Category Archives: The Issues

A positive attitude …

may not solve all your problems, but it will annoy enough people to make it worth the effort.

I was planning to heap scorn a society that, with growing homelessness, poverty and affordable housing needs, would spend $1.1 million on a trail. I thought to enquire if Greater Vancouver got $3.7 for trail improvement and Abbotsford got $1.2 million, how was it that when Vancouver got $80 million spent on affordable housing for the homeless Abbotsford got $0.00.

Do the homeless in Abbotsford not deserve help as well? More importantly why is it local politicians were/are silent rather than calling the Liberals on their continuing failure to recognize that the homeless and affordable housing crisis extends beyond Greater Vancouver into the Fraser Valley and particularly Abbotsford?

But …… it is a new week (Monday morning) and last week held excellent results for me with regard to the WRAP program, a program I strongly embrace. So, why depress myself because local politicians and assorted big-wigs don’t seem to care about those in need enough to act responsibly OR to provide leadership? Better for my mental health to focus on the positive aspect of this cash infusion and future plans to extent the trail even further with provincial $$$.

This trail network should encourage people to travel around west Abbotsford without wasting gas and while getting some exercise. While it would have been nice if the current project had pushed further west than Exhibition Park, it is close enough to Clearbrook that the Clearbrook homeless population will be able to access the trail network.

Not only will this provide access to and open up more good camping spots, it will allow the homeless population to spread westward along the convenient entrance to west Abbotsford. It will also relieve pressures on the mounting Clearbrook homeless population, which should in turn reduce the pressure for the downtown old Abbotsford to camp out in the Compassion Park area. Thereby saving their meagre possessions from confiscation by city work crews.

Indeed I would urge the City of Abbotsford to bring immediate pressure on Victoria to provide immediate funding for the western portion of the trail so that work on the east side can also be completed this summer. I believe it is more important to focus on the eastern area with its potential to open access to Sumas Mountain to the homeless via this network of trails.

While I am not sure opening up access to camping spots and spreading the homeless population out across the city is a good idea, it does serve to provide motivation to the entire city population to become involved in addressing homelessness and affordable housing issues. And at least council, our local MLA’s and the provincial Liberals are taking an action that opens up some interesting opportunities for the City’s homeless population

What do you know, there is a great deal of truth in the assertion that it is all in how you look at things. While not a course of action I would have advocated for addressing homelessness and other affordable housing issues, viewed from a properly skewed viewpoint this network of trails certainly constitutes an interesting approach to those pressing concerns.

Centennial Pool

Centennial Pool – is there a city bylaw against thinking?

Undoubtedly a portion of the blame for the damage that will be done to the Whalers Swim Club, their programs and their ability to be competitive does lie with the contractor. However, despite their finger pointing, senior city staff and council must bear the largest portion of the responsibility for this debacle.

I am tired, make that disgusted, with the fact that in making poor decision after poor decision senior staff and council insist on pointing their fingers everywhere and at everyone else, refusing to accept their responsibility for the decisions they make.

Worse, in the case of Centennial Pool they spent the past three to four months assuring the Whalers Swim Club the pool would be ready. This behaviour has clearly taken the matter of Centennial Pool past poor judgement into incompetence.

At the time the contract was awarded questions were raised by many, except for senior staff and council, concerning accepting the low bid from an inexperienced pool tank builder. Why did the experienced pool builders think building costs would be so much higher than the inexperienced builder, as reflected by their bids? With the incredibly tight deadline for completion and the devastating impact failure to open on time would have on the Whalers Swim Club, why take the extremely high risk involved in awarding the contract to a company that had never built a pool before? Exactly how is “highly recommended” preferable to a track record of actual pool construction?

I do not know the answers to these and similar questions that were raised, because senior staff and council refused to address any questions. Whether this was because the questions were from the public, arrogance, the projected $600,000 savings were desperately needed to feed the voracious appetite the capital plan has shown for consuming City cash flow or simply a lack of judgment and common sense is also unknown.

I do know it is time Abbotsford City Hall was held accountable for its actions. Mark Taylor and any other senior staff involved in this clear lack of judgment should be fired. Since Abbotsford has chosen to lack any adequate alternative facilities it is the responsibility of the city to find and secure alternative training facilities, bear any difference in costs of these facilities and provide transportation or reasonable compensation for transportation to these other facilities. Current council’s “firing” must await the next municipal election. In the meantime they owe a public apology to the Whalers.

It is past time that Abbotsford City Hall stopped blaming everyone and everything else and accepted responsibility for the consequences of the decisions they make and actions they take

Warehousing is NOT a solution.

Warehousing is not a solution, it is only a band-aid. I worry that the public will be misled into thinking this $80 million purchase of hotels by the Liberal government is a solution rather than just the first step of a multi-year long process.

It is also most worrisome that the Liberal government appears to fail to see any homelessness beyond the boundary of Greater Vancouver. The hundreds of homeless roaming the streets of Abbotsford also are in dire need of shelter Mr. Campbell, what of them?

Having said that it was still good to see the provincial government begin to acknowledge the extent of the homeless challenge we as a society and province face. This move does serve to secure these buildings for very low income housing. Ideally we would be building from the ground up to incorporate the lessons experience has taught us about designing this type of transitional housing.

Unfortunately procrastination on homelessness by all levels of government have denied us the luxury of time. While not ideal this purchase and rehab gets these units online quickly. We need to follow this beginning up by starting NOW to plan and build the additional transitional housing units required by the number of homeless on our streets, numbers that are a result of our failure to take action. These new units we can design and build based on the lessons our hard earned experience has taught us.

Simply warehousing the homeless is not a solution. At the rate our society for a variety of reasons is generating new homeless, simply warehousing the homeless continuously lead to overflowing “warehouses” and the need to be continuously adding warehouse space.

From years of experience we know the form and nature of the programs we need to put in place if we want to make progress and reduce the homeless population. I have no illusions that homelessness can be reduced to zero. I know, we know, based on experience, that we can significantly reduce the homeless population. IF we choose to make the investment in housing, detoxification, recovery and community based support programs experience we need to put in place.

The true challenge in reducing homelessness lies in the fact that the needed course of action requires leadership, boldness, a willingness to face an unpleasant reality, change our current approach and the willingness to accept and deal with the unavoidable problems in helping people with many behavioural difficulties. All of which, regrettably, politicians would rather avoid in the service of opinion polls and the name of winning politics.

It is easy to spend $80 million on buildings, especially when it permits announcing this purchase with pomp, circumstance and self congratulations.
Investing $80+ million in the housing and recovery/support programs we know we need to put in place is hard. Politics may be a blood sport but it is easy to play. It is far harder to address the complex, unpleasant and unpopular problem of homelessness calling as it does for character and the willingness to stand up and be counted not because it is politically popular but because it is the right thing, the Canadian way to behave.

Politics or Leadership, the homeless ball is currently in the court Mr. Campbell and his Liberals .