School District 61 and the NDP

Published in Lower Island News (Victoria), January 2007

It is not pleasant to question the actions of fellow New Democrats in a public forum like this newspaper. But sometimes it is essential, particularly when NDP members hold positions of trust and public responsibility.

We must question the decision of a majority of School District No. 61 (Greater Victoria) trustees to sell Fairburn Elementary in Gordon Head to a private real-estate developer. It should be remembered that a majority of trustees, including the chairperson, belong to the New Democratic Party.

By some strange logic, a sufficient number of NDP members voted with Liberals to sell-off 7.2 acres of public land and attached buildings to a private developer for $4.3 million.

Contrary to basic democratic principles of transparency, disclosure, and public participation, the Board majority announced this sell-off as a fait accompli without any public consultation.

The Fairburn Elementary sell-off followed similar questionable land deals. Several years ago, Blanshard Elementary was closed and leased for 99 years to privately-owned University Canada West, for $4.5-million. The university has recently put the lease on this public property for sale, for $6.5 million. Why did the School Board agree to a contract that was so favourable to the private party and so detrimental to the public interest?

I am a member of the New Democrat Party because I hold a set of principles, including a belief in public ownership and participatory democracy. Selling assets such as School Board property to private real-estate developers, without consultation, conflicts with these principles.

School District No. 61 definitely has financial woes, due to inadequate funding from the provincial government. But Greater Victoria voters elect school trustees to protect their interests from cost-cutting and privatizing governments. Voters place New Democrats in positions of public trust. It is my belief that this trust has been undermined by the sale of Fairburn Elementary and the de facto sale of Blanshard Elementary. Public trust in the New Democratic Party has also been compromised.

Fairburn and Blanshard – like Burnside, Uplands, Hampton, and Richmond – are highly valued as crucial greenspaces in these build-out neighbourhoods. Their sale to private interests for residential subdivisions hurts these communities. Moreover, their sale reveals a lack of vision of future requirements for public lands and public schools.

Where will Greater Victoria be in the year 2080, when I’m 102 years old and my daughter is 75? Where will her grandchildren go to public school and what greenspaces will they enjoy, in a much denser and heavily populated region? The costs of assembling lands for public purposes will be exponentially higher in 2080 than the $9-million the School District received for these properties.

If we don’t look ahead to the future, who will?

New Democrats in Greater Victoria need to begin asking some hard questions. I ascribe to a ‘Big Tent’ philosophy as the only means of effectively challenging the power of private interests and their political arms – the BC Liberal party and the federal Liberal and Conservative parties.

But how do we respond when the privatization ideology creeps into our ‘Big Tent’?

Nobody owns their elected positions. They are put there by voters. And likewise, they can be removed.

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When property rights conflict with the right to shelter: Victoria’s homeless and Winnipeg’s Derelict Building Bylaw

Published in Fernwood News (Victoria), January 2007

The private real-estate market does not provide adequate housing for low-income people. As the cost of land escalates in Victoria, property owners (like myself) can realize large capital gains, but a growing number of fellow citizens are squeezed into substandard housing and onto the streets.

This is the reality of a neoliberal economy where the right to hold property supersedes many other rights. This reality was revealed on October 23, 2006, when the Victoria Police Department used tear gas to evict a low-income man who had occupied the three-decades vacant Janion Building on Store Street.

For years, civil leaders claimed they lacked the jurisdiction and resources to provide adequate shelter for those in need. For years, the social costs of homelessness spilled over into neighbourhoods like Fernwood. For years, civic officials threw up their hands as the owner of the Janion Building allowed this heritage property to decay.

But within hours of learning that Craig Ballantyne (a 41-year-old man inflicted with terminal cancer) had occupied the Janion, the Victoria Police Department acted with haste and force. Police used tear gas to evict Ballantyne, gassing a large number of bystanders on the street below.

Your tax dollars paid for those tear gas canisters. And your (and my) tax dollars will pay to replace them.

Was justice served in Victoria on October 23, 2006?

From the narrow standpoint of the owner’s right to hold and enjoy property, the answer is yes. But from the broader standpoint of social justice – the belief in equality and human dignity – the answer is no, I believe. Unfortunately, social justice is less of a priority in when tax dollars are allocated than the protection of property rights.

In the City of Victoria, there is no legal protection for the right to shelter.

What Victoria can learn from Winnipeg

In 2004, Winnipeg City Council passed By-law No. 35/2004. This municipal legislation empowered the city to take title to derelict buildings like the Janion Building. Frustrated by decaying neighbourhoods, the city of 600,000 took action against negligent property owners.

Winnipeg By-law No. 35/2004 establishes a process to certify vacant properties as derelict. If the owner refuses repeated requests to maintain their property to established standards, and is convicted of violating the bylaw, the city can apply to the district registrar of titles to transfer ownership to the City. The owner is entitled to no compensation.

To date, Winnipeg has not yet used this power to take title to vacant or derelict buildings. However in November 2006, the City threatened action against 15 property owners who had been convicted under the by-law. A strength of Winnipeg By-law No. 35/2004 is its persuasive effect on property owners. The threat of expropriation without compensation creates a major incentive for owners to maintain their properties to a reasonable standard. The escalating costs of applying for vacant building permits, as required under the by-law, similarly persuades owners to maintain and use their property.

