Results tagged “DTES” from Mobilizing Mouse

All festival details are available at the Heart of the City Festival website here

Wed. 28 October - Sun. 8 November 2009

Over 80 events at over 30 venues throughout the Downtown Eastside


I'm particularly drawn to the event on November 7th

Illuminating the Four Corners: an outdoor multi-level event at Main and Hastings featuring visual projections on buildings and through windows; DTES musicians and poets performing from windows, rooftops and soap boxes; a welcome song with Sam George; music of the DTES Samba Band; a theatrical reenactment of a 1935 milestone at the Carnegie Museum; songs from the Carnegie Village Choir Project led by Beverly Dobrinsky; ending with a street celebration on the four corners.

and from elsewhere on the site a different presentation of the themes and styles of this project......


ILLUMINATING THE FOUR CORNERS

Community Celebration
ILLUMINATING THE FOUR CORNERS
Saturday November 7, 8pm-9:30pm
Corner of Main and Hastings. Rain or shine

"We are here. We are here. We are here." Sandy Cameron

Carnegie&MosaicPhotoTerryHunter

Come on down and look around!  See our Four Corners illuminated like never before! This open-air multi-level evening opens with a welcome song from Squamish elder Sam George. You'll see images of the faces of Downtown Eastside community members projected onto buildings and through windows; buildings lit up with lights; musicians and poets performing from windows, balconies and soap boxes;  music of the Downtown Eastside Samba Band; a theatrical re-enactment (with members of the Carnegie Community Action Project) of the 1935 occupation by unemployed workers at the Carnegie Museum; neighbourhood banners by artist Diane Wood; Chinese lion dancers; songs from the Carnegie Village Choir Project led by Beverly Dobrinsky; ending with a street celebration on the four corners. Ohh...and did we say 'popcorn'?

We are here: to illuminate this corner - this neighbourhood - this community. We are here: standing proud and saying "This is who we are. This is our community, the heart of Vancouver."
Illuminating the Four Corners has been made possible with the support of the City of Vancouver Great Beginnings Program.

Free

ILLUMINATING THE FOUR CORNERS

Located on unceded Coast Salish land, the four corners at Hastings and Main have been home to Coast Salish people for thousands of years. For over a hundred years, it's been a gathering place for immigrants arriving from the four corners of the globe. Today it's the crossroads for residents of Gastown, the Main and Hastings corridors, Chinatown, Strathcona, Japantown (Powell Street) and the city of Vancouver.

People gather at the four corners to find lost friends, catch up on the news and connect with their community. In 1903, the Carnegie Public Library/Museum and City Hall stood at the corner and Hastings was packed with people, restaurants, nightclubs, hotels, rooming houses, bars, and coffee shops. It was Vancouver's most important social and commercial district. Tattoo artists worked in sidewalk kiosks, lady barbers set up on the street, hawkers sold miracle cures side by side with evangelists warning sinners to return to the fold before the end of the world.

During the economic depression of 1907 homeless people camped out on the False Creek flats and half the city's population turned up for an Asiatic Exclusion League parade to City Hall at the "four corners." Inflammatory speeches sent the crowd storming down Pender into Chinatown--breaking windows, looting, starting fires--then raced to Powell Street's "Little Tokyo" where they were stopped by armed resistance from the residents.

During the hard times of the 1930s, Hastings Street was the main thoroughfare for public demonstrations for "work and wages" and in 1935 unemployed men occupied Carnegie for a day. The streets were a neon-lit circus of activity lined with theatres, cafes, bars, gambling clubs and union offices.

Changes followed World War II that reverberate in our community to this day: from the tearing up of the BC Electric Railway and street car tracks to the closing of the Carnegie library and museum (it stood vacant for over a decade); from the loss of housing and jobs to the closure of the community's largest business, Woodward's. These kinds of losses tore holes in the community's heart.

But this is a neighbourhood that refuses to lie down. After a six-year fight, the City agreed to re-open the Carnegie Library as a Community Centre and as each new physical and social change arrives to strain our social fabric, new grassroots initiatives rise to meet the challenges with local solutions. With the Carnegie building's Centennial celebration in 2003, initiatives arose to celebrate the community as the original heart of Vancouver; showcase our community's talents and cultures with affordable safe events; and commemorate its achievements and losses, its heroes and stories.

Here - at the crossroads of Main and Hastings--in the words of poet and historian Sandy Cameron, "the citizens of Vancouver can take pride in the long history of the Downtown Eastside."

by Savannah Walling





I had been wondering for a while why the phrase 'civil society' as mis-used and abused by Sullivan and his cronies (and council staff and journalists who sucked up to this phrase) had such a nasty ring to it.


Then I saw this piece in the New York Times and was reminded of Ralf Dahrendorf and his wonderfully stimulating re-working of Marxist theory - it's not so much money as power that is unfairly and unjustly distributed.

This lead to much innovative re-examining of what constitutes true consultation, participatory planning, and even the title of a recent DTES paper - I believe called 'Not about us without us.'

Truly empowering people breaks the power attached to money and indeed removes the power implicitly assocaited woth money.

Time to re-read "Class and Class Conflict in Civil Society" (1957)

This abstract and summary is quite good

http://fathom.lse.ac.uk/features/122552/

AS you'll seee these ideas are exactly what Fearless, W2 and other groups are achieving in the DTES and why the stale hierachical organizations - Portland Hotel Society as seen two weeks ago - find loose progress and achievment so threatening.

(From the link above:)

Organisations: These would be voluntary associations, and non-governmental or non-profit organisations, social movements, networks and informal groups. These organisations make up the infrastructure of civil society; they are the vehicles and forums for social participation, "voice" processes, the expression of values and preferences, and service provision.

