Finding Home: Affordable Housing Solutions for Greater Vancouver
Transcription
Finding Home: Affordable Housing Solutions for Greater Vancouver
Finding Home: Affordable Housing Solutions for Greater Vancouver and B.C. A Tyee Solutions Series by Jackie Wong and David P. Ball Finding Home Produced by Tyee Solutions Society in collaboration with Tides Canada Initiatives Society. This series was made possible through the support of the Real Estate Foundation, Vancity, and BC Non-Profit Housing Association. Introduction: Creating a Public Window to a Critical Year in Affordable Housing i Five Ideas to Make Vancouver More Affordable 1 Affordable Homes Crunch: Experts See Opportunities 6 Buying Vancouver Space One Cubic Foot at a Time 10 ‘Upscaling’ of DTES Eroding Low Income Housing: Report 13 Increasingly, Vancouver’s Pidgin restaurant is focal point for BC social housing push 16 ‘Gentrification and the City’ lectures aim to educate and expand horizons 18 Symposium Shares ‘Down-to-Earth’ Fixes to High-Cost Housing 20 Panel debates solutions to BC rental insecurity at housing conference 23 Jackie Wong is interested in the intersections between journalism, education, and community building. She works as a freelance writer, editor, and writing instructor. She is the managing editor of Megaphone magazine, Vancouver’s street newspaper. Jackie co-teaches an introductory journalism class for inner city residents and teaches new media studies and journalism through UBC and SFU. going deeper: in-depth series on housing hot zones Vancouver’s ‘Old’ Chinatown: Still Here 26 Old, Alone and Victims of Racism in Downtown Eastside 34 ‘A Drop in the Bucket’: Housing for Chinese Speaking Seniors 40 For Chinese Speaking Seniors, Better Service in San Francisco and Toronto 45 One Last Walk with Judy Graves 50 Social housing group left wanting more from both Libs, NDP on ‘urgent’ crisis 55 Vancouver Rent Assembly explores deeper questions around tenant rights, gentrification 58 Housing Justice Project puts affordable lodging and legal advocacy into action 60 Feds have ‘no choice but to listen’ to municipal pressure on affordable housing 63 ‘Community Land Trust’: Vancouver’s Affordable Housing Fix? 66 Advocates call for ‘social impact’ assessments of new Downtown Eastside developments 71 David P. Ball is an awardwinning reporter with a passion for multimedia journalism, particularly investigative reporting, photography and documentary film. His reporting at The Tyee won a 2013 Jack Webster Foundation award. He also writes regularly for 24 Hours, Windspeaker and Xtra!, and has also been published in National Post, Toronto Star and Georgia Straight. Study Details Canada’s ‘Perfect Storm’ Housing Problem 74 going deeper: in-depth series on housing hot zones Safer from Violence, Still Seeking a Home 78 Bonded by Shared Horrors, Refugees Find Housing Solutions 84 Fleeing Danger, Refugee Shelter-Seekers Find Exploitation 89 A Home for Refugees ‘Caught In-Between’ 95 Are Stats Glossing over Vancouver’s Housing Crisis? 100 going deeper: in-depth series on housing hot zones Generation Rent: Cities of Renters 106 Generation Rent: San Francisco’s Citizen Tenants 110 Generation Rent: Urban Facelifts Serve the Well-Heeled 117 Generation Rent: The Secret to a Great Rental Home 123 Infographic: Cities of Renters, Vancouver vs. San Francisco 129 More Lower Mainland Rental Housing, but For Whom? 132 The Quiet Agony of the Landlord 137 Affordable Housing: Some Parts Just Aren’t City Hall’s Job 141 Latest in Vancouver Density Battle: Demolition at Marine Gardens 146 Retirement Savings Could Jump-start Victoria Affordable Housing 149 Judge Again Orders Abbotsford Homeless Camp Eviction 153 To Help Vulnerable Renters, Boost Housing Literacy 155 going deeper: in-depth series on housing hot zones Stars Aligned for False Creek South 159 A Hippie-Era-Urban Experiment Hits 40 163 To Help Vulnerable Renters, Boost Second Life for False Creek South? 170 ‘Inspiring’ Shipping Container Housing Set to Multiply 176 Intoduction: Creating a Public Window to a Critical Year in Affordable Housing by Jackie Wong “There’s no great mystique to housing people,” Judy Graves told me one sunny afternoon in March. We were walking through Stanley Park, and Graves was showing me the places she used to frequent during overnight walks to learn from people sleeping on the street. Those walks, initiated by simple curiosity, became a symbol of Graves’ unfussy, straightforward approach to understanding and finding solutions for homelessness, a social problem that, for many, is mired in endless complexity. But Graves didn’t see it that way. “Ending homelessness is probably the easiest problem of all the problems facing cities to solve,” she said. To her, the solution is simple housing that affords a person privacy and dignity. “It’s so straightforward. And it benefits all of us.” Graves retired from her post as the City of Vancouver’s advocate for the homeless shortly after we spoke. During her career, she made massive strides in drawing public attention to Vancouver’s most visibly vulnerable—people with nowhere to live but the streets. Her work influenced significant progress in documenting Vancouver street homelessness and changing municipal policy to deal with it differently. Tyee Solutions Society tracked some of that progress. Former Tyee Solutions housing reporter Monte Paulsen wrote numerous series exploring solutions to Vancouver’s housing crisis, a crisis at the time most visible on the city’s streets. The groundbreaking How to End Homelessness in Vancouver (2008), the award-winning A Home for All (2009), and the influential Green and Affordable Homes, Out of the Box (2010) convened the Finding Home: Affordable Housing Solutions for Greater Vancouver and B.C. city’s housing experts in putting forward solutions to make housing more affordable—and, importantly, accessible—to a wider public. Four years later, some of Paulsen’s suggestions are bearing fruit, notably in the form of a seven-storey tower of innovative shipping-container housing for women in Vancouver’s Downtown Eastside, which Tyee Solutions Society reporter David P. Ball wrote about in January 2014. That project, now five months old at the time of this writing, came about as a direct result of Paulsen’s 2010 series about housing made from shipping containers. Elsewhere in the city however, a quiet crisis continues to unfold behind closed doors as public conversations around housing shift from homelessness to the more nebulous territory of affordability. In picking up where Paulsen left off, I found, in 2013, that Vancouver’s most acute housing problems—where affordability, livability, and mental health come together—are playing out in the private rental market. That’s where people are struggling to hold on to what lodgings they’ve been able to find, housing that is often precarious and offers no sure future for its inhabitants. It’s where people end up staying for years while they wait for their names to inch forward on social housing lists. And it’s where under-represented citizens— people whose first language is not English, people who lack the social and cultural literacies to speak publicly about their situation or advocate for something better—are facing the worst outcomes of an unaffordable city. ii “I think middle-class Canadians are focused on the idea that it’s a tough housing market and they have to work hard to get into it,” urban geographer Dan Hiebert said to me last February. “That deflects their vision from the precariousness of people down the socio-economic hierarchy.” In 2013, David P. Ball and I worked to pull back the curtain on under-reported housing affordability issues and the people living at their heart. We worked from the perspective that housing is about more than simply putting a roof over a person’s head. Finding solutions to the affordability concerns, we found, is to think carefully about what makes a house a home. The intricate, messy, often beautiful elements of what separates ordinary life from the experience of truly living go hand in hand with what distinguishes a house from a home. Our year of reporting sought to articulate that, and also show the consequences of its absence. Jackie Wong January 2014 Five Ideas to Make Vancouver More Affordable Housing experts weigh in ahead of Buildex keynote panel on Feb. 14. By Jackie Wong It’s been a year since Brent Toderian suddenly and controversially departed his job as the City of Vancouver’s planning director. He now heads up his own city planning and urban consultancy firm, Toderian Urbanworks, where he’s at work, among many other things locally, nationally and internationally, on two local affordable housing projects and three job-space projects, as well as a citywide plan for Regina, Canada’s second fastest growing city. His planning work today echoes what he previously did with the City of Vancouver. A key difference between now and then is he can talk about urban issues without first asking permission from his bosses to discuss them. “You could never forget that you were speaking on behalf of the city before. And now I’m simply speaking on behalf of my opinion on cities. So in that sense, there’s a lot fewer boundaries,” he tells me. “But the rumours of my fetteredness were always a bit overstated while I was at City Hall because I was a pretty outspoken fellow, which is maybe why I’m not there anymore. And the rumours of my un-fetteredness are probably a bit overstated now. Life is always a little more complicated than that.” Vancouver winter scene by TOTORORO RORO from Your BC: The Tyee’s Photo Pool. Toderian will share his perspectives on city-building and affordable living as part of a keynote panel at the Buildex Vancouver conference Feb. 14. The two-day conference and tradeshow will draw over 13,000 expected visitors to share information about building, managing and designing real estate. The panel, called “Living Affordably in Greater Vancouver,” aims to explore solutions to this region’s housing affordability crisis. Unsurprisingly, Vancouver was recently ranked the second-most unaffordable city in the world (Hong Finding Home: Affordable Housing Solutions for Greater Vancouver and B.C. Kong was first), according to January 2013 survey findings published by Demographia, an American urban planning consultancy. Idea 1. Public transport creates housing options. “We need to change the discussion to one of affordable cities rather than just affordable housing,” Toderian says. Affordable cities, he says, must include affordable transportation systems independent of private cars, plus job spaces that ensure the people who live here can make a living. “There’s a mythology that’s been spread across North America that industry is out of date, and we should convert all these [industrial] lands to mixed-use, hip, high-density communities. Vancouver has actually been one of the models for that. There are some places where you can actually do that successfully and other places where you shouldn’t,” Toderian says. “And what kind of job space do we have in this city? Is it the kind of job space that only facilitates trendy restaurants and service-sector jobs, or is it about higher-paid jobs, creative jobs, manufacturing jobs that require specialized lands and buildings? That’s as much a part of the affordability picture as affordable housing is.” Solutions for homelessness and vulnerable housing rely as much on inclusive employment training as it does on the provision of affordable and supportive housing, he adds. “Skills-training and inclusive job-training initiatives, where 2 you actually take folks out of poverty cycle situations to give folks the training they need to change their economic profile, is an important issue relative to homelessness and supportive housing,” he says. “It’s not just about giving an affordable home, although that’s critically important.” Idea 2. Make policies to support options other than ownership. Both Toderian and fellow Buildex panelist Sean McEwen are calling for a re-consideration of how our society values and privileges home ownership over other forms of housing. “The idea of ownership as an indication of success is a uniquely North American thing, and it’s increasingly less applicable to expensive cities,” Toderian says. “This is true of every global expensive city; ownership isn’t the automatic assumption, but there are people that live successful and fulfilling lives all over the world and never own a home, and don’t think anything less of themselves in the doing.” McEwen, who has worked as the sole practitioner for his firm, S.R. McEwen Architect, for just over 20 years, suggests cities have been planned — and even governments have been organized — around deep-seated cultural biases towards home ownership. “There’s kind of a core belief that home ownership is better, that it essentially helps to create a more stable society, a society where people express pride of ownership and maintain their place in society,” McEwen says. “There’ve been studies Finding Home: Affordable Housing Solutions for Greater Vancouver and B.C. that have shown that renters demand more policing than homeowners do. There are kind of these core social biases that tend to define what’s of value in society and what isn’t.” Special federal measures, like homeowner grants, are not afforded to renters, McEwen adds. Such measures work to both defend home ownership and enhance its status. A longtime social housing advocate who has worked with numerous neighbourhood groups to advance tenant rights and housing for low-income citizens, McEwen remembers housing-related discussions from the 1970s that are eerily prescient today. “People used to warn us 40 years ago about Vancouver becoming an executive city. It was gentrifying like mad. And it’s come to pass,” he says. “It’s the planning culture and the development culture that we’ve had that have allowed it to come to pass. Their efforts at social engineering have really succeeded.” Idea 3. Change the thrust of ‘conditional use’ permits. McEwen chooses an independent architectural practice because he wants to maintain his freedom to express his views frankly. “If I was part of a firm and trying to market our skills and we were making these sort of what we call sociallyprogressive notions, you might not get hired by developers in the local context,” he says. A Vancouver urban planning trend that worries him these days is prioritizing the visual impact of a new development over its contributions to civil society. 3 “In the culture of planning that we have, planners construct these beautiful, artistic pieces of urban design, but we’ve gotten farther away from looking at things that I think are important, like social mix,” he says. McEwen would like to see a return to some of the original purposes of the conditional land use permit. Conditional land use allows the property owner — in many local cases, the City of Vancouver — to use land in a way that lies outside the zoning law, usually with conditions based on recommendations from local area advisory groups, nearby property owners, and other advisory bodies. “What I would say is we go back to some original ideas of using the conditional use tool to look at housing goals and wider affordability goals,” McKewan says. “If there was a use important to the community, then you could use conditional use as an inducement to keep incorporating those kinds of uses into projects.” So, for example, if it’s found that low-income seniors housing is needed in a community, a conditional land use permit could provide the bonus density needed to achieve that in a standard market residential development. This was done before, he says, but now it seems to be a thing of the past. “The way that it’s evolved in Vancouver is that everything’s entirely visual,” he says. But high aesthetic impact doesn’t necessarily need to sacrifice contributing to the social good. “If you reward good design with higher densities for conditional use, it’s one tool the planners have to improve the Finding Home: Affordable Housing Solutions for Greater Vancouver and B.C. quality of urban developments. In years gone by, it looked at social issues as well. That’s been forgotten.” Idea 4. Foster a European solution: Co-housing. Even though the City of Vancouver’s Urban Design Panel rejected a rezoning and development application for a co-housing development in Kensington-Cedar Cottage last month, Dane Jansen remains optimistic about the potential for this European housing type to successfully establish itself Windsong in Langley is B.C.’s in Vancouver. The principal of first and oldest co-housing project. Buildesx panelist Dane Vancouver’s dys architecture Jansen worked on project in the joins Toderian and McEwen on mid-’90s. Photo dys projects. Thursday’s Buildex panel, along with Urban Fabric Group principal Heather Tremain. “It’s hitting some of the critical criteria in terms of producing affordable housing,” Jansen says of co-housing, which is characterized by its non-hierarchical, member-driven decisionmaking structure and private homes supplemented by common facilities. While Jansen is not part of the current Cedar Cottage co-housing proposal, he and dys architecture previously 4 worked on a co-housing development in Langley called the Windsong, which welcomed its first residents in 1996. “[Co-housing is] one of the ways we can improve affordability that’s self-initiated,” he continues. “Part of being in co-housing is to reduce some of the lifestyle and budget issues. You’re not always having to go looking for a babysitter because there’s somebody there to deal with your kids if you’re running late coming home one night. People are coming together to be mutually supportive, which should suggest you can reduce some of your other costs in your life and draw that down.” He also praises co-housing for its development cost savings. “If you’re doing the development yourself, you’re removing one of the soft costs, which is developer profit, and hopefully turning that back into development or making more affordable units.” Idea 5. Go small intelligently. Jansen’s other work in designing social housing units has, like co-housing, drawn on European inspiration. He has designed 220- to 325-square foot apartments several supportive housing facilities in Vancouver, and was one of the first architects to pioneer small suites for such purposes in the late 1990s. “There was quite an outcry. ‘How dare people live in something that’s the size of a parking space?’ ” he remembers. Finding Home: Affordable Housing Solutions for Greater Vancouver and B.C. “For me, I knew that other people living in the rest of the world had been living that way.” But current economic circumstances are seeing governments less involved with housing than they have been in the past, Jansen says. “I think we had that paradigm where we’ve just trusted there would be the involvement of government to carry forward with that agenda. And they had a strong agenda, right up until 2007, 2008, as evidenced with the Provincial Homelessness Initiative,” he says. “Now, the provincial government is in a bit of a tough situation. So while they’re still continuing to do work and we’re fortunate to do work with it, there are not as many programs today as there were a few years ago. It tells us that we can’t always trust that there will be that level of funding from the provincial government. And it means you’ve got to look at things more creatively.” 5 Affordable Homes Crunch: Experts See Opportunities Lower Mainland could be lab for innovative financing, planning, say Buildex panelists. By Jackie Wong The words “affordable home ownership” and “Vancouver” aren’t frequently uttered in the same breath, but some innovative local projects suggest the tides are turning — slowly. The discussions emerging from the Feb. 14 BuildEX Vancouver panel on living affordably in Greater Vancouver reflected what it is to live in this region; it’s a place of infinite, Russian doll-style contradictions underscored by a widely felt, sometimes cloudily articulated notion that somehow things can be better. The panelists disagreed with one another at times, but Brent Toderian, Sean McEwen, Dane Jansen, and Heather Tremain put forward a host of ideas on how to improve housing affordability, based on their extensive and varied experiences with building, planning, and designing housing in all forms. The many specific ideas cited by the four experts fall under three headings of “opportunities” the building, design and policy making community should seize, according to the panelists. Opportunity 1: Creative affordable ownership initiatives The Verdant town homes on Simon Fraser University’s Burnaby campus are proof that a special alchemy of community-minded partnerships and creativity can create affordability when there may otherwise be none to be found. Windsong in Langley: Cited as one promising affordable housing prototype by Dane Jansen of dys architects, who helped design it. Heather Tremain, principal of Urban Fabric Group, was involved with Verdant, a 60-unit wood frame development completed in 2007. She says it’s a model for affordable home Finding Home: Affordable Housing Solutions for Greater Vancouver and B.C. ownership that can and should be applied elsewhere. The units were designed primarily for families, a demographic often priced out of Vancouver’s real estate market. Verdant’s smallest unit, at 518 square feet, sold for $129,000. Its largest, three-bedroom units, at 1,247 square feet, sold for $311,000. SFU Community Trust provided the lower-cost land, and Vancity Enterprises Ltd. handled the development instead of a standard high-profit developer. As well, the project eschewed traditional marketing strategies like expensive newspaper advertising campaigns, which can cost tens of thousands of dollars. Instead, marketers focused on more modest door-to-door campaigns, and achieved the same goals at a much lower cost. “The objective of the work was to create family-focused, multi-unit residential building that would provide an affordable option in the university community,” Tremain said. creates a co-op, the co-op buys land, and then Options works for the co-op, alongside related professionals such as architects and planners. Homeownership Alternatives, a separate entity, finances the co-op. Homeownership Alternatives operates on the proceeds from previous Options projects. “The market might deliver it at $290,000 a unit. They can deliver it at $190,000,” Tremain said of Options for Homes projects. “One of the interesting things about them is they buy land in areas that are kind of the ‘next’ area. They wouldn’t buy on Main Street right now in Vancouver. They’d buy on Fraser Street, they’d buy on Victoria Drive. So they get a benefit for being the new group into the market.” A no-frills approach to building and marketing the units also keeps costs down, she added. SFU purchased some units to hold as rental stock, but most were sold to families. It was both an environmentally- and economically-sustainable project. While the objective was to create community and affordability, it was never treated like a charity. Opportunity 2: Growing the non-market sector Tremain also points to Toronto’s Options for Homes as a model for affordable ownership that could take shape in Greater Vancouver. The non-profit facilitates development and has since helped build more than 3,000 units of affordable real estate in the Greater Toronto area. How it works: Options “It’s something we used to do much better 30 or 25 years ago. But we’ve forgotten how to do that, and it hasn’t been a priority in society,” he said. “Everybody got paid,” Tremain said. “We didn’t squeeze the architects or whomever. It was a market project.” 