Other benefits of the Winnipeg by-law include: (1) limiting the unsightliness of vacant buildings on adjacent properties and neighbourhoods; (2) maintaining safe conditions for firefighters, other civic officials, and members of the public who come in contact with vacant properties; and (3) preventing the decay of useable buildings by mandating minimum standards of maintenance and upkeep.

Victoria would benefit from legislation along the lines of Winnipeg By-law No. 35/2004. While the Winnipeg by-law required amendments to the Winnipeg Charter, BC’s Local Government Act and Community Charter can be similarly amended by the province. In the interim, Victoria City Council can pass a draft Vacant and Derelict Buildings By-law to shift the onus onto the province.

Vacant and derelict building legislation reconciles private property rights with broader, community interests. Winnipeg now has the legislative capacity to take title to derelict buildings and open them for community uses including housing. Proposals for redevelopment are part of the process of taking title in the Winnipeg by-law.

In Victoria and neighbouring municipalities, citizens and elected officials would be wise to incorporate such legislation into their housing strategy. Rather than wait for low-income people like Craig Ballantyne to squat derelict buildings, provoking confrontation, city officials can be proactive and take action against negligent property owners.

Proactive civic action can avoid needless conflict that pits low-income people against police; squanders limited tax dollars on expensive counter-protest gadgets and noxious tear gas; and puts law-enforcement officers in the unenviable position of deploying force against the property-less poor in order to protect the interests of derelict property owners.

A Vacant and Derelict Building By-law is a step toward equality and social justice for Victoria.

 

Some facts on ending homelessness

Ending homelessness is a big task, but one that Canada can certainly afford. The country’s “Big Six” banks recorded profits of nearly $12-billion in 2005, while the average salaries of Canadian CEO’s exceeded $9-million that year. Our federal government, which once took an activist role in the provision of housing, subsidized the oil and gas industry to the tune of $1.4 billion last year. The problem is not a lack of funds. The problem is that Canada’s vast resource and financial wealth by-passes a large number of Canadians, and leaves them without adequate shelter.

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Stand up to Bear Mountain

Published in Lower Island News (Victoria), December 2006

Earlier this year, I wrote about the need for progressives throughout the CRD to organize a regional force for change. This need was clearly demonstrated in November 2006, when the Bear Mountain Development Group provoked an ugly confrontation with local First Nations.

This dispute centred around a cave near the summit of Skirt Mountain in Langford, which members of the Songhees, Tsartlip and other local First Nations call Spaet Mountain (pronounced ‘Spay-et’). In May 2006, Songhees Lands Manager Cheryl Bryce informed the Bear Mountain Development Group that local Aboriginals considered the cave a sacred site and asked that it be protected.

However Bear Mountain CEO Len Barrie, a former NHL hockey player, arrogantly declared: “If we want to blow up a cave and put up a hotel we will.” (Times Colonist, 25 May 2006, p. A1). You may recall that Barrie circulated a letter to Saanich South voters in May 2005 urging the election of a ‘business-friendly’ government.

Throughout the summer of 2006, attempts by Bryce and others to arrange a meeting with Barrie were refused, and in September 2006 Bryce was formally banned from the Bear Mountain property. This prevented her from assisting the BC Archeology Branch in identifying Aboriginal cultural heritage sites on the mountain.

This disrespectful treatment of a responsible official of the Songhees First Nation amplified tension.

In November 2006 the BC Archeology Branch approved construction in the vicinity the cave, ostensibly to determine it “archeological value.” Barrie followed through on his threat and sent in bulldozers, which tore the roof off the cave and drained a subterranean lake. When Bryce and others ascended the mountain to stop the destruction, the Bear Mountain management instigated several hundred construction workers—threatened with the loss of employment—into a standoff with a small group of Aboriginals. One Tsartlip man was assaulted. Also present at the cave site were First Nations chiefs from across BC, in Victoria for the funeral of Frank Calder (CCF-NDP MLA for Atlin, 1949-1975), the first Aboriginal elected to a Canadian legislature.

This incident is appalling on many levels, most notably for the spectre of racism and contempt toward Aboriginals. Non-Aboriginal workers were incited toward vigilantism, by an employer pandering to the worst instincts of young workers desperate to retain employment.

The really scary thing is the amount of power that Len Barrie and his Bear Mountain colleagues wield. Backed by millions of dollars in investments and wooed by a billion dollars in potential revenues, the stakes are high. Langford Mayor Stewart Young has granted a virtual ‘carte blanche’ to the development group. Victoria Mayor Alan Lowe has completed architectural work at Bear Mountain. The BC Heritage Conservation Act has facilitated rather than prevented ‘greenfield’ expansion into Aboriginal heritage sites. The federal Liberal Party, in its ‘Made-in-BC’ election platform last winter, pledged $5-million to a new highway interchange proposed for the luxury resort.

Bear Mountain is prepared to bulldoze anyone and anything that stands in its way.

