Why Vancouver needs an independent COPE now

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      Sean Antrim, Kim Hearty, and Tristan Markle, who plan to run for spots on the Coalition of Progressive Electors executive, sent us this letter in response to a message sent by former councillor Ellen Woodsworth to her supporters:

      The time has come for Vancouver’s only progressive civic party to stand on its own two feet. The situation is urgent: Vancouver has become the most expensive city on the continent and the second most unaffordable city in the world. Our friends and family are being priced-out, as social housing is privatized and demolished at an unprecedented rate. People are longing for real change and real social justice.

      As community organizers, the three of us are determined to turn this situation around and make Vancouver affordable for everyone. To that end, we are running for the executive of the Coalition of Progressive Electors (COPE) at this Sunday’s AGM. We believe that renters, who form the majority of residents in this city, need housing stability and firm rent controls. Existing affordable housing stock must be protected through stronger civic bylaws, and new affordable housing created through a robust housing authority. We realize that the only way for this to happen is for COPE to stand strong and independent of the two developer-funded parties -- the NPA and Vision Vancouver. A few recent examples will serve to illustrate why.

      Just last week, the Vancouver Renters’ Union -- an organization to which we belong -- successfully worked with 33 brave seniors to fight a 45% rent increase at Lions Manor in Mount Pleasant. The landlord’s rationale for the proposed extraordinary rent increase was that local property values are escalating due to high-end condo developments in this historically working-class neighbourhood. The current developer-backed city council actively facilitates this upscaling, but refuses to use its tools or influence to protect the most vulnerable renters. Unfortunately, Lions Manor is only the tip of the iceberg. Throughout East Vancouver, migrant communities, seniors and those hit hardest by Vancouver's housing crisis are being displaced. To halt this process, it is essential that COPE withdraw support from developer-funded parties, and present an independent alternative.

      The situation is even more critical in the Downtown Eastside, where condo development is outpacing social housing at a staggering rate. City council is currently fast-tracking approval of high-end condo projects on two sides of the Carnegie Centre: the redevelopment of one of Vancouver’s oldest theatres, the Pantages, and a tower at Main and Keefer by Westbank Development Corp, a key Vision donor. Just this month, the City joined Wall Financial Corp to announce plans for an even more massive complex of three towers across from Ray Cam neighbourhood centre on the Hastings corridor. All this is happening without social impact studies, and before completion of the local area planning process. Also this month, the Mayor fired the city’s head planner Brent Toderian in order to expedite all these pet condo projects. Before regaining the trust of the Downtown Eastside community, COPE has to stop colluding with the developer party that is actively undermining low-income housing in the neighbourhood.

      Completing its rightward corporate transformation, Vision recently appointed former BC Liberal cabinet minister Olga Ilich to head a new housing “task force,” stacked with development industry and landlord lobbyists. The task force is charged with shoring up public support for council's plans to demolish existing public housing while creating even more corporate tax-breaks for the development industry. All community groups have been locked-out of the task force.

      The progressive forces in Vancouver are rightly confused by COPE's position as a tool for propping up and lending legitimacy to Vision's strong neoliberal agenda of tax cuts and market solutions to the housing crisis. Voters’ confusion is understandable, given COPE’s proud history of defending residents against developers and corporations. For the sake of clarity, it is time for COPE to stand with residents unambiguously, without fear of losing support of established interests.

      The old back-room, top-down approach of striking deals with other parties is a dead end. Those parties are too entrenched in the status quo and COPE has diverted too much of its energy working in back rooms rather than in the community. We need to refocus energies on building a strong, independent COPE that reconnects with neighbourhoods and grassroots organizations.

      It’s also time to move beyond the old factionalism, where demonizing and bullying are used against those who want a new direction. A pro-Vision letter published in yesterday’s Georgia Straight warned against a new, re-energized COPE. But such fear-mongering only deters democracy and protects the status quo in a worsening situation. Furthermore, these scare tactics fall flat given that the old approach of compromising with Vision has already wiped COPE from city council. It needs to be acknowledged that this strategy failed COPE members and, more importantly, failed the people of Vancouver.

      There are many individuals and organizations across the city who are anxious to join a social movement for an affordable city. Let’s bring COPE into the movement by giving it a strong, inclusive, independent voice. We are young activists running to make COPE a place for real change.

      Vote for an independent COPE on Sunday, February 19, at 1:30pm at the Ukrainian Church, 154 East 10th Avenue.

      Sincerely
      Sean Antrim, Kim Hearty, and Tristan Markle

      Comments

      22 Comments

      independent cope

      Feb 16, 2012 at 10:27am

      well said, i am going to vote for an INDEPENDENT COPE on Sunday!

      time to stop cooperating with developer-backed parties.

      LostMyGlasses

      Feb 16, 2012 at 10:35am

      How much did all these folks canvass in the past civic election for COPE?

      Chantal

      Feb 16, 2012 at 10:35am

      We really need a Vancouver for everyone! Vote for independence.

      "calculations" of "cost"

      Feb 16, 2012 at 12:46pm

      The COPE slate must accommodate the interests of those they represent, not appease the demands of developers and current vision/npa council seat holders. The only way is independence.

      Anonymous1

      Feb 16, 2012 at 12:58pm

      Lostmyglasses canvassing is not much fun when you have to canvas for Gregor Robertson and his team on the same slate as COPE

      Kevin R

      Feb 16, 2012 at 1:26pm

      It's fascinating to me that anyone in COPE would even consider continuing on the current, disastrous Vision/Developer-friendly path. Vision has proven itself to be no better in practice than the NPA. COPE was our only alternative, and by working with Vision, they failed us. I look forward to Antrim, Hearty and Markle returning the party to its roots as an energized and assertive force for change.

      Wankoover

      Feb 16, 2012 at 3:53pm

      well, if the Straight is not going to point out who exactly Antrim, Markle and Hearty are - then I suppose it leaves this lowly post to mention that the three are behind the online blog "The Mainlander" and in themselves embody a "back-room, top-down approach" . Frankly, the DTES does not need any more self-important coddled UBC student Marxists to parachute into the neighbourhood and stir up fear and discord, the DNC, CCAP and Markle's own VAN ACT have done more than enough of that.

      The push to keep the DTES a silo for supportive housing alone and reject affordable rentals (a cornerstone tenet of The Mainlander supported DNC) will ensure more of the same old same old in the DTES and do nothing to thwart gentrification. Once the skeletons are pulled out of the closet, these three will be found to be too radical and too agenda bound to garner any real support in this city.

      Hopefully COPE voters see through the veneer and avoid the trap of student radicals hijacking the party before they are banished to the dustbin of Vancouver political history.

      Crisis breeds hope

      Feb 16, 2012 at 4:04pm

      LostMyGlasses - i canvassed several times a week for the duration of the campaign including several times with Tristan, a signer to this letter. Your point?

      Igor

      Feb 16, 2012 at 4:48pm

      I don't know Kim, but both Tristan and Sean will make excellent additions to the COPE executive. Not only are they both thoughtful, articulate, and mature, but they also play ball hockey with unbridled passion.

      Dunsmuir's Ghosts

      Feb 16, 2012 at 8:30pm

      @Wankoover

      Kevin Kwinlan?! I didn't know you read the straight!