7 Sean McEwen, a longtime community housing activist and Vancouver architect with an independent practice, called for architects and developers to re-prioritize the non-market housing sector. “It’s created a system where we told certain groups that you will have some difficulties, but maybe you’ll have to move Finding Home: Affordable Housing Solutions for Greater Vancouver and B.C. somewhere else,” McEwen continued. “Rather than consider ourselves as closed systems, closed neighbourhoods where we want to protect what we have, we have to think of integrating the needs of others in society, especially the less fortunate.” McEwen was critical of the Vancouver Mayor’s Task Force on Housing Affordability, which did not articulate many opportunities for non-market housing. To grow non-market housing in the current political and economic climate, he suggested using the conditional use zoning bylaw to leverage affordable housing opportunities; taking housing units as exaction for rezoning benefits rather than ‘pay in lieu’ scenarios; and finally, ensuring the voices of local groups are heard at city hall. “We have too much of a top-down process in terms of planning our communities,” he said. Opportunity 3: Evolving more ways to share space, cost, amenities Reducing the cost of living in areas like transportation and food is key to tackling the affordable housing conundrum. “We have a double whammy here in Metro Vancouver,” panelist Brent Toderian said. “We have the highest housing costs and below average national incomes.” To Toderian, affordable living means affordable food access, land that supports high-paying jobs, and strong purpose-built rental stocks. He suggests strategically mixing purpose-built 8 rental housing into mixed employment areas close to transit hubs. “There’s nothing incompatible with rental housing and office space,” he says. He noted, however, that Vancouver’s supply of live-work spaces leaves much to be desired. Car sharing has seen great success in the city of Vancouver, but it’s enjoyed less traction in outlying areas. Dane Jansen, principal of dys architects, suggests Vancouver suburbs adopt peer-to-peer car sharing initiatives in which car owners rent their cars to neighbours. He points to Getaround, a peer-to-peer car rental program in San Francisco, California, in which users rent each others’ cars for an average of $8 an hour. For architects, Jansen says, “Building [housing complexes] with co-op cars in mind reduces the cost of the built form and reduces costs for residents.” A single stall of parking is about $35,000, and one carsharing spot can save four to five stalls in a new development. Jansen also supports alternative ownership and tenancy models, such as co-housing, joint-purchasing, and joint tenancy. To co-own living spaces like living rooms and kitchens can reduce the cost of buying a home. Tremain said such arrangements may gain ground among younger adults in their 20s and 30s. “Maybe these new housing forms could start to solve a couple of our issues,” Tremain said, referring to a 2011 Vancouver Foundation survey that found the top concern among interviewees was a growing sense of isolation. Finding Home: Affordable Housing Solutions for Greater Vancouver and B.C. Shared tenancy, shared ownership, co-housing, and car sharing could present solutions to some foundational ingredients for living well: living in community, and living within one’s means. 9 Buying Vancouver Space One Cubic Foot at a Time With a wink, Cube Living promises hyperdense real estate ownership for all. By Jackie Wong “Science tells us that physical space is infinitely divisible. This means that real estate density is theoretically unlimited, resulting in the potential for infinite capital gain!” — CubeLiving.ca In the back production area of Vancouver’s 221A Artist Run Centre, Alex Grunenfelder is selling real estate, and it’s going fast. His Cube Living: Buy Small installation project has been open for just an hour when Tyee Solutions Society stops by on Tuesday afternoon, but he’s already pre-sold many units, each one cubic foot in size. We are Grunenfelder’s first walkin customers, and we’ve purchased two units for $3. We feel lucky to have invested at such a good time. “You got your first one for $1. They’re going to be selling at $3 each after your two are gone,” Grunenfelder tells us. He finishes assembling the six-sided cardboard cube containing our purchased space in about three minutes. “This is a construction process that would normally take at least two years. And that’s why they can be so cheap because the efficiencies are unbelievable,” he says. This is what Grunenfelder refers to as real estate 3.0, or the micro-realestate revolution. “This seems like a logical conclusion,” he says, “following the neoliberal market logic of allowing speculative capital to determine how space gets created and used in the city.” Designer Alex Grunenfelder with stacked boxes each containing one cubic foot of Vancouver space, now being marketed to general public. Photo: D. Beers. Grunenfelder works as a graphic designer and has lived in Vancouver for 13 years. His says the Cube Living project was inspired by what he observes as the surreal activities of the local real estate industry and related urban densification initiatives. Finding Home: Affordable Housing Solutions for Greater Vancouver and B.C. 11 As we chat, a woman who works at a restaurant a few doors down on East Georgia Street walks in and asks whether this is yet another condo sale underway. She’s not shopping for a home, but she’s interested in what’s happening to the neighbourhood and is drawn in by the familiar trappings of real estate sales, like the life-sized cut out figure of a woman smiling in front of a photo of the city’s skyline, holding in her hand… well, this is different: A one cubic foot box made of transparent plastic. After asking a few questions, the visitor is relieved to find out the storefront is just part of an art installation making comment on the source of her anxiety. Grunenfelder pre-sold a large number of cubes before marketing them to the general public. Price is rising. Photo: D. Beers. “I’m not necessarily advocating living in smaller spaces,” he says of Cube Living. “It’s about looking at the discussions that are happening around all of this, and maybe looking at things from a different point of view, and also trying to project, where is this going? Where is this process of urban densification going to end up?” Cube Living is about the relationship between property owners, developers, and purchasers. “It’s a way to investigate and directly interact with those relationships and bring them all together in one time and place,” he says, “Instead of over the course of years it would normally take for a spatial property to be developed.” After Grunenfelder finishes putting together our cube, we sign our agreement for transfer of ownership. The terms of use permit us to use the space for art gallery, retail store, office, art studio, workshop, or storage purposes. But the weight of the contents in the cube must not exceed 40 pounds. The cardboard container that houses the space is provided to us by the manufacturer on loan, free of charge and in perpetuity. We decide to leave the container at 221A until the end of the month, after which we may either choose to take possession of the space and After making a sale, Grunenfelder assembles the packaging for the space he is selling. Photo: D. Beers. Finding Home: Affordable Housing Solutions for Greater Vancouver and B.C. relocate it, or enter a management contract ($2/month per unit) with 221A. As we get ready to leave, more customers are arriving to make an investment on yet more units. Here in Vancouver, it’s the only real estate many of us can afford. 12 ‘Upscaling’ of DTES Eroding Low Income Housing: Report Carnegie Community Action Project's conclusions disputed by Vision councillor Jang. By David P. Ball Vancouver’s housing crisis worsened in the Downtown Eastside in the past year, according to a report released yesterday by an activist housing group, with fewer and fewer Single Resident Occupancy (SRO) rentals within reach of many residents’ budgets. The survey comes in the wake of media attention paid to daily picket line facing clients and staff of yet another upscale restaurant opening in the neighbourhood. Looking out over Pigeon Park, a longtime gathering place of low income people, activists believe that the arrival of ‘Pidgin’ and businesses like it have bumped property values beyond the reach of some residents, a process known as gentrification. At a chilly street-corner press conference yesterday morning, members of the Carnegie Community Action Project (CCAP) unfurled a large map of the neighbourhood, with rental building icons colour-coded by price to prove their point. They also renewed their demand for the city to purchase and dedicate 10 buildings a year for affordable social housing. “We want the city to take immediate action to stop renovictions and the upscaling of hotels — the invisible and covered-up losses of affordable housing stock for low-income people,” said Ivan Drury, an organizer with CCAP who coauthored the 2012 Hotel Survey report with Jean Swanson. Jean Swanson, with the Carnegie Community Action Project (CCAP), explains a colour-coded map illustrating rent increases in the Downtown Eastside. Photo by David P. Ball. “The biggest problem with gentrification — which is a combination of cultural gentrification that happens with highend restaurants and boutiques, and condos being built — is that the price of land goes up. It makes it an impossible place for low-income people to remain.” Finding Home: Affordable Housing Solutions for Greater Vancouver and B.C. ‘Who’s being displaced?’: Councillor Jang The report, titled “We’re Trying to Get Rid of the Welfare People” (a quote CCAP attributes to a hotel clerk during their research), found that 426 rooms in the area shifted “from being affordable to being unaffordable to people on welfare, disability and basic pension,” based on social assistance rates of $375 for lodging. But the report’s findings were questioned by City Councillor Kerry Jang, Vision Vancouver’s point person on housing issues. “Who’s been displaced?” Jang asked, when approached for comment on the survey. “Any new development being built is in buildings that were warehouses or empty to start with. Where’s the displacement? “I just don’t buy that. It’s a very extreme, one-sided perspective of [CCAP], for 100 per cent social housing only. It makes no sense; 100 per cent of any type of housing doesn’t work, either rich or poor.” Jang said that the City has, in fact, purchased several buildings — as well as requiring developers to include affordable units in their plans — and he argued that the conditions of SROs are improving as the province buys and renovates buildings. He added that an inventory of housing conducted by the City disputes CCAP’s claims of displacement. “There has been no loss in housing in the Downtown Eastside,” he said. “In fact, it’s increased, and there are several 14 hundred units on the way, of both social and supportive housing. “I disagree with [CCAP] on so many levels… The Carnegie [Community Action Project] has always been very strident against anybody living in the Downtown Eastside unless they are poor. They’ve made it clear to me they want a 100 per cent low-income neighbourhood that is subsidized forever. But mixed communities work best — mixed buildings, mixed communities, mixed neighbourhoods. We’re beginning to see that change in the Downtown Eastside… There’s no longer this class warfare that’s gone on too long — and ghettoized the neighbourhood.” ‘Housing is key’: DTES resident For long-time Downtown Eastside resident Sandra Czechacze, who several years ago moved from a hotel SRO into subsidized Native Housing, the claims of displacement and increasingly unaffordable establishments are spot-on. She said that her own move was the “best thing that’s happened” for her, and added that safe, affordable housing should be a right for everyone — but too often unattainable. “Housing is a very, very big thing,” Czechaczek said. “When you can wake up in the morning and you’re happy to be where you are, it’s connected to your health, and to your whole life. Finding Home: Affordable Housing Solutions for Greater Vancouver and B.C. “At the end of the day, you have to go to your house. If you live where there are rats this big, cockroaches and bedbugs, do you really want to go home to that? So housing is key.” Czechaczek said she is not opposed to rich and poor living and working side-by-side. But with the number of higherend businesses like Pidgin and Cartems Donuterie — which sells premium, handmade, locally sourced donuts — moving into the Downtown Eastside, she hopes there can be a balance between their needs and interests. “Slowly, low-cost stores are going out the window,” she said. “Who can afford a $3 donut? That’s crazy! Not the people who live here. What about us? “The way I see it, the rich people are just pushing us out. I feel like we’re losing our dignity because we can’t afford these places. You can’t even go into some of these stores because they’re watching, just because of the way I’m dressed. If I was wearing a three-piece suit right now, and high heels and a big hairstyle, they’d be just catering to me.” Dollars and donuts While he disputes the argument that poor people are being pushed out of the Downtown Eastside, Jang admits that Pidgin’s $5 pickles and Cartem’s $3 donuts may not be within the reach of many. “Quite frankly,” he chuckled, “there (are) restaurants in this town that even I can’t afford to eat at. 15 “It’s always about providing a range — that’s what we’re aiming for, not only in the Downtown Eastside but through the entire city. When you have all one thing, either all-poor or allrich, it creates microcosms of despair or callousness. You can have $3 donuts and $0.90 donuts. I don’t buy $3 donuts, quite frankly. I can buy them for $0.60, or wait ’til 5 to buy a dozen for $3.” Increasingly, Vancouver’s Pidgin restaurant is focal point for BC social housing push By Jackie Wong A province-wide campaign pressing for more social housing has fastened on a contentious corner of Vancouver and a new eatery there. It’s been a month since Pidgin restaurant opened at the corner of Carrall and Hastings in Vancouver’s Downtown Eastside, its row of front window seats framed in a large picture window that looks across the street at Pigeon Park, a well-known and widely-used public gathering space in the neighbourhood. To highlight the troubling disparity they see between the Japanese and Korean-inspired cuisine inside, and the undeniable urban poverty outside, housing activists — including members of the Social Housing Coalition of BC campaign, have picketed the restaurant for weeks. They want to draw attention to what they see as the damaging effects of upmarket development in the neighbourhood. The protests spurred extensive mainstream media coverage, derision, and public explanations from the restaurant. “Pidgin is by definition a bridging of language and culture and our location is not haphazard,” reads a Valentine’s Day statement on the Pidgin website, which was later printed and taped to the front windows. “Despite the fact that the protestors have chosen to confront this business, we all agree, there absolutely needs to be more dignified housing and services for low income residents of the DTES, our inability to help those most in need in our society is a horrid reflection of the lack of progress by all levels of Finding Home: Affordable Housing Solutions for Greater Vancouver and B.C. government. Rather than us being divided in our fight to help those in need, we welcome a dialogue with them and other community leaders to focus our collective strength on the real problems facing the DTES, not on a small business trying to be socially responsible.” This week, the Mainlander news site published a financial and business profile of the people behind the restaurant. Today, housing activists affiliated with the Pidgin pickets released more information about the building that now houses Pidgin on the ground floor and 21 market condominiums on the upper floors. From 1983 to 2008, the building was the site of 30 rental apartments. Studios rented for $440 a month, and two-bedroom units rented for $674. All tenants were evicted in 2008. Meanwhile on the Mainlander site, a friend has come to Pidgin co-owner Brandon Grossutti’s defense, stating his friend has been unfairly demonized when Grossutti himself faced economic barriers as a young person. The argument echoes restaurant critic and Pidgin supporter Andrew Morrison’s public pronouncements that many restaurateurs who operate businesses in the Downtown Eastside and Gastown are “scratching to make a living just the same as everyone else.” “To many, a good restaurant on the Downtown Eastside equals gentrification,” Morrison told Pecha Kucha audience members in spring 2012. “But the gentrifiers here are mostly young people who have grown up in the restaurant business, 17 former bus boys and dishwashers who have clawed their way up. It’s a shame that that truth is seldom recognized. “No matter how many SROs there are, you can’t legislate against a good wine list,” he said in his talk. “People want to have a good dining experience if they can afford it.” The activists behind the Pidgin protests say there is not enough social housing available for the people who need it, especially in the Downtown Eastside. Those who belong to the Social Housing Coalition of BC campaign, which launched in early February, have demanded the provincial government to build 10,000 units of social housing per year and strengthen the Residential Tenancy Act so it better protects vulnerable renters. The campaign aims to make social housing a key issue in the 2013 provincial election. Social Housing Now is staging regular Saturday demonstrations throughout the city. A rally and march downtown takes place Saturday, March 2, starting at 12 p.m. at the Vancouver Art Gallery. ‘Gentrification and the City’ lectures aim to educate and expand horizons By Jackie Wong Gentrification, the process of urban redevelopment that can carry the consequence of displacing lower-income residents, takes many forms. And it’s happening in many more places than the inner-city neighbourhoods that tend to draw the most public attention, says Peter Hall, a professor in Simon Fraser University’s Urban Studies department. Last week, Tyee Solutions Society reported on the controversy around Pidgin, an upscale restaurant in Vancouver’s Downtown Eastside neighbourhood that’s become a focal point for a social housing push in the province, in particular by the Social Housing Coalition of BC campaign which aims to make housing a key issue in the 2013 provincial election. While Hall acknowledges that current local discussions about gentrification in Vancouver tend to zero in on the Downtown Eastside, he says such focus can limit public understanding about the complex social and economic forces that spur urban change. As part of efforts to broaden discussion and understanding of the causes and consequences of gentrification, Hall and his colleagues are launching a year-long lecture series, “Gentrification and the City,” that will explore gentrification through the perspectives of international experts in human geography, urban planning, and housing. The intersection of Main and Keefer streets in Vancouver’s Chinatown. Hall says he hopes the series will help people get beyond what in some ways is a very narrow discussion about gentrification in Vancouver. Finding Home: Affordable Housing Solutions for Greater Vancouver and B.C. “People obviously get impassioned about the issues confronting them here and now and today, but we can take a step back and say, there’s a longer cycle of urban change this form’s part of. Whatever we see today has a history. And there are lessons to be learned from other places.” Hall says there’s a tendency to look at the City of Vancouver as a closed system. “But if you take a more regional perspective, then in many ways, what’s going on elsewhere in the region is a kind of fallout from what’s happened in central Vancouver,” he says. “The focus on displacement in the Downtown Eastside tends to ignore the concentration processes that brought people to the Downtown Eastside in the first place… of course there are people in the Downtown Eastside who were displaced from somewhere else.” The Gentrification and the City series begins Thursday, March 7 with a public lecture about gentrification and the arts from Norma Rantisi, a Concordia University geography professor. Other lectures this spring will examine gentrification in the suburbs and the role of gentrification in social inclusion and exclusion. Gentrification and the City convenors are also planning a set of three additional public lectures in fall 2013, which will feature a housing expert, a talk about waterfront gentrification, and the legacy of the late cities-for-people advocate Jane Jacobs. 