Where’s the Signs?

I have had several people ask me about where my signs are and have found myself explaining why I will not raise money for signs.

I will not be raising or asking for money for signs, cards, pamphlets, campaign offices etc. Not because I could not raise funds, turns out I have a lot of friends on this matter, but because I know so many better uses for monies raised than to spend them on politicking.

The demand on our local food bank is growing while at the same time the economy has resulted in decreased donations for the food banks. Compounding this is that we are heading into the Christmas season when demand soars, followed by the bleak days for donations of January and February 2009.

People are going cold, wet and hungry – how could I raise money and spend it on politics?

People have said “think of all the good you could do if elected”. You start justifying you actions or thinking like that and it has become about you and you have decided to be a politician rather than a leader.

I have written several times over the past months to remind people to remember the food banks (thanks to the local papers for printing those letters). How could I not follow my own pleas and remember the food bank?

Being on council is also about priorities and leadership and I believe that if getting on council is your overriding priority, your priorities are wrong. A thought echoed by one homeless gentleman who felt he had to come up and urge me to not become a politician but to remain true to my self and remember the people.

So I cannot, will not raise money for signs.

Besides I do have a few.

A decal sign from a friend who had his brother cut decals for his vehicle and my car as well as some legal size signs I printed off of my computer. Some friends are threatening to paint up some signs which is fine, I can only hope they get the spelling right. One or two friends are insisting I need at least a few signs and insisting on getting at least some put up. Then there are those who are printing up their own signs from their computer as did I.

As my homeless acquaintance said I have to remain true to my self … which brings me to the question of whether you have remembered the food bank recently?

Druthers.

Three more years of not asking and for citizens to have to pay for, deal with or just live with the consequences of council’s conduct.

I am not speaking of the $$$ millions Abbotsford taxpayers are out of pocket because city council could not bather to ask our federal MP Ed Fast to get federal funds to lower the cost to taxpayers of Plan A. Nor the $$$ millions more taxpayers were forced to shell out because city council could not be bothered to listen to those who opposed Plan A and secure provincial funding before finalizing full funding for Plan A.

Obviously citizens approve paying the higher costs and property taxes associated with these council actions since they endorsed them in the city’s recent municipal election.

Similarly the tens of $millions$ of dollars of cost overruns were signed off on and stamped approved by the vote. As was the continuation of council’s profligate spending and the resulting large tax increases or the deferment of needed infrastructure and maintenance.

Clearly citizen’s claims of concern with crime and safety issues were overstated. Why else would they choose to elect a retired school principal rather than an experienced police officer who retired from the local police force?

I do find citizens endorsement of council’s doing nothing to endeavor to address the afflictions of homelessness, addiction, mental illness, the growing numbers depending on the food bank for their daily food and survival, poverty and affordable housing hypocritical in light claim to being Christian.

Still they have the right to choose harsh indifference over compassion; to stamp their approval on the theft/confiscation of the meager belongings of the homeless and the leaving them facing the task of surviving the night and the weather with only the clothes on their backs.

Nonetheless it would have been nice if council would have bothered to ask the library for their input before locating their pond in front of the library’s downstairs/basement entrance – much nicer for the current and future children of Abbotsford.

With the grassy swale and large old shade trees that use to be outside the exterior entrance to the downstairs it had been the plan to move the current upstairs children’s area to more spacious and open accommodations downstairs.

That plan is now gone since the librarians are responsible people and will not be locating a children’s area downstairs with the presence of an unfenced pond and bridges just outside the door.

Unfortunate loss for the children of Abbotsford, but this kind of can of worms is business as usual for city council. On the other hand perhaps it is best that the children of Abbotsford learn early that they will long be paying for the choices their parents and grandparents made.

Re-election lip service to social issues?

Reading the statements from city council about the BC Housing projects it is clear that the back pedalling has already begun on the issue of addressing the social issues facing the city; raising questions of whether city council really has/had any interest or intention of addressing the social issues this city is mired in or if their only interest in these social problems was to be seen to be taking action for purposes of re-election.

Let us contrast their actions, or more correctly lack of actions, on addressing homelessness, addiction, mental illness, poverty and associated crime – versus – their actions on something they WANTED to do, Plan A.

