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Live on The Drive Blog

Read more on Community-related blog in service to building community, sharing views, passions, news, and more.

Council Approves EcoDensity Charter

June 13, 2008

Vancouver City Council unanimously voted on June 10 to adopt the EcoDensity Charter.

The EcoDensity Charter commits the City to make environmental sustainability a primary goal in all city planning decisions - in ways that also support housing affordability and livability.

The first two actions to be implemented by the City immediately are:
1. Rezoning policy for greener buildings: Applications for new rezoning will need to meet a minimum LEED™ (Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design) Silver rating, or similar equivalency in green design. The City will also be expecting that energy performance, water efficiency and storm water use be considered.

2. Rezoning policy for greener larger sites: Changes to rezonings for land that is two acres or more. A number of sustainability measures will be required for these rezonings, and for sites with housing, a range of types and tenures must be considered to increase affordable housing opportunities.

Longer-term actions that will receive priority include: an interim EcoDensity rezoning policy; options for backyard/laneway housing; more options for secondary suites; and removal of barriers to green building approaches.

Council initiated the EcoDensity program in July 2006. The final Charter and Actions incorporated public input from a Special Council Meeting that lasted seven sessions, amongst numerous other public consultation opportunities.

To view the EcoDensity Charter and Initial Actions and for more information: vancouver.ca/ecodensity

Who Needs Insight on Insite?

June 02, 2008


Eastside
Originally uploaded by Daquella manera
Federal Government Health Minister Tony Clements prefers overdoses leading to death, than safe injection interventions that could lead to health. Appallingly, the Federal Government has made a decision to take the province to court after the BC Supreme Court's decision to support Insite.

Living in Vancouver, it is clear that drastic measures, services, and programs are needed to solve the issues. What is seen on the surface, is rarely ever the cause. While Insite may not be perfect, and it may leave a lot to be desired, it is the first positive step taken in Canadian society to move further forward with progressive and proactive measures that could lead to recovery.

Saving lives from this affliction is far more complex than a safe injection site. That safe injection site, however, becomes a valuable gateway to intervention; coaxing jaded and cynical people off the street who have been abused repeatedly. They might consider surrendering their negative lifestyle to the possibility and hope that our society's limited programs and services can help them get their lives back together.

Change is work, and it is hard work. Every healthy person recognizes this, and when we have bad days, we know how much more difficult - sometimes impossible - it is to succeed with change. If society wishes for the addict, street person, prostitute, and other at-risk individuals to "do the work," then society and government at all levels had better be prepared to do-the-work that creates the systems and structure that ensure success.

Insite, with an average of 600 daily visits, intervened to resuscitate 900 overdoses since opening. Liz Evans, who runs Insite in partnership with Vancouver Coastal Health says, "If those injections were taking place in back alleys, those people would go under. There would be no nurse there to help save their lives."

"I don't think anyone has ever said that Insite is a magic pill that will resolve all the issues around mental health and addictions," says B.C. Health Minister George Abbott.

"No one has ever said that. I see, and the government sees, the provincial government at least, sees Insite as part of a continuum of services aimed at assisting addicts through their life issues."

Regarding Ottawa's drug policies, Abbott said: "I don't think they yet appreciate that it is useful to have the opportunity to bring some stability into the lives of people who have tragically very little stability in their lives."

Local enforcement professionals also expressed varied opinions on the subject, both for and against what Insite offers. The against position rightly expresses the overwhelming level of 'tolerance' that allows inappropriate behaviour to continue unchecked and without adequate consequences (if any). A significant reason our social issues have spun out of control is the lack of accountability, along with actionable and achievable goals that empower change.

Our own complacency had most of Vancouver turn a blind eye to the issues, and the escalation we're experiencing has resulted in more discontentment. As people become discontent, therefore less tolerant, the voices are likely to start clamoring for change. Even so, as expressed by some residents, some professionals, and some government offices, 'we don't want to encourage that here!'

A walk through a local green-space on the edge of Strathcona and Chinatown often reveals many reasons for this attitude's survival. Mere steps into the park space, right along the sidewalk, a mound of hypodermic needles still fresh in their packaging, is found. On the way to work in the morning, homeless are now found sleeping and bundled in filthy blankets on common property on residential streets. Walking across town, men and women alike are accosted on almost every block by those wanting, needing, and even demanding a handout. Could this why Insite is not recognized as working?

On one hand, the Federal Health Minister Tony Clement wants it shut down. This is looking like a political battle, not a battle for lives nor solutions. With the majority of the Conservatives backed by tough-on-crime critics, supporting Insite may have offended their reelection. Here in Vancouver, the Mayor, Chief of Police, and others are in support; likely also seeking the popular vote of Vancouver residents and business.