19 Symposium Shares ‘Down-to-Earth’ Fixes to High-Cost Housing Vancouver event unites advocates, developers, architects, politicians and more. By David P. Ball Vancouver will host affordable-housing thinkers, designers and decision-makers from across B.C. this week for the Housing Affordability Symposium (HAS), held March 14 and 15. The two-day annual event has become known for offering a raft of creative solutions to the high costs of housing, which in Vancouver are among the world’s highest and across the province create challenges for many communities. The conference this year comes in the wake of a new Metro Vancouver Housing Committee report that reveals the average rent in the city has climbed by nearly 17 per cent in the last five years alone. Could new ideas help? Ideas like buying and selling walkout basement suites. Tweaking zoning rules to reduce parking and pass on the savings. Imaginatively sharing communal space. Offering the homeless lodging in movable modular units — or in scattered apartments where they can finally have an address. Bringing together everyone from architects to politicians and advocates to developers, this year’s HAS continues the focus on what outspoken architect and keynote speaker Michael Geller calls “down-to-earth” affordable-housing solutions. Could laneway houses brighten the affordable housing landscape? Module photo courtesy: Michael Geller’s blog. “One of the best parts is the presentation of on-the-ground case studies and demonstration projects,” he explains. “I often think that the best way to convince people an idea is practical is to show it being done. “There are very good, practical, down-to-earth examples of housing innovation that are resulting in greater affordability… Finding Home: Affordable Housing Solutions for Greater Vancouver and B.C. It’s not just talking about it. We’re looking at drawings, actually seeing pictures of completed projects and having the people (responsible) in attendance to answer questions.” But for symposium organizer Auli Parviainen, this year’s conference isn’t simply about “actionable solutions” to numerous problems — from homelessness to home ownership — and the need for more rental units. “We’re also looking at the changes that are going to need to be addressed with cultural and demographic shifts that are occurring,” she says. “There are a variety of needs that must be met — expectations for housing are changing. “What solutions will allow market affordability to occur, and how do we do that? That’s the question, always, for us.” Even those who can aren’t buying This year’s new demographic focus will incorporate the voices of social demographers, urban planners, and regular residents grouped in three categories — the so-called under-30 “millennial” generation, families and seniors. Each of the groups, researchers are discovering, has changing needs that must be addressed as markets shift. The symposium will devote panels to each demographic group, identifying both struggles and solutions. One of those speaking as a “millennial” is Alicia Medina Laddaga, one of the young architects behind Vancouver’s Laboratory of Housing Alternatives (LOHA). She tells The 21 Tyee that HAS is an important forum to connect with likeminded thinkers and policy-makers. “We want to gather people with ideas together, and translate them into solutions,” she says. “That’s what we’re working towards. “A lot of young, creative professionals are leaving the city, saying, ‘I’m not giving up my art discipline in order to keep living here.’ But how would Vancouver look without arts and culture? It would be a very sad and not-fun city.” Among LOHA’s ideas are proposals for homes that offer both individual and communal space. For instance, shared artists studios incorporated into their lodgings shared workshops, common areas and bike parking. “People are not only only looking for individual spaces, but to create community around them,” she says. “There’s a lot of talk about shared or co-ownership, and community-based development. “Now the market’s changing. Even people who can afford to aren’t buying — at least, not in the neighbourhoods where they want to live. Opening up this conversation is exciting.” Chaired by Bob Deeks, whose firm RDC Fine Homes boasts “affordable, high performance, sustainable housing,” the symposium also features presentations by ground-breaking Okanagan migrant housing geographer Carlos Teixeira and an opening keynote by Chris Turner, author of The Geography of Hope: A Tour of the World We Need. Finding Home: Affordable Housing Solutions for Greater Vancouver and B.C. Geller himself is offering the closing keynote speech and said his aim this year is to encourage participants to get to work putting ideas into practice. “My keynote is going to be, out of all the ideas that are coming up this year … (let’s) try to figure out which of the ones have the greatest likelihood of succeeding in the shortterm,” Geller says. “How do you actually create a work plan to make sure they are followed up on? “Unfortunately, I have drawers and drawers full of affordable housing reports. Many of the ideas we’re talking about now have been discussed for decades — some go back 30 years.” ‘Absolutely crazy’ While many conference speakers are addressing issues around both home ownership and rentals, the issue of homelessness (and finding long-term resolution) is also on the agenda. And while advocates like Geller support emergency shelters, in the long-term it’s an expensive and inadequate solution. One costs $24,000 per resident a year, he adds. “It’s crazy, absolutely crazy,” Geller exclaims. “I’ve advocated that it’s better to simply rent apartments around the city and put people in those apartments and provide them with services, which in turn would allow them to have an address. One of the problems with a shelter is you don’t have an address, which makes it harder to get work. Some say 22 they’re never going to work, but well, it sure is harder to go to work without an address.” Some of Geller’s other suggestions for reducing housing costs include bylaws allowing duplex owners to rent out basement suites or allowing walkout basement suites to be sold like condos or under shared ownership agreements. Reducing minimum parking requirements for new buildings and encouraging people to use car shares, co-ops, and public transit could shave $50,000 off condo prices. But with the average Vancouverite’s rent climbing steeply over the last five years — from $898 in 2007 to $1,047 last year, according to a new Metro Vancouver Housing Committee report — the affordable landscape seems bleak. “In the very near future, that landscape is changing,” Parviainen says. “Can we start creating housing forms that are appropriate? “Anecdotally, I do know that a lot of concepts introduced at the symposium are already fully-executed solutions. They’re inspiration for people looking at a number of ways to use those solutions in their own communities.” Panel debates solutions to BC rental insecurity at housing conference By Jackie Wong While the rain poured outside today, planners, developers, municipal politicians, and academics from across B.C. gathered in Richmond for the third-annual Housing Affordability Symposium, a two-day conference co-presented by BC Housing, the Canadian Home Builders’ Association, and the Province of B.C. With an election just two months away, no B.C. provincial leaders or election hopefuls were in attendance, though housing matters related to provincial jurisdiction, such as rental housing, were widely discussed. In an afternoon panel on housing affordability for families, Lisa Moffatt relayed her experiences struggling to find affordable, appropriate rental housing for her and her daughter after moving to Vancouver for grad school in the early 2000s. She and her daughter moved multiple times and weathered virtually every renter’s conundrum. They competed against equally-deserving families and couples for rental units by presenting landlords with carefully curated resumes, life histories, and charisma; faced the scrutiny of several landlords unwilling to rent to a single-parent family; lived with a rotating cast of roommates to offset housing costs; weathered the storm of two employment lay-offs, and, most recently, were evicted early this year by a landlord who wanted to move into their suite. Moffatt, who now works as a planner for the Township of Langley, has since found a new rental home in the same catchment area of her daughter’s school. She’s moving there Finding Home: Affordable Housing Solutions for Greater Vancouver and B.C. with her new partner, her roommate, and her daughter at the end of the month. She’s glad to have found a new place to live, but like many renters who experience the shaky murk of Vancouver’s rental market, all she wants now is to stay put. “We’re tired of moving around,” Moffatt told the symposium audience today. “I guess what I really want is security.” While many of the solutions presented at the Housing Affordability Symposium so far suggest increasing the rental housing stock and accepting renting as a long-term, rather than transitional, mode of housing, the success of renting longterm in B.C. relies largely on the security of tenure that many renters don’t have, and which people like Moffatt certainly have not experienced. “One of the problems is when you tinker with rentals to make them more secure for tenants, it makes developers less likely to want to build rentals,” Nathanael Lauster told Tyee Solutions Society. “The more the province limits what they can do with rental suites, the less likely market actors are going to really want to build them.” The assistant professor in UBC’s sociology department presented at the symposium alongside Moffatt. He conducted a 2011 study on discrimination against single-parent families and same-sex couples in the Metro Vancouver rental market. He found that same-sex male couples and single-parent families faced significant discrimination when it came to finding a place to rent compared to straight couples. 24 Lauster would like to see more intensive exploration of nonmarket housing options suitable for families. “I think co-ops are this fascinating thing that have just dropped,” he said. In Lauster’s panel presentation at the housing symposium, he questioned the popular notion that families need single detached homes to thrive. His research findings suggest that more than half of Vancouver families are already living in urban alternatives to the house, including row houses, lowrises, and duplexes. Lauster’s suggestions for leveraging density for affordability include building up the rental housing stock, building cooperative housing stock, and building social housing stock. “Do families actually need houses? Over time, this has moved from a sales pitch to becoming a living standard,” Lauster told the audience. Finally, pressing for more progressive income distribution, he said, is key to addressing the affordability crisis. “The more we rely just on housing policies,” he said, “The more we’re going to be missing that big picture.” going deeper: in-depth series on housing hot zones Alone, Elderly, and Isolated by Language in Vancouver’s Chinatown Vancouver’s Chinatown has been home to generations of immigrants since 1858. Today, the neighbourhood is changing as new businesses and residents move in next to decades-old grocery stores, butchers, and restaurants. But amidst this influx of new life, an unknown number of seniors who speak only Cantonese or Mandarin face discrimination, marginalization, and a lack of affordable, culturally- and linguisticallyappropriate housing. Research suggests the problem will worsen as these vulnerable seniors, already living in poverty and isolation, age. In this special series, Tyee Solutions Society housing reporter Jackie Wong pulls back the curtain on the widely felt, seldomdiscussed discrimination that Chinese seniors face every day. She also looks to Toronto and San Francisco, home to innovative housing solutions for non-English speaking seniors. . going deeper: in-depth series on housing hot zones Vancouver’s ‘Old’ Chinatown: Still Here As the city's neighbourhood 'revitalizes,' its Chinese-speaking seniors struggle for resources. By Jackie Wong Editor's note: The greatest need for supportive seniors' housing among Vancouver's language minorities is for uncounted hundreds – or thousands – of women and men who speak only Cantonese or Mandarin. Many end up in the single-room occupancy hotels of old Chinatown. It’s a Wednesday morning in March, and Chinatown’s May Wah Hotel is a hive of activity. Up a narrow flight of stairs from the hotel’s easy-to-miss street door, Vancouver Second Mile Society outreach worker Cindy Pang is surrounded by a circle of urgent seniors. They press pill bottles into her hands, their English labels and instructions unreadable. She translates into Cantonese, answering what questions she can. Everybody, it seems, knows her, likes her, and is keen for individual attention. They treat her fondly, like a family member. Outside on East Pender Street, people duck out of the rain under storefront awnings crowded with boxes of gai lan and bok choy. Few spare a moment for the sturdy old four-storey brick building above them, much less the simple gold-painted block letters that identify it as the May Wah Hotel. Entering feels like going back in time. Strains of Chinese opera can be heard behind doors thickly layered in deep red paint. The walls in the spare, neat first floor lounge display compulsory “No Smoking” signs, but there are ashtrays on the tables and people exhale carefully out over Pender Street through an open window. “I’m happy and I’m healthy,” Rosesari Rosesari says. She is 92 years old and lives in the May Wah Hotel in Vancouver’s Chinatown. In a shiny rainbow necklace over a black and white zebraprint shirt, Rosesari Rosesari stands out from her neighbours’ hallway chatter. Ninety-two, Rosesari pays $320 a month for her room here. She makes a point of telling me she receives no government assistance to pay for housing. Ethnically Chinese, Finding Home: Affordable Housing Solutions for Greater Vancouver and B.C. Rosesari doesn’t recall exactly when she moved to the May Wah, or even the precise year she came to Canada from Bali, Indonesia. One son lives in Richmond, she tells me; her other children half a world away in Indonesia. But she is quick to express pride in the home she has created here for herself. Every space in the tiny but bright room has a use. The ceiling has hooks to hang her coats. A daikon radish and green beans sit on a tall plastic bucket by the sink, near a rice cooker and toaster oven. The room is decorated with butterfly trinkets, youthful knick-knacks, and colourful origami. “I’m happy and I’m healthy,” Pang translates Rosesari’s Cantonese for me. “I look old, but my heart is still young.” While much is made about the seemingly flamboyant wealth of some Chinese immigrants to Canada, those who live at the May Wah and other privately owned SROs in the old Chinatown area share a very different experience. For them, this country has ultimately delivered poverty, discrimination, and a marginalization that leaves them in the shadow of a media spotlight often trained on the Downtown Eastside neighbourhood’s troubled English-speakers, many of whom struggle with addictions, mental illness and abusive histories in residential school or foster care. Like other SROs, the approximately 40-room May Wah is home to a mix of long-time residents and people in transition. Some regard it as a temporary stay while their names inch forward on a waiting list for social housing. But for the seniors who speak only Chinese, living in Chinatown is a crucial 27 connection to the only community where they feel fully at home. Many speak no other language than Chinese, and have lived at the hotel for years. The May Wah is one of 10 buildings Pang visits weekly, helping hundreds of Chinese seniors like Rosesari connect with public and social agencies that provide housing, health, and social support. Her work has a lot to do with Rosesari’s youthful satisfaction with life. But Pang is paid to work only 28 hours a week. A colleague works even fewer hours. A separate organization, the Downtown Eastside Women’s Centre, employs another person for 30 hours a week of bilingual Chinese seniors outreach. Together, the three overtaxed staff are the only service providers dedicated to alleviating the isolation of the city’s thousands of solitary Chinese seniors. A hidden, growing crisis Rosesari pays $320 a month for her room, and shares kitchen and bathroom facilities with her neighbours. Others on the same floor pay $200 to $290 for similar rooms. Ninetythree-year-old Gai Li Lin has lived down the hall for eight years. After more than 20 years in Canada, Lin says that her life’s work consisted of taking care of children. Her adult children live in the Lower Mainland. Confucian tradition obliges adult children to take care of their aging parents. But “most have the same story,” Pang says of the seniors she works with. “Kids get them here, they take Finding Home: Affordable Housing Solutions for Greater Vancouver and B.C. care of the grandkids. And when they get old, they stay here,” she adds, matter-of-factly indicating our surroundings. Modest as those are, Lin and Rosesari can feel relatively fortunate among Chinese seniors. They live in a building that is well maintained, not currently under threat of eviction, and unlike other area SROs, affordable to people with low incomes. Though Vancouver’s Chinatown has been home to generations of immigrants since 1858, reliable information about how many elderly live alone there today is remarkably hard to come by. Statistics Canada offers — for a fee — to tabulate the number of inner-city Chinese seniors who responded to the most recent census survey in 2011. But with less than one per cent of such seniors believed to speak any English, and many unable to read or write in their mother tongue, let alone English, knowledgeable observers believe it would yield an unreliable undercount. What we do know is that 30 per cent of the City of Vancouver’s population and closer to half — 41 per cent — of people who reside in Chinatown’s 10-block area, identify themselves as Chinese. And as recently as 2011, UBC’s Centre for Urban Economics and Real Estate contended that the shortfall of social housing is greatest among Chinese seniors of all elderly ethnic immigrant groups in Vancouver. The UBC Centre estimated that over 3,300 Chinese-speaking seniors lack the wealth to be homeowners and would benefit from affordable, culturally and linguistically specific assisted living facilities. The next largest language community of ethnic 28 seniors who could benefit from such support is 560 Tagalogspeaking seniors, followed by 340 Punjabi speakers. Also true is that social housing is in short supply for all Vancouver’s seniors. Metro Vancouver can provide housing for one of every seven seniors living in the region. The City of Vancouver has 11,000 social units available for its 81,930 seniors. Unsurprisingly, waiting lists are long: the 4,549 names on the list of people hoping for seniors’ social housing in Metro Vancouver has gone up by nearly 45 per cent in just the last four years, according to a March report by the United Way Lower Mainland and the Social Planning & Research Council of BC (SPARC BC). And the need is growing. Metro Vancouver’s senior population is predicted to more than double by 2031. “Although most seniors do not live in social housing, with other factors remaining equal, the greater the number of seniors, the more seniors’ social housing is needed,” the SPARC report notes. Shelter isn’t enough If more shelter is needed for Chinese seniors, so is more personal support. Three blocks from the May Wah Hotel, the Downtown Eastside Seniors Centre operated by the Vancouver Second Mile Society at Hastings and Jackson is a boisterous place at midday. People are eating lunch, reading the newspaper, Finding Home: Affordable Housing Solutions for Greater Vancouver and B.C. playing table tennis and Mah Jong. Two thirds of the 500 members are Chinese. When executive director Steve Chan asks them to register, many sign their names with the letter ‘X.’ They are unable to write or read. “If they’re from a village in China, they may not even have elementary school,” says Chan, who’s worked here for 13 years and is its first Cantonese-capable director. “We don’t have many statistics on literacy levels for the seniors we reach out to,” he acknowledges. “But just take my mom, for example. She’s 78. [As a child she] went through the Second World War. At that time in China, in Hong Kong, they had to run, to flee from the Japanese. They didn’t have a chance to go to school. My mom didn’t go to school until she was in her teenage years. She went to primary-school-level classes for a few years, night school. She had to work during the day and she paid tuition to go there herself. My dad was in the same boat.” The Seniors Centre’s clients are mostly women, who tend to live longer than men. Now in their 80s or more, they are even less likely to have literacy skills than their male counterparts. Their generation emerged from a cultural tradition that barred women from education, observes Alice Choi, a registered nurse and executive director of health services for the United Chinese Community Enrichment Services Society, better known as S.U.C.C.E.S.S. “There is a saying in Chinese that it’s a virtue when the females don’t know anything,” Choi says. “If you’re not smart and you don’t know anything, it’s the role of the wife, of the 29 female, to reproduce and to take care of the household stuff. All the business, all the education, goes to the sons.” Many of Second Mile outreach worker Pang’s clients arrived in Canada later in life, coming to help adult children take care of grandchildren in the Lower Mainland. They “relied on their husbands and their children, and they can’t even read a very simple letter,” Pang says. “Now, they’re on their own.” Outside the May Wah building in Vancouver’s Chinatown. Photo by Jackie Wong. Virtually none of Vancouver’s inner city Chinese seniors (a barely-there 0.1 per cent) speak English well, according to a 2007 survey (available in hard copy only), of Chinese seniors and services in the old Chinatown and surrounding areas. Hardly more (0.3 per cent) speak even limited English. Eightyeight per cent spoke Cantonese; 12 per cent Mandarin. Finding Home: Affordable Housing Solutions for Greater Vancouver and B.C. The 2007 survey — conducted by Dr. Sing Mei Chan of the UBC School of Social Work, for the City of Vancouver, found that language barriers, discrimination, racism, and a lack of information, education, and advocacy all create pressing service gaps for Chinese seniors. The findings echoed earlier research indicating that fewer than a quarter of Asian American seniors in another historic magnet for immigrants — New York City — spoke English. Poverty, loneliness and anxiety were their three most pressing issues. For the lucky few in Vancouver, the bilingual outreach workers who visit the SROs are rare conduits to social agency support. But the task is overwhelming. Pang, one co-worker at the Second Mile Society, and Deanna Wong of the Downtown Eastside Women’s Centre, are shouldering it alone. Translating forms and talking seniors individually through English-language housing applications, tax returns and other requirements, is emotionally and physically taxing. It’s a high turnover job, and more than one former outreach worker with the Second Mile Society is on long-term disability as a result of the stress. ‘Revitalizing,’ but leaving seniors behind Last July, Vancouver city council unanimously approved a three-year Chinatown Neighbourhood Plan and Economic Revitalization Strategy. More than a decade in the making, the plan focused on economic revitalization, after two-thirds of businesses surveyed in Vancouver’s original Chinatown 30 reported declining revenues between 2008 and 2011 — blamed mainly on losses to newer Chinese-language communities in suburbs like Richmond. The revitalization plan envisions new residential development, “to connect with younger generations and reach out to people of all backgrounds to ensure Chinatown is increasingly relevant to a more multi-cultural Vancouver.” At the same time, it acknowledged that in a neighborhood where 67 per cent of households are low-income — more than twice the City of Vancouver average — such redevelopment “can displace low-income residents.” What is good for old Chinatown’s businesses, in short, may be less so for its poor and isolated elderly. S.U.C.C.E.S.S., Vancouver’s primary provider of culturallyand linguistically-supportive housing and services for Chinese seniors, is providing a partial answer. It operates a single multi-level care facility in old Chinatown for people with cognitive impairments or who require round-the-clock nursing. But its 103 beds, soon to be 113, are about one-tenth of what the UBC Centre for Urban Economics anticipates will be needed over the next 15 years to house Chinese seniors. Meanwhile, the support it offers seem a world away from Rosesari and her neighbours living in privately operated SROs like the May Wah Hotel. Yet the women are spirited and resilient. “I’m happy and I’m healthy,” Rosesari told me through Pang’s interpretation. Both she and Lin say they like living in Chinatown. They feel at home here, where the language spoken is the one they know. Finding Home: Affordable Housing Solutions for Greater Vancouver and B.C. They are also in their 90s. As time goes on, they and others may no longer be able to manage the May Wah’s staircases, its lack of mobility aids, and its communal bathing facilities. The alternatives available to them then are in terribly short supply. 