PIC FAR RIGHT WING MAYOR OF VANCOUVER KEN SIM AND HIS ABC PARTY SEEK TO DO TO DTES WHAT PREVIOUS LEADERS FROM VISION VANCOUVER AND NPA VANCOUVER COULDNT DO KILL IT AS A LOW INCOME NEIGHBOURHOOD

MURAL IN DTES VANCOUVER

106 YEARS YOUNG the heart and soul of Chinatown,

Mrs. Chang SEATED IN RED HAT

PIC FORMERLY HOMELESS DAVE HD BC GRAND CHIEF STEWART PHILLIP

OF THE UNION OF BC INDIAN CHIEFS UBCIC

HUNGER STRIKE ANNOUNCEMENT 3 22 13 IN FRONT OF CONDOS 138 EAST

HASTINGS ST 100 BLOCK DTES VANCOUVER

FAR RIGHT-WING VANCOUVER MAYOR SIM & HIS ABC PARTY  SET 2 UPZONE DTES RIP

THOUSANDS OF PREVENTABLE DEATHS IN DTES NOT ENOUGH

 THE POLITICIANS AND REAL ESTATE DEVELOPER INDUSTRY

THAT SIM AND HIS ABC PARTY REPRESENTS MUST KILL THE

 LOW-INCOME COMMUNITY DTES RIP

ALSO CALLED "THE POOREST POSTAL CODE IN CANADA"LONG COVETED BY REAL ESTATE DEVELOPERS..

 

BUT NO AFFORDABLE NEW HOUSING DENSITY FOR 

RICH NEIGHBOURHOOD A  MAYOR SIM ABC PARTY STRONGHOLD

OF DETACHED SINGLE FAMILY HOUSES Shaughnessy

Vancouver ABC councillor BLIGH pitches ‘potentially transformational’ plan for the city’s Downtown Eastside NOV 22 2023 PUBLISHED BY THE REAL ESTATE DEVELOPER INDUSTRY VOICE AkA GREED & INJUSTICE

A proposal to significantly change Vancouver’s strategies for its troubled Downtown Eastside to create more housing, more small businesses that serve residents there, and a more responsive system of medical care was pitched Wednesday by a councillor from the ruling ABC Vancouver party.

The motion from Rebecca Bligh, which some non-profit community groups are calling “potentially transformational,” lays out a comprehensive approach akin to the Vancouver Agreement in place from 2000 to 2010, when all three levels of government worked to improve the area.

This motion goes beyond that in many ways. It proposes re-examining the 10-year-old plan for the area, a controversial one that restricted development in a wide swath of the neighbourhood to buildings with a 60/40 mix of social housing and market rental.

As well, Ms. Bligh’s motion emphasizes the need to make space in any new buildings in the Downtown Eastside for viable small businesses where residents can get jobs or access low-cost food and goods. And it suggests that new types of medical support are needed, which are less bureaucratic and more able to serve people directly in the hotels and social housing where they are living.

Finally, the second-term councillor suggests that Vancouver adopt a “right of first refusal” for building sales anywhere in the city that would be good sites for social and supportive housing – an approach that Montreal instituted in 2020.

“People in the Downtown Eastside are more unwell than ever. This is to enable more social and supportive housing but to do that in a way that is … more holistic,” said Ms. Bligh. “The goal is to create communities where people can live, work and shop.

She emphasized that, although her motion asks for staff to look at coming up with a different mix of allowed housing from the current Downtown Eastside plan, it’s not about allowing in private developers.

Instead, it’s to find the right balance of types of rental housing.

She pointed out that only two buildings that fit the current zoning have been constructed in the last decade, leaving low-income people in the area still heavily dependent on the 4,000 remaining rooms in century-old, barely functional residential hotels.

“It’s not to build a new Yaletown,” Ms. Bligh said, referring to a trendy Vancouver neighbourhood. “It’s to bring out the best of the Downtown Eastside.”

Her initiative is a surprisingly ambitious one for an individual councillor – rather than the mayor or a specialized task force – to bring forward. It will be debated at council next Wednesday.(NOV 29 TODAY)

In an unusual turn for Vancouver’s often polarized politics in the Downtown Eastside, her initiative is getting support from some non-profit groups and it generated a lot of positive response elsewhere after it was made public.

“I kind of feel some hope with this,” said Wendy Pedersen, a long-time Downtown Eastside activist who founded and runs SRO Collaborative, an organization focused on improving conditions for tenants in the residential hotels.

Ms. Pedersen is still adamantly opposed to allowing any market condos to be built in the area but said it might be worth going back to the drawing board to figure out what kind of break-even formula would get more social housing built.