Individuals: Citizens and participants in civil society generally. This would include people's activities in civil society such as membership, volunteering, organising events, or supporting specific causes; people's values, attitudes, preferences and expectations; and people's skills and in terms governance, management and leadership.
As an analytic, conceptual term, civil society is very abstract, even somewhat vague, and certainly highly complex, seemingly resistant to any precise measurement. Yet as an operational definition, it refers to the activities, values and other key characteristics of institutions, organisations and individuals located among the market, the state and the family. (end quote)

From the New York Times:

Ralf Dahrendorf, Sociologist, Dies at 80


Published: June 22, 2009

Ralf Dahrendorf, a German sociologist whose experiences in Nazi Germany led him to develop a theory of liberalism and human freedom that often went against the grain of German politics in the postwar period, died Wednesday in Cologne. He was 80.

Roland Magunia/Agence France-Presse -- Getty Images

Ralf Dahrendorf in 2004.

His death was confirmed in a statement from Chancellor Angela Merkel, who said, "Europe has lost one of its most important thinkers and intellectuals." The cause was cancer, said his wife, Dr. Christiane Dahrendorf.

Democracy and its problems preoccupied Mr. Dahrendorf for his entire career as a scholar and as a politician in West Germany in the 1960s and 1970s. As a high school student he had been imprisoned by the Nazis for spreading leaflets opposing the regime, and early in his life he developed a deep suspicion of what he called "closed, encompassing systems."

Mr. Dahrendorf championed liberal pluralism, which he defined as a social system that recognizes divergent interests and aspirations and puts institutions in place that allow them to be expressed.

Democracy is "about organizing conflict and living with conflict," he told an audience at the Institute of International Studies at the University of California, Berkeley, in 1989.

"The world isn't simple, nor should it be simple," he continued. "It's rich because it's complicated. Let's learn to live with this."

He explored these ideas in "Class and Class Conflict in Civil Society" (1957), which famously proposed the counter-Marxist idea that power, rather than property, defined social class. Later books like "Society and Democracy in Germany" and "Modern Social Conflict" pursued similar themes.

"As a scholar he was always addressing human value problems in democracy, especially freedom, but he was also deeply involved in the civic life of Germany," said Neil J. Smeltser, an emeritus professor of sociology at Berkeley. "He bridged the gap between social theory and social practice as well as anyone I can think of."

Ralf Gustav Dahrendorf was born in Hamburg, where his father, a Social Democratic politician, was arrested and removed from his job by the Nazis in 1933. The family moved to Berlin soon after. Mr. Dahrendorf's father was arrested again in 1944, and a few months later, Ralf was arrested by the Gestapo for anti-Nazi activities and sent to a concentration camp in Poland. He was released as Soviet forces advanced in 1945.

At the University of Hamburg, Mr. Dahrendorf studied philosophy and classics, earning a doctorate in philosophy in 1952. He went on to earn a second doctorate, in sociology, at the London School of Economics, where he studied under Karl Popper. It was Mr. Popper's "Open Society" that provided the answers, he once said, to the great questions of modern industrial society posed by Marx.

After teaching at the universities of Saarbrücken, Tübingen and Konstanz in West Germany, and at Stanford in California, he ran for a seat in the regional Parliament of Baden-Württemberg. In 1969 he was elected to the federal Parliament as a Free Democrat. He was a junior foreign minister in Willy Brandt's first government and in 1970 became a European commissioner.

At a time when liberal democracy was under attack, Mr. Dahrendorf, as both a university professor and a politician, held fast to the principles of pluralism and personal freedom. His convictions were Social Democratic with a libertarian spin.

He favored laws and policies that encouraged personal freedom, a sense of citizenship and a broadening of social, economic and political opportunities. Germany's problems, he argued, stemmed from a belief in absolute answers and in the yearning for an all-powerful leader to put them into effect.

In 1974 he was invited to become director of the London School of Economics, a post he held for the next decade. He later wrote a history of the school.

He returned to Germany to become chairman of the social sciences department at Konstanz University, but in 1987 he accepted the position of warden of St. Antony's College, Oxford. He became a British citizen in 1988 and was made a life peer under the name Lord Dahrendorf of Clare Market in the City of Westminster in 1993.

In addition to Dr. Dahrendorf, his third wife, he is survived by three daughters, Nicola, Alexandra and Daphne, and one grandchild.

Arcane rules prevent would-be performance venues from becoming viable, councillor says
 
By Randy Shore, Vancouver SunMay 1, 2009
 
 
Save On Meats at 34 West Hastings in Vancouver was to be developed into a gallery but the plan has proven too expensive.
 
Save On Meats at 34 West Hastings in Vancouver was to be developed into a gallery but the plan has proven too expensive.
Photograph by: Ian Smith, Vancouver Sun, Vancouver Sun

The city will take a first step next week toward lowering the barriers faced by artists and small venue operators with an eye toward creating more performance spaces in the city.

Under the city's bylaws, changing the use of a building to open a gallery, an eatery or a boite triggers a whole mess of required upgrades to meet fire and seismic codes.

Add to that a punishing property tax regime and layers of licensing rules, and creating a profitable performance venue is almost insurmountably difficult

"I have one space in Vancouver with a rent of $700 a month and a property tax bill of $1,500 a month," said Vancouver entrepreneur David Duprey, who operates several buildings with gallery and artist space.

The average income for a working artist in Canada is less than $25,000.

A seismic upgrade that Duprey had been considered to revitalize the former home of Save-On-Meats would have run into hundreds of thousands of dollars.

The math is more than challenging and it's one of the reasons that so many buildings in the Downtown Eastside have been boarded up for years, he said.

Duprey operates several buildings and a restaurant, mainly in ground-level storefronts with artist studios occupying the remaining space in the building.

Parties and performances help draw customers, but arcane rules often prevent owners and operators from staging events.

On Tuesday, Coun. Heather Deal will bring a motion to council, proposing the creation of a working group to advise council on various ways to lower the bureaucratic and taxation barriers and to change the liquor bylaws and special occasion licences, which can often be the difference between setting up a profitable new venueor putting some more plywood on the windows.

Obviously there are base levels of safety that have to be maintained, Deal said.

"But we have rules now that don't allow more than two people to perform at cafe-galleries or restaurants and we have to break down those barriers and stop treating these spaces like they are all such different things," said Deal.