The proposed Savory Road Connector could forever alter the landscape and character of Spaet Mountain. This highway, designed to ease traffic congestion caused by Bear Mountain, would carve its way from the Trans-Canada Highway near Florence Lake up the southeasterly slope of the mountain. It would destroy Douglas Fir, Garry Oak and Arbutus forest, a natural ravine that feeds Florence Lake, and other Aboriginal sacred sites.

Len Barrie and his cohorts have gone far enough. Certainly we can provide adequate employment in the CRD without destroying sacred sites and endangered ecosystems. Certainly we can establish a firm urban containment boundary. Certainly we are wise enough to leave the remaining forested areas on Spaet Mountain alone.

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Ignatieff is ideal Liberal

Letter to the Editor of the Globe and Mail (Toronto), 12 October 2006

As Michael Ignatieff scrambles to be all things to all people, courting both sides of the Israel-Palestine conflict, we should assess his behaviour in light of the Liberal party’s history.

In the 1890s, Laurier waffled over the Manitoba Schools Question, simultaneously pandering to Catholic and Protestant voters – and won power. In 1910, he proposed a Canadian Navy that was considered too weak in imperialist Ontario and too strong in anti-imperialist Quebec, and lost the subsequent election.

During the Second World War, Mackenzie King skirted around the conscription issue – “conscription if necessary, but not necessarily conscription” – and retained a slim majority. In the 1970s, Trudeau pursued a policy of “balance” toward South Africa’s Apartheid regime, voicing support for “human rights” while allowing increased exports of Canadian arms, investments, and trade.

In the 1990s, Chretien promised a national child-care program but this policy languished until the dying days of his successor’s government.

Canada’s “natural governing party” has never really known where it stands. This makes Ignatieff the ideal leadership candidate.

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BC Experience shows failure of P3s

Published in Lower Island News (Victoria), October 2006

So the BC Experience has gone “belly up.” Big surprise. Campbell’s giveaway to CFAX millionaire Mel Cooper has left both the City of Victoria and BC government on the hook for uncollected expenses, along with 226 other unsecured creditors. Too bad the political will doesn’t exist to collect this public debt from Cooper’s private weath. But that’s the nature of Public-Private Partnerships (P3s), isn’t it? The public takes the risk while private individuals, sheltered by “limited liability corporations” and an unfair Bankruptcy Act, walk away.

The Provincial Capital Commission, which owns the building and closed the Crystal Gardens in 2004, spent $3.5 million subsidizing Cooper’s failed “Experience.” The City of Victoria is owed $30,000, which is enough to operate a new homeless shelter for over a month. So much for our (in)justice system.

New Democrats should learn something from this “Experience,” which is an appropriate symbol for the “BC Experience” of recent years: the Medical Services Plan privatization, BC Rail privatization, BC Ferries quasi-privatization, “Save-On Foods” Arena scam. The public takes the risk, private individuals profit, while user fees increase and public oversight is removed. P3s are a rip-off; we should state this clearly and unequivocally, and advocate for public ownership, operation and control of public assets.

Hopefully we have learned our lesson. New Democrats should now turn their attention to future uses for this site. A public market? Recreation centre? Swimming pool? Seniors centre? A community dialogue needs to weigh the benefits of various options. In the short-term, however, one solution is obvious: open the doors of this public building to provide emergency shelter for the growing numbers of homeless people seeking refuge from a cold, wet winter.

Do our NDP MLAs and municipal officials have the courage to fight for this logical humanitarian measure? We shall see.

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Congratulation to Quadra-Hillside residents

Letter to the Editor for Hillside-Quadra Community News (Victoria), April 2006

I am writing to congratulate residents of Hillside-Quadra on their efforts to establish a community garden.

For years, neighbourhood residents have lobbied public officials to make land available for this important community use. The efforts of PATH (Promoting Action Toward Health) and NAG (Neighbourhood Action Group) are finally paying off, with a garden anticipated for the Wark Street Playlot Park.

While it is disappointing that School District 61 missed the opportunity to provide land at the Blanshard School site and the Warehouse site on Quadra Street, the Wark Street garden will provide a solid foundation for future expansion. The S.J. Willis School field comes to mind as a good location for an allotment garden. Community members will have to remain vigilant, however, to ensure this public land remains in public hands.

The benefits of locally grown food are numerous, and become more obvious all the time. Preparing, planting, maintaining and harvesting garden plots is a healthy lifestyle choice. Eating fresh, pesticide-free produce has many health benefits. As the price of fossil fuels and transportation continues to rise, local agriculture provides the only guarantee of a stable, affordable food supply. From the social and environmental standpoint, community gardening is the smart choice.

Quadra-Hillside is laying the foundation for a secure and prosperous future, extending the benefits of gardening to renters and residents of multiple-family dwellings who may not have access to land.

Keep up the great work!

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Understanding needed in Middle East

Letter to the Editor published in the Victoria Times Colonist, 20 March 2006

I feel compelled to respond to an inflammatory headline in your newspaper (‘Terrorist Palestinian leader talks of Israeli peace deal’, March 18). Ismail Haniyeh is the democratically elected leader of the Palestinian people. While I may not agree with his theological approach to politics, or the tactics of some of his supporters, Haniyeh is an influential figure in the Middle East.