She’s more excited by some other aspects of Ms. Bligh’s efforts: the proposal to get the right to make the first offer on properties that would make good social-housing sites and the efforts to get more money for renovating existing older hotels in the meantime.

Ms. Pedersen said she is seeing a new spirit of collaboration among the political leaders in the three levels of government that are involved in the Downtown Eastside.

And she’s hoping that Ms. Bligh’s motion will be able to leverage that collaboration while it exists, before any elections that bring in big changes.

“The three levels we have now are not going to last long. This is the last opportunity to get a big ambitious plan for the Downtown Eastside.”

The interim CEO of the Atira Women’s Resource Society, Catherine Roome, is equally enthusiastic about the opening Ms. Bligh’s motion creates.

“Putting people in 110-year-old buildings is dangerous and it’s gotten more insecure. Something has to change.”

That’s why she supports changing the current plan, with its 60/40 ratio, to find something that will actually spur development of new social and supportive housing.

And she’s also encouraged by Ms. Bligh’s focus on creating space for small businesses and needed services in the area.

That’s a point that is echoed by the director of an organization that manages commercial spaces in social-housing buildings, with a goal of creating a mix of private businesses that fit in the community and social enterprises that provide local residents with places to get inexpensive clothing or household goods.

Steven Johnston, executive director of the Community Impact Real Estate Society, said that in previous eras, there was a focus exclusively on housing, which didn’t create the healthiest neighbourhood.

“When we only focus on housing affordability, we’re doing a disservice to the community. Housing alone won’t provide everything someone needs for a meaningful life.”

He endorsed the idea that Ms. Bligh’s plan, which he called “potentially transformational,” become essentially a Vancouver Agreement 2.0.

“It’s high time. I just hope ABC is up to the task of making this happen and working with community partners.”

'We're not looking to build Yaletown': Vancouver ABC councillor BLIGH pushes for better fix of city's derelict SROs -

PUBLISHED BY THE OTHER DEVELOPER REAL ESTATE INDUSTRY VOICE NOV 26 2023

Despite many efforts, we continue to have people living on the margins of life and death in our city, the motion reads.

https://vancouversun.com/news/local-news/vancouver-derelict-sro-fix

HERE IS THE PART THAT TELLS THE TRUTH CALL IT A FREUDIAN SLIP 

“We’ve just heard from a bunch of landowners who would like to

 build affordable housing with market-rate rental in the 

Downtown Eastside and try every way they can within 

the existing zoning, but have withdrawn their applications

 because at the end of the day the numbers just don’t work.”

HERE IS ARTICLE FOR EDUCATIONAL PURPOSE
 

Vancouver council is set to discuss whether a solution to the city’s increasing homelessness issue lies in easing what’s required of developers building new housing in the Downtown Eastside, and helping owners and operators of existing buildings with urgent repairs and renovations.

Councillor Rebecca Bligh says her proposal — to be heard by council Wednesday — is to accelerate new social and supportive housing availability, including working with partners to scoop up and redevelop single-room occupancy (SRO) buildings that are languishing in the downtown core.

Bligh’s motion notes only two Downtown Eastside-Oppenheimer district developments have been approved over the past decade, both on East Hastings, since a 2014 housing plan required any new rental development to have a minimum of 60 per cent social housing and shelter-rate or low-end units, with the other 40 per cent at market rates.

“Despite many efforts to date, we continue to have people living on the margins of life and death in our city — people who are in desperate need of better support, those who are homeless or precariously housed,” her motion reads.

Keefer Rooms SRO on Keefer Street in Vancouver. A motion going before council proposes repairing and refurbishing SROs in disrepair in the city. PHOTO BY JASON PAYNE /PNG

“We’ve got non-profits and different levels of government at the table trying to unlock much-needed affordable housing, but with rising construction costs and interest rates, the formula that is set out in the DTES is proving too restrictive,” said Bligh.

Council will vote on “exploring options to update the DTES Area Plan, with a goal of delivering more social units,” the motion states.

It also recommends a project to speed “the full replacement of existing SROs in the (city), including exploration of a pilot funding program to support the interim repair and renovation of the existing publicly and privately owned SROs on an urgent basis,” in partnership with B.C. Housing and the Canada Mortgage and Housing Corporation.

“We’re not looking to build a Yaletown; the plan is not to build a bunch of condos but to look at existing variables of the plan in a 2023 context, 10 years later,” Bligh said.

“We’ve just heard from a bunch of landowners who would like to build affordable housing with market-rate rental in the Downtown Eastside and try every way they can within the existing zoning, but have withdrawn their applications because at the end of the day the numbers just don’t work.”