31 Finding Home: Affordable Housing Solutions for Greater Vancouver and B.C. 32 The front door of the May Wah is easy to miss, squeezed between a travel agency and a vacant store on East Pender Street. Many of the May Wah's residents have lived there for years. Others are waiting to move up the waiting list for social housing. Gai Li Lin is 93. She's lived in the May Wah for eight years after a life time spent caring for children, first her own, later her grandkids. Gai Li Lin’s room is crowded but bright. Like most of the hotel’s residents, Gai Li Lin speaks only Chinese. Residents of the May Wah have access to their floor’s communal kitchen. At 92, Rosesari Rosesari can’t recall the year she moved to Canada from Bali, or exactly when she came to the May Wah. One son lives in Richmond; her other children are in Indonesia. Finding Home: Affordable Housing Solutions for Greater Vancouver and B.C. Rosesari Rosesari’s room overlooks Pender Street. The convenience of Chinese-speaking merchants helps make her feel at home here. Like most residents of the May Wah, Rosesari Rosesari cooks many of her meals in her room on small appliances. The affordable rooms at the May Wah mean that everyone shares a communal bathroom down the hall. The residents’ lounge at the May Wah. Only three Chinese-speaking outreach workers provide residents of the Downtown Eastside’s SROs with assistance in their own language. 33 A string of paper cranes decorates Gai Li Lin’s room at the May Wah Hotel. going deeper: in-depth series on housing hot zones Old, Alone and Victims of Racism in Downtown Eastside Service providers call for more culturally specific services. By Jackie Wong It’s lunchtime at the Downtown Eastside Women’s Centre (DEWC). Women of all ages move quickly through a short line near the kitchen, filling plates with salad, thick open-faced sandwiches, and a mug of soup. There are about 75 people seated in the dining area, eating lunch and socializing. There are no snaking lineups out the door and around the block here, unlike other agencies that serve free meals to low-income people. And though the place is busy there’s room around the centre’s many circular tables for anyone who wants to sit down. A group of Chinese senior women share one table with younger, Englishspeaking DEWC members; the two groups communicate by sharing food, gestures, and jokes. Sadly, however, this scene of cheerful harmony between Chinese and English speakers is an exception in the Downtown Eastside. When the 15 Chinese seniors gather in a basement common room to chat with me after lunch, they tell me, unanimously, that discrimination is the biggest issue they face. “Other people are giving out food to any other race, but when they look at you, they say, ‘Oh, you’re Chinese. You’re from China. Go back to China,’” says 82-year-old Jay Gnun Foon. “They will deny a piece of bread that everybody else is getting. That makes me feel the worst.” Jay Gnun Foon, left, and Sum Chew Gnun, right, chat at the Downtown Eastside Women’s Centre in Vancouver. Photo by Jackie Wong. But Foon and her 14 friends are strapped for cash after paying for housing, just like others in the area who stand in food lineups. They tell me that that while they don’t always feel welcome in the Downtown Eastside, they deserve to be there as much as anybody else. Finding Home: Affordable Housing Solutions for Greater Vancouver and B.C. Foon has lived in Canada for about 20 years. Her daughter asked her to come to help take care of her children, while she and her husband worked for minimum wage. Now Foon lives alone in old Chinatown, paying $400 a month in rent. She regularly comes to the DEWC to enjoy the company of friends. Foon and the 14 other women I meet today speak a country dialect of Cantonese that 25-year-old Deanna Wong, the DEWC’s one bilingual Chinese seniors outreach coordinator, translates for me. Wong tells me that most of the women here are from Guangdong Province in China, once farmland but now an industrial region. “A lot of them come from rural China, and they’ve been farming their entire lives,” she says. When they were coming of age back in the 1930s, ’40s, and ’50s, China, as Wong describes it, was “a culture that didn’t support women. Women were treated like objects in Asia, like furniture. Your ownership [went] from your father to your husband.” Many continued to work as farm labourers after coming to the Lower Mainland. Their health, Wong says, is generally better than that of the roughly 200 other Chinese senior women she works with in the Downtown Eastside. Instead, their most troubling issues are poverty, racism and age discrimination that sometimes find expression in verbal and physical abuse, financial mistreatment, and conflicts and miscommunication arising from language barriers. Wong tells me about Chinese seniors who arrive at the women’s centre with black eyes hidden under sunglasses. 35 Yet few complain, or approach her for help. “They’ll force a smile to cover the pain, and overcompensate for it, to reassure me that things are fine when I know they’re not,” Wong says. “They have my contact information but a lot of times they won’t want to trouble me for it. They’ll try to get it done themselves.” Wong also makes regular visits to three Downtown Eastside SROs and social housing facilities, where Chinese seniors live among a predominantly English-speaking population. She finds isolation and depression widespread among her contacts. Her mandate is to connect Chinese seniors with each other and with community supports. Part of her job is to arrange outings for the seniors, designed both for entertainment and the less obvious goal of providing informal opportunities for the women to speak candidly, amongst themselves and with her. She has seen, firsthand, the difference such connections can make in the life of an isolated senior. “The ones that are healthiest come in the biggest groups,” she says, describing the seniors who regularly show up at the DEWC with their friends. “They don’t have any education. They can’t read. They can’t write. But the way they’re happy, the way they survive, and part of why they’re healthy, is because they have each other.” Life is much harder for people who have lost touch with their friends. “The ones most isolated are actually the ones who are educated and who are very independent and live alone,” Wong Finding Home: Affordable Housing Solutions for Greater Vancouver and B.C. says. “They see all their friends pass away. They become more and more isolated, and they have fewer and fewer activities.” ‘We get sworn at for no reason at all’ The close bonds among today’s group of 15 are evident in the way the women laugh together, leaning in to each other’s shoulders. When I first arrive, they are gracious and polite, but reserved. As the afternoon wears on they relax into a funloving rapport. By the end of my visit, So Gee Quan, one of the youngest of the group at 65, has the others in stitches, swearing like a sailor to imitate the people who yell at her as she walks the streets of the Downtown Eastside. “Fuck, fuck, fuck!” she yells. “We get sworn at for no reason at all. Fuck, fuck, fuck!” Painful as it is, her friends nod their heads and laugh. This is something they’ve experienced, too. Quan has lived in Canada for 11 years. She worked on a farm in Surrey until the last year, when she could not work anymore. She rents her home in Vancouver’s Hastings Sunrise neighbourhood, paying $700 a month that she splits with her daughter. “They make it so that it’s not welcoming.” Quan says, with understatement. “It’s very frustrating. They’re bigger than you. Verbal is fine, but sometimes it’s physical. And they can get really aggressive. So you can’t do anything back to them. The only thing you can do is yell back, but that’s about it. “My family paid head taxes and we worked until there were holes in our shoes,” she adds. “And we kept working. 36 A lot of my family has been here for generations. And they’re Canadian. And they still face so much discrimination. It’s not fair.” Quan’s experience validates the findings of a 2007 report to the City of Vancouver by the UBC School of Social Work, that found discrimination and racism, alongside language barriers, were the top concerns among Chinese seniors and service providers in the inner city. The tension is felt most acutely among the Chinese seniors who must line up with English speakers, similarly struggling to make ends meet, for food and services. ‘You’re set up to hate them’ Jason Nepinak has lived in the Downtown Eastside since 1994, homeless for the last 15 of those years. He’s a familiar face at the PHS Drug Users Resource Centre — better known as the Lifeskills Centre — across the street from Oppenheimer Park, where he has volunteered since the centre opened in 2002. On this rainy morning in February, he’s working the front desk, welcoming people coming in to do laundry, take a shower, get toothbrushes, and eat a meal. According to the tally sheets he and other workers maintain, approximately 130 people show up for breakfast here every day. For lunch, it’s closer to 150. The Drug Users Resource Centre is just one of many sources for meals in the neighbourhood. Outside its front doors in Oppenheimer Park, unaffiliated volunteers are Finding Home: Affordable Housing Solutions for Greater Vancouver and B.C. off-loading boxes of sandwiches from an unmarked sports utility vehicle. There is already a long line that winds along Powell Street and around the corner to Dunlevy. Most in the line are Chinese seniors. “You know, it’s a horrible thing to say, but everybody treats ‘em terrible, just terrible,” Nepinak says of elderly Chinese waiting in line. “They say bad things to them. They mock their accents. And it’s just horrible. I hear it a lot, the racial slurs. ” Nepinak, a First Nations Man, says he tries to put a stop to any racist activity he sees. “Everybody in the centre knows me,” he says. “They know I don’t put up with violence or racial threats, slurs or anything.” Some of the hostility, he says, is motivated by faulty assumptions — chiefly that the Chinese seniors are wealthy, and don’t need the food or services as badly as others. But Nepinak’s of a mind that they should be welcome: “Everybody downtown has hard times,” he says. Coco Culbertson is director of programs with the PHS Community Services Society that runs the Resources Centre. She has lived in Strathcona for 17 years and was the Centre’s first director. She’s seen the number of Chinese seniors who frequent the centre grow in the last 11 years. Now, 15 to 20 Chinese seniors walk through the doors every day. They’re not part of the drug-using population the centre was built to serve. But with few other places to turn, they need the free food and toothbrushes it gives away. “The programming is targeted to engage active drug users and illicit alcohol drinkers,” Culbertson says. “It is funded 37 to provide resources to those suffering with homelessness, drug addiction and alcohol misuse. We have on occasion had Cantonese-speaking volunteers there, but the language barrier, compounded with the population we serve, makes it difficult for us to fully support the seniors coming in.” Despite their years in the community, neither Culbertson nor Nepinak could think of resources more suited for Chinese seniors that they could refer people to. Culbertson suggested the Carnegie Community Centre, “but I’m not familiar with what they offer,” she said. Neither could Gail Harmer, a former social worker, longtime seniors advocate and board member of the 411 Seniors Centre who facilitates seniors wellness workshops with the Council of Senior Citizens’ Organizations of B.C. (COSCO). She could only name the DEWC as the one place where culturally specific programming is available to Chinese seniors. The Women’s Centre is only a few blocks away from the Drug Users Resource Centre. As is often the case in this neighbourhood, it serves two distinct populations: Chinesespeaking seniors and English-speaking Downtown Eastsiders. Generally both are experiencing poverty, and both are competing for the same limited services. “When you see those lineups, there’s a limited amount of food,” the DEWC’s Deanna Wong says. “And then when you see a whole group of seniors lined up in the front, you’re set up to hate them because now it’s like they’re taking your food away; this is your means of survival.” Finding Home: Affordable Housing Solutions for Greater Vancouver and B.C. Culbertson agrees. “Everyone feels pressured. And living day-to-day, not knowing if you’ll have food and shelter, doesn’t generally bring out patience for those who are different. The tension is down to poverty.” Ending indignities What might be accomplished when people are no longer forced to compete against each other is visible every Thursday morning at the Downtown Eastside Neighbourhood House community kitchen. Taking inspiration from the right to food, the Neighbourhood House designs its activities intentionally to eliminate the stigma and indignities of lining up for a charity meal. It prides itself on offering fresh, culturally diverse food choices and welcomes people to join in the preparation in its open kitchen. The Thursday morning community kitchen, designed specifically for Chinese elders, has the effect of breaking down barriers between different language speakers. “One of the things that we try to do here at the Neighbourhood House is have a range of food so that people from different communities and different cultural groups will see themselves reflected in our menu,” says executive director Irene Jaakson. “That’s one of the ways we’ve been able to chip away at some of those barriers. I don’t know that we’ve been 100 per cent successful. But I can tell you that we serve more members of the Chinese community than is typical.” 38 The DEWC’s Wong shares the view that food brings people together. She has been observing more connection between English- and Chinese-speakers during mealtimes at the Women’s Centre lately. “I’ve noticed at lunchtime, now, the Chinese women will pile together all the bread and salad and leave a [loaded] plate on the centre of the table. They’ll actively seek out other non-Chinese women to take the food,” she says. “I’ve noticed there are a couple of [non-Chinese] women deliberately sitting at those tables, actively trying to get to know them. And it’s really great to see things like that. But that’s only when you can give people food. When you have all those basic needs met.” It’s a different story when people’s needs are not met. “When you take those away, and people compete for those basic needs, it’s no wonder discrimination happens,” Wong says. “When they look different, you can’t understand them, you can’t talk to them, and you can’t see that you come from so many similar struggles.” She would like to see more recognition that the two populations in the Downtown Eastside are alike in their vulnerability and their poverty. “Housing is something I see that both populations are in dire, dire need of,” she says. However, she also thinks separate, linguistically appropriate services would particularly benefit Chinese seniors. In the DEWC basement, the Chinese seniors are packing up to leave, to pick up grandchildren from school or prepare an evening meal for their families. They don’t speak English, but Finding Home: Affordable Housing Solutions for Greater Vancouver and B.C. they understand the assumptions some English speakers make about them. “When people look at us, they think that we look healthy or that we’re well-kept and that we’re not deserving,” says So Gee Quan. Only in one of Canada’s poorest urban neighbourhoods could an absence of obvious signs of poverty be mistaken for an absence of need—rather than a rare, if fragile, sign of dignity and hope preserved. 39 going deeper: in-depth series on housing hot zones ‘A Drop in the Bucket’: Housing for Chinese Speaking Seniors As Vancouver's Chinatown transforms, need grows for projects like the Simon K.Y. Lee Home for the elderly. By Jackie Wong Over the last five years new cocktail lounges, cafes, and art spaces have cropped up in steady succession in Vancouver’s old Chinatown, on Pender, Keefer and East Georgia Streets between Carrall to the west and Gore to the east. Amidst the young people toting Americanos to their art studios however, elements of an earlier time remain: tall, brightly painted buildings built by clan or benevolent associations a century ago. The buildings are testaments to an era when legal discrimination and social exclusion forced British Columbia’s earliest settlers from China to band together for mutual support. Early in the 20th century, benevolent associations provided housing and what today we’d call social services. The benevolent associations provided needed services to a community turned away from even the limited support available back then from private groups or government to Euro-Canadians. While much has changed for the better, previous reports in this series have documented an undiminished need for supportive housing in this fast-gentrifying neighbourhood, as benevolent associations have largely withdrawn from the field. At least 10 more supportive care homes like S.U.C.C.E.S.S.’s Simon K.Y. Lee Home will be needed over the next decade to shelter Chinese-language seniors. Photo: S.U.C.C.E.S.S The first such association was created in 1896 by six prominent Chinese merchants to serve a growing population of mostly men sent abroad to make money for their families back in China. Other groups followed, creating supportive expatriate communities around clan associations bearing a common family name. By 1911, and despite layers of official discrimination, the neighborhood’s 3,559 Chinese residents constituted, according to the Canada census, the largest such community in the country. By then the original Chinese Benevolent Association had expanded to the point that it Finding Home: Affordable Housing Solutions for Greater Vancouver and B.C. 41 had constructed its own Chinatown hospital. But housing remained a central service. housing among its Chinese-speaking residents — many of them now advanced in age — may be greater than ever. “The lower floor rented to commercial [tenants], and the upper floors had partitions and accommodated the single men to live there. In the old days, the associations played an important function of providing welfare to the so-called ‘bachelor Chinese,’ and to provide comfort. Many of those in need of affordable housing and suitable social support are from the generation that experienced official discrimination. That is gone, but barriers of language and education continue to exclude many from programs available to other seniors. And the decline of benevolent associations has left the task of providing them with “shelter and comfort” to a shockingly small number of agencies. “Before the [Second World] war, most associations had rental buildings,” says David Lai, now 75, who before his retirement dedicated his career as a professor of geography and Asian studies at the University of Victoria to studying Chinese-Canadian history and the development of Chinatowns. Reunited families ended the ‘benevolent association’ The role changed after the Second World War, Lai says. When Canada belatedly permitted Chinese women and children to immigrate, many of Vancouver’s Chinese “bachelors” were reunited with their families. “They moved out of Chinatown and lived in the suburbs.” “The major function [of the benevolent associations] was to provide welfare for a large number of bachelors. But after the war, they lose a lot of their function.” Without that role to fill, Lai explains, many traditional associations “are dying down.” But while lonely bachelors may be fewer in Chinatown, the need for culturally appropriate social support and affordable According to a 2011 UBC discussion paper, more than 1,000 aging Chinese Canadians will be in need of shelter and some level of assistance over the next decade. The need is particularly acute in the City of Vancouver, where nearly a third of us identify as ethnically Chinese — nearly twice the figure of 18 per cent across all of Metro Vancouver. Largest is the non-profit