Recently in Homelessness Category

Welcome to Vanoc uver - here's what's happening

| | Comments (0) | TrackBacks (0)

11 members of a workforce (the 'security force') of 10,000 sent home (see story at the foot of the page) was an "extremely minimal number."

But if one window gets broken and a little paint spilled it triggers (!) a massive security response.......

It's all about security

For a full size image of this poster.....

If nothing happens to threaten 'security' security forces will say 'see, we did a good job.'

If something happens they will say 'see, we were needed'.It's a 'post 9-11' version of nuclear deterrence.

smallheaveweb.jpg
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.
 
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."


Ryan Larkin - posthumous 'Spare Change' a final tribute

| | Comments (0) | TrackBacks (0)

New short film features work by renowned animator Ryan Larkin

MONTREAL -- Laurie Gordon had originally wanted acclaimed National Film Board animator Ryan Larkin to contribute a few drawings to the music video for her rock band Chiwawa.

What she ended up with was a good friend and a six-minute film that showcases some of the last work by Larkin, who died of lung cancer last year.

"Spare Change" will screen in Vancouver, Toronto, Quebec City and Sherbrooke, Que., on Friday and also open the Focus section on Sunday at Montreal's Festival du Nouveau Cinema.

The film, which was completed by Gordon and a team of young animators after Larkin's death, is a poetic - and surreal - trip through Larkin's imagination.

"I think he would have hoped it would have been his first in a new series," Gordon said wistfully over coffee at Larkin's favourite bar, sitting next to his regular chair.

The drawings, which range from beautiful charcoal renderings to the cartoonish, tell the story of Astral Pan, a panhandler who takes the viewer from the wintry streets of Montreal to hell and back and up to the gates of heaven, where there's a meeting with St. Peter.

Chiwawa's song "Do It For Me" is featured in the movie.

Larkin's voice is also heard in the film and several of his own paintings and character drawings appear.

"I also got some circa-1967 stuff that came to me, magically - flip books that he did," Gordon says.

Gordon approached Larkin after seeing a news report which profiled him after personal problems put his flourishing filmmaking career into a 25-year stall.

Tapped by NFB legend Norman McLaren as a shining new talent, Larkin enjoyed a meteoric rise at the film board with his work in the 1960s, capping it off with an Oscar nomination in 1969 for his film "Walking."

He left the film board in 1978 and ended up bumming change on the street. But he gained new attention as the subject of the animated short "Ryan" directed by Chris Landreth, who won an Oscar for the movie in 2005.

Gordon said she approached Ryan in 2002 as he panhandled on St-Laurent Boulevard and pitched her idea. He was interested.

"I gave him some music and he chose a song and he started to make a few drawings," Gordon said. "Things were slow moving. There was no big rush."

Until one of Larkin's buddies pressed them.

"It's Ryan's time," Gordon says the fellow panhandler told them.

"That gave us both a rush and a push and we really started to seriously conceive and think and meet regularly on this yet-to-be-named film," says Gordon, who owns MusiVision, a film and music production company.

"One day Ryan called me up and said, 'I got the name, I got the name. It's 'Spare Change."'

That added another dimension to the film, Gordon says with a smile.

"We were sitting right over there," she says indicating a table in the bar, which has Larkin's picture on the wall. "He said to me, 'Now that we're making a movie together, we're going to need official titles. I'm the director and you're the producer'."

She made business cards.

"That was the beginning of hell and back but a good hell. It was a great ride for Ryan and I on many levels.

"It was wonderful. I really loved working with Ryan. I miss him a lot," she added, tears welling in her eyes.

She compared their friendship to that of a couple of mischievous teenagers and said a real connection developed. He was a diligent worker, she got the money together.

"He didn't boss people around," she said. "He didn't have time to boss people around."

The project took on added urgency when doctors discovered a small tumour on Larkin's lung in 2005. He was in generally good health aside from the tumour and Gordon got the impression he was comforted by the fact she had survived breast cancer.

Larkin came to live with Gordon and her husband in nearby St-Hyacinthe, Que., where he was cared for by them and her sister until he had to go into a hospice. He died a week later, just two hours after Gordon had left his bedside.

Larkin had been experiencing a comeback with the attention garnered by Landreth's film and had done some work for MTV. When "Spare Change" is shown at the Montreal Festival du Nouveau Cinema, it will open for Adrian Wills' "All Together Now."

That documentary tells the story behind the collaboration between the Beatles and Cirque du soleil that resulted in the creation and 2006 launch of the "Love" stage production which launched in 2006.

Gordon says the lyrical "Spare Change" is a fitting tribute to Larkin, who always insisted he didn't want to be remembered for his past.

"He was always looking to the future."

Street sweeps displace homeless in Downtown Eastside

| | Comments (0) | TrackBacks (0)

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.

Homeless gather in Oppenheimer Park

| | Comments (0) | TrackBacks (0)

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!
Very comprehensive, very revealing.

DTES Demographic Study Final June 2008.pdf

Fearing it would hurt the poor, demonstrators want proposed development quashed

VANCOUVER -- Housing activists made a last-ditch effort to derail a Downtown Eastside condominium project at a city hall hearing yesterday, claiming the development would fuel "class hatred" and make it more difficult for low-income people who live in the neighbourhood to obtain decent housing and services.

"We need some indication that there is a future for poor people in this neighbourhood - otherwise these condos are a slap in the face," Carnegie Community Action Project spokeswoman Wendy Pedersen said yesterday at a development permit board meeting.

Ms. Pedersen and other activists attended the meeting to register their objections to the 160-unit Greenwich condominium project, which developer Concord Pacific has proposed for a downtown site at 58 West Hastings St.

The area is now dominated by single-room accommodation hotels and the rough edges of Vancouver's drug trade.


VPD veteran says province must renovate 18 single-room occupancy hotels
 
Mike Howell
Vancouver Courier

Wednesday, June 25, 2008
copcallsforbackup.jpg

CREDIT: Photo-Dan Toulgoet
Makeshift shelters, including Mark Tobiasson's lean-to in Oppenheimer Park, populate the Downtown Eastside.

A senior Vancouver police officer says homelessness in the Downtown Eastside is the worst he's seen in his 23 years on the job.

Supt. Warren Lemcke, commander for the north part of the city, said the dire situation won't change until the provincial government renovates the 18 single-room occupancy hotels it purchased over the last year.


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.