An Israeli state that acts unilaterally—ignoring the 1967 borders of Palestine, and creating hundreds of thousands of refugees—should not be surprised that a militant group like Hamas enjoys widespread support. Violence against civilians—Palestinian or Jew—should be roundly condemned by all thoughtful people.

Demonizing Hamas will not change the fact that the organization won the recent elections and commands the support of a plurality of Palestinians. The challenge now is to bridge this 60-year divide, not inflame it further.

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Why we need a new CRD electoral coalition

Published in Lower Island News (Victoria), March 2006

Democratic socialists and progressive allies in Greater Victoria have achieved strong representation in provincial and federal politics. At the municipal level, however, right-of-centre politicians dominate public office in the Capital Regional District. The result is inaction in the face of urban sprawl and growing inequality, which conflicts with our values of solidarity, equality and sustainability. This situation must change.

In the 2005 municipal elections, right-of-centre majorities were elected in the CRD’s 13 municipalities, with far-reaching powers over land use and community services. While a handful of individual progressives were successful, they lack a cohesive vision for the region and a coordinated strategy to implement it. In the municipal councils and at the CRD board and committees, these progressives are in the minority, outnumbered by pro-development politicians.

In the City of Victoria, progressive forces were fragmented into a half-dozen distinct campaign organizations in 2005: two parallel NDP school board campaigns, the VCE/NDP council campaign, the VCE/NDP mayoral campaign, the independent progressive campaign of Rose Henry and Sue Hendricks, and the successful Green Party campaign that elected Sonya Chandler to City Hall.

Elsewhere in the CRD, Andrew Britton won by acclamation to View Royal council. Zeb King was re-elected to Central Saanich council, as was Judy Brownoff to Saanich council. In Esquimalt, Dr. Jane Stark was elected as a Green councillor.

Just imagine the possibilities if these enthusiastic campaign efforts – representing thousands of hours of volunteer labour, over $100,000 in campaign funds, a half-dozen paid staff, high-profile campaign offices, reams of leaflets and materials, thousands of lawn signs, and several dozen print, radio and television advertisements – were harnessed in a regional municipal coalition.

What would a regional municipal coalition look like? It would have to be inclusive enough to mount a determined challenge to the pro-development lobby in every CRD municipality. It would have to be focused enough to attract activists and candidates committed to an alternative vision for the CRD, based on social justice and environmental stewardship. It would have to be professional enough to articulate this alternative vision, and communicate it in a practical way. It would have to be organized enough to win majorities in some councils in the 2008 elections, and establish at least a beachhead in all the rest.

A regional municipal coalition should attract the best elements from the various social groups and social movements in the CRD – aboriginal people, organized labour, environmentalists, anti-poverty activists, progressive entrepreneurs, students, artists, parents, and seniors. Such a regional municipal coalition would be structured as an umbrella organization, with local units reflecting municipal boundaries, but also a coordinating structure to tackle region-wide issues.

A regional municipal coalition, in order to succeed as an electoral force in the near-term, would have to sidestep partisan provincial/federal alignments. NDP/Green antagonisms, like factional fights within both parties, have benefited our real political opponents – the local lieutenants of the Campbell/Harper corporate agenda. These partisan conflicts will survive in provincial and federal politics for some time to come, but we can act now to mitigate their impact at the local level.

A regional coalition requires a constitution and an internal culture capable of withstanding these divisive pressures, which are present in every organization. It could succeed to the extent that it mediates the diversity of its activists, leaves the NDP-Green debate at the door, and articulates a coherent vision for the CRD.

Some unifying policies for a regional municipal coalition include:

  • Revenue Sharing on Social Services
  • Rapid Transit and Sewage Treatment for the CRD
  • Respect for Community and Regional Planning
  • Green Belt protection to contain sprawl by completing the Sidney to Sooke ‘Sea-to-Sea’ conservation corridor

Progressives in the 13 CRD municipalities, whatever their political stripe, need to begin discussing options for greater cooperation. Chamber of Commerce-driven amalgamation is on the agenda. We must act now to organize our forces. The alternative is a top-down, undemocratic, big-box megacity that none of us want.

I have worked with hundreds of committed activists from around the CRD, on a number of diverse projects. I am confident that, collectively, we can preserve and improve our jewel on southern Vancouver Island.

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Fernwood groups fill gap

Letter to the Editor published in the Victoria Times Colonist, 3 February 2006

As a Fernwood resident and parent, I applaud the majority of Victoria city councilors who approved funding for the Fernwood Community Association and Fernwood Community Centre Society.

Contrary to the opinions of this newspaper, both groups serve an essential role in our city and deserve public funds. They confront “externalities” left in the wake of the CRD’s present boom conditions: displacement, traffic congestion, homelessness, petty crime, drug addiction, unsightly development and loss of greenspace.

Wealth generated from unprecedented construction has not trickled down to the core. Homeowners and renters in core neighbourhoods realize they have no choice but to work together to address social problems. By investing in our neighbourhoods today, escalating policing costs may be avoided in the future.

It’s easy to extol the benefits of private investment. But the reality is that the private sector has failed to address regional social problems, which are too large to be resolved by charity alone. Government, and allied community organizations in James Bay, Burnside-Gorge, Fernwood and Downtown, have stepped in to fill this void. The quality of life of everyone depends on this cooperative effort.