The city is in year one of a 10-year plan to develop a more vibrant culture industry in Vancouver and job one is making sure artists and performers have studio and performance space.

A two-day workshop that was held in March was the first step toward arming the culture community with the tools needed to navigate the complexities of project development and the bureaucracy.

"It's incredibly difficult to go through the process with the city and most artists just won't go through it," Duprey said.

"If you have a 30- or 40-year-old retail space that people are working in right now and you want to change the usage to say a gallery, it suddenly means you have to bring everything up to 2009 standards."

"Heather is really on to something here," he said.

"If we can lower those barriers, it will really make a difference in neighbourhoods like the Downtown Eastside, where we have a lot of boarded-up buildings."

rshore@vancouversun.com
© Copyright (c) The Vancouver Sun
 
 
som.jpg 
Save On Meats at 34 West Hastings in Vancouver was to be developed into a gallery but the plan has proven too expensive.
Photograph by: Ian Smith, Vancouver Sun
The Grand March for Housing drew support from a wide range of groups and individuals across British Columbia, all of whom have had enough of the pain and distress caused by homelessness they see everyday, and are calling for all three levels of government to stop talking and act.

This shot shows the marchers gathered at the Art Gallery in front of the ironic excesses of the Georgia development.

georgiabackdrop.jpg
While this shot is of a white board where people were encouraged to write their comments - the 'shovel' sums it up.

shovel.jpg 

The march was passionate but peaceful, as several streams of marchers united before gathering at the Vancouver Art Gallery to hear speeches and entertainment. More about the coalition and future events can be found here: http://www.citywidehousingcoalition.org/



The marchers assembled at Main and Hastings greet the marchers coming from the south.

Note the excellent range of faiths, causes and politics represented.



The marchers turn up Richards on their way to the Art Gallery.




The march, united, crosses Hornby and arrives at the Art Gallery; the early sound is bad....sorry! The excellent band overwhelming my tiny microphone is 'Headwater': more at http://www.headwater.ca/

Some stills....

empty.jpg

Outside Pathways as the march assembled, the Streams of Justice group's banner.


dome.jpg

Looking east from the steps of the Art Gallery as the crowd grows.


redframe.jpg



The marchers framed by the red leaves.


notwar.jpg
Photographing the photographers


box.jpg

Exactly.
Inspired by the Walking Tour brochure produced by the SFU labour history department in the early 1990s, this map shows the 20 sites featured on the Eastside of Vancouver, BC, Canada.

On February 7th 2009, 20 Downtown Eastside videographers will stream the 20 sites live to the Gallery Gachet at 88 East Cordova in Vancouver, and worldwide via http://fearlesscity.ca/.

Attend, watch, comment via the map or visit us on the web - http://fearlesscity.ca/. - between 11 and 12 Pacific Standard Time on Saturday February 7th 2009
Live Event: February 7th, 10am to 12am, venue for live streaming, vjs, pancake breakfast and live event
Gallery Gachet
88 E Cordova St
Vancouver, BC V6A 1K2, CA
ph: 604.687.2468

It's often said that if we ignore our history we are doomed to repeat
it. By recognizing and recording the stories of 20 sites in Vancouver's Downtown Eastside, mobile videographers connect past to present, creating an opening for informed reflection on the future. This crossmedia exhibition and web project remixes Labour, Work, and Working People: A Working Class and Labour History Walking Tour using Web 2.0 strategies to expand the number of voices heard and stories told.


Using the latest in digital technology, live video streams tell tales of 20 DTES sites through enduring memories of Vancouver's labour history. Videographers present the history and context of each site and reveal new relationships with contemporary players. Strikes, lockouts, evictions, state suspicion, attacks on working class movements, markers of
a death - each site has a unique role to play in the story of the
neighbourhood. New tools are being used to harness history and bring it forward with mobile devices, wireless networks, live screens and video mixers.

Following a live event on Saturday, Feb. 7, the public is invited to interact with a month-long gallery installation and add to the stories, while our collective knowledge of DTES history deepens as it is reinterpreted through a digital lens.


 
Gerry Bellett
Vancouver sun

Thousands of Downtown Eastside residents have problems that aren't being dealt with, Police Chief Jim Chu says.
CREDIT: Bill Keay, Vancouver Sun files
Thousands of Downtown Eastside residents have problems that aren't being dealt with, Police Chief Jim Chu says.

Vancouver Police Chief Jim Chu is calling on the federal and provincial governments to create an agency to deal exclusively with the unmanageable social problems that afflict thousands of people living in Vancouver's Downtown Eastside (DTES).

Chu says the agency should be under the control of a "director for the most vulnerable," a civil servant with the type of power given to heads of Crown corporations and agencies.

It would be the director's job to oversee all the government programs that now found in the area and hold the agencies that deliver them accountable for producing measurable results.

The recommendation is contained in the 59-page document Project Lockstep, a united effort to save lives in the Downtown Eastside, to be released today.

Chu also called for the VPD to move back to the Downtown Eastside to aid in the area's rehabilitation.

The report argues that while there have been major efforts to improve the state of affairs in the Downtown Eastside, they have failed. It says "deliberate and unintended policies and changes have played significant roles in the continuation and, or, worsening of the problems that are concentrated in the area."


Donate phones to Fearless to help Vancouver downtown eastside artists and residents

Donate your old mobile phones to help DTES artists share stories, and tap into life, jobs & family

How can you help?

  1. Your used mobile phones - preferably with video, camera, wi-fi
  2. Cash donations (* tax deductible) or new phone donations
  3. Conversation - tell your friend on your blog, twitter, etc. - post a badge

Action Plan:
First, Gather phones!

Collect all the un-used mobile phones at your office and home - dig into your boxes of stuff, ask you friends! Digital cameras gratefully accepted too.

Next, Arrange Pick-up:

  • Let us know via Twitter: Fearless City, email: info (at) fearlessmedia (dot) ca, Phone/SMS: 604.644.4349, Voice mail: 604.682.3269 xt 8320
  • We'll come by on purple Yahoo bikes on Tues. Dec. 23rd & 30th to collect your devices
  • We'll take your photo, bring treats, and thank you publicly with a link

Or, Drop-off (after Tuesday, 23rd) at:

Want to be a drop-off point? Let us know.