What are your views, your expertise, or opinions about these people, this issue, and how it can be solved? Are politicians and our systems capable? If not, why and what can we do?
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Commercial Drive May 10-11 Weekend Events

May 09, 2008


May 10, 2008
12:00 PM - 5:00 PM

Stone Soup Festival

Community Event in Grandview-Woodland
Saturday May 10, 2008
Location: Britannia Community Centre Site
Contact: Brenda Racanelli 604 718-5825
Celebration of Food and Community! Mini-farmer's market, prepared food vendors, cooking demos, art market and entertainment for everyone! And of course, SOUP!


May 10, 2008
1:00 PM - 5:00 PM

The Frock Swap

Community Event in Grandview-Woodland
Saturday May 10, 2008
Location: Box Studios, 1622 Franklin Street, Vancouver
Contact: Marjolyn Ustaris 6048128235
What you send to closet purgatory might be heaven-sent for someone else. Celebrate the art of sharing and bring your gently-worn items to The Frock Swap. Free clothes, free refreshments, sustainable shopping and saying goodbye to your never-worn-agains. All unclaimed garments will be donated to The Convenant House. What more could you ask for? For more information & free registration: www.thegarmentunion.com/the-frock-swap.html


May 11, 2008
10:00 AM - 4:00 PM

Growing Hope for Africa Sunflower Seedling Sale

Fundraiser & Charity Events in Grandview-Woodland
Sunday May 11, 2008
Location: 2133 East 7th Avenue
Contact: Suzy Coulter 778-330-6770
Fourth Annual Sunflower Seedling Fundraiser for the Stephen Lewis Foundation organized by local Downtown Eastside Nurses and friends to support Grassroots HIV/AIDS groups in Sub Saharan Africa. Over 30 Ornamental varieties!

Theatre In the Raw

April 19, 2008


Giving Exposure to Voices Seldom Heard since 1994
Our Mandate...

The Theatre In the Raw Society is a company dedicated to artistic grassroots theatre in the Lower Mainland of Vancouver, as well as to presentations beyond B.C. borders.

We are risk takers, creating and responding to the cultural needs of those in the Canadian and International community.

We want to provide an open, creative, and supportive atmosphere for struggling artists and give exposure to tried and untried playwrights.


Our Mission...

• We believe that hands-on experience in the real world independent theatre is the best way to learn, teach, and perform thespian art and skills.

• Our mission is to provide a venue for new and under-employed performers, playwrights and drama technicians, with a multi-cultural emphasis.

• Our productions represent a diversified balance, ranging from raw experimental to the theatre classics. Relevant productions, exploring social issues distinct to our local community are our specialty.

• We are risk takers, willing to give exposure to voices seldom heard, striving for artistic excellence, in the presentation of unusual, awakening, and exchanging theatre


How We Began...

Theatre In the Raw started out of a storefront cafe called La Quena Café on East Vancouver's Commercial Drive, in 1994. We rehearsed and performed there for nearly three years, producing over 125 one-acts in over 43 nights of theatre...

...For more on who we are, our history, upcoming shows, activities and how to join us, please go to our website at http://www.theatreintheraw.

The Drive Spring in the Step

March 25, 2008


Drive Mural
Originally uploaded by knightbefore_99
Easter Monday, beautiful rays of sunshine, open patios, coffee bars, people, beer, wine, and great food: This was Commercial Drive the way it was experienced just yesterday. After a good stint at the office in the morning, my late morning meeting with Steven R. Duncan, the creator and contributor to TheDriveIsAlive blog, resulted in us heading out take in some lunch up on The Drive.

After a stroll back and forth we settled upon Panevero Bakery and enjoyed a delightful soup and sandwich meal. The homemade style Turkey soup was very substantial and after filling ourselves we stepped over to Grandview Park to enjoy conversation, new company, and the beautiful rays of sunshine.

In the park, the families were out with their children playing, young people sat around the trees talking, and we parked ourselves on some large boulders to continue our creative brainstorming. Steven R. Duncan, a poet himself, also works directly with the Vancouver Arts & Culture community part-time, and continues his involvement and activities related to Arts & Culture with a strong focus on his current Commercial Drive neighbourhood. Our brainstorming will continue int he coming week(s) as we look to further the reach and positive impact of the LiveIn community sites, how it relates to other Bloggers and sites in the Community (we are after all a Community Portal website).

Creative City, creative people, and creative community describe Vancouver and The Drive very well. The City of Vancouver has a Creative City initiative, alongside many other current initiatives to make the city a better place to live. LiveIn is looking at how to maximize our impact and involvement alongside these initiatives to further promote and empower communities, their citizens and businesses. With a little luck and some hard work, we anticipate being able to secure some funding to deliver more to you!

Welcome to The Drive!

I Like to Eat

March 23, 2008


Dashain Celebration 2007
Originally uploaded by aNantaB
Food and drink are the basic staples of life that offer more in richness than just their nourishing value. Food and drink also offer us plentiful opportunity to sit with friends, company, and strangers to do the most natural thing for humans to do: Share. Yes, I like to eat.

