A resolution made by Councillor Whetham was recently passed at our local Council meeting to look at future planning for a city block in our own downtown. That block is made up of a substantial amount of city owned heritage property, the FireHall, City Hall, the brick Electrical Building and The Studio, Stage Door. The block also houses the RCMP building and city owned empty lots. Public input will be requested for this planning exercise.
In Vancouver and around the world, middle-class citizens rage against planning that favours profit over people.
by Patrick M. Condon, 26 Aug 2013, TheTyee.ca
What do the
demonstrations at Gezi Park in Turkey,the mass protests in Natal, Brazil, and
the uproar over recent rezoning in Vancouver's Grandview-Woodlands
neighbourhood have in common?
Everything.
Throughout
the world we are observing what happens when you suppress a debate about who
the city is for, and how it should be built………..
Rage is real
But this
brings us back again to the parallels between the Turkish revolt over Gezi Park
and the Brazilian "Bus Revolt" actions.
While the
case is very strong for increasing Vancouver's economic magnetism -- for
Vancouver to be one of the world's "winners" over the course of the
next few decades -- the weakness of this vision is the view of what makes
cities thrive. It assumes that the fickle goddess of global investment must be
persuaded to direct her gaze our way for us to flourish.
But not everyone
agrees. The protests in Brazil and Turkey are all in opposition to this view.
The critique is that when decision makers focus exclusively (and in most cases
undemocratically) on attracting global investment to achieve economic
development ends, it undermines the natural rights of citizens.
The rage
generated by this feeling of impotence can sometimes seem incoherent,
leaderless, unfocused -- but the rage is real and it's powerful enough to
threaten established governments.
This rage
seems particularly acute when democratic practices have been subverted -- when
leaders present a face of community connection and a commitment to consultation
on the one hand, but are driven by external motivations which have only a
limited connection to immediate local needs and current democratic processes.
In the case
of Vancouver, it feels particularly heartbreaking to many.
Political
leadership in Vancouver has been united for decades across three different
leading parties and their commitment to sustainability. Beginning with NPA-led
efforts in Yaletown, continuing with COPE's commitment to sustainability
demonstrated notably by efforts at southeast False Creek, followed by Sam
Sullivan's courage in tying density to sustainability in his EcoDensity plan,
and finally now with Vision's Greenest City initiative.
The
despondency, present in many conversations heard across the city, is consequent
to a feeling of having lost our way. There is a feeling that the green
progressive agenda has been co-opted by the same forces many thought it
opposed.
Certainly it
can be and has been argued that there is more than one way to measure and
arrive at a sustainable city, and to ignore global realities is unwise. But
absent of a legitimately democratic conversation about what kind of city best
accommodates our lives and the lives of our kids, the frustrations among the
electorate will likely remain palpable, and our progress towards our common
goal will be halting at best.
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