More can be found here on the Fearless City site

And here on Twitter

Streaming Video from the Downtown Eastside

|
Live blogging.....refresh the page to see latest comments......

Sunday
4:05 So I'm seeing a guitarist, a (probably) first nations older man, and a younger guy in black - context/ description needed

4:10 Sound on guitarist good, young man cuts out, older man very big gaps

4:15 Younger man in black seems to be talking about turning his life around

4;15 Older man discussing priorities in Vancouver - global versus local - sound still cuts out a lot

4:16 Younger man - sync is out sound/image

4: 16 Guitarist very pixelated - talking instead of playing now

4:40 Young man sound out, guitarist good sound and images, older man stopped at 3 minutes or so??

4:48 April putting pictures in context - v.good - dusk, views of north shore mountains etc

Fearless City Mobile
November 10-16 Workshop Reminder

TONIGHT HEART OF THE CITY 4-5pm Online! and Ukrainian Hawks and Pender
If you're on the Internet from 4-5pm tonight, check out the live stream of
our Heart of the City interviews with Residents of the DTES at
<live.fearlessmedia.ca> or come down to the Ukrainian Hall at Pender and
Hawks for the closing evening of HOTC and the location of our mobile
screen.

MONDAY LIFE SKILLS EXPERIMENTAL VIDEO PRODUCTION CLASS 1-3pm at 410 E.
Cordova
If you are interested in learning how to use the N77 mobile video cameras,
please check out the Experimental Video Production class at Lifeskills
this Monday November 10th.

The Experimental Video Production class on Tuesday November 11 IS
CANCELLED due to Remembrance Day.

WEDNESDAY WORKSHOP 1-3pm at Lori Krill Co-op 65 W. Pender
Lorraine Murphy will be taking on from where Roland Tanglao left off with
her workshop: Web Community: International Websites, blogs & projects that
engage mobile phones in inner-city campaigns.

THURSDAY TUTORIAL AT LIFE SKILLS 1-3pm at 410 E. Cordova
Scott Nelson will be sitting an open tutorial from 1-3pm in the video
production lab at Lifeskills. First come first serve, with a 30min
tutorial limit when people are waiting for assistance. Come with your
questions about live streaming, blogging, using the Fearless City Mobile
website, using the N77 cameras, or downloading your material onto a hard
drive.

SATURDAY BLOGGING WORKSHOPS AT TRADEWORKS 10-2pm at 87 E. Pender
10-11:30am Fearless Blogging 101 11:30-12 open computer access and questions
12-1:30 pm Connecting With Your Community Online (resources, contacts, and
how you can use the Web to help make our community stronger)
1:30-2 open computer access and questions



Saturday

10:36 Hearing review of the event by the filmmakers - what went well and what didn't - how does one know when the stream is being streamed? And does/ should this affect what is being said and seen...........?

10:16am - thanks for the feedback in the UK - sound still fragile on stream 3

No stream 1 visible

10:08am - sound cutting out on stream 3

Stream 2 good colour and sound

Fearless City Mobile streams Live! @ Heart of the City Festival

Today, Saturday November 8, from 9:30am-10:30am, and from 7-8pm, Fearless
City Mobile teams will be simultaneously interviewing three residents of
the Downtown Eastside from three distinct locations. These interviews will
be live streamed online, and to our roving shopping cart screen which will
be located on the front steps of the Dominion Building from 9:30-10:30am
for Homelessness walk, and in front of the Russian Hall from 7-8pm prior
to Bruce the Musical Beginning.

To view these live streamed interviews visit live.fearlessmedia.ca . An
archive of these interviews will be posted on fearlesscity.ca shortly
afterwards.

We will also be broadcasting tomorrow, Sunday November 9 from 4-5pm at the
Ukrainian Hall! Hope you see you at one of these events, or online!

amy


Gastown Riot - Stan Douglas - A night to remember (or forget)

|

A controversial photograph depicting Vancouver's Gastown Riot goes on display in New York before settling into its Downtown Eastside home

From Thursday's Globe and Mail

VANCOUVER -- A controversial new artwork by Vancouver artist Stan Douglas goes on display today at the David Zwirner gallery in New York. The piece - Abbott & Cordova - depicts a scene from the 1971 Gastown Riot, an episode of Vancouver's history that members of the city's police force would rather not revisit.

The work is a scale version of a huge photograph (9 by 15 metres) due to be installed in June in the atrium of the redeveloped Woodward's building in Vancouver's troubled Downtown Eastside. Enclosed in glass, the piece shows police rounding up protesters, who were demonstrating against the use of undercover cops and for the legalization of marijuana.

News reports from the time state that police charged on horseback and beat the crowd with batons.

One eyewitness was quoted in The Globe and Mail saying the officers behaved with "almost a satanic arrogance."


Time ticking on media-arts centre at Woodward's project

|


By Jessica Werb

Final plans for W2, a 14,395-square-foot media-arts centre at the Woodward's project championed by Gallery Gachet executive director Irwin Oostindie, are in the city's hands.

But, according to Oostindie, city council must approve them before the November 15 civic election if he is to raise $2.6 million for finishing and operating costs for the facility to open by September 2009.

"They've pushed us back with a whole bunch of more questions," Oostindie said, referring to the W2 report submitted September 2. "They want a lot of detail from us, and we're a bit hamstrung because we're not able to embark on a fundraising campaign and identify our funders, because we're still waiting for city-council approval."

A proposal for W2, initially called the Centre for Creative Technology and Community Arts, was first submitted to the city in 2006, in response to a request for proposals from nonprofit groups for space in Woodward's.



Galleries stake out Downtown Eastside - new venues

|


By Robin Laurence

Here's a familiar scenario. Artists band together to open exhibition spaces in low-rent urban areas. Gentrification creeps in. Landlords raise rents. Studios disappear. Galleries collapse.

