Today, a catch-as-catch-can VanRamblings column, focusing on the necessity of citizen engagement, and how critical it is that voters get out to the advance polls early in October, or on Election Day, Saturday, October 20th, to exercise their franchise, take power over their lives, and determine how our city will grow and address the issues of importance facing the citizens of Vancouver over the next four year period of life in our city.
In the 2008 Vancouver civic election — one of the most closely-observed elections in Vancouver history, and following a brutal, life-altering summer of 2007 3-month strike / worker lockout brought on by the then Vancouver Non-Partisan Association Sam Sullivan-led civic administration — voter turnout was a paltry 30.79%, with only 124,285 eligible voters out of a registered civic voter base of 403,663 turning up at the polls. That means, 69.21% of eligible Vancouver voters could not be bothered to cast a ballot, to “throw the bums out”, to keep or elect a new civic administration.
As has often been said, municipal government is the most important level of government, the one that is closest to the day-to-day concerns of its citizens — the level of government that keeps our streets clean, fixes potholes, picks up our garbage and recycling, supplies water & services to our homes, levies property tax, builds new community centres, and determines the livability of the city where we live, the level of government that is closest to our homes, dramatically impacting on the quality of our daily lives — saw Vancouver voters either staying at home sitting on their duff, going to a pub or hockey game, or otherwise avoiding exercising their franchise, as if voting, being involved in the democratic political process, and taking some degree of power over our lives, simply didn’t matter.
All of which attitude of disengagement and civic anomie, beggars belief.
If you’re here reading today’s VanRamblings column, good for you. You are a member of an elite group, that 4% of the population (2% left-of-centre, 2% right-of-centre) who are actually engaged in the process of helping determine the policies that will affect the quality of your life in this city, in our province, and in your home country of Canada. If you’re here reading today’s column, it means that you actually care about the quality of education your children, grandchildren or neighbour’s children will receive in our public education system, and whether we’re going to get that new community centre in Marpole, whether addressing homelessness and the affordable housing crisis that has plagued our city for well over a decade will emerge as a priority for the next civic administration, among a myriad of issues Vancouver voters will address at the polls this upcoming autumn.
On Earth Day this past Sunday, at the well-attended Earth Day Service: The Life of this Land, hosted by the Canadian Memorial United Church at 15th and Burrard, a young indigenous man — a 21-year-old man by the name of Cedar George-Parker, who along with his sister, Kayah George-Parker, the children of Tseil-Waututh Sundance Chief Rueben George, and Tulalip Band Councillor, Deborah Parker — spoke movingly about the necessity of being involved in the movement for change, and the necessity that everyone, all of us, must come together, work together, and become involved in the decision-making that affects the quality of all our lives, and the lives of our children, our children’s children, and all the generations to come.
“I could sit at home watching TV,” he told the congregation, “but that would be a disservice to my sister, to my family, to my godchildren, and to each and every one of you. We are at a critical juncture in the history of our planet, where our oceans are being polluted and our fish stocks depleted to the point where we soon won’t have a fisheries in British Columbia, where the lush green valleys of our province are being flooded in service of an electricity-generating dam to serve monied interests, a dam that will not only destroy habitat, but impact in the most destructive manner possible the lives of our northern indigenous peoples and those who live on the land, who grow the food for our tables, raise the cattle that feed our families, and those lands that allow our planet to breathe, allowing each one of us to breathe cleaner, fresher and life-giving air.
I am here today to ask you to stand with my sister Kayah and I, to stand with your brothers and sisters, to fight for your home and the preservation of our planet, to do all that you can do to make a difference.
VanRamblings has friends who have all but taken up residence on Burnaby Mountain fighting the expansion of the Kinder Morgan pipeline, who daily wage the battle against racism, bigotry, hate and intolerance, who fight for the proper funding of our public schools, and who are engaged with others — with friends and neighbours, with their families and their colleagues, and people they don’t even know but whose values they share, and who recognize as they do that life on our planet, and life in our city is our responsibility, and that it is critical that each and every one of us work with others for the change we want to see, to become engaged in the political process — in this case, our upcoming Vancouver civic election — that will determine our collective future, and the livability of our city and our planet.
Do you have friends, neighbours, colleagues or family members who are disengaged from the political life of our city, disengaged from the decision-making that affects the quality of their and all of our lives, those of us who live in the city of Vancouver, who prioritize going to the movies or to their neighbourhood pub, or who find themselves sitting home most nights smoking a doobie, or watching TV or who otherwise are letting life pass them by, as if somehow it doesn’t matter that the new tower being planned for down the street that will affect the livability of their neighbourhood is a fait accompli, and what can they do about it anyway? If so (and you know that you do), take them out for a coffee, remind them that they can make a difference, that their voice is powerful, and their time, energy and commitment is required to create the kind of city we all want to live in, to raise our families in, and to share with our neighbours, family and friends.
Take it upon yourself to convince them to join the political party of their choice, and accompany them to a meeting of — the Green Party of Vancouver, who prize the environment and independent thought; or OneCity Vancouver, the Vancouver municipal political party that means to make a difference in 2018; or Vision Vancouver, the party that has held civic office for the past 10 years, the party that has championed LGBTQ2+ issues, and enacted healthy, environmentally sound active transportation initiatives that have transformed our city; or, the Vancouver Non-Partisan Association, who mean to return service to citizens as its number one priority; the Coalition of Progressive Electors (COPE), the political party that will this year celebrate 50 years of service to the citizens of Vancouver; or, the good folks involved with Team Jean, originally formed to champion, support and ensure the election to City Council of longtime community activist, Jean Swanson, and — if truth be told — the most energetic and well-organized amalgam of community activists / change makers our city has seen in years, some members of whom have now joined COPE.
Take this advice: turn that damn TV off, read about what’s going on in our city, in the Vancouver Courier, the Vancouver Sun and Province newspapers, the Globe and Mail and the new StarMetro Vancouver daily, on VanRamblings, and in the Georgia Straight (most particularly, online — the opinion pieces written by editor Charlie Smith always a must-read).
Click on each of the party websites above, gain some cogent insight into what each party stands for and prioritizes in its electoral platform, and the programmes and policies each will set about to implement should they be elected to office at Vancouver City Council, Park Board or School Board, in the coming civic election, in this most critical of election years.
Go out to coffee with your neighbours to discuss the issues of importance that are facing Vancouver voters in the coming civic election, or when you’re with your colleagues at the lunch table, in the BBQ in the back yard or on the roof, in our parks, or any place where you are gathered with your friends, your neighbours, your colleagues, and those with whom you gather together in your neighbourhood, in your community and across our city.
In 2018, set out to make a difference, set out to prioritize engagement over anomie, get to know the issues, and work with your friends and neighbours to make ours a better, fairer and more just city. You’ll sleep better at night, your health will improve and your levels of stress decline, you will feel empowered and will one day very soon arise and know that you truly are making a difference, that you have stories to tell, a life to live, and a past to look back on where you know that you’ve done your part to make things better, not just for your family, but for all of us who share this planet, who live in this city we call home, a paradise by the sea named Vancouver.