Blog – Libby Davies yeehaw

Former longtime area NDP MP Libby Davies will be a guest in an Oct. 28 at Heart of the City

Former longtime area NDP MP Libby Davies will be a guest in an Oct. 28 at Heart of the City

When Libby Davies first tried to establish a library in the Carnegie Community Centre, she was told no. “We went to the library board, but they only wanted a reading room. The board said that people in the Downtown Eastside didn’t read. We were outraged at the myth, that if you’re poor you don’t read.” Forty years later, the former, long-time NDP member of Parliament is looking back on one of her greatest legacies. On Oct. 28, Davies will be a guest in a special online event that celebrates the opening of the Carnegie Community Centre and its library. The event, hosted by Terry Hunter, kicks off the 17th annual Heart in the City Festival, which includes more than 100 events happening live and virtually until Nov. 8. In a separate, pre-recorded event hosted by Am Johal, Davies reads selections from her 2019 book Outside In: A Political Memoir. Advertisement STORY CONTINUES BELOW This advertisement has not loaded yet, but your article continues below. Article content continued As Davies recalls, it took six years for her and her fellow activists/organizers, including her partner Bruce Eriksen and DERA (the Downtown Eastside Residents’ Association), to get the Carnegie off the ground. Davies started working in what was then known as Skid Road in 1972, while still a liberal arts student at UBC. (She dropped out the following year, as her work in the DTES took up more of her time.) As much as things have changed since then, many of the problems — rampant drug use, homelessness — rage on. But she’s enthusiastic about the city’s plans to house some of the city’s tent-dwellers — city council just passed a $30-million homeless action plan. “I think it’s a very substantive and significant solution,” she said. “This is a perennial crisis. I was working on this as a young organizer in the ’70s, in the ’80s, the ’90s when I became a member of Parliament, and still it continues.” Davies blames current conditions on the loss of existing low-income housing and national housing policies under Paul Martin’s prime ministership (2003-2006). “Canada stopped its federal housing program, and that had a dramatic impact. I know because I lived through it. I was there when we had the housing programs in the ’80s, and we used those federal funds to build Oppenheimer Lodge and co-op and social housing. We are still recovering from that loss.” Davies’ own impact on the area is immeasurable. The Carnegie is one significant touchstone. According to recent statistics, the library boasted the second-highest (after Marpole) foot traffic in the city for a neighbourhood branch. And then there’s the creativity that has come out of the Carnegie, some of which is showcased at this year’s festival. Events include the Sandy Cameron Memorial Writing Contest, an annual event that celebrates the creative writing of Downtown Eastside-involved residents; and In the Beginning, which features storyteller/filmmaker/performer Rosemary Georgeson and Firehall Arts Centre artistic director Donna Spencer delving into stories and history of local Indigenous peoples prior to and during colonization. “Incredible poetry came out of this building from people’s lived experience,” Davies said. “Bud Osborn used to give poetry workshops. They used to have poetry nights, and they were amazing. People would be enthralled. “Bud’s work touched people so deeply. He wrote about the neighbourhood and what people were experiencing. He and Bruce Eriksen and (recently deceased playwright/journalist) Bob Sarti and (activist/writer) Sandy Cameron have all been pivotal people in the centre. “It’s a really important place. For people who don’t have their own living room, the Carnegie became the living room of the community.”



Throne Speech Fails to Deliver on Affordable Housing

Throne Speech Fails to Deliver on Affordable Housing

“What I have seen and heard so far in Vancouver has convinced me that this dire state of homelessness in the face of so much wealth indicates that this is still a serious issue that needs continued monitoring by the UN.” – UN envoy on homelessness, Miloon Kothari, Vancouver Province, Wednesday, October 17, 2007

The Conservative government delivered a disastrous Throne Speech on October 16.

While Vancouver and cities across Canada recognized Homelessness Action Week and the International Day for the Eradication of Poverty, Stephen Harper outlined an agenda for the upcoming session of Parliament that offered nothing for affordable housing and child care, nothing for a $10 minimum wage and no plans or actions to end poverty in Canada.

A Throne Speech vote is where you either show your support or your opposition to the government’s direction. Conservatives are seeking a mandate to govern. I won’t support this wrongheaded mandate and I voted against this Throne Speech.

In a shameful move, the government’s Throne Speech mentioned homelessness and poverty, but nothing to address the problem. The Speech states: “Families worry about the rising costs of higher education and the expense of caring for elderly parents. They worry about affordable housing and the number of homeless people on our streets. Our Government is committed to helping Canadian families meet their needs. The Working Income Tax Benefit will help Canadians get back into the workforce.”

Really?

This so-called benefit was already introduced in their last budget and we know if affects very few Canadians. If a single parent qualifies for the maximum benefit of $1000 a year, it gets significantly reduced for parents making more that $14,500 a year and completely disappears for families – even a family of four – making $20,000 a year – still well below the poverty line. We already know that tax cuts don’t build affordable homes and tax cuts don’t create quality affordable child care spaces.

Once again the government is taking in billions of dollars in surplus, and once again corporate tax cuts are taking priority over affordable housing.

Earlier this year, I wrote to Monte Solberg, the Minister of Canada Mortgage and Housing Corporation, calling on federal support for VANOC’s Inner City Housing Table proposal for 3200 new affordable housing units and a housing legacy for the 2010 Winter Games. The federal government seems unwilling to rise to this challenge. In his response to my letter, Mr. Solberg acknowledged that government has not yet formed a response to the VANOC report.

I will continue challenge and call on all levels of government to commit to the protection of low and affordable housing, and raise the assistance rates to realistic levels.

Sincerely,
Libby



Romanow’s 50-year fight for medicare

Romanow’s 50-year fight for medicare

OTTAWA—Roy Romanow is 72, though he hardly looks it. He has earned the right to sit this one out, but, of course, he can’t. As the future of health care in Canada elbows its way onto centre stage in 2012, the former Saskatchewan premier will be marking 50 years of fighting for a publicly administered, single-payer health-care system in this country….“Very early on in my thinking, I came to the conclusion that the most efficient and most ethical form of delivery is predicated on the assumption that we are all together on this short journey in life and we owe it to each other to look after each other the best that we can,” he said…Under the proposed Ottawa scheme, says NDP deputy leader Libby Davies, good years will mean sustainable health care, but the bad years will mean, “sorry, you are out of luck.’’







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