Vancouver's Downtown Eastside is especially volatile, and artist-run centres such as Artspeak, Access, Centre A, Gallery Gachet, and the Helen Pitt Gallery, early stakeholders in and around the area, survive through dedicated boards and staff, energetic fundraising, and occasional grants. But what about the independent galleries, showing emerging artists and attempting commercial viability without subsidy? Here are three new or newish examples. They're some of the best of the Downtown Eastside--and slightly beyond.


Street sweeps displace homeless in Downtown Eastside

|

From the Georgia Straight, original here:

On a covered sidewalk on West Cordova Street, where the smell of vomit and urine hangs in the air, Ken Foster talked about what it takes to push the boundaries of his art.

A homeless artist whose work is well known on Vancouver's Downtown Eastside, Foster paints on materials he picks up in alleys, like discarded construction signs.

ken_foster.jpg

"I'll sell it for $6, maybe, and with that buy a can of paint," Foster related. "And so I end up doing 10 paintings before I finally get enough supplies to make one painting that is actually pushing a boundary of any sort, or furthering, you know what I mean, like, any sort of importance."

When the Georgia Straight caught up with the 37-year-old street artist, Foster's challenges were a lot greater. A Sharpie pen was all that was left of his possessions because of the recent street sweeps by city crews and the police on the Downtown Eastside.

"The last time, they threw out my wheelchair, $150 worth of paint, my backpack, my ID, and I don't own anything other than what you see right here," he said, showing the pen.

Foster recalled one incident. "They said, 'You have half an hour to get that cleaned up; get somebody to help you move it out of here,' " he said. "So I had gone. I came back 15 minutes later. It wasn't even half an hour. And they had thrown it all, and they're laughing at me."

And the police who accompanied the city crew? "They're laughing at me too," Foster said.

Street smart cop gets the boot

|

Mark Hasiuk, Vancouver Courier

Published: Friday, August 08, 2008

Dave Dickson is leaving.

That name might mean nothing to you, but it's widely known in the Downtown Eastside.

Dickson spent more than 20 years walking the DTES beat as a member of the Vancouver Police Department. Now retired, Dickson works as the sex trade liaison for the VPD.

The liaison position was created two years ago--for Dickson--to help bridge the gap between law enforcement and the street.

Almost every day, the 57-year-old Dickson travels from his Surrey home to the syringe-speckled streets and alleys of the DTES. He doesn't have an office or a budget. He relies on street smarts, honed during his days on the force. He's on a first-name basis with prostitutes, drug addicts, street people and government and non-government workers in the area.

His relationship with prostitutes is unprecedented. He's the only man allowed inside the WISH women's shelter. His contacts on the street, combined with his access to police computers, help him locate missing persons for organizations such as Strathcona Mental Health.


Homeless gather in Oppenheimer Park

|

Mary Frances Hill, Vancouver Sun

Published: Saturday, August 09, 2008

VANCOUVER - Every night in Oppenheimer Park, Brian Humchitt and his wife Tina lay their heads beneath a large banner that says, "Homelessness is not a crime." They've called the inner city park -- which has become a tent city of sorts -- their only home for the past two months.

Dozens of homeless people and their supporters flock to the Downtown Eastside park, bounded by Jackson, Dunlevy, Powell and Cordova streets, to sleep in tents at night, socialize during the day and take advantage of the soup kitchens, free showers and bathrooms available nearby.

However, violence is common in what some call "Dopenheimer Park." Dealers and addicts jockey for space under the trees, idling away the hours on old mattresses.


198558-68399.jpg

The city has contracted security guards to patrol Oppenheimer Park, monitoring the activities there.

Photo: Mark van Manen, Vancouver Sun

I don't know who Tom Sandborn is but this is so nicely done.

Motivation for an opera, a play, an installation? Anyone?

Tom Sandborn
Vancouver Courier

Friday, July 25, 2008

I have a file in my computer called "No Future for Satire." It is dedicated to news items that support my favourite literary theory, the proposition that satire is dead as a form of fiction in the 21st century. The basic assumption here is that it is impossible to make up anything as grotesque as the six o'clock news.

A little-noticed decision by city council last September is now a standout piece of evidence in that file. The folks we elected to conduct city business decided, in their infinite wisdom, to spend $5 million from the $20 million Olympics Legacy Fund on turning two downtown parking lots into enormous outdoor venues. Those of us who can't afford the pricey tickets for Olympic events can gather there and watch them on huge TV screens and enjoy live entertainment. Talk about pay per view!
By Matthew Burrows

What are the chances of the economy in the Downtown Eastside taking off?


Wendy Pedersen
Organizer, Carnegie Community Action Project

"I think it very well could take off because of Woodward's and if there is more condo development that comes into the neighbourhood. I think we could see Gap stores and bigger places in the neighbourhood easily, unless there are some tools to manage change. We don't see what those are. What is going to protect the small-business owner and the low-income renter in the neighbourhood?"


Jorge Mar
Chinatown shop owner

"Not in the near future. Because of the price of gas and the U.S. economy, especially in Chinatown here, we are dependent on the tourists and that doesn't help. The past three years have been going down [in terms of revenues]. Last year, really, we felt the effects of the U.S. economy. This year is the worst. I don't think the city can do much--maybe some cosmetic stuff."


Bernie Magnan
Chief economist, Vancouver Board of Trade

"There are businesses that are already there and doing very well, thank you very much... What we need to do is help the people--and I'm not just talking about those who have a drug and/or a mental-health addiction problem--but also the residents of the Downtown Eastside and their children in making sure they get a proper education so they can succeed in life."


David Eby
Council candidate and DTES-Strathcona resident

"I guess that depends on what you mean by the Downtown Eastside economy. I mean, the Downtown Eastside economy is doing really well. But until we deal with the underlying issues of homelessness, drug addiction, and mental health in the Downtown Eastside community, the Downtown Eastside mainstream economy will never take off."

