Showing posts with label letter-writing. Show all posts
Showing posts with label letter-writing. Show all posts

Sunday, May 11, 2008

Letters Not Condos

Please join with us to oppose a significant proposal for condos covering 6 lots at 58 W. Hastings in the Downtown Eastside of Vancouver. We literally need hundreds of Vancouver residents to write a letter AND sign up to speak at the Development Permit Hearing to make an impact. The hearing is on June 23. It is essential that our letters are in by Friday, May 17 so the Planning Department can reference them in the report that will be submitted to the DP Board who will make the decision. Your letter does not have to be long or profound. A few sentences to object will do just fine. Elaborating is good too. Feel free to use the information below and use the information in CCAP's letter posted at: http://ccapvancouver.wordpress.com.

Background:

The Concord Pacific development at 58 W. Hastings must be stopped. The rapid gentrification of the Downtown Eastside (DTES) is overwhelming the low-income residents of this neighborhood, who make up 75% of its population. The current rate of development, in which new condos outstrip social housing 3 to 1, is a grave threat to the neighborhood. The feverish planning, approval and construction of market condos in the DTES is a destructive force setting off massive shocks in this community. Rising real estate prices are already resulting in increased rents, conversions and closures of residential hotels (SRO’s), creating a constant flow of displacement and evictions of low-income residents, and consequent homelessness. Condo construction will be accompanied by a flood of upscale amenities catering to the new residents of the area, which will further marginalize the low-income residents who have made this neighborhood home for many years.

Unlike people with significant resources, whose lives are marked by independence and mobility, people living in poverty form communities of interdependence, located in a specific geographical area, and embedded in neighborly networks of support and assistance. The community of low-income residents who currently call the DTES home should not be displaced from their neighborhood and relocated somewhere else for the sake of condo development. This is their home, and they should be able to live here. Poverty is not grounds for displacement.

Condo construction in the DTES must be halted until a community vision is formulated, planned and implemented. Like putting up a tent in a windstorm, rooting and securing housing for low-income people in a community experiencing the hurricane of condo development and massive gentrification is impossible. Residents need time to determine their own community vision and they need support for the implementation of that vision, before the green light is
given to condo developers. What is at stake is the existence of a vibrant, amazing community of people.

The cessation of condo development for the sake of this community can begin here and now, with the rejection of a development permit to Concord Pacific for the 58 West Hastings site.

We believe there is an opening at City Hall to support our position. On Thursday, May 1 at the Planning and Environment counil meeting, Cameron Gray, Director of the City's Housing Centre said the surge of condos in the DTES is “like a hurricane and is going twice as fast as predicted…[and] we need to address the rapidity of change in order to stay on track with the Downtown Eastside Housing Plan." He also said that a strong mechanism to control condo development “could signal to the Province that no market housing will be built and landowners/developers may be off to Victoria to get more housing here.” And he said: “its time to do a community visioning because groups are more united and able to do it and because of the rapidity of change.” At the same meeting, Councilor Anton of the NPA stated “we have the horrendous challenge of 4000 more units” in terms of securing replacement housing in the area and that “as long as the SRO’s are in private hands, they are in jeopardy.” Councilor Anton said she was “very encouraged by the [visioning] work in the DTES.”

Please write your letters by Friday, May 17 to:

Alison.higginson@vancouver.ca
The Chair, Development Permit Board
c/o Alison Higginson, Project Facilitator,
Development Services
453 West 12th Avenue
Vancouver BC
V5Y 1V4
Please bcc your email letter to: wpedersen@look.ca or send us a quick note to let us know that you wrote a letter.

To sign up to speak at the hearing on Monday June 23, call:

Lorna Harvey
Assistant to the Development Permit Board
Development Services
604. 873-7469

Sincerely,

Carnegie Community Action Project [CCAP

Wednesday, May 9, 2007

Anglicans take Action: A call for letters to end homelessness

From our friends in the Anglican Church...

Housing Does Solve Homelessness: A Diocesan Wide Letter writing campaign


Please take part in a diocesan wide initiative to end homelessness. Have a letter writing day in you parish after church in the next month (by May 27th, Pentecost). Write to the leaders of the federal political parties (no postage stamp is required).Tell our political leaders that Housing does solve homelessness. Housing is a national issue. Having a home is a human right. Everyone benefits when we all have a home. Each political party needs to make affordable housing one of its top priorities.

We can end homelessness. We can have decent housing for those with low income and special needs. We just have to decide as Canadians that we want to do this. Please write of your deep concern as a Christian. Put your home address so that the leaders see the diversity.

Send your letter off personally, but keep a copy for your parish as we'd like to gather all the letters together. Ask your Synod delegate(s) to bring your letter to the Justice & Peace Unit table at Synod 2007. Let’s do this as a diocese. Let's say we can stop homelessness as a nation.

Please write to:

  • The Rt. Hon. Stephen Harper, P.C., M.P., Office of the Prime Minister, 80Wellington Street, Ottawa, K1A 0A2
  • The Hon. Stephane Dion, P.C., M.P., 121 East Block, Ottawa, K1A 0A6
  • The Hon. Giles Duceppe, M.P., House of Commons, Ottawa, K1A 0A6
  • The Hon. Jack Layton, M.P., 634 C Block, House of Commons, Ottawa, K1A 0A6
Sponsored by your Justice and Peace Unit
The Rev. Margaret Marquardt, Chair
Tel: 604 874-5030 Email: mmarquardt@telus.net

Suggestions for your letter:
  • Write in your own words as a Christian why we need social housing for people with special needs, for low income folk and SRO's (single room occupancy) hotels for those who are homeless.
  • Provide paper, envelopes and address labels
  • Have people put their home address on the letters
  • Please make four copies (one for each political party) and one copy for the Justice & Peace Unit.
Pass your letters along to the Justice & Peace Unit through your Synod delegate(s).
The letters will be displayed at Diocesan Synod (May 25- 26)