United Chinese Community Enrichment Services Society, better known as S.U.C.C.E.S.S. Its executive director for health services is Alice Choi, a registered nurse. Marginalized, old, and poor A popular notion exists, Choi observes, that the Lower Mainland’s Chinese community has largely migrated to Richmond, leaving old Chinatown ripe for new business. “No, no, no, no,” she says. “They’re still here. Vancouver’s east side is a big problem. They are being forgotten. They Finding Home: Affordable Housing Solutions for Greater Vancouver and B.C. are marginalized. They’re old. They’re poor. No education, sometimes no family support. And then what do you do?” One answer can be found at the intersection of Keefer and Carrall Streets, in sight of the pagoda-roofed pavilions peeking out over the high walls of the Dr. Sun Yat-Sen Classical Chinese Garden. A more subtle grey building, the Simon K.Y. Lee Seniors Care Home opened in 2001, providing 103 assisted care beds and an adult day centre for seniors. S.U.C.C.E.S.S.’s largest facility specifically designed and managed to serve Chinese seniors will soon add 10 more beds. “We are funded by the government, and our space in the adult day centre is only 20,” Choi says. “I have a three-year waiting list.” The number of people waiting for beds in the care home is a figure held only by Vancouver Coastal Health, which manages admissions. Vancouver Coastal Health did not respond to the Tyee Solution Society’s request for information. Chinese community advocates created S.U.C.C.E.S.S. 40 years ago as a storefront social services organization for Chinese immigrants. Since 1973, it has expanded its housing and settlement services, language and employment training, and counseling services, to other language communities and groups. Its website now aspires to a “World of Multicultural Harmony.” And despite its long roots in Chinatown, S.U.C.C.E.S.S. has a relatively short history with Chinese seniors’ housing and healthcare services. A S.U.C.C.E.S.S. Multi-Level [health] Care Society has operated since 1995. And since 2008 the organization has managed two Downtown Eastside 42 social housing projects, Orange Hall and Solheim Place, for individuals and families who are at risk of homelessness or who have low incomes. But while those shelter some residents who are ethnically Chinese, neither is targeted specifically to the Chinese community. Two years ago S.U.C.C.E.S.S. incorporated a Housing Society, to provide and operate additional non-profit housing for low- or modest-income people. It recently signed a 10-year Memorandum of Understanding with the City of Vancouver to increase affordable housing stock. S.U.C.C.E.S.S. CEO Queenie Choo is pleased about the additional, beds at Simon Lee. But “when you’re looking at the Chinese population, those [10 beds] are a drop in the bucket,” she says. Choo is a relative newcomer to Vancouver. She took over the leadership of S.U.C.C.E.S.S. last year, after a long career in health services in Edmonton. She admits she has more questions than answers about how her organization can meet the needs of more people. Bringing supports directly to seniors “There’s a lot of things we can do, as an organization,” Choi believes. “I know that we need to do more promotion, outreach into the community, and so on. But I have to be frank with you, it’s difficult. Resources are a huge problem. We are stretched to the limit.” Finding Home: Affordable Housing Solutions for Greater Vancouver and B.C. Meeting the need fully would take at least one more facility the size of the Simon Lee home opening every year for the next decade. Choi is familiar with the resources that exist currently for educated, English-speaking seniors. Innovative as they are, she knows they won’t be much help to Chinese-speaking seniors who are already underserved. “In the [western] mainstream community, seniors are more sophisticated in finding ways to improve their health,” Choi says. She sits on a provincial advisory group for healthy living among seniors. “We talk a lot about using technology and promotional materials. For a certain category of seniors, this is very useful because you need to start with prevention, selfmanagement of chronic disease and so on. You need to start with those people who are in their 60s now, whose education level is better, whose literacy is better. They can navigate a computer.” But web-based initiatives won’t help Chinatown’s seniors, Choi says. “They don’t even know how to read. They will not come out to seek information because they don’t know how. You need a different approach for this group of people. You need to bring services to them.” A 2007 report by the City of Vancouver and UBC School of Social Work laid out 16 ideas for improving housing and health for Chinese seniors in the inner city. They included more initiatives to build on the strengths of seniors, counter the faulty assumption that Chinese seniors are rich enough not to need help or are automatically taken care of by their 43 families, and to build a stronger network of support and services. Providing more opportunities for seniors to be involved with their community and advocate for each another was also among the recommendations. The Council of Senior Citizens of BC (COSCO) exists for that purpose. But Gail Harmer, a longtime housing advocate and seniors’ workshop facilitator with COSCO, acknowledges that the Council falls short of addressing people who don’t speak English. “The institution has to change itself to accommodate the new. Or the groups themselves have to organize — and that’s incredibly difficult when you are very vulnerable,” she says. Harmer would like to see more Chinese seniors involved with COSCO. But English-speaking Chinese seniors rarely cross paths with COSCO. Of approximately 30 seniors who have volunteered with COSCO and taken training to facilitate its senior-to-senior workshops, only two are Chinese. In Strathcona, a neighbourhood adjacent to old Chinatown, a network of Chinese-speaking mothers provides home support to Chinese seniors living alone in the area. During the hours their own children are in school, the women help seniors with daily tasks like tidying their suites and running errands. The simple interactions provide a powerful source of companionship for people living in isolation. The women receive an average of $13.50 an hour from a project called Capacity Links, United Way-funded and operated by Vancouver’s Network of Inner-City Community Services Society (NICCSS). The program is targeted at low- Finding Home: Affordable Housing Solutions for Greater Vancouver and B.C. income, marginalized Chinese seniors who are ineligible for the home services that Vancouver Coastal Health offers — someone who can still bathe herself, for example, isn’t eligible — but who can benefit from some measure of support. It’s the type of program that Choi says we need more of to assist seniors living in private market rental housing or commercial SROs. “Housing is important, but you have to give them the support in order to maintain them there,” she says. “A lot of seniors are living in what we call independent housing. They’re aging in place, but they’re aging in place with no support. And social isolation is a very big issue with the Chinese seniors because of language barriers; some of them do not have any help from their families, and their health deteriorates.” Organizations like, S.U.C.C.E.S.S., NICCSS, the Downtown Eastside Women’s Centre and Vancouver Second Mile Society are doing what they can to connect with Chinese-speaking seniors in the inner city. But “you look at this report they did it in 2007,” Choi says, referring to the City/UBC report that suggested 16 ways to improve the lives of Chinese seniors. “There are recommendations. There was no further action. But we needed to start even before then. The population in the east side needed it yesterday.” 44 going deeper: in-depth series on housing hot zones For Chinese Speaking Seniors, Better Service in San Francisco and Toronto Two innovative, holistic models that put culture and community first. By Jackie Wong Every morning in San Francisco, 50 blue vans fan out through the Mission, the Polk Gulch and other neighbourhoods, to pick up seniors from their homes. If a senior lives in a walkup apartment with stairs, the driver will park the van, go to the senior’s door, help her out of the apartment, walk her down the stairs, and settle her into the van. All the while, the driver is collecting information about the senior’s living conditions, mood, and overall well being. The information will be shared with the team of physicians, nurses, social workers, counsellors, and occupational therapists who work collaboratively with the seniors at the city’s seven On Lok Lifeways day centres. Hundreds of seniors — many mono-lingual in Chinese — congregate daily at the state- and federally-funded centres to socialize, share a meal, and connect with all their health care providers in one place. On Lok started in San Francisco’s Chinatown around the same time as Vancouver’s S.U.C.C.E.S.S., with the same intention to address an under-served population of Chinesespeaking immigrants in the inner city. Now, with 10 centres in the Bay Area and some 1,200 senior members, On Lok has expanded its scope to reach people from the non-Chinese community as well. Daily attention and one-stop care from a social and medical team supports clients of the On Lok seniors’ day care network in San Francisco. Photo courtesy of On Lok Lifeways, San Francisco, California. While S.U.C.C.E.S.S. serves immigrant and at-risk adults of all ages, On Lok focuses exclusively on seniors’ health. But with thousands of Chinese-speaking senior Vancouverites expected to need linguistically- and culturally-specific health and housing services over the next 15 years, On Lok’s innovative, holistic model deserves examination. Finding Home: Affordable Housing Solutions for Greater Vancouver and B.C. Chinese care on a British model On Lok’s Lifeways PACE (Program of All-Inclusive Care for the Elderly) Centers operate on a “social day care” model inspired by the organizational structure of British day hospitals. They started in San Francisco when Dr. William Gee, a dentist, contacted Marie-Louise Ansak, a social worker, to study the feasibility of building a nursing home in San Francisco’s Chinatown in 1971. Ansak found a nursing home to be both culturally and financially infeasible. She found that most Chinatown seniors seemed interested in remaining in their homes, but lacked culturally- and linguistically-appropriate access to health and social services. What services they could access were fragmented and straining to experience for both seniors and their families. It was stressful to shuttle from appointment to appointment, place to place. Together, Ansak and Gee founded San Francisco’s first adult day centre in 1972. The goal was to create a community hub where all of a seniors’ health needs — social, physical, emotional, medical — would be addressed in one place. On Lok — Cantonese for “peaceful, happy abode” — has expanded to seven centres in San Francisco, two in the East Bay area, and one in San Jose. Its model has been replicated in 90 places across the United States. The great majority of On Lok’s 1,200 member seniors are low-income: 96 per cent qualify for federal Medicare and state 46 Medicaid funding that covers their enrollment at the seniors’ day centre. “We get a lump sum amount from both the federal government and state government, and for that we take care of everything the senior needs,” says On Lok’s chief administrative officer, Kelvin Quan, on the phone from San Francisco. “We pay for the drivers, for the primary care doctors, hospital care, we pay for medication, and if they have to go ultimately into a nursing home, we also pay for that. “When we talk about the problems of navigating through the system, our seniors don’t have to struggle with that, and neither do their caregivers or their family. They don’t have to struggle through ‘My primary care doctor says my mother has to see a cardiologist but I’m working tomorrow, how do I get my mother to the cardiologist? How do I get to the pharmacy to get the medicine?’” says Quan. “On Lok takes care of all of those things.” Four per cent of On Lok’s members have financial resources that take them out of the low-income category. They pay for what Medicaid would have covered out of pocket. Confucian duty in the 21st century Quan holds a master’s degree in public health policy. He’s also a lawyer. He started working with On Lok only last year, but grew up with it in San Francisco’s Chinatown in the early ’70s. Finding Home: Affordable Housing Solutions for Greater Vancouver and B.C. While others will say that their city’s Chinatown is radically different from what it was 50 years ago, Quan has a different view. “I think that from an economic, societal standpoint, Chinatown in San Francisco is just as challenged as it was 50 years ago. It’s just in a different way,” he says. “I think the needs are just as great.” Quan believes that today’s economy and society put as much strain on the adult children of aging Chinese parents as they did 50 years ago. But today generations are more geographically separated; adult children live in outlying, English-speaking suburbs where parents don’t want to live — or across the country. The traditional Confucian obligation to take care of one’s parents is a source of ongoing family stress, he says. One of On Lok’s goals is to alleviate some of that strain. “The Confucian obligation of children to take care of their parents is a really great expectation,” Quon observes. “Due to various sociological reasons, the children are not able to fulfill that obligation the way that the parents had expected. The children have families of their own, children to take care of. And there are only limited reserves of time and resources that they can spend taking care of their father or their mother. And that’s when we reach out specifically to the children to partner with them in the care of their parents.” 47 ‘Please help me die’ The Greater Toronto Area is also home to a large Chinesespeaking population. Like On Lok, the GTA’s Yee Hong Centre for Geriatric Care was founded by a Chinese doctor who wanted to address the problem of so many Chinese-speaking seniors falling through the cracks of the English-speaking mainstream health system. Dr. Joseph Y.K. Wong was completing his residency as a medical doctor in the late 1970s. One of his residency rotations took him to a long-term care home for seniors. “Too frequently, he would encounter seniors whose family had left,” says Yee Hong’s director of communications, Anna Wong. “They don’t speak the language, they don’t know why they were there. They’d see a Chinese face, a doctor coming by. They would take his hand, drag him, and say, ‘Please, help me die.’” It was clear to Dr. Wong that the conventional North American model for senior care didn’t work for people who didn’t speak English. Through the 1980s, he educated himself on how to fund a culturally specific, holistic care program for Chinese seniors. He founded Yee Hong and in 1994 opened its first 155-bed long-term facility in Scarborough, Ontario. Twenty-one years later, Yee Hong’s 1,200 employees staff four long-term facilities with 805 beds and three adult day centres, where more than 260 participants receive programs in Mandarin and Cantonese. Yee Hong offers a range of services for people at various stages of life, from fresh retirees to people in palliative care. Finding Home: Affordable Housing Solutions for Greater Vancouver and B.C. But there’s a 10-year waiting list for one of its long-term beds. By contrast, it takes under 10 months on average to get into a “mainstream” care bed in the GTA. But Wong denies that more money will ease the bottleneck. “It’s not [a need for] more resources. It’s ineffective allocation of resources,” she says. “The Chinese population within Ontario is not asking for the government to give them more money so they can practice culturally appropriate care,” she insists. “They’re asking for the government to allocate the [available] resources to the providers who already do it well, so that the users can benefit from the care they actually need.” About half those in long-term care at Yee Hong have come from mainstream care homes. Shifting resources to more culturally specific care could improve the quality of life for the many Chinese seniors who struggle with an English language system. “There’s a sizeable percentage that have become suicidal,” Wong says of Yee Hong’s seniors who arrive as transfers from western care facilities. “Their depression has been aggravated from being in a non-appropriate setting for them.” Preventive caring Back in San Francisco, the healthcare providers at On Lok deal closely with the hundreds of seniors who make use of their services. To get away from a purely medical model of care and look after the whole person, physicians are consciously 48 positioned as equals, working alongside the social worker, the nurse, and occupational therapist in the care team — not above them. At daily meetings the teams comb every issue, from chronic health concerns to personal arguments between seniors. The idea is to catch the onset of new health conditions early, in an effort to avoid crisis situations later. Preventive care is often talked about for younger seniors in their 60s, but On Lok still uses it with clients in their 80s who have, on average, about 13 to 15 chronic medical conditions. “With a lot of this very proactive attention and care, we can head off a lot of more severe conditions that may happen later on if they were otherwise living independently,” Quan says. Seniors who lived alone and received no daily interaction, unmonitored and seldom thought about, would be likely to get worse much more rapidly. Those are just the circumstances facing many Chinesespeaking seniors in Vancouver. They are living independently but lack the day-to-day, face-to-face supports that could keep them doing so without sudden, panicked trips to the hospital or doctor that are now common upsets in their daily lives. By late afternoon in San Francisco, the blue vans drive each senior from the On Lok home. There, the driver will help them settle into evening meals, errands, and medication. The seniors are living independently and also in a community of support. “It’s a social care model, which means we need to put resources around the senior so that they get attention Finding Home: Affordable Housing Solutions for Greater Vancouver and B.C. throughout the week,” Quan says. “Not just when they’re sick, not just when they go in for a medical appointment.” Vancouver lacks any such comprehensive, culturally appropriate housing and services for its growing population of Chinese-speaking seniors. As we learned in previous installments in this series persistent racial discrimination and culturally rooted gender inequality have as much to do with that as does a lack of services on the ground. But examples of what could address all those issues are not so far from home. 49 One Last Walk with Judy Graves City of Vancouver's only full-time advocate for the homeless to retire in May. By Jackie Wong It’s one of the first sunny days of spring, and the herons have returned to their rookery in Vancouver’s Stanley Park. Judy Graves walks slowly, pausing to admire the wiry herons’ nests, the new daffodils, and the fluffy cherry blossoms. The 63-yearold’s nails are whimsically painted a lilac pastel that matches her goofy spontaneity and youthful inquisitiveness. “Here,” she says, leading us towards the Vancouver Park Board’s headquarters. We follow her to a side of the building thick with rhododendron bushes. “When I’m a homeless old woman, this is where I’ll live.” It takes a moment to understand what she means. She points to a rectangular covered area with a clean white concrete floor. Short walls provide some shelter from the elements. “The people who live here are usually very organized,” she says. “One man, he would cook his food out on the beach. And he just loved the flowers.” The space, so small and hidden by the wall of flowers, is easy to miss. But to Graves, it’s one of countless spaces hidden in plain sight that are home to the city’s homeless. They are places and people she knows well. She has spent more than half her lifetime working with Vancouver’s homeless and hard-to-house, and holds the City of Vancouver’s only position as an advocate for the homeless. It’s a title she’s held since 2010. It evolved from her work through the 1980s, ’90s, and the first decade of the 2000s, as the city’s tenant assistance coordinator. ‘I started going out into the streets and asking people, “What happened?”