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Vote ‘Yes’ for CFS

Letter to the Editor published in The Brunswickan (Fredericton), 30 January 2006

Later this month, grad students will have the opportunity to join the Canadian Federation of Students (CFS). I firmly believe it is in their best interests to vote a resounding ‘Yes.’

The CFS represents students at universities and colleges across Canada, both graduate and undergraduate. It advocates for grants, rather than loans, and that tuition barriers to education should be reduced. It has encouraged student participation in the development of public policy, moving beyond lobbying by a small number of student leaders.

The CFS has as its ultimate goal the elimination of tuition barriers to education, favouring the European model of zero tuition, where education costs are born by governments as an investment in the future. The example of Ireland, which eliminated tuition fees in 1996 and is now celebrated as the economic ‘tiger’ of Europe, demonstrates the strength of this policy.

Some people might tell you the CFS is the wrong choice for grad students, that they are better off remaining independent or affiliating with other organizations. The flaw in this argument is that students need more unity, not less. ‘Divide and conquer’ has always weakened the student movement in Canada. The small amount of dues paid annually to CFS pales in comparison to potential cost savings on tuition and other expenses. If Canadian students can achieve unity in one organization, there is real hope for the future.

Unlike other student organizations in Canada, the CFS derives its mandate from a democratic referendum vote of every student on each member campus. The roots of the CFS are deep, extending back to the National Union of Students of the 1960s, and is has a proud record defending the rights of women and minority groups. In recent years, opponents of affordable education have sought to weaken the CFS, creating splinter groups that take a soft stance in the face of funding cuts. The reason is obvious: without the CFS, powerholders have a much easier time cutting funding, raising tuition fees, and pursuing a top-down model of education.

I hope UNB grad students do their own research and put their best interests first in this referendum. I hope they vote for unity with students across Canada by voting ‘YES’ for the CFS. Spread the word, and remember to vote on February 20 to 22.

Ben Isitt is a PhD student in the department of history.

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No such thing as ‘free trade’

Letter to the Editor of the Victoria News, 24 August 2005

Scott Brison, federal Public Works Minister, told Victoria’s Chamber of Commerce that trade agreements prevent Canada from favouring domestic producers (“Canada can’t discriminate,” Victoria News, August 24). This demonstrates once again why our country should withdraw from the Free Trade Agreement (FTA), NAFTA and the WTO, and enter into negotiations for forward-looking trade agreements that put people and the environment first.

Neoliberal pundits claim there is no alternative to corporate-driven globalization, that removing trade barriers brings down costs and lifts up underdeveloped countries. The reality is that these agreements undermine labour and environmental standards, and erode living conditions in the Third World and in rich countries like Canada.

The WTO dictates that Canada cannot favour domestic producers of goods and services. This means that products – such as tomatoes from Chile or pencils from Taiwan – are shipped half way across the world, using tons of fossil fuel with a huge environmental cost. Some imports are inevitable – like coffee for those unable (like myself) to kick the habit in northern countries like Canada. But our government has the responsibility to ensure these specialized products don’t come at the expense of workers’ rights or the environment. Other aspects of the FTA, NAFTA and the WTO, such as restrictions on public enterprise, drive up the costs of social services, medical care, education, energy, and transportation.

Canada should not function as an island, with no connection to the outside world. But the international connections we establish must have as their bottom line the improvement of living standards for ordinary people and the protection of our shared environment. Profit considerations of corporations are less important than fundamental questions of human rights and sustainability.

Brison and his colleagues in the federal government would be wise to abandon the mythology of ‘free trade’ and display some courage in the international arena.

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Social ownership of BC’s resource wealth: A vision for the BC NDP

Published in the Lower Island News (Victoria), June 2005

With 33 MLAs in the BC legislature, five MPs in the House of Commons, and hundreds of activists in local governments, the BC NDP is a powerful force. We must remember, however, that power is never enough on it own. Inspired by recent electoral success, New Democrats must ask the hard question: For what purpose—and toward what ends—do we seek political power?

In Port Hardy, on the north-east coast of Vancouver Island, unemployment has hovered over 50 per cent for nearly a decade. This community suffers a range of social problems tied to the economic situation: violence against women and children, alcoholism and drug abuse, malnutrition, a lack of opportunities for youth, out-migration. Billions of dollars of timber, minerals, and fish have been exported from coastal communities, to the point of depletion, but Port Hardy—like Tahsis, Zeballos, Gold River, Port Alice and dozens of other towns are crippled by unemployment and its effects. Among First Nations, these inhumane conditions are the norm. The natural environment has been ravaged, while people lack any economic security. Only the logging, mining, and fishing companies have benefited consistently from the coast’s resource wealth.