Fresh from lunch on a balmy Saturday afternoon, Coun. Peter Ladner strolls westward from the Carnegie Centre at Main and Hastings and confronts Vancouver's socioeconomic underbelly.

Already on this short walkabout, the NPA's mayoral hopeful and two-term councillor has talked with VPD Sgt. Tim Henschel in an alley, where the officer had recovered a stolen city engineering truck. Flustered Chinatown security guard Harold Johnson pulled Ladner aside a minute later to tell him drug users should "start rehab or serve time".

David Eby runs for city council - finally someone to vote for?

|

Interesting how the final impetus was the pathetic tokenism of a monthly visit by a planner to the DTES for supposed 'consultation' and even that was rejected.

Whether running on the Vision ticket or the COPE ticket or the Wallabies ticket I don't really care.

A good man with heart, courage and imagination putting himself forward is excellent.

It's the imagination he has shown which is the greatest asset.

The DTES does not need more $$$, but simply imaginative ideas involvingly implemented and David Eby I believe gets this.

From the Metro......

Lawyer in running
JEFF HODSON/METRO VANCOUVER
14 July 2008 02:12

Pivot lawyer David Eby, a well-known Downtown Eastside housing advocate, on Commercial Drive yesterday, is seeking a city council nomination with Vision Vancouver.

eby.jpeg
JEFF HODSON/METRO VANCOUVER

A well-known Downtown Eastside housing advocate has his sights set on Vancouver's City Hall -- hoping to effect more change from within the system than he did as an outsider looking in.

Pivot lawyer David Eby, 31, announced Thursday that he would be seeking a city council nomination with Vision Vancouver in November's civic election.

"That was a real struggle for me, deciding whether I would be more effective on the ground or in council," said Eby, at Grandview Park off Commercial Drive yesterday.

"I realized that as much work as we did (reaching out) to the community, going to council and in the media, we weren't getting as far as we should have."

The event that convinced him to run was a proposal by Vision Coun. Tim Stevenson to locate a city office in the Downtown Eastside.

The proposal, Eby said, was whittled down to having a city planner work one day a month out of the Carnegie Centre. In the end, even the reduced proposal was defeated.

"That was incredibly frustrating," Eby said. "The NPA was not interested in input from the community or reaching out to the community. And that's not just the Downtown Eastside, that's all over Vancouver. I really want to be a part of changing that."



Dance experience creates new connections in Downtown Eastside

|
by Kevin Griffin
Vancouver Sun

Saturday, July 12, 2008

jamieson3.jpg
Karen Jamieson's Stand Your Ground II, part of Dancing On The Edge 2008.
CREDIT: Handout

Stand Your Ground - Act II
By Karen Jamieson Dance
Part of the Dancing on the Edge Festival

Karen Jamieson's Stand Your Ground - Act II wasn't a traditional dance performance. Performers and audience members often mixed and mingled, most venues were outdoors, and more than half of the performers were dancers with minimal training.

So if you judged Stand Your Ground by the same criteria as a professional dance production at a venue such as Playhouse, you'd have to say it didn't measure up. But that wouldn't be fair to Stand Your Ground. It would be more accurate to say that it was more of a community experience.

Stand Your Ground started with a brief introduction and solo dance on the back patio of the Firehall. Behind the audience, there was a loud metallic rattling sound: the rest of the performers were at the fence waiting to be let in. The 11 performers fanned out and personally invited each of the 20 or so audience members on a journey through the Downtown Eastside.

Dance experience creates new connections in Downtown Eastside

|
by Kevin Griffin
Vancouver Sun

Saturday, July 12, 2008

jamieson3.jpg
Karen Jamieson's Stand Your Ground II, part of Dancing On The Edge 2008.
CREDIT: Handout

Stand Your Ground - Act II
By Karen Jamieson Dance
Part of the Dancing on the Edge Festival

Karen Jamieson's Stand Your Ground - Act II wasn't a traditional dance performance. Performers and audience members often mixed and mingled, most venues were outdoors, and more than half of the performers were dancers with minimal training.

So if you judged Stand Your Ground by the same criteria as a professional dance production at a venue such as Playhouse, you'd have to say it didn't measure up. But that wouldn't be fair to Stand Your Ground. It would be more accurate to say that it was more of a community experience.

Stand Your Ground started with a brief introduction and solo dance on the back patio of the Firehall. Behind the audience, there was a loud metallic rattling sound: the rest of the performers were at the fence waiting to be let in. The 11 performers fanned out and personally invited each of the 20 or so audience members on a journey through the Downtown Eastside.

The next performance was at the corner of Gore and East Hastings in front of First United Church. Four performers splayed their bodies against a wall as if listening to the stories in the bricks while a dancer pirouetted and danced on the sidewalk.

On the other side of East Hastings, the entrepreneurs who sell second-hand shirts, bracelets and books on the street were honoured with songs and attention.

A few doors west, a first nations woman blessed the audience with pungent burning sweetgrass. In front of the Ovaltine Cafe, a part of the community since 1943, we were served water from handleless ceramic cups used for Chinese tea.

Around the corner on Main, we all stood in a semi-circle in front of The Listening Post on the ground floor of Bruce Eriksen Place, the social housing complex named after the social activist and Downtown Eastside champion who died in 1997. From the mural on the side of the building, likenesses of Eriksen looked down on us standing on the sidewalk. Standing with three other drummers, a first nations woman drummed and sang a song of thanks in her native language, stopped, and asked audience members why they were thankful for being there.

The final venue was in the Carnegie Community Centre. We all marched up the beautiful winding staircase past the stained glass windows depicting Shakespeare, Milton and Spenser to the airy gym where we sat in chairs around the perimeter. What followed was a step dance and follow the leader, all movements originating with the participants who were part of the Carnegie's Dance 101 workshop. At the end, each performer thanked each audience member for being there by shaking hands. Being personally touched and looked at by each dancer was unexpectedly moving. Stand Your Ground created encounters between different classes and backgrounds that would not otherwise have occurred.