‘ Photo by Christine McAvoy. Now, her days with the city are drawing to a close. She turns 64 on Wednesday, May 29, a day that will also mark her retirement from a career that has spanned over three decades. In much the same way she’s approached other aspects of Finding Home: Affordable Housing Solutions for Greater Vancouver and B.C. her life, she decided in January to leave, she says, because it simply felt right. She’s not aware of any plans to replace her. Graves isn’t the type to self-aggrandize, but she believes her position should be filled. “I think it’s important to have an informed advocate within the system who can speak truth to power. It’s very easy for government to start believing its own spin,” she says. “And it’s important for government to have people they trust within their own ranks. I think it’s very important, as well, that there be somebody doing the public advocacy and the teaching for the citizens as a whole.” But so far no one else at City Hall is taking on Graves’ mission to educate. While she humbly notes that many others have made a positive mark on the city, few have made such a resonant impact on the individual lives of Vancouver’s most vulnerable citizens. “I’m not a counter,” she admits, but she estimates the people she’s helped over the years to secure housing number in the thousands. Karen O’Shannacery is a longtime friend of Graves’. She co-founded Vancouver’s Lookout Emergency Aid Society in 1971 when she was 20 years old, after living on the streets as a teenager. While she believes the work should continue after her friend has retired, she doesn’t expect anyone will be able to fill Graves’ shoes completely. “Nobody could replace Judy,” she says. “Her impact has really fostered the city taking such a leadership role in ending homelessness within the city of Vancouver, which challenges the whole region and challenges the province. I think she deserves recognition for that.” 51 ‘Right away, Judy became involved’ John Ethier is one among thousands who remembers Graves’ help during a difficult time in his life. The former commercial fisher moved to Vancouver from a small town in Ontario in the 1970s. When he wasn’t casting nets at sea, he, like other resource industry workers, lived in the previously abundant rooming houses downtown. He spent the ’90s in the Downtown Eastside and was living in a downtown Single Room Occupancy (SRO) hotel when he met Graves, who at the time was working as the city’s tenant assistance coordinator. “I met Judy in 2003 when the old Plaza Hotel on Richards was being emptied for demolition and redevelopment,” he remembers. “We were approached by an agent for the owners who offered to help us relocate to the Marble Arch [Hotel]. We were told the city was closing the Plaza due to safety concerns. A call to City Hall revealed the city had no knowledge of this. We were, in fact, being scammed by the owners. Right away, Judy became involved.” Under Graves’ watch, the Plaza tenants were moved to suitable accommodations. They were not displaced, as they feared. “I still run into Judy from time to time and she always has time to stop and chat,” Ethier says fondly. He now lives in seniors’ social housing in Downtown South. “Judy, to me, is a person who is very passionate and dedicated about ending homelessness.” Finding Home: Affordable Housing Solutions for Greater Vancouver and B.C. The lady in the blue coat Graves’ work has inhabited two worlds: the streets of the homeless, and the territory of politicians, bureaucrats, community leaders, and non-profit service providers. For years, she took overnight walks through the city, connecting with people sleeping on the streets, building their trust, and walking alongside them to find and secure housing, social services, and income assistance. In the dead of night she’d appear in doorways, under bridges, and in other outdoor spaces where the homeless slept. She’d offer a cigarette, a piece of candy, a treat for the dog. Then they’d talk, and Graves would visit again and again until the person was ready to move forward — to a homeless shelter, onto income assistance, or into housing. People on the streets know her as “the lady in the blue coat,” walking slowly through the night to find people all but lost to everyone else. She spent her days at City Hall, reporting what she learned on her overnight excursions to the people in government who could make a difference through policy and funding. “She was able to get buy-in, persuade the powers that be to do something about it,” O’Shannacery says. Graves’ first reports on people sleeping on Vancouver’s streets in the 1990s “made it real” to the municipal government, O’Shannacery says. “She made it personal, putting a face on people who were homeless.” Graves also persuaded authorities to see that homelessness was neither unsolvable, nor an age-old problem that has 52 always been with us. She remembers the 1970s and ’80s in Vancouver, when higher vacancy rates and affordable rooming houses kept many people off the streets. In the 1990s, however, homelessness became visible, as two trends struck the city at one time. In 1993, the federal government completed its long withdrawal from funding social housing across Canada. Meanwhile, an influx of cocaine fueled an active open drug market in Vancouver’s inner city. By 1997, Vancouver Coastal Health declared a public health emergency in the Downtown Eastside for its HIV-AIDS epidemic and high drug overdose rates. Today, “we’ve got a whole generation who don’t remember that homelessness is not normal,” Graves says. “Anybody who was born in the late ’80s would have no conscious memory of there simply not being a homelessness crisis.” Counting what didn’t count to others People view Graves’ work as heroic. “Judy has been the conscience of our city,” says Maxine Davis, executive director of the Dr. Peter AIDS Foundation. “I defy anyone to hear her speak about her daily connection with individuals on the streets, in parks, and under bridges and not be stirred to help make a difference.” But the overnight walks for which she has become known — and which were replicated, starting in 2002, by hundreds of volunteers in the Metro Vancouver Homeless Count — were borne of simple curiosity. Finding Home: Affordable Housing Solutions for Greater Vancouver and B.C. Graves started work with the City of Vancouver as a receptionist at Kitsilano’s Pine Free Clinic. She was 25 and the new mother of a baby daughter. At 30, she started a job at Cordova House, a city-owned building for difficult tenants. Then, in the early 1990s, she and other tenant support workers started to notice people sleeping on the streets. As more people turned up on the streets, Graves felt compelled to understand a situation she figured everyone else knew more about than she. While her City of Vancouver coworkers held graduate degrees in urban planning, she had dropped out of high school. “I thought I was the only person who didn’t understand this was happening,” she says. “So I started going out into the streets and asking people, ‘What happened? What can I do to help?’” Against the wishes of her supervisor, who viewed her walks as a trivial hobby, Graves says, “I found the best time to do it was between two and six in the morning,” she says. “The world belongs to the homeless in the middle of the night.” As word of her walks spread around the office, people started asking her for information. And as Vancouver’s street homeless population grew, reporters started pressing the municipality for answers. By the late 1990s, Graves conducted Vancouver’s first homeless counts on her own — crude estimates done on hand-drawn maps. “Judy’s early street homeless counts in Vancouver demonstrated the power of hard numbers in the fight against homelessness, and doubtless inspired the first Regional Homeless Count,” says urban planner Margaret Eberle. Metro 53 Vancouver took its first large-scale homeless count in 2002 and now takes a new count every three years. The City of Vancouver has conducted its own annual count since 2010. “Judy is the heart and soul of the Vancouver homeless count,” Eberle says. “What is essentially a data collection exercise is transformed in the training sessions where Judy teaches us how to approach the homeless, and how to understand and treat the homeless with respect and compassion. Most of us emerge from these sessions with a sense of awe for Judy — her compassion, humour, and most of all, her skills.” The counts Graves inspired have brought street homelessness into the public spotlight. “Some question the utility of homeless counts,” Eberle admits. “I firmly believe in the power of defensible estimates of homelessness in shaping housing and income assistance policy, and ultimately, in addressing homelessness.” ‘Deal with homelessness as a disaster’ Graves’ long career has seen numerous ruling parties come and go at City Hall. She admits that municipal regime changes have affected how she’s been able to do her work — “but not predictably,” she says. “I certainly think that Phillip Owen was a wonderful mayor to work under. And I’m wildly impressed with the work that [current mayor] Gregor [Robertson] has done with homelessness,” she says. Finding Home: Affordable Housing Solutions for Greater Vancouver and B.C. Beyond that, she won’t indulge in the criticism or gossip that often spring only too readily from government staffers when they’re ready to leave a job. “I don’t believe in taking any individual on,” she says. “Any of us can change our mind in a heartbeat. I don’t see people as enemies.” While she’s not willing to spend time attacking individuals for perceived shortcomings, Graves has a striking final message for all of Canada. Ending homelessness, she says, is probably one of the easiest problems facing cities to solve. But “until the powers — and I don’t mean just the city, I mean the province and the feds — decide to deal with homelessness as a disaster, they could dab at it for another century and not get it done,” she says. “It could, actually, be quite easily done, very quickly. We need probably a couple of thousand units of housing. Not expensive housing. Not fancy housing. We need rooms with their own bathrooms, which is exactly what every homeless person I talk to is asking for. And beyond that, we need to look at ways of getting nutrition, good quality nutrition, to people who are very poor.” Last days on the street After we parted ways in English Bay at the end of our afternoon together in Stanley Park, I contacted Graves again to ask if I could meet her for an overnight walk this month. She’s usually open to having guests along with her. But she declined. 54 “Can’t,” she wrote. “The time in the street now is too personal. Too full of grief. Talking to people who will be still out there after I have left.” Graves has no firm plans after retirement. While she has an apartment in a West End co-op, she’s not sure where she’ll live next, as her daughter recently moved to Powell River. As has been the case with other events in her life, things will happen, she says, when the time is right. “I probably have survived by rolling downhill like water into a stream,” she says, laughing. One sure thing is she’ll be dearly, sadly missed. Especially by those who will no longer be visited in the night by the lady in the blue coat, with whom they’ll stay up late smoking, talking, helping each other understand. Social housing group left wanting more from both Libs, NDP on ‘urgent’ crisis By David P. Ball Social Housing Coalition activists (from left) Ivan Drury, Herb Varley and Dave Diewert speak with BCFED president Jim Sinclair outside last night’s NDP fundraiser in Vancouver. Photo by David P. Ball. Although the BC New Democrats have not released their election platform yet, the party’s housing critic is pushing for the province to take a “leading role at the table” on affordable housing, including direct investment in new social housing units. But activists with the Social Housing Coalition accuse the party of not taking B.C.’s housing crisis seriously enough, and last night they pamphleted with a banner outside an NDP fundraiser in Vancouver, a performance they’ll repeat at another party faithful event tomorrow in hopes of garnering concrete commitments in imminent campaign promises. Joe Trasolini, NDP Critic for Housing, Construction and Business Investment, said the housing strategy he’ll put forward will bring together federal and municipal governments, non-profits, housing advocates and private interests, with the province taking a leading role to increase housing stock across B.C. “We need new supply. Whenever there is supply that comes on the market, it relieves the pressure on vacancy. When you don’t have enough vacancy… landlords can get away with a lot more than when there is more supply of rental units. I’ve met with a lot of housing advocates who have shovelready projects that have been reviewed by BC Housing staff… and they’ve been found to be very much needed, qualify for government partnerships, but nothing is happening. They’re told that there’s no money,” he told Tyee Solutions Society. The BC Liberals have made new housing-related announcements almost every week over the last several months, with press releases lauding new investment and Finding Home: Affordable Housing Solutions for Greater Vancouver and B.C. hundreds of units in seniors housing, emergency homeless shelters, and single room occupancy (SRO) renovations. And while critics claim the province and feds alike are not “at the table” to the degree they would like, in March the B.C. government announced a new federal partnership to help “vulnerable” people with housing in the province, dubbed the Federal-Provincial Housing (FPH) initiative. Funding for that affordability program totals roughly $155 million, the government said, plus $45 million through a variety of measures such as contributions for capital costs, exempting some fees for development, and property tax breaks. “The B.C. government believes in strong partnerships and with shared funding from the federal and provincial governments, as well as local governments and community organizations,” Housing Minister Rich Coleman stated. “We’re increasing the number of housing options available to people most at risk across the province. “The funding made available through this program is already contributing to affordable and supportive housing solutions to help those in need.” While Trasolini said that the government’s initiatives are only enough to maintain — not expand — B.C.’s housing stock, outside his party’s fundraiser at Vancouver’s Bill Reid Gallery last night, coalition activists questioned whether the MLA for Port Moody-Coquitlam or his party are treating the housing crisis as “urgent.” 56 They launched a petition for social housing in B.C., and chief among their demands is that the province build “10,000 units of good quality social housing per year”; prioritizing housing for vulnerable or marginalized people such as indigenous people, seniors, and immigrants; enforcing maintenance laws on cheap rental hotels; and increasing taxes to fund more social housing. The housing activists hope “to push for the NDP, or whoever gets into the provincial leadership, to do something about it,” one pamphleteer told Tyee Solutions Society. “We’ve hit the NDP on a few occasions,” said Dave Diewert, with the Social Housing Coalition. “They completely waffle on the housing front… they are very non-committal, and don’t seem to have a very strong sense of urgency around this issue, and will probably not do anything. From what they’ve been saying, it sounds virtually like the status quo. That’s just not acceptable.” That status quo is what the coalition is calling one of the province’s greatest crises, one that Diewert argued has been “mystified and played down” by all parties. “There’s a sentiment that we’ve taken care of it all, that we’ve built a ton of housing and everybody’s okay,” he explained. “It’s missing a huge sector in the province who not only live in poverty, but also has to struggle on the housing front — indigenous people, new immigrants, temporary foreign workers, youth, seniors, women. Across the board, there’s a huge need.” Finding Home: Affordable Housing Solutions for Greater Vancouver and B.C. Trasolini told Tyee Solutions Society he is committed to re-investing financially in social housing if the NDP wins the election, as well as working with the private sector, municipal and federal governments, and non-profits to increase the stock of both rental and supportive housing. But as for 10,000 new units built a year as the coalition demands, those levels may be “accurate” in terms of need, he said, but they are unlikely to be met regardless of which party forms government after May 14. “Insofar as saying that any government could come up with 10,000 units in one year, it might be a stretch,” he said. “There has to be a start — a comprehensive plan that we undertake a step at a time, starting right away — and doing as much as we can in one year, and making a commitment for following years. “It’s probably an accurate number of need. Nobody’s going to argue about the need. I’ve seen it first-hand.” For Jim Sinclair, president of the BC Federation of Labour — one of roughly 150 NDP donors attending last night’s fundraiser, alongside representatives of the construction industry, energy firms, unions and others — housing should be a priority for the party. Sinclair said he hopes the NDP lives up to its past commitment to build new social housing, even if it costs taxpayers to fix the problem. He also criticized the BC Liberal government’s record on the issue. “They’ve bought some Downtown Eastside hotels, but that didn’t increase the number of units. It just saved some of the units that were there. It’s going to take money. The big 57 challenge that we’ve got as a province is (that) we’re going to have to fix these problems by paying for them.” The Social Housing Coalition has planned another pamphleting rally outside the BC NDP’s Business Leader dinner tomorrow at the Molson Brewery, as well as at the premier’s fundraising dinner at the Vancouver Convention Centre on Monday. Vancouver Rent Assembly explores deeper questions around tenant rights, gentrification By David P. Ball If you are among the more than half of Vancouverites who rent their homes, having to fork over a hefty chunk of your income to a landlord every month might elicit groans or even disdain as prices climb. But a conference this weekend isn’t just bemoaning the high price of being a tenant in Canada’s most unaffordable city. The Rent Assembly happening today and tomorrow is also asking deeper questions about tenancy, and most importantly how communities can address leasing problems. “We’ve all been struggling with these issues,” organizer Anahita Jamali Rad told Tyee Solutions Society. “It keeps getting blown up more and more. “Everyone involved has similar experience: we all pay rent, and spend a lot of our time working to pay rent. It becomes such a big part of your life.” Co-sponsored by The Mainlander, the Vancouver Renters Union, and the Kootenay School of Writing, the weekend assembly is using art, poetry, panel discussions and activism workshops to explore the history of rent as a concept, tenants’ experiences, as well as concrete examples from communities which have successfully fought for tenant rights. There will also be sessions discussing racism in housing, aboriginal struggles, and gentrification — an urban process which sees lower-income renters displaced from their neighbourhoods by rising costs. The extent to which that geographic phenomenon applies in Vancouver has been at the crux of an increasingly fierce debate recently, which has seen blogs like the Gastown Gazette decrying gentrification’s critics Finding Home: Affordable Housing Solutions for Greater Vancouver and B.C. — be they established community organizations or alleged anarchist vandals making headlines. The conference’s philosophical approach sets it apart from usual industry or activist gatherings. “Paying rent is not natural,” Jamali Rad argued. “Things are the way they are not because it’s a natural thing, but because it’s part of the structure right now; it doesn’t mean it should be the way it is. “We’re not really trying to give any broad statement; we just want to open up the conversation, and have people explore these ideas.” With tensions flaring in recent months over the gentrification of the Downtown Eastside, as well as a string of arts and culture venue evictions or closures due to rent hikes, organizers hope to cast a critical reflection on why Vancouver has become so expensive. “There’s a weird Vancouver standard we have for the price of rent. If someone pays $1,500 for a one-bedroom in an okay area, we now all think that’s normal. We don’t realize that there are all the sorts of background financial things that go on behind the scenes so that prices are ridiculously high. . . There’s a constant lowering of expectations.” The rent assembly launches tonight with a panel on ‘Rent in Theory’ featuring Jamali Rad, as well as Mainlander contributor Nathan Crompton, Danielle LaFrance and Maria Wallstam. Other events include a Swamp interactive theatre piece, and a direct action workshop from several organizers of the 59 controversial Pidgin restaurant picket — which has led to one activist’s arrest and conflict with business owners. “It’s definitely polarizing the city,” Jamali Rad added. “A lot of people not interested in these issues. . . are becoming more and more interested because it’s actually affecting their daily lives. “With the explosion of evictions and renovictions of organizations in Vancouver, it seems like everyone either knows someone close to them who’s been renovicted, or who has been themselves. . . More than anything we want people to come together and talk.” Housing Justice Project puts affordable lodging and legal advocacy into action By David P. Ball Affordable housing is a recognized human right, say legal advocates, but too many residents of B.C. are unable to exercise that right, or even access the legal system as tenants. UBC law professor Margot Young will address the right to housing, in particular for Vancouver’s women and girls, at a major conference today, Engaging Women, Transforming Cities. “For anyone concerned about building a just city, this is really a critical conversation to be a part of,” Young told The Tyee Solutions Society. “Housing is such a central issue. “Our focus is to look at housing justice — that is, to understand housing as a right… It’s not a question about what’s happening with the housing bubble, prices, or market mechanisms. It’s looking at what kinds of policies, programs, laws, and regulations, ought to be in place to ensure that everybody who lives in Vancouver has decent housing.” Young is a co-founder of the Housing Justice Project, a unique collaboration between UBC’s law and community planning departments, Pivot Legal Society, and the Canadian Rental Housing Coalition. The project hopes to educate the public and explore solutions to the housing crisis by advocating for residents’ legal rights, engaging the community, and developing policies to address increasingly unaffordable living. “In B.C., there is a real lack of access to justice for tenants,” said Darcie Bennett, campaign director with Pivot Legal Society. “There’s little legal support for housing. Finding Home: Affordable Housing Solutions for Greater Vancouver and B.C. “There used to be poverty law clinics here, but all that is now missing here in B.C.; it has been eroded over the last decade. . . For marginalized renters, it’s pretty much impossible to figure out what to do and how go though the process of disputing an eviction or landlord harassment. Even when an order is made, there is not a lot of enforcement to get money or resolve it quickly.” On May 28, the City of Vancouver announced it would grant $8,000 to continue running a Residential Tenancy Branch to support Downtown Eastside residents, based out of the Aboriginal Community Career Employment Services Society (ACCESS) on Main Street. Unlike other approaches which view housing primarily through the lens of real estate, municipal zoning, or social welfare, for example, the Housing Justice Project is attempting to create a niche in the legal system, and the community, for positive change to happen. Funded by UBC’s Peter Wall Solutions Initiative, which hopes to join academics with community groups to work for social change, the project held its first public event in February: a showcase of films about housing struggles, made by local youth. When viewed through a legal perspective, Bennett added, affordable lodging becomes clearly linked to other social issues and rights. But while there is much research on how to ensure peoples’ right to housing, there are few avenues to put it into practice for ordinary people, be they homeowners, tenants or the homeless. 