Happy Easter! Another reason just to be together regardless of your faith.

Public Input: Welcome to the Oasis

February 21, 2008

Commercial Drive is well-known for its vibe, its art, and its funk. The colour and controversy stroll side-by-side with all the social clashing assaulting the senses while they might be laughing and enjoying a conversation. Diversity and multiculturalism are the key cornerstone that sets The Drive apart.

With a strong Arts Community concentrated in and around The Drive, there are many opportunities missed to connect in meaningful, and potentially in meaningful creative ways. Arts is often seen as a solitary venture, and yet the artist that collaborates, or those who work in groups discover a deeper growth and development in their character and their work. Community, friends, and family are the very things that hold us up through the tough slog.

So a young woman arrives with a question about an idea worth considering: How can I create a residence / studio-mixed (non-threatening to safety) / gallery where live-in, neighbourhood, and travelling artists can congregate, share, collaborate, create, and grow? This sent the mind reeling over the City of Vancouver's Creative City Culture Plan 2008-2018 and wondering that there might well be approaches that could be followed to create such a space, and to gear it up to be fully-sustainable, self-supporting.

A draft brief overview titled Welcome to the Oasis outlines the basic premise to create such a work / live residence for artists. It needs further editing and honing. This is the perfect time to ask for your input.

Happy New Year Commercial Drive

January 20, 2008

The mad Christmas rush is over, the New Year's resolution I've already broken, and now that we're half way through January, the dust is settling and we're finding a groove again. Well, most of us are finding a groove anyway. Some lucky folks have their mind set on some far off exotic vacation spot with beating rays of sun, fruity drinks, delicious food, and lots of dancing and general carrying on.

At LiveIn, we're slowly seeing the efforts of gathering community resources and profiles to build beautiful, useful, and beneficial sites for Vancouver communities. Overall sponsorship is being supported by the LiveIn group, and also welcomes modest sponsorship opportunities for local businesses. In the coming months, more in-depth features will be sought for inclusion to the LiveInMountPleasant.com site, as well as your favourite, the LiveInCommercialDrive.com site.

We welcome suggestions for ideas to write about people, places, and things. Take a look at the Eastside Culture Crawl Executive Director, Valerie Arntzen, and her Assemblage Artist Profile finalized this past week. This is one example of a focused theme as this page becomes one of many for the Arts pages for the community. Who do you know along Commercial Drive of note? People, places, and things - tell us about your hood, and we'll send the News Snoop out to build the story. Register and post your suggestions in our Discussion Forum, or post your comment on our blog.

Commercial Drive Vancouver Lives

December 21, 2007

Time passes quickly and much changes in our lives. Looking back just a few years and I recognize how many areas of my life, my values, my habits, my social network, and others have changed. What I don't always see is how much the world around me has changed.

No more than four years ago I would visit Commercial Drive regularly. I'd visit one of the many coffee shops, maybe grab some Sushi or Mexican, occasionally a nice Greek dish, and with rare company wine and dine at one of the hip joints with the trendy ambiance of the new crowds. With major relationship and career changes, I also ended up downtown without a vehicle and my habits and haunts changed.

Now closer to Commercial Drive, I had my real first opportunity to walk The Drive and see the changes. I walked from almost at Venables, all the way past Broadway a half block, and back again. You know what? The only time I tripped along the route was when I stepped off a curb once. It was my own clumsiness, not the myriad of heaved sidewalk cracks I remember littering Commercial Drive.

At the corner of Venables and Commercial Drive, a commercial / residential development property has long been completed and is occupied with new businesses and residents. The life of Commercial Drive is clearly vibrant and extended in length further North than it used to. Even Venables feels more vibrant around this corner.

As my walk ventured south of 1st Ave along Commercial Drive, I always expected some life but not with the same vibrancy and pizazz of the stretch north of 1st Ave up to the area around Grandview Park. There was a restaurant, well-known and liked, right at that corner across from Joe's coffee shop that had burned down. I forgot to notice what was there today, but down to about here and back to 1st Ave was my favourite stretch.

Today though, I discovered a whole new vibe along Commercial Drive right up to and past Broadway. Businesses had brightened up, new faces and fronts lined the street, and a stronger cultural diversity was presented to the passerby. I was having a great time soaking in the senses, sights, and sounds. This brings me to my one gripe.

Motorists, by and large, are quite comfortable wrapped warmly in their metal cocoons ripping along the streets of 1st Ave and Commercial Drive. A lot of the motorists I witnessed in the two hours I strolled The Drive were aggressively impatient and dangerously reckless, not to mention obnoxious. I like the Car Free idea and see why it would be so popular along The Drive. I think drivers need a reality check; that might solve a few more city-wide problems.