That was clear by an experience that happened to me. The day before, I had an hour to spare between performances. From the Firehall, I went on a speed-walk through the neighbourhood. The streets were full of invisible acrid odours, staggering people and loud arguments.

It wasn't so much frightening as extremely unpleasant.

With the Stand Your Ground group passing through much of the same terrain, it was very different. When we stopped at one of the street vendors I spotted the distinctive cover of the first Dark Knight Batman comic book from 1989. I bought it for $2.

Without the artificiality of the performance, I wouldn't have been comfortable enough to pause and find something valuable. Stand Your Ground  allowed me to look at a neighbourhood I'd rather avoid. 

The last performance of Stand Your Ground - Act II takes place today at 5 p.m. at the Firehall, 280 East Cordova.

kevingriffin@png.canwest.com
© Vancouver Sun


Copyright © 2008 CanWest Interactive, a division of CanWest MediaWorks Publications, Inc.. All rights reserved.



Just ask the police and doctors on the front line - harm reduction doesn't work

MARGARET WENTE

The Globe and Mail

July 12, 2008

VANCOUVER -- Sergeant Mark Steinkampf knows every back alley in Vancouver's Downtown Eastside. He greets the regulars by name and doesn't miss much. On street patrol one balmy evening, he spots a new face - a young, attractive woman on a bicycle. He motions her to stop.

"I can see that crack pipe in your bra there," he says. He pulls it out and dangles it in the air. "You're under arrest. Let me read you your rights." He drops the crack pipe and crushes it beneath his shoe.

The woman doesn't have drugs on her. If she's smart, she'll get out of here fast and he'll never see her again. If she's not, her prospects aren't good. A year from now, she'll likely be ravaged by drugs and infections, turning tricks to get the money for a fix. If she's very unlucky, she'll wind up like another girl, whose body was found by a dumpster, stuffed into a plastic bag like so much garbage.

Vancouver is famous for its innovative approaches to drug treatment. Twenty years ago, it launched a bold experiment to tackle the problems of the notorious Downtown Eastside. The guiding idea was harm reduction. If you couldn't cut off the drug supply or jail all the addicts, then at least you could reduce the secondary damage - HIV, hepatitis and the like - by giving people clean needles. You would surround them with medical and social services. Addiction, all agreed, was an illness, and addicts deserved compassion and respect.

Intense, uplifting and ultimately heartbreaking performance
 
Kevin Griffin
Vancouver Sun

Saturday, July 05, 2008

On a warm summer evening, Kokoro Dance summoned the ghosts of the Downtown Eastside. Using bagpipes and drums and Japanese butoh-style movement, they made the ghosts substantial for 45 minutes to open the Dancing on the Edge Festival.


SUN0701 Kokoro.jpg
Barbara Bourget performs in Kokoro Dance Company's production of Ghosts by Barbara Bourget and Jay Hirabayashi.

Then they disappeared, to return for two final performances Friday and again this evening.

The first performance took place on the rooftop parking lot of the Sunrise Market at 300 Powell. As a backdrop, an existing mural of tomatoes, peas, strawberries and other colourful fruits and vegetables, along with neighbourhood landmarks, stretched the entire width of the adjacent building's west-facing wall.

Several minutes before Ghosts started, the performers walked up the alley entrance and took their positions on the pavement. In the centre were the musicians. Surrounding them all were members of the audience, standing and sitting on the edges of the outdoor performance area.

Paying the price for heritage

|
Vancouver's wildly successful restoration program raises questions about trade in 'density bonuses'

VANCOUVER -- Robert Fung is the most active player in Vancouver's hugely successful heritage restoration program, undertaking six of 25 buildings that have been saved in the past five years. He spearheaded multimillion-dollar projects on the promise of incentives from city hall intended to help pay extra costs associated with preserving the city's history.

But Mr. Fung now suspects the city may have a memory problem, forgetting its commitments to those who took risks on heritage restoration.

A proposal to modify the program to help other neighbourhoods would be a betrayal to those who invested in the projects, he said in an interview.

"We negotiated in good faith years ago," Mr. Fung said. Any move by the city to alter the nature of the program "is really reneging on a good-faith arrangement."

Hidden in probably the most pretentious piece of writing I have read for many years is an art project involving pictures of construction in the DTES of Vancouver being pasted on a party wall which will itself be obscured by the development.

Canadian Architect,  June 2008


Backpage

Accidental Exposure, Deliberate Concealment

TEXT HANNAH TEICHER

PHOTO ERIC DEIS



CA-20080601-050-accidentalexpos-45026_MI0001.jpg

A PHOTOGRAPHER REMINDS US--IF ONLY TEMPORARILY--OF THE HISTORICAL LAYERS OF THE CITY VANISHING BEFORE OUR EYES.

Flagging changes large and small which signal the disjointed evolution of the urban landscape, Eric Deis hurries to capture them, initiating a process of delaminating the city. His photos, while of Vancouver, are not specifically of Vancouver; while they are of buildings, they are not about buildings; and of course, while they are of construction sites, they are not concerned with construction sites. The photos instead reveal the discovery of accidental encounters, a process that only just begins as the photo is taken.


Very comprehensive, very revealing.

DTES Demographic Study Final June 2008.pdf
Priority will be getting a 'better handle' on crime, Rix says

"If you want happiness for a year, inherit a fortune. But if you want happiness for a lifetime, help somebody else."
 
Bruce Constantineau
Vancouver Sun

Friday, June 20, 2008

The Vancouver Board of Trade's new chairman says Vancouver businesses have to become more philanthropic and he'll push that concept aggressively over the next year.

"You can count on that," Donald Rix, 77, said in an interview Thursday after he became board chairman at the organization's 121st annual meeting.

The chairman of LifeLabs Diagnostics Inc. and Cantest Ltd., who's also a well-known philanthropist, told the meeting a recent U.S. survey found just 39 per cent of business leaders believe corporate citizenship is part of their business planning.

"To be successful over the long term, companies have to be involved and invested in their community," Rix told the meeting at the Fairmont Hotel Vancouver. "Not just chequebook involvement, but personal involvement.

