multi-billionaire Chip Wilson, and some guy named Peter Armstrong, who locked his Rocky Mountaineer workers out for a year. Not only would Ken Sim turn Vancouver into a city for the ultra-rich, in the process, he’d fire union workers while attempting to destroy the union movement;

Fred Harding, who doesn’t even live in Vancouver. He calls China home. He’d be a commuter Mayor from halfway across the globe were he to become Vancouver’s next Mayor. Let’s face it, Harding is just visiting Vancouver during the current Vancouver civic election, stoking fear in the same manner as a PIerre Poilievre or Donald Trump — we think that’s despicable, something you don’t want;

And last, but certainly not least, Colleen Hardwick, who would turn Vancouver back 50 years and seek to create a paradise for the rich, while attempting to build a Vancouver that never was …

All four of these right-wing Vancouver Mayoral aspirants would do their level best to undo all that our government has achieved during the course of these past five years in government. Your only choice for Mayor in 2022: Mayor Kennedy Stewart.”

Other news of note concerning the Mayor’s Forward Together campaign for office. The provincial NDP has put the full weight of the party behind the candidacy of Tesicca Truong who, in the 2020 provincial election, came within a hair’s breadth of defeating B.C. Liberal incumbent, Michael Lee.

The BC New Democratic Party feels that Tesicca Truong represents the future of the BC NDP, and has set about to ensure a win for Ms. Truong — an immigrant, a refugee and a climate change activist — at the polls on Saturday, October 15th.

Of course, in promoting Ms. Truong’s candidacy, along with that of the Mayor, BC NDP stalwarts Alvin Singh and Dulcy Anderson are being left out in the cold.

Politics, as you may have gathered, is a dirty business, where no one really wins.

Soon-to-be defeated in her re-election bid, wrongheaded, unprincipled City Councillor, Christine Boyle.

In the meantime, in-between time, ain’t we got fun!

Not so much for Councillor Christine Boyle, who’s lost the support of the BC NDP.


Atiya Jaffar (left) and Anjali Appadurai. Jaffar volunteered to pay membership fees for prospective BC NDP leadership election voters while on an Instagram live event hosted by NDP leadership candidate Appadurai. The NDP leadership candidate and supporter Jaffar are under internal investigation for alleged vote buying. Ms. Jaffar is also active in the OneCity Vancouver civic party. | Photo: Instagram

Although Ms. Boyle has, for some while, been the fair-haired golden child of incoming B.C. Premier David Eby, seems that the NDP party brass are far from thrilled with OneCity Vancouver Councillor and candidate for re-election Christine Boyle’s association with Atiya Jaffar, the woman behind Premier-aspirant Anjali Appuradai’s campaign to unseat Mr. Eby and lead the BC New Democratic Party to oblivion, this same U.S.-based activist a major fundraiser for The Cult of Christine Boyleer … we mean, OneCity Vancouver Councillor Christine Boyle.

Neither are British Columbia New Democratic Party brass particularly thrilled that Ms. Boyle has not disavowed her association with “volunteers” on her campaign for re-election, those volunteers allegedly planning a campaign of terror …

“Maybe we give (Rohana Rezel) a taste of his own medicine and openly wonder why he’s associating on Twitter with possible pedophiles?” asks Tim Ell, who’s been door knocking with OneCity’s incumbent Vancouver City Councillor Christine Boyle during the campaign.

In a ThinkPol article published on Tuesday, Mr. Rezel wrote that he had obtained chat logs that show OneCity Vancouver volunteers plotting to destroy their opponents by fabricating damaging rumours — including rumours about pedophilia. Their targets involve affordable housing advocates, academics, journalists, and lawyers. Mr. Rezel writes that, “What they intend to do to us is jaw dropping.”

Yet Christine Boyle refuses to disavow her association with, as VanRamblings reported on September 13th, “volunteers” on her campaign for re-election, rife with alt-right white supremacists with a “history of racism, misogyny and violence.”

Christine Boyle’s new status? Persona non grata with the B.C. New Democrats.

The man you see above is Christopher Richardson, the best man we know.

A former Vancouver School Board Chairperson, Mr. Richardson was seeking re-election to Vancouver’s Board of Education, under the ABC (A Better City?) banner, until he got unceremoniously dumped as a candidate for Vancouver School Board.

The above the line story, as reported in a September 26th CBC story is …

“Late Friday afternoon ABC Vancouver was made aware that a charitable organization that Christopher Richardson was a board member of had its charitable status revoked by the Canada Revenue Agency on Sept. 10,” the statement by Kareen Allam read.

“On Saturday, ABC conducted several queries. At the conclusion, ABC sent an email at 8 p.m. Saturday evening to the chief election officer that ABC’s endorsement of Christopher Richardson be removed, knowing that the deadline to do so may have passed.”