61 “Seeing things through a justice lens is important, because pretty much any issue we work on relates to a housing issue, whether it’s the foster care system or addictions, housing is a big piece of it,” Bennett said. “We could fill a room with research on how important housing is as a human right; it’s all been researched to the ends of time. “It’s about joining forces to take action on their research… to be able to use the research they’re able to do as a frame for some of the cases we take on, to say, ‘This case isn’t just about this individual, but about issues facing so many individuals who fall through the cracks.’” Taking an intersecting and interdisciplinary approach to housing is key to addressing the housing needs of marginalized people, particularly for women and girls who are the focus of today’s conference, organized by Women Transforming Cities. Another speaker at the event’s housing-focused panel is Janice Abbott, CEO of Atira Women’s Resource Society and Atira property management, an influential Downtown Eastside nonprofit striving to end violence against women through housing, support and advocacy services. Abbott told Tyee Solutions Society that, when addressing the housing crisis, agencies need to work from an “antioppression framework” — an understanding that people face greater barriers and stigma if they are aboriginal, immigrant, sole-parents, or disabled, for instance. Poverty and gender are also key factors that affect access to safe, affordable housing. Finding Home: Affordable Housing Solutions for Greater Vancouver and B.C. “We need more and better housing options for women who are poor,” Abbott said in an interview. “We need more places where women who have experienced repeated incidents of trauma, likely from childhood, can have a place to be safe and to heal. “Housing needs to be able to provide consistency and predictability across time. There also needs to be housing where there are women-headed leases. Often at Atira, we see women form relationships, often with male partners, but when those relationships go sideways, women are typically the ones who end up homeless again and have to give up their housing.” The lack of a national housing strategy is also a bone of contention for advocates like Atira and the Housing Justice Project. But given the “severity” of homelessness and cost of living across the country, particularly in B.C., Young said, “the fault lies with all levels of government.” “It’s a failure to observe a key human right well-recognized at the international level,” she added, “and arguably part of the kinds of protections that our own constitutional Charter of Rights and Freedoms provides.” For Pivot’s Bennett, the right to housing cannot be left to the private sector. “When we think about really basic needs like medical care or education, we realize there needs to be government regulation for them,” Bennett argued. “Housing is a really important basic need, and yet it has been left out of purview of government.” 62 Both Young and Abbott will be speaking about housing rights for women and girls today (May 30) from 11 a.m. to 12:30 p.m., as part of the day-long Women Transforming Cities conference, at Simon Fraser University, 500 Granville St. Feds have ‘no choice but to listen’ to municipal pressure on affordable housing By David P. Ball Over the past decade, the average price tag of new homes in Canada has almost doubled, and homeownership remains hindered by skyrocketing personal debt. And while the country’s municipal leaders head home from their annual conference, which ended June 3, boasting of a “united front” to bring the federal government back to the table to discuss affordable housing, so far they’ve been unsuccessful in lobbying for a national housing strategy. Still, Federation of Canadian Municipalities (FCM) vice president Raymond Louie says Ottawa “has no choice” but to assist cities and towns that are struggling to create affordable housing. “We’re looking for the federal government to… support us at the low-end of the spectrum and in the middle, perhaps with tax write-offs to those who are building rental housing,” said Louie, who’s also a four-term Vancouver councillor, in an interview. “That was a key component of how rental housing was built in the past.” Louie said he and Vancouver Mayor Gregor Robertson — who chairs the FCM’s Big City Mayors’ Caucus — held separate meetings with federal cabinet ministers throughout the weekend, such as Infrastructure and Intergovernmental Affairs Minister Denis Lebel, Trade Minister Ed Fast, and Heritage Minister James Moore. They lobbied for greater federal housing and infrastructure involvement, Louie said. They also met with Thomas Mulcair, leader of the official Opposition, and Liberal chief Justin Trudeau, who also attended the FCM meeting. Finding Home: Affordable Housing Solutions for Greater Vancouver and B.C. “(We) brought forth those concerns to every minister that (we) met with, and to the opposition parties as well,” he said. “All parties need to hear that same message, and hopefully it’s brought back.” Robertson set a housing-focused tone for the weekend when he emerged from the Big City Mayors’ Caucus pre-conference on May 30, saying that cities were increasingly concerned not only about homelessness, but also the ability of their residents to own their own houses. For over half of Vancouverites and many other Canadians, homeownership is simply not in the cards. “The rising cost of housing is an issue we see in cities across the country. Cities are ready and willing to help protect the economy and solve this housing crisis but we need federal and provincial partners who are committed to working with us,” he said in a statement. The FCM has warned that 500,000 Canadians could lose their homes, with $1.7 billion in social housing transfers from Ottawa running out in the next six years. In the past, Robertson has likened the way cities must apply for federal infrastructure funding to purchasing a lottery ticket in hopes of plugging leaks in your roof. But the federal government counters that it is partnering heavily on infrastructure investment with cities, and points to this year’s budget as an example of cooperation between levels of government, citing a new 10-year infrastructure commitment. 64 The conference also coincided with the release of the FCM’s State of Canada’s Cities and Communities report. Although short on detailed proposals, the 26-page document described that relationship as an “outdated” and “broken” framework more fitting to the “19th century,” and called for changes to Canada’s constitution to better include cities in matters affecting them. “The reason is that our cities and communities continue to operate within an institutional framework better adapted to the realities of the 19th century than today’s rapidly shifting urban and economic landscape,” the report stated. “This outdated framework creates jurisdictional silos that hinder federal and provincial decision-making, cooperation and coordination, and often lead to ad-hoc policy interventions that mask or fail to address real problems and leave municipalities scrambling to fill the gaps.” The report was not all bad news for communities. The authors also pointed to a “growing municipal policy footprint” over the past 10 years, which has resulted in cities gaining a much greater “role and influence in national debates.” “Today, local governments and FCM are actively consulted on more and more of the national issues playing out in cities and communities,” the report noted. Looking back on the four-day conference, Louie said that any discussion of affordable housing must consider the full “spectrum of housing” — from housing people on the streets to families being able to buy their own residences. Finding Home: Affordable Housing Solutions for Greater Vancouver and B.C. “In Vancouver, homeownership and the ability to own a home is a major, major issue for us,” Louie explained. “The concept of homeownership is becoming near-impossible for many of our own citizens. Louie pointed to the co-op housing model, as well as a local cohousing project which would create partly shared living spaces, as solutions being explored by the City of Vancouver. 65 ‘Community Land Trust’: Vancouver’s Affordable Housing Fix? New rental units on city-owned land earn mixed reviews. By Jackie Wong Thinking back to the eight months he spent last year as one of the more radical Vancouver members of the Mayor’s Task Force on Housing Affordability, Mike Lewis is glad to see one recommendation starting to bear fruit. On May 15, Vancouver city council approved a staff proposal to build 355 units of rental housing on four city-owned sites, to be operated by four community land trust partners. Lewis praises the decision as “one way of pushing back” against the “rank individualism” of our times. Last year, Lewis co-authored The Resilience Imperative. In it he writes about community land trusts around the world. He sees them as one way of reclaiming the commons and bridging what he calls the gap between the “we” and the “I.” Community land trusts do that by owning property under a non-profit, multi-stakeholder, democratic governance model. They are guided by the idea that community control of land, instead of real-estate market investor control, helps keep down the cost of housing. View of the Fraser River from the southeast Vancouver site of forthcoming affordable rental and co-op housing projects on city-owned land. Photo courtesy: Mike Lewis. Vancouver’s Community Housing Land Trust Foundation is a registered charity created two decades ago by the Co-operative Housing Federation of BC. Under the new agreement, Vancouver will lease four city-owned parcels of land to the Land Trust Foundation. It in turn will sub-lease those sites to four partners to develop affordable rentalhousing units. The partners are Fraserview Housing Co-operative, Tikva Housing Society, Katherine Sanford Housing Society and Finding Home: Affordable Housing Solutions for Greater Vancouver and B.C. HFBC Housing Foundation. The Land Trust will oversee housing development and construction. The four partners will operate the housing after it’s been built, with the Land Trust overseeing things and reporting annually to the city on how they are reaching affordability targets. 67 residents are met,” according to the City of Vancouver staff report on the project. With construction slated to begin in March 2014, the first residents are expected to move in by November 2015. “This is common sense,” Lewis says. “That’s what I’m excited about by this social-purpose development partnership. It’s principled, it’s pragmatic, and it’s leveraging assets.” Two-bedroom suites for under $950 a month Of the 355 units of rental housing, 273 will rent at belowmarket rates. According to initial estimates, based on rates below BC Housing’s Housing Income Limits (HIL) metric, that would translate to about $769 a month for a one-bedroom apartment. A two-bedroom unit would rent for $945. The four sites are near the Fraser in southeast Vancouver. Image courtesy Mike Lewis. Revenues from the 82 market-price units will support the non-market units, approximately 48 of which will serve people with mental health concerns. New Westminster Mayor Wayne Wright praises the project as “stepping forward where they need to go.” Wright co-chairs the Canadian Rental Housing Coalition and praises Vancouver for its innovation. The four sites in southeast Vancouver are at 1700 Kingsway, 2910 E. Kent Avenue, 2780 Southeast Marine Drive, and 2800 Southeast Marine Drive. Tenants will be identified through BC Housing and the four non-profit community land trust partners co-operating in the project, in order to “ensure that the needs of Vancouver Keeping existing housing affordable Lewis, also the executive director of the Canadian Centre for Community Renewal, is one of many who views the community land trust project as an important, historic step forward in Vancouver’s affordable rental housing odyssey. He’s echoing Vancouver’s rental housing policies in his own municipality. During the same week that Vancouver city Finding Home: Affordable Housing Solutions for Greater Vancouver and B.C. council approved the four rental housing project sites, New Westminster city council approved a new Secured Market Rental Housing Policy. The policy is designed to protect New Westminster’s existing, aging supply of market rental housing. Among other measures, it continues a moratorium on converting rental buildings into strata title (condo) properties, and will explore the use of “density transfer” swaps to preserve existing purpose-built rental stock. The New West policy primarily deals with rental housing priced at market rates, however. “In order for affordable rental housing to be achieved,” the report notes, “other additional incentives would need to be considered.” Both Lewis and Wright acknowledged that cities are doing what they can in the absence of either a national housing strategy or extensive provincial funding for housing. To significantly further expand non-market affordability, Wright believes, “We need federal direction.” He and Lewis echo others involved in affordable housing initiatives who bemoan the lack of federal funding for housing since Ottawa abandoned the field in 1993. “We don’t have a national housing policy in this country and we should,” Lewis says. “We’re probably one of the few OECD [Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development] countries that don’t have one.” 68 Absent guarantees for the neediest Meanwhile, Vancouver city council has drawn as much criticism as praise for its land trust project from housing advocates who say there’s no guarantee of real affordability. “There are loose, floating ‘targets’ for below-market Mike Lewis supports the City of Vancouver’s new rental housing rents,” said Tim Louis, a former project operated by a community Vancouver city councillor with land trust. He writes about such trusts in his 2012 book, The the Coalition of Progressive Resilience Imperative. Photo by Electors. “But just look at the Jackie Wong. Olympic Village to see what happens when there are no guarantees built-in from the start.” Connor Donegan of the Vancouver Renters’ Union questions whether the non-profit community land trust partners will be able to offer affordable housing without further financial backing from the city. In the initial staff report on the project, the City of Vancouver made it clear that it will not provide any operating subsidies or property tax exemptions. Donegan points to the city’s staff report, which “warns that ‘affordability may be delayed’ due to ‘future market economics.’ We need a guarantee that the buildings will be affordable,” he says. “City-owned land needs to be leveraged in order to circumvent the market forces that are destroying Finding Home: Affordable Housing Solutions for Greater Vancouver and B.C. affordable housing and causing homelessness: this proposal fails to meet that need.” Jean Swanson, a longtime Downtown Eastside housing advocate and co-ordinator of the Carnegie Community Action Project, echoes Donegan’s sentiments. “In order to solve the housing crisis, we need government-funded housing. Charities just don’t have enough money. And developers won’t build enough,” she says. 69 the housing continuum. Based on the initial estimates that one-bedroom units on the land trust sites would rent for about $769 a month, those units would be affordable for people making up to $38,000 a year. “The good part of this is that it’s non-profit. But I don’t know how much of this housing is going to be used for people at welfare rates. From our perspective, it would be good if a lot of it were used for people at welfare rates, because they’re the ones that have the greatest need.” The City of Vancouver’s Housing and Homelessness Strategy is designed to address the housing needs of people on income assistance. Meanwhile the Mayor’s Task Force on Housing Affordability, which paved the way for the community land trust project, is aimed at citizens in a different income bracket. “The task force, essentially, was focused on a cohort of $21,000 to $85,000 household income,” Lewis says. “The argument that was made, as I understood it, was that the homelessness strategy and that lower income would not be really the focus here, that we had an affordability problem that was broader than just the acute problem of people at the lowest income levels.” The community land trust project addresses what the City of Vancouver refers to as the ‘non-market rental’ portion of Different housing policies for different levels of need. Source: City of Vancouver staff report to council, “Agreement with the Community Housing Land Trust Foundation to Deliver Affordable Rental Housing on City-Owned Land.” Ottawa still MIA People who work in housing at the municipal and provincial levels often speak extensively about how Canada lacks a federal housing policy. In Swanson’s view, the fanfare around the new community land trust project undermines the city’s own goals in lobbying for a national housing plan. “The city is trumpeting this as a great thing, and by doing that, it undermines its own ability to lobby for a federal, provincial housing program, because it makes it appear that everything is okay and we don’t have a crisis,” she says. Finding Home: Affordable Housing Solutions for Greater Vancouver and B.C. “In 2007, the city had 14 lots, and they designated them for social housing. And then they went after the senior governments to get funding for those lots. And they got it,” Swanson recalls. “I think a strategy like that is needed now, where the city buys land and goes after the senior governments and says, we want you to fund housing on this land. We’re showing that we’re serious. We’ve got this land that’s designated for housing. And we want you to fund it. Because there’s a huge need. We need thousands of units of social housing.” To former housing affordability task force member Mike Lewis, the solutions lie somewhere between allowing the market to “fix itself” and relying fully on government forces. Renters’ rights, however, are under provincial jurisdiction in B.C. During the lead-up to this year’s provincial election, representatives from six Vancouver non-profits compiled a set of 13 recommendations for change in B.C.’s Residential Tenancy Act, in efforts to better balance the rights of tenants and landlords. Its first two recommendations were to toughen rent controls and minimize unnecessary evictions. “If we divorce social goals from what we think about in terms of economic exchange, which is the essence of ‘let the market decide,’ that’s an inadequate basis for any kind of policy,” Lewis says. “The market is a social construction. And we have constructed it. This ['Four Sites' project] is a way, small way, of pushing back, by saying social relations should be right in the middle of the discourse.” 70 Advocates call for ‘social impact’ assessments of new Downtown Eastside developments By David P. Ball The city should require low-income “social impact assessments” of all new businesses and condominiums in Vancouver’s Downtown Eastside, similar to neighbourhood reviews when addictions recovery centres or shelters are proposed for wealthier neighbourhoods, suggests a housing advocate. Low-income residents, “not bureaucrats,” should be in charge of such a process, said BC Social Housing Coalition spokesperson Dave Diewert at a rally yesterday, organized by the Anti-Gentrification Caucus. The group is a participant in the city’s Local Area Planning Process (LAPP) for the neighbourhood. “If you try to put a recovery centre in Kits, or a treatment centre in any other neighbourhood of the city, they’ll have a social impact study,” said Diewert. “But when they put in condos here, or high-end restaurants, there’s no social impact study on how it will affect low-income people. Those things need to be in place.” More than 200 protestors marched from Main and East Hastings St. to BC Housing’s offices, presenting a 3,000-signature petition calling for more social housing and a moratorium on condominium development in the most impoverished parts of the DTES. Volunteers canvassed street corners and parks, and knocked on hotel room doors in many of the neighbourhood’s Single Resident Occupancy hotels, to collect signatures, organizers said. Finding Home: Affordable Housing Solutions for Greater Vancouver and B.C. Impacts of new development are already thoroughly reviewed, the city councillor responsible for housing told Tyee Solutions Society, and the area planning process exists for that reason. “This is exactly why the (Local Area Planning Process) was set up. It says to everyone, all stakeholders, here’s your chance at the table. If we weren’t serious about that, we wouldn’t have started this process three years ago,” said councillor Kerry Jang. For addictions outreach worker Chris McPartlin, a former longtime resident of the neighbourhood, the process has not given the community a sense of being heard at city hall. “These decisions are just being made arbitrarily, without that much consultation,” he told Tyee Solutions Society. “I would like to see actual cooperation with the people who have called this a community for so long. For decades, this was the ‘scary part of town’ — socially unacceptable, stigmatized. But you know what? This is the one place in the Lower Mainland where there is a big sense of community.” McPartlin said he’s witnessed the “gradual downsizing” of community over the past decade, adding that he fears that once condominium residents move into the area, they will demand the city and police “clean up” undesirable residents — taking away one of the few places where people can safely access services like Insite’s needle exchange, addictions counselling or other low-income agencies. “How long will it be before the owners of these condos start complaining to city hall: ‘I don’t like leaving my front door 72 with my little child and seeing this type of activity going on. Get the police down here, isn’t that stuff against the law?’” he said. “I can already picture the conversations.” Low-income participants in the planning process released an alternative plan for the struggling neighbourhood, which would see the city cede to long-standing demands for 10,000 new units of social housing. For David Hamm, a LAPP participant and president of Vancouver Area Network of Drug Users (VANDU), the problem is that upscale condominium developments continue to raise prices in the DTES, while the city’s consultation process is unfolding too slowly. It will not release a draft report until at least the end of this year. “What we’d like to see is them listening to us, and getting on board buying properties that need to be bought; they own property that could be used too,” Hamm told Tyee Solutions Society, just before stepping into a LAPP committee meeting. “They can’t help but hear us. “But are they going to do anything about it, or have they already made up their minds? Are they just trying to keep us occupied?