From 1991 to 2001, the BC NDP held the reigns of political power in BC. Our party was in a position to make changes that were necessary to provide economic security in BC’s resource and aboriginal communities. But sadly, elected New Democrats lacked a long-term vision of social change. Guided by short-term considerations of winning and maintaining power, those at the helm of the BC NDP sought to ‘govern from the centre’, and looked with suspicion at those who advised a more bold legislative strategy. To many New Democrats in the 1990s, power became a goal in itself, rather than a means of improving society. The historic objective of the social-democratic movement in Canada—transferring wealth from the top to the bottom of society, and extending social ownership as an alternative to corporate power—was lost in the opportunistic drive for respectability. The alienation of environmentalists at Clayoquot Sound in 1993, and the corresponding rise of the Green Party, was the logical outcome of ‘governing from the centre.’ In 2001, when voters relegated New Democrats to the wilderness, the structure of BC’s economy had not changed. Exploitation, poverty, and environmental degradation continued as though the NDP had never been in office.

In 2005, the BC NDP is again approaching political power. We must plan now to ensure a better outcome the next time around. ‘Moving to the centre’ and ‘ending political polarization’ may sound attractive at a time when the BC Liberal party has drifted so far to the right, but this is a dangerous course. Such language ignores the reality of BC’s economy, where power and wealth are polarized between the affluent and the marginalized, between settler populations and aboriginal people, between urban areas and the rural hinterland. Polarization arises from real-life economic conditions, not some abstract agenda or theory. A centrist political strategy offers no mechanism for altering these basic imbalances. Centrism, by its refusal to offend the interests of economic elites, rules out the possibility of improving the economic system through democratic means.

The BC NDP has reached a critical juncture in its history, when the membership must decide whether they desire to be a small ‘l’ liberal party of the centre or remain a democratic socialist party of the left. As the Preamble of the BC NDP’s constitution states, “the application of democratic socialist principles to government and the administration of public affairs” offers the only real possibility of social, economic and political progress. The Preamble asserts that economic institutions should be directed to meet the “needs of people and not for profit,” and supports “the extension of the principle of social ownership.” Nowhere in the constitution is the NDP described as a party of the ‘centre.’

We owe it to the generations of women and men who built the NDP in BC to abide by the constitution and apply the principles of democratic socialism and social ownership to public policy. Without bold vision and a willingness to confront economic power, New Democrats will fail to make the changes that are necessary to provide security for people and protect the environment. Without bold vision and a willingness to confront elites, New Democrats would never have extended social ownership into the field of medical care, or established the Agricultural Land Reserve and the Insurance Corporation of British Columbia. Today, we need this kind of bold, aggressive vision to confront the problems facing BC’s resource and aboriginal communities, combat poverty in our urban areas, and stop the corporate exploitation of our natural environment.

The Co-operative Commonwealth Federation (CCF), predecessor of the NDP, advocated “a planned and socialized economy in which our natural resources and principal means of production and distribution are owned, controlled and operated by the people.” Applying the principles of democratic socialism to public policy, the CCF sought to replace the arbitrary power of private corporations with cooperatives, crown corporations, and other forms of social ownership. Today, examples of social ownership include the Federated Co-operatives Ltd. sawmill and plywood plant at Canoe, BC, and Community Forests at Revelstoke, Mission, and North Cowichan.

In Port Hardy and across BC, social ownership and community control of the forests, mines, energy resources, and fishery—in cooperation with First Nations, and with a strong environmental code in place—offers a practical and lasting solution for economic security. Social ownership of BC’s natural resources, and the development of secondary, ‘value-added’ industries, offers the most reliable source of revenue for necessary social services. Under the terms of the Expropriation Act, the provincial government already has the power to extend social ownership over natural resources. NAFTA is a complicating factor, but not an insurmountable barrier; fines levied by the trade body can be absorbed through the taxation system, especially once public opinion is mobilized behind the NDP program.

Wealth must begin to flow to local communities, rather than shareholders of transnational firms. This is hardly a ‘centrist’ political strategy, but from an electoral and moral standpoint, this policy should be embraced as the BC NDP organizes for power in 2009.

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Public healthcare still the best system

Letter to the Editor published in the Victoria Times Colonist, 10 June 2005

Lobby groups for private health corporations, such as the Canadian Taxpayers’ Federation and the Canadian Healthcare Association, are celebrating the Supreme Court ruling supporting private insurance. They have called this decision “historic.”

Taking a long-range approach to Canadian history, this decision represents a retreat to an older model of health delivery, based on ability to pay. Under this system, which existed in this country until the 1960s and has always existed in the United States, the wealthy receive top quality health care while the poor are denied adequate services. At the same time that Tommy Douglas is celebrated as the “greatest Canadian,” the health-care model he helped establish is being dismantled by governments, courts and the corporate sector.

Rather than applaud the Supreme Court decision, as the private health lobby desires, Canadians should be ashamed and appalled by this endorsement of privatization by the judiciary. More important, they should be mobilized into action to force the federal government to strengthen legislation protecting public medicare — and provide the resources needed to ensure a top-quality, single-tier system.

 

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Reality of drug use

Letter to the Editor of the Victoria News, 8 June 2005

In a recent article (‘Nothing safe about this junk’), newsgroup columnist Tom Fletcher describes safe-injection sites as a ‘questionable bit of social engineering.’ Fletcher has every right to hold this opinion, but it seems to ignore the real-life situation in Victoria today.

We do not live in an ideal world. Public policy must begin by recognizing conditions as they exist. We all wish that marginalized people would reject heroin, crack, and other debilitating substances. But the reality is that poverty and social dislocation lead people to seek solace through these drugs.