The statement did not reveal the name of the charity or why its status had been revoked. However, on Sunday evening ABC spokesperson Kareen Allam said that Richardson was let go after ABC was contacted by local writer Vivian Krause advising them that a charity Richardson was affiliated with had its charitable status revoked.

A human note should be made at this juncture: Two minutes before Christopher Richardson received the call from ABC Vancouver campaign manager Kareen Allam advising him he was being “let go” from the campaign and his candidacy for School Board revoked, Mr. Richardson had taken a call from the care home where his mother-in-law was resident, advising him that his wife’s mother had passed.

With Ms. Richardson in tears and inconsolable, Mr. Richardson reluctantly took Mr. Allam’s call, which call when it ended was followed by hours of reporters camped outside his door, while he attempted to console his beloved and bereft wife, at the same time somehow finding the strength to participate in a number of incredibly difficult — and dare we say, unfeeling — interviews with the press, where he was put on the defensive, during which interviews he felt doggedly under attack.

The behind-the-scenes story is this: Christopher Richardson, who is a Chartered Professional Accountant, Charitable Gift Planning Consultant & Philanthropy Advisor, has worked since 2005 with Blake Bromley, a Vancouver-based lawyer, considered to be

As you might well expect, Mr. Bromley does not work exclusively with Mr. Richardson. From time to time, Mr. Bromley has taken on work for Joel Solomon, a philanthropist, real estate magnate and founder of Vision Vancouver — the civic party which held power in Vancouver between 2008 and 2018 — and who is also a co-founder of Hollyhock on Cortes Island, about which Shannon Rupp, a reporter for The Georgia Straight, has written

“I assume this artificial feeling of love and acceptance is what people are paying for, but I have to admit I find these get-togethers oppressive. Perhaps the most annoying aspect of Hollyhock is its culture of conformity – Goddess forbid anyone should question anything. After five days here, I’ve found Hollyhock is really two places: the site itself is delightful, but the half-baked spiritual and psychological concepts it peddles make me uneasy.”

Vivian Krause, conspiracy theorist, given to arch-villain, under-researched, unsupported narratives.

For years, Vivian Krause, a controversial researcher and writer critical of Canada’s environmental charities and, we think it is fair to say, a rabid critic of Joel Solomon, who Ms. Krause has spent a good portion of her life “exposing” as a charlatan, a fraud and a ne’er-do-well, and for whom she has long had a hate on. Anyone even remotely associated with Mr. Solomon is persona non grata in her book, a despicable evil creature deserving of the worst she might visit upon him.

And so she does.

Ms. Krause’s undeserving and unwitting “target” in the 2022 Vancouver civic election: Christopher Richardson, because of his loose affiliation with Joel Solomon, through his work with Vancouver charitable foundations lawyer Blake Bromley. For the past decade and more, Vivian Krause has dragged out every and any untoward, unsupported and unsubstantiated allegation of wrong-doing concerning Mr. Richardson, in some ways making his life on Earth, at times, a living hell.

For weeks in the current election campaign, Ms. Krause has attempted to peddle her scurrilous allegations about Mr. Richardson — who in the cutthroat world of civic politics is a beloved figure — to every campaign in the 2022 election, which entreaties by Ms. Krause by each and every one of the Vancouver civic parties — much to their credit — save one, was rejected. Seems that Ms. Krause has a relationship of longstanding with one of the ABC candidates for election, and it is this candidate who stuck the knife in Mr. Richardson’s School Board candidacy.

Some weeks ago Blake Bromley and Mr. Richardson submitted a renewal of the application for charitable foundation status for one of the foundations Mr. Bromley and Mr. Richardson represent, the every five year re-application in accordance with Canada Revenue Agency guidelines, as required under law. Apparently, the documentation submitted by Mr. Bromley and Mr. Richardson was incomplete — one or more boxes was left unchecked — leading the CRA to reject the application, and revoke the charitable status of the foundation re-applying for certification.

Upon being advised of the revocation, Mr. Bromley immediately launched an appeal, which appeal is under review, the corrected and fully completed application now in the hands of the Canada Revenue Agency. Mr. Richardson advises VanRamblings that he believes the re-application will be successful, after which he has been assured by Mr. Allam, once all outstanding matters have been resolved, he may once again resume his ABC candidacy for Vancouver School Board.

Oh, there’s more, so much more. But not today. We’re already over length.

Chances are that as you are reading this, VanRamblings is attending the much-looked-forward-to announcement of the TEAM for a Livable Vancouver housing policy — finally, with UBC urban geographer, VanRamblings’ most beloved Patrick Condon one of the presenters — where we’ve been assured that our dreams about an affordable housing policy, which we have written about ad nauseum and to distraction during the course of the current civic election campaign — will be realized.

Colour us thrilled and over-the-moon. I believe that there’s a lunch with Mr. Condon & Ms. Hardwick, in the Olympic Village, in each of our respective futures.