Plan A squeaked through a city wide referendum with narrow approval ranging from the low of 52% for the arena to 56% for the cultural center. When shortly after the referendum the millions of dollars of costs that council was aware of but kept from the public during the referendum came to light and people who had voted yes demanded a new vote because they had been mislead by council what happened?

Council ploughed ahead ignoring the calls for a vote based upon all the information council knew about but had withheld from the public and ignoring the strong 48% to 44% city wide opposition to these projects.

When the total costs associated with Plan A soared from the advertised, sworn to and promised $85 million and are closing in on $120 million mark what did council do? Other than hiding the true costs of Plan A from the public that is?

City council ploughed ahead pouring whatever funds were required to pay for Plan A into Plan A while they deferred waste treatment infrastructure needs to 2010 because they had no money to pay for it after paying for Plan A.

City council wanted to build Plan A and the fact that citizens were almost split on Plan A didn’t matter; council poured whatever funds were required to build Plan A into Plan A deferring other city needs; council paid the cost premiums required to make sure that the cultural centre and ARC expansion opened before the election.

Council wanted to build Plan A and whatever it took to do that they did.

Contrast that with council action, or rather inaction, on the social issues facing this city. Ever since the BC Housing agreement was announced and council could point to it as evidence of their addressing the social issues of those who are homeless, addicted, mentally ill or in poverty council has been backing away.

We have no idea what kind of housing or who the people who would be occupying these buildings are. For all we know seniors may be part of the mix of tenants in the building.

We have no idea and won’t have any idea until the proposals come as to who will be building, who will be supplying the support services or who will be living in the buildings as tenants.

So knowing nothing of the nature of this housing council was able to determine that it was inappropriate for this (these) location(s) and is seeking other alternatives. One can only wonder how long it will be before, having already spoken of how sad it would be to have to send the money back to Victoria, council will, if they have achieved re-election, concludes there is no suitable location and regretfully has to decline to build any social housing?

Is it any wonder that the two recent, very successful and safe for the tenants, housing projects of this nature were in Chilliwack and Mission? Indeed the building in Mission has improved the neighbourhood. Abbotsford city council is well aware that the organization that brought about the Mission project intends to put in a proposal for one of the BC Housing funded projects in Abbotsford.

So, when city council wants to build something it rides roughshod over any and all opposition, ignoring citizens and doing or spending whatever is required to build what they want.

How can one not question council’s commitment to addressing social issues given their spineless, self-defeating behaviour on this housing, especially as we currently have nothing to base decisions on – despite council being willing to make decisions based on knowing nothing , of having no facts? Particularly in contrast to their behaviour and actions on Plan A projects they wanted to build.

When councillor John Smith seeks to avoid the question of their behaviour on this manner by citing the Abbotsford Social Development Committee and all that this committee has accomplished, ask if he and this committee have added even 1 unit of housing or even 1 bed to the housing stock in Abbotsford.

They have not. Despite all the lip service paid to housing not even a single bed has been added in Abbotsford. In Chilliwack and Mission buildings have been added to the supported affordable housing stock. I am sure council and councillors will be able to make many excuses.

City council and councillors are very good at making excuses when they do not want to do something; stark contrast to the lengths they will go to build what they want to build at any cost.

You can understand why one may wonder if current council and councillors have any intention of ever building any housing or ever addressing the issues of homelessness, addiction, mental illness, poverty and associated crime.

Lucky Opening Day was Sunny.

I had to laugh, to avoid crying as I walked into ARC through the new addition for the first time Friday.

With an all-candidates meeting on Friday night I had to swim early, before Yale high school was out, and found myself parking beneath the new extension.

After walking up the fire escape stairs because the elevator was out-of-service due to malfunction, I turned to head down the ramp to head into the old building and the pool and found myself walking around the bucket set out to catch the water leaking into our new recreation facility through its brand new roof.

I also had to step carefully so as not to slip in the two rivulets of water that ran down the ramp.

Into each new building a little rain must fall.
Into each new building a little rain must fall

It was very lucky for our current council that their rushed pre-election grand opening was on a dry non-rainy day. The public would probably have been considerably less impressed if it had been raining and they had to walk around or carefully to avoid the leaks in their expensive new roof.