European jurisdictions have to come terms with this reality. Through safe-injection sites, they reduce the most harmful aspects of drug use (such as HIV and AIDS, violent crime, and overdose leading to death). At the same time, these European countries pursue more long-range strategies, aimed at eliminating poverty through social programs and the taxation system.

It is unfortunate that the Victoria News provides a permanent platform for Fletchers’ socially conservative world view, while progressive opinions are confined to the Letters to the Editor section. Readers’ letters may be a good start, but they do not have the same credibility or cumulative impact as regular columns in the newspaper.

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NDP balanced the budget

Letter to the Editor of the Victoria News, 11 February 2005

Several letter-writers, and columnist Paul Willcocks, have contributed to the misconception that the 1990s were a ‘dark decade’ for BC’s economy. NDP leaders are portrayed as terrible fiscal managers, while Campbell and his cohorts are praised for bringing about an economic miracle. This story has a tenuous connection to reality.

In 2001, the NDP produced a budgetary surplus totaling $1.5 billion dollars. Economic indicators relating to employment and growth were strong. This achievement followed back-to-back budgetary surpluses in the two preceding years. Federal offloading of social spending and declining commodity prices had produced a fiscal crisis earlier in the 1990s that would have confronted any governing party.

When the Campbell Liberals were elected to power in May 2001, they reversed the financial position of the BC government, removing $2-billion from the provincial treasury and plunging the province back into debt. The celebrated tax cut rewarded those individuals and corporations who needed it the least, while punishing working-class people, the disabled, and the poor.

According to the Canadian Centre for Policy Alternatives, the choices made by the Campbell Liberals added more than $3-billion to the provincial debt between 2001 and 2003. The Liberal government may celebrate its surplus now, but we must not forget that it was created at the expense of our social infrastructure and low-income people who are now suffering economically. A short-term boom tied to construction cannot conceal structural imbalances and inequities in the BC economy.

A commitment to social justice and genuine economic progress offers the only long-term solutions to our economic problems. Notwithstanding the rhetoric of Liberal spin doctors, the fact remains that when the NDP was defeated in 2001, BC had budgetary surpluses and strong social programs.

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Condos and ice caps

Letter to the Editor of Monday Magazine (Victoria), 25 November 2004

Scientists identify deforestation and fossil fuel consumption as the major forces driving global warming. In BC, the provincial government seems hell-bent on expanding these destructive practices, through intensified logging of old-growth and delicate forests, and through the opening of oil and gas drilling off the coast.

It recently dawned on me that there may be a connection between this agenda of feverish resource extraction and the ‘2010’ developers’ bonanza of high-rise condos and similar urban pursuits. Perhaps Gordo and his gang are more forward-looking and environmentally aware than we think.

As the last stands of old-growth rainforest are shipped out of this country, and as a flotilla of oil rigs is deployed off our fragile coast, BC will inevitably help drive the last nail in the coffin of the Arctic ice caps. A few years down the road, as the world’s oceans rise to prehistoric levels, the energy and development cronies will have a ready-made haven of high-rise condos in which to take refuge. Noah’s Ark meets Blade Runner.

God help the plebeians below.

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Risk of spill too great

Letter to the Editor of the Victoria Times Colonist, 22 November 2004

The recent oil spill off the shore of Newfoundland will hopefully put to rest the agitation for oil and gas drilling on the West Coast.

The Campbell Liberal government is demanding an end to a federal moratorium on offshore drilling. Serving the agenda of powerful energy corporations, the provincial government in threatening the natural environment and giving a false sense of hope to impoverished coastal communities.

While the energy interests promise jobs to local workers, the reality of offshore drilling is starkly different. Highly skilled technicians from the Gulf of Mexico and the North Sea will be flown directly onto rigs to operate computerized technology that requires very little local labour. Pre-fabricated rigs will employ few BC workers in the assembly stages. Oil tankers will be staffed by low-wage, outside workers, and will sail under ‘flags of convenience’ (tax havens such as the Bahamas).

Offshore oil and gas extraction will cost billions in provincial revenue, while providing no sustainable future for working people in BC. We must reject this old model of a provincial economy dominated by the extraction of natural resources that are processed elsewhere. Public revenue should be spent on building a truly sustainable economy based on value-added manufacturing, strong public services, and local economic development.

Newfoundland’s ailing fishery is threatened by the latest oil spill. Imagine a similar catastrophe on BC’s fragile coast, located in one of the world’s most volatile seismic zones. British Columbians would be wise to take a vocal stance on this issue.

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Community centres need funding, not decommissioning

Letter to the Editor of the Victoria Times Colonist, August 2004

I am writing regarding the proposed closure of Victoria’s community centres. While action must be taken to meet the city’s future recreational needs, I am not convinced that city council is moving in the right direction.

On July 8th, council received the report of the Recreation Renewal Project Team. Steps are now being taken toward a new ‘recreation Hub’ for the city. If the current course is followed to completion, Victoria’s network of twelve major community centres and seniors’ centres will be replaced by 2009 with four large ‘wellness and recreation centres’. City-owned sites slated for ‘decommissioning’ include Crystal Pool, Royal Athletic Park, Silver Threads Seniors’ Centre, James Bay New Horizons, Fernwood Community Centre, and the Fairfield Community Place.