… We are well aware things could go that way, (but) I try to stay openminded. We are there in good faith, and hope they are too.” Meanwhile, a months-long picket protest outside the upscale Pidgin Restaurant in the neighbourhood continues. Two activists have been arrested, including Coalition of Progressive Electors (COPE) executive committee member Kim Hearty last week. Finding Home: Affordable Housing Solutions for Greater Vancouver and B.C. Some business-owners and the Gastown Gazette blog have claimed the protests are linked to a string of crimes in east Vancouver, including arson, vandalism and theft, for which a group calling itself the Anti-Gentrification Front took credit online. Jang said “extremists” and “special interest groups” on any side of the debate should not direct the work of the area planning process, which he hopes will produce a draft report before the end of this year. “It’s been an arduous process for all participants, on all sides,” Jang said. “The aim is to provide a balanced neighbourhood, one where nobody who’s poor is displaced, but also where there is opportunity for people to move in as well… We’re not about extremes. Some people are very frustrated with the extremists; some think we’re not extreme enough.” 73 Study Details Canada’s ‘Perfect Storm’ Housing Problem Eroding incomes and plunging rental stock leave 380,600 households in 'severe' need. By David P. Ball New research into Canada’s housing crisis has yielded some disturbing conclusions, including findings that 200,000 Canadians experience homelessness every year, and three-quarters of that group is forced to stay in shelters at some point. Researchers released their State of Homelessness in Canada 2013 report yesterday, billing it as the first comprehensive look at a growing problem on a national scale. The document also concludes that 380,600 Canadian households are in “severe housing need,” and that on any given night there are 30,000 homeless across the country. The crisis is particularly acute for aboriginal people, as well as gay, lesbian, bisexual and transgender youth, the report found. “This is the first time we’ve ever delivered a comprehensive attempt to quantify homelessness in the country,” said coauthor Tim Richter, president & CEO of the Canadian Alliance to End Homelessness, which commissioned the study. “The worrying thing is, the numbers may actually be a lot higher than we’re estimating… You see eroding incomes for the poorest Canadians, and 10 per cent of households living in poverty. That’s very worrying. Homelessness is a lot bigger than who shows up in the shelters and on the streets.” How Vancouver stacks up Once a student hostel, Vancouver’s Dunsmuir House is currently a supportive housing project run by BC Housing. Photo by laniwurm in Your BC: The Tyee’s Photo Pool. Stephen Gaetz, director of York University’s Canadian Homelessness Research Network, told Tyee Solutions Society that Vancouver deserves credit for its “interesting and innovative” approaches to the housing crisis, including Finding Home: Affordable Housing Solutions for Greater Vancouver and B.C. implementing a “Housing First” strategy, where some chronically homeless are provided with stable housing and support services in a more holistic way. Vision Vancouver’s promises to end street homelessness by 2015 also earned kudos from the report’s co-author. But with many experiencing hidden homelessness, such as couchsurfing, as well as long-term emergency shelter use, the city still faces many challenges which do not end simply by getting people off the streets, he added. “It’s been very successful in reducing street homelessness — not the entire problem, but at least it helps people sleeping outdoors,” Gaetz said. “The approach in Vancouver is different than in other places; your housing solutions often involve housing people in single buildings, rather than a scattered approach. “But Vancouver’s affordability problems are the spanner in the works there.” According to The Economist magazine, Vancouver is the most unaffordable city in North America and one of the most expensive in the world. But homelessness, compounded by declining incomes, is “plaguing” cities across Canada. Gaetz argued that despite the high numbers reported in this year’s State of Housing research, the number of people impacted by the crisis may be even greater than reported. “What makes it even scarier is that we were being as cautious as possible,” he said. “It doesn’t help to overstate the problem. We were really looking at the bottom end; it’s likely much higher. 75 “The building industry has shifted from building apartments to building condos. We’ve seen that across the country,” he said. “The supply of low-cost rental housing has diminished at the same time that incomes have diminished. It’s the perfect storm.” ‘We need better data’ The study is the first report-card style overview of a growing problem in cities across the country, Gaetz said, adding that his organization and co-researchers at the Canadian Alliance to End Homelessness hope to issue a State of Homelessness every year. The root causes of homelessness in Canada, such as structural factors and the federal government’s axing of the national housing strategy 20 years ago, are “fairly well” understood, Gaetz said. But few attempts have been made to improve country-wide data, as this report claims. “For a long time, we’ve relied on bumbling along in an ad hoc way,” he said. “We need good numbers and program evaluations so we can understand their effectiveness. We need a consistent strategy across Canada. The U.S. does it every year, but across Canada there are different counts, different methodologies. We need better data.” One ongoing problem the report identifies is the increasing reliance on emergency shelters as a solution to homelessness. Those temporary services were never intended as a longterm fix to the problem, Gaetz said. In the end, shelters wind Finding Home: Affordable Housing Solutions for Greater Vancouver and B.C. up costing significantly more in services such as health care, mental health and policing. The York University researcher likened the homelessness crisis to a disaster such as the raging Okanagan forest fires which pushed 45,000 residents from their homes in 2003. But the difference, he said, is that few would tolerate a failure to solve the housing loss after 10 years, yet homelessness persists. “We’re not denying there will always be crises that push people out of their homes,” he said. “The problem of homelessness is that we keep people mired in that problem year after year. “Imagine going back to Kelowna today and there still being people living in hockey rinks. You’d think, ‘Wow, we’ve done something wrong!’ That’s how I see homelessness. We’re using the emergency shelter system, which was only designed for emergencies, and it’s become permanent housing for people who are homeless. It’s inhumane.” A Housing First approach That’s why one of the report’s key recommendations is to expand the Housing First approach, which has been tested successfully in Vancouver, Gaetz said. Such a strategy has proven successful, because when an at-risk person “touches the system” — for instance, by accessing an emergency shelter, being released from hospital, or interacting with police — the whole system responds, rather 76 than having that person just move from shelter to shelter, he said. Housing First’s integrated systems can work in any community, Gaetz argued. “If you take most chronic, hardcore homeless person with complex issues, and give them housing and the supports they need — there’s an investment there — then their health improves, as well as their engagement with the community. That’s a strategy we know works… but it needs to be scaled up and accompanied by investment in expanding the affordable housing supply.” Richter agreed that the solution to homelessness will take greater investment from all levels of government, but explained his report’s ultimate recommendation in surprisingly simple terms: “Housing cures homelessness,” he quipped. “At the end of the day, we’re not going to get anywhere without significant new investment in market rental housing and social housing,” he added. “There is a fairly serious housing crisis in our country. The economics show it doesn’t make financial sense for our country to ignore that problem.” going deeper: in-depth series on housing hot zones A Long Way from Home for BC Refugees Jackie Wong examines some of the unique challenges facing an often-overlooked community: refugees who have fled violence in other countries, and now struggle to secure a better life in Canada. . going deeper: in-depth series on housing hot zones Safer from Violence, Still Seeking a Home Secure shelter is hard to find for BC refugees. By Jackie Wong The sunny sidewalks of south Fraser Street in Vancouver are full of the casual energy brought out by blue skies and a long weekend. It’s Good Friday. People crowd the produce markets, pack the bus stops and fill patios to toast four days off work. To one young man browsing a produce stand for Red Delicious apples, bananas and mango juice, the statutory holiday means little. Delawar, 27, (he asked that his last name be withheld) is about ready to give up on his hopes of making a new home for himself in Vancouver. His groceries bagged, he takes a side street to the basement apartment he shares with his roommate Qudratullah, 23, (who likewise wished his last name be held). Unlike others their age in the neighbourhood, these guys don’t have big Friday night plans. Indeed, after a year spent fruitlessly looking for work, the days have a way of bleeding into each other. Both are former translators for the Canadian military in Afghanistan, brought here by the federal government to start a new life safe from reprisals. But the better life has proven elusive in Vancouver. Work is non-existent, shelter unaffordable. Esther Mang, left, and her son, David. An older son still lives in Myanmar, which Mang was forced to flee on foot. Photo by Jackie Wong. Delawar is not alone in his predicament. Poverty and the constant threat of being put out onto the street dominate the lives of refugees like him in Metro Vancouver, according to a 2011 Metropolis BC report. The study of precarious housing and hidden homelessness among new Canadians suggests that many refugees suffer from low incomes and lack strategies or resources to advocate for help. As a result, those trying Finding Home: Affordable Housing Solutions for Greater Vancouver and B.C. to put down new roots in Vancouver are often forced into substandard, overcrowded and unaffordable housing, and are at the elevated risk of losing their shelter entirely. Now close to running out of money, Delawar has decided to move on. On Monday he’ll move to Calgary, a place he’s never seen. “I don’t know what will happen there,” Delawar says. “I’ll try first to find work as a mechanic. Some of my friends living in Calgary think there’s a lot of jobs [there], so that’s why I’m moving. Because we are new here in B.C., there are no jobs for us.” 79 Facing a bleak future in his own country, he willingly accepted the Canadian government’s offer of refuge, arriving in Vancouver with hope that his varied experience and knowledge of English would quickly land him a job and put a roof over his head. The federal government provides refugees it sponsors with transition assistance. Under the federal Resettlement Assistance Program (RAP), refugees like Delawar and Qudratullah receive monthly cheques scaled to provincial social assistance rates. The benefit ends when they find work, or after a year. Resettlement assistance, for a while Vancouver is a city built by immigrants, and Canada has offered a safe haven to refugees ever since 1776. The federal government brought Delawar and Qudratullah to Canada in 2012, designating them under the Convention Refugees Abroad Class as government-assisted refugees: people forced to flee their home countries to escape persecution, war or severe human rights abuses. The class constitutes the majority of refugees entering Canada, some 14,500 people a year (see table below). Many have extensive skilled experience. In addition to working as a translator in Kandahar for the Canadian Forces, Delawar is a trained electrical mechanic who worked with the American Special Forces, and in his early twenties was a sergeant in the Afghan National Army. B.C. receives approximately 2,000 refugees each year. The majority are government-assisted refugees. Source: ISSBC. Between April 2012 and April 2013, Delawar received $720 a month under RAP. He paid $400 of it for his share of a twobedroom basement apartment — a portion of his income Finding Home: Affordable Housing Solutions for Greater Vancouver and B.C. considered unaffordable by the standards of BC Housing and the Canada Mortgage and Housing Corporation. Both agencies consider housing beyond affordable reach if it requires more than 30 per cent of one’s income to secure. Even though Delawar’s suite at $800 was near the bottom of Vancouver private market rental rates for two bedrooms, it nonetheless gobbled up over half — 55 per cent — of his monthly stipend. Qudratullah, who came to Canada with his older friend, worries about how he’ll cover all the rent before he finds a new roommate. But he understands why Delawar has to go. As a place to live, he says, Vancouver “is too expensive. We don’t know why they brought us here.” That decision was made by Citizenship and Immigration Canada, which chooses where to place government-assisted refugees based on their work experience, language community, and the local availability of settlement services. Qudratullah is fluent in multiple languages –Afghani, Pashto, Farsi, Urdu, Punjabi, English — has taken business administration and computer classes, and most recently worked alongside Delawar translating for Canadian soldiers on foot patrol. In Vancouver, he says, “I gave [out] more than 100 CVs. I didn’t receive one call from anyone.” If Delawar has luck finding work in Calgary, Qudratullah will follow him. “If he says Calgary is good for work, then I will also move,” he says. “We can’t stay here. We have to work.” 80 Harder for families In leaving Vancouver for better prospects in Calgary, Delawar is following the lead of countless earlier generations of enterprising new Canadians who kept moving until they struck opportunity. But what is feasible for a young single man is less so for a family. Esther Mang, now 38, and her husband Lianawr, 43, fled separately in 2006 from their homes in Myanmar, a country of one of the longest standing military dictatorships in the world. Myanmar’s army had conscripted Lianawr. When he refused to carry out some of its barbaric orders, he was tortured before managing to flee, eventually reaching India. When soldiers sought Lianawr at the couple’s home, Esther also fled, escaping overland on foot to India. By good fortune the pair met up again in New Delhi, where Lianawr found employment in a radio factory and Esther as a translator for the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees. The work brought her into contact with Canadian officials before gaining acceptance for the family as government-assisted refugees in Canada. The Mangs arrived in Canada in late 2011 with their infant son, David. Resettlement Assistance Program workers greeted them at Vancouver International Airport and took them to Welcome House — a transitional housing facility downtown operated by the Immigrant Services Society of BC (ISSBC). The government-funded agency provides an array of services to help over 30,000 immigrant clients a year find a Finding Home: Affordable Housing Solutions for Greater Vancouver and B.C. footing in their new country. But beyond offering temporary accommodation at Welcome House, only one ISSBC staff position among 365 employees is funded to provide housing search assistance specifically to government-assisted refugees. The Mang family managed to rent a one-bedroom apartment for $850 a month, but it took more than two-thirds of the $1,218.75 they were receiving through RAP at that time. After moving three times, they now pay $800 a month for a small one-bedroom apartment off Kingsway in East Vancouver. All three sleep in the suite’s single tiny bedroom, a situation that won’t be feasible as David, now three, grows up. Stress is ‘difficult to overstate’ Their crowded situation is a common experience for refugee families. The 2011 Metropolis BC study of such families in Metro Vancouver showed that most living on federal RAP assistance were sleeping an average of two people per bedroom. Overcrowding, the study’s authors wrote, is just one consequence of incomes too low to afford larger dwellings. Other factors include restricted access to subsidized housing, lack of knowledge about the regional rental market, language barriers, and vulnerability to abuse from landlords. They added: “It is difficult to overstate the significance of the stress experienced by [refugee] focus group participants due to the challenges they face in the housing market.” 81 UBC geographer and Metropolis BC report co-author Daniel Hiebert has studied newcomers’ experience with housing for years. He describes “a mismatch between lived experience and the way settlement services are funded,” that results in many newcomers failing to achieve the integration into Canadian society that the federal government cites as its top priority. Hiebert considers shelter a critical requirement for new settlers. But instead of helping refugees secure housing, he says that service organizations like ISSBC focus too much on “how Canadian society works. It’s oriented towards getting people prepared for language instruction and ultimately citizenship instruction, making sure people get the wherewithal to get a job.” “Housing,” he says, “is a side issue.” ISSBC staffers are well aware of the housing gaps that exist for newcomers. They’re peddling hard, says ISSBC settlement services director Chris Friesen, to stretch their limited resources to better serve the organization’s clientele. “What we’re trying to do, and the populations we’re working with — for example, refugee claimants — are not deemed a priority by the federal government,” Friesen observes. “They’re not interested in providing the housing for that population. So we get caught, we fall between the [funding] cracks because of the population we’ve identified and prioritized.” Nonetheless, the Immigrant Services Society is expanding one of its resources. A new Welcome House centre is being built in Grandview-Woodland. Some 200 beds will take Finding Home: Affordable Housing Solutions for Greater Vancouver and B.C. the place of the 80 beds currently downtown to address the immediate housing needs of refugee and immigrant newcomers. Accommodation will be configured to serve both singles and families for stays as short as two weeks and as long as a year. The new regional shelter and service hub for refugees and other newcomers is expected to open in 2015. (We’ll explore the new Welcome House in more detail in the final installment of this series.) Small victories, lingering regrets In the meantime, there are small victories to be celebrated. Since their RAP support ended last December, the Mang family has become self-supporting. Lianawr makes $1,900 a month working construction — although 42 per cent of that goes to rent, still an “unaffordable” level of expenditure, according to the Canada Mortgage and Housing Corporation and BC Housing. Esther has more professional qualifications than her husband — she was a teacher in Myanmar — but has had more trouble finding employment. A teacher’s salary would bring in at least $38,894 — but certification in B.C. would require her to upgrade her education, a luxury she can’t afford. Instead, she works as a Burmese translator at the Mount Pleasant Family Centre. She enjoys it, but the $16 an hour she earns for sporadic on-call shifts doesn’t amount to much. Watching David, now three, show off his muscle-man poses and ninja moves on an abandoned couch outside their 82 apartment, Esther thinks about her older son. He was seven when she was forced to leave him with her older sister in Myanmar because he was too little to keep pace with Esther as she escaped. He’s now almost 12. Few of her neighbours know much about Esther’s life. Compared to Myanmar or India, she finds her new home terribly quiet, and Canadian society peculiar in its reserve. “In Asian countries, we visit each other, we share our problems, we talk about our experiences,” she says. “Here, it’s quite different. No chit-chat, nothing.” On another afternoon, Delawar and Qudratullah’s basement apartment darkens as the day wanes. Delawar opens his laptop to look at pictures taken a year earlier in Kandahar. There are shots of the two friends wearing Canadian military fatigues, flak jackets dusty with sand. Some show spectacular expanses of desert. Then come pictures of the two mugging for the camera with friends, green bottles of beer in hand. Each photo is looked at for a long time, Delawar explaining each one in detail. The slideshow ends on a formal studio portrait of a woman in her mid-twenties with dark eyes, pretty long hair and fuchsia lipstick. He quickly minimizes the screen. There’s nothing else to say. Relying on luck The Resettlement Assistance Program counts on government-assisted newcomers to Canada to become employed, financially self-sufficient and stably housed within Finding Home: Affordable Housing Solutions for Greater Vancouver and B.C. the course of a year — for many that means learning a new language while fresh from the traumas that forced them to flee their homes. Those who reach Canada on their own, relying on this country’s historically open arms to recognize their claim to be refugees from an intolerable homeland, can expect even less. Citizenship and Immigration Canada is emphatic that “the Government of Canada does not provide shelter for refugee claimants in Canada,” as a spokesperson wrote in an email in response to a question about newcomers