"If you want happiness for a year, inherit a fortune. But if you want happiness for a lifetime, help somebody else."

Meet Vancouver's next mayor

|
From The Globe and Mail

VANCOUVER -- The next mayor of Vancouver is a bicycle-riding environmentalist who is super fit, loves the outdoors and has a passion for social justice. In his hippie phase, he went back to the land, became a farmer and grew organic produce. City councillor Peter Ladner winces at this list of typical West Coast clichés. Ruefully, he admits they're all true. The trouble is, they're also true of his opponent, Gregor Robertson. One or the other is going to be elected Vancouver's Olympics mayor this fall (unless Carole Taylor, who says she's not running, changes her mind).

But how will voters tell which one is which? "I have much more experience," Mr. Ladner says. Until last week, people expected Sam Sullivan to be Vancouver's Olympics mayor. But Mr. Sullivan's leadership wasn't nearly as inspiring as his life story - a quadriplegic who triumphed over adversity. So his party turfed him and nominated Mr. Ladner, instead.

Pivot Legal Society lawyer opposes ticketing homeless

|
From The Georgia Straight

By Carlito Pablo

Remember Darrell Mickasko? He was the homeless man who died of burn injuries days after his clothing caught fire as he used a stove to keep himself warm one cold evening last winter. He was sleeping behind a Dumpster near a Vancouver homeless shelter that was full.

Writing in his blog on February 4, Pivot Legal Society lawyer David Eby recalled that he had seen Mickasko the week before, and that the 47-year-old Edmonton native had asked if he knew of a place he could rent. Eby didn't, and the next thing he knew, the man he considered a friend was dead.

"If people have to live outside, we're going to have more tragic deaths like Darrell Mickasko," Eby told the Georgia Straight as he raised concerns about thousands of incidents of "turnaways" from emergency shelters across the Lower Mainland.

Citing figures compiled by B.C. Housing using data from service providers, Eby said that there were more than 40,000 occasions in the Lower Mainland between April 2007 and January 2008 when people were denied access to shelters.

Logic-injection site - nicely phrased comment

|

Logic-injection site

Kamloops, B.C. -- In disagreeing with the B.C. Supreme Court judge's decision to protect Vancouver's safe-injection site, Margaret Wente argues that the real solution is to stigmatize the "crack whores" like we do the smokers, for their own good. Isn't the logic a little loose here? Society stigmatizes the act of smoking because it thinks smokers should know better. Society stigmatizes "crack whores" because it thinks they are a pathetic bunch less worthy of kindness and support. How many readers can honestly say they see humanity in Vancouver's Downtown Eastside?

Human dignity is a value central to our Constitution. It informs and is informed by every Charter right we know. Thus, Mr. Justice Ian Pitfield was not creating a "constitutional right for addicts to shoot up"; rather, he was recognizing that our community's collective dignity was being threatened by our government's disregard for human life.

2nd Annual Women's Housing March Saturday June 14th

|

2nd Annual Women's Housing March

Sat June 14 @ 2 pm
Starts outside Downtown Eastside Women Centre
(302 Columbia- corner Cordova, just west of Main)

To watch the video for the march, click here

(it might say the video is unavailable--just keep trying)

On Saturday June 14 at 2 pm, join women in the Downtown Eastside Women Centre Power of Women Group in the 2nd Annual March for Women's Housing and March Against Poverty!


A Welfare 'Savings' Boomerang

|

A Welfare 'Savings' Boomerang

|

Common vision

Businessmen, activists join forces to help developers find solutions for Downtown Eastside

Frances Bula, Vancouver Sun

Published: Saturday, May 03, 2008

An unusual group of businessmen and community activists has waded into Vancouver's most contentious neighbourhood to try to help developers, the city and low-income advocates agree on a new common vision for the Downtown Eastside.

It's one that Milton Wong, the businessman and philanthropist who is one of the leaders of the group, along with former Carnegie Centre director Michael Clague, hopes will be open to business while respecting the existing low-income residents.

The group has proposed the city consider designating the Downtown Eastside a "special development zone," creating a special trust fund paid by development fees, and/or establishing a community development corporation, as a way of helping realize the new future for the neighbourhood.

Construction continues at the Woodwards site in the Downtown Eastside, where it is a frequent sight to see the homeless around multi-million dollar developments.

Construction continues at the Woodwards site in the Downtown Eastside, where it is a frequent sight to see the homeless around multi-million dollar developments.

Ward Perrin, Vancouver Sun
Original here

Doctors to visit poorest Vancouver residents to free up hospital beds

Wednesday, April 30, 2008 | 10:06 AM ET

CBC News

In a bid to reduce the number of hospital beds being taken up by the homeless and drug addicts in Vancouver, doctors will soon be making house calls to those who live in single room occupancy (SRO) hotels in the Downtown Eastside. Many residents of the Downtown Eastside are seriously ill, often the result of drug use and hard living on the streets, said Lorna Howes, the director of acute and community mental health for Vancouver with the Vancouver Coastal Health authority. By the time they get to a hospital, she said, they often need long-term care.


From the CBC 'Sounds like Canada' website, below are two links to the first and second  parts of recordings of the show.

You can also get a Podcast of the show here:

CBC SLS Podcast:

Latest Show: Friday April 11th

Part 1 - The Portland Hotel:
Shelagh visits with Dr. Gabor Mate, the staff physician at the Portland Hotel. It's an addiction treatment centre and residence in Vancouver's downtown eastside. Mate introduces Shelagh to some of his patients. And he talks about his new book, "In the Realm of the Hungry Ghosts: Close Encounters With Addiction" which presents some controversial ideas on the roots of addiction and ways to treat addicts.


Part 2 - The Portland Hotel, cont'd: A continuation of the discussion at the Portland Hotel.

About These Pages

From social activism, to homelessness in a wealthy city, to respectful workplaces, you'll find something to stimulate.

Working as an employment counsellor and mentor, I also question assumptions and offer resources for those in this important field.

Pages

Creative Commons License
This weblog is licensed under a Creative Commons License.