Victoria has built up an impressive network of neighbourhood facilities in recent decades. This network needs to be expanded, not decommissioned. While upgrades to existing facilities are no doubt needed, a handful of mega-projects will provide the solution. Our existing community centres and senior’s centres require guaranteed, stable funding to strengthen the ties of community, in order to prevent urban decay and associated social ills.

The current proposal appears to leave the door open for a larger private-sector role in community recreation services. This is a major concern. Victorians do not want every aspect of their community to be commercialized. City council would be wise to reconsider the proposal at hand.

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The real problem with resource developments

Letter to the Editor published in the Victoria Times Colonist, 26 July 2004

Re: “Ottawa should invest in the West,” July 15.

As a trained historian, I would like to clarify a recent editorial on the pattern of economic development in B.C. From a historical standpoint, investment in infrastructure offers no panacea for economic success. Nor does the exploitation of new resources.

Billions of dollars in public funds have built up our rail, road and energy infrastructure. However, as the editorial points out, resource communities suffer from staggering levels of poverty, unemployment and related social ills. At Port Hardy, a clear majority of people are without regular work.

This is not due to a lack of resources. Billions of board feet of lumber, billions of tonnes of coal, iron and other minerals, billions of fish, have been extracted from our land and waters. A tremendous amount of wealth has been produced through the extraction of natural resources, and yet our resource communities remain impoverished.

Premier Gordon Campbell and his cohorts are misguided when they call for public-private investment in transportation infrastructure and the opening up of oilwells on our fragile coastline. The problem is not a scarcity of resources or infrastructure but an imbalance in how resources are distributed.

If our existing resource base was used wisely, and the fruits distributed fairly, there would be enough work for everyone. Tenure in our forests and fisheries could be held by communities, rather than corporations, with greater potential for value-added and related economic benefits. Environmental stewardship could be incorporated into community decision-making, rather than dismissed by external shareholders.

Such a model of economic development is possible. It is being practised in communities such as Revelstoke, Canoe and Mission. But don’t expect Campbell to tell you about it.

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Irving is not a mountain

Letter to the Editor published in The Brunswickan (Fredericton), 20 January 2004

From their tax shelter in the Caribbean, the Irvings have stamped out free speech on Fredericton’s North Side. While this is not surprising, it should raise alarm bells about the danger of concentrated economic power in New Brunswick.

Many of us are prone to accept, even respect, the Irving economic empire. From heating and forestry to petroleum and building supplies, thousands of New Brunswickers earn their livelihoods from Irving. We tacitly accept the company’s control of the political system, as well as its monopoly control of the English-language press. We are not supposed to discuss the fact that the Irving family resides in Bermuda to avoid paying Canadian taxes. It is just part of “the way things are” in New Brunswick.

Recently, Irving purchased the North Side News. A forum for community discussion, the newspaper developed a wide readership among North Side residents, and provided an important voice for beleaguered Main Street businesses. It was a community newspaper, by no means perfect, but valued by citizens.

Now Irving has closed the North Side offices of the paper, and collapsed operations into the Daily Gleaner. The North Side News, as well as the Oromocto paper, will now be distributed as inserts in the Gleaner. They have ceased to function as newspapers in any meaningful sense.

Along with the loss of the News as an economic institution on the North Side (with its own employees, offices, and related economic benefits for surrounding businesses), the elimination of the North Side News poses a significant threat to the free exchange of ideas, information and viewpoints in Fredericton. Other than the two campus newspapers, with their student focus, and the alternative monthly paper Fred, Irving controls all print media in the Fredericton area.

We should not be surprised that Irving destroyed the North Side News. Corporations are guided by the profit motive and by self-preservation. Empowered and informed communities can undermine both of these objectives. For decades, Irving has exercised cultural power (through the media) to control the political system, in order to protect its vast economic power. The News existed as an independent voice outside Irving’s orbit, so it was crushed. Irving would do the same thing to the Brunswickan if it were given the opportunity.

But I will not end on a tone of defeat. Several years ago, I had the great privilege to talk to Noam Chomsky. He told me: “Corporations are not like mountains. They are human creations. They are given the power they have by governments, but that power can be taken away.”

Early in January, a crack emerged in the Irving universe. Loggers in the state of Maine went on strike against Irving logging operations. Realizing that individually they were powerless, these workers clubbed together to challenge Irving’s economic power.

I come from British Columbia, where another economic dynasty was built around a man named Robert Dunsmuir. A Scottish coal miner, Dunsmuir was granted one-quarter of Vancouver Island in the 1800s and soon became the wealthiest man in British Columbia. His son James served as premier and lieutenant governor. However by the First World War, weakened by labour unrest and economic crisis, the Dunsmuir empire collapsed. All that remains today is the odd street name and a museum.

To paraphrase Chomsky, Irving is not a mountain. It is a human creation. When New Brunswickers awake from their deep slumber, the power of Irving and other corporate giants can be taken away.

And then maybe the North Side will get its newspaper back.

 

Ben Isitt is a doctoral student in Canadian labour history and a member of the Fredericton NDP Club.

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