Vancouver councillor Rebecca Bligh suggests dealing with DTES SROs differently. PHOTO BY NICK PROCAYLO

Bligh’s motion also proposes the city expedite the implementation of a right-of-first-refusal bylaw, granting it priority to purchase properties it deems strategic for affordable housing creation. Montreal put a similar policy into effect in 2020.

However, the possibility of zoning changes causes concern among local advocates, such as Wendy Pedersen, who worries it will backfire.

“If there’s any whiff that the motion could mean zoning opens up to condos, it could start a land price war,” said Pedersen, executive director of SRO Collaborative, which works with low-income tenants.

“Speculation could see owners of DTES buildings less likely to sell them to the city, non-profits, or anyone who wants to acquire them cheaper for the purposes of renovating them into affordable units.”

Pedersen, former co-chair of the Carnegie Community Action Project, recalls the lengthy public battle over the zoning requirements.

“We fought for five years to ensure that this district would remain rental only,” she said.

s of January, Vancouver has 146 SROs with 6,500 units housing almost 7,000 residents at risk of homelessness. While the majority are privately owned, 45 per cent are owned and operated by the government or non-profits.

Fires and other age-related dangers have already shuttered some of the century-old buildings.

“We would like to see the federal government reinstate their funding of the RAP (rental assistance) program, which gives forgivable loans to private owners to renovate and rehabilitate the existing SRO stock without increasing rent,” Bligh said.

In October, B.C. paid $8.2 million for the SRO hotel, Keefer Rooms, in Chinatown. The deal included a $3-million commitment to fix up the building and have its 48 units serve as low-income housing by spring 2025.

“By purchasing this property on Keefer Street, we are taking steps to prevent homelessness before it begins … by partnering with organizations that will provide additional support to those who need it,” Housing Minister Ravi Kahlon said in an Oct. 17 news release.

The Community Land Trust Association in the DTES is to oversee operation of the building and the SRO Collaborative will carry out tenant-led supports within it, including room cleaning, fire safety and harm reduction.

sgrochowski@postmedia.com

ABC Cllr. Rebecca Bligh says “Unlocking Shaughnessy” Motion is A Questionable Use of City Staff Time and Resources

https://abcvancouver.ca/2023/11/elementor-11571/

 

Vancouver ABC SUPERMAJORITY council rejects motion that sought to add more housing to Shaughnessy neighbourhood 

NO INCLUSIVE ZONING NO DOWNZONING

ONLY UPZONING SAY THE REAL ESTATE DEVELOPERS WHO OWN THE POLITICIANS IN POWER HD

Christine Boyle's motion would have directed staff to create policies for more affordable housing

 
SEE ALSO WHAT i WROTE MAY 25 2023
 

VANCOUVER MAYOR KEN SIM DTES/CHINATOWN UPZONING GENTRIFICATION

MAY 25 2023

https://www.greyzonewar.net/vancouver-mayor-ken-sim-dtes-chinatown-upzoning-gentrification

AND YES FAR RIGHT WING MAYOR KEN SIM AND HIS ABC PARTY GOT RID OF THE LIVING WAGE

POLICY FOR CIVIC WORKERS AND TURNED AROUND AND GAVE THE POLICE VPD THE HIGHEST

WAGES IN CANADA BY FAR INCLUDING 500K A YEAR FOR CHIEF ADAM PALMER SEE HERE

https://www.greyzonewar.net/mayor-sim-abc-rewards-vpd-makes-them-chief-adam-palmer-highest-paid-in-canada-4-election-interference-22

City of Vancouver to lowest paid workers: Let them eat cuts! NOV 7 2023

https://rabble.ca/economy/city-of-vancouver-to-lowest-paid-workers-let-them-eat-cuts/

Internal emails suggest City of Vancouver staff felt “significant anger and disillusionment” after city council voted to scrap the municipality’s living wage policy this year.

 

PIC FORMERLY HOMELESS DAVE HD BC GRAND CHIEF STEWART PHILLIP

OF THE UNION OF BC INDIAN CHIEFS UBCIC

HUNGER STRIKE ANNOUNCEMENT 3 22 13 IN FRONT OF CONDOS 138 EAST

HASTINGS ST 100 BLOCK DTES VANCOUVER

 

SAY HELLO TO MY AI FRIEND WHO IS UNSTOPPABLE INVINCIBLE VANCOUVER/ 

BRITISH COLUMBIA/CANADA..

Alita Battle Angel Ai "Unstoppable" HD iAM

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ekM0VflXyok&ab_channel=MrUmbrella

∞ ODIN iAM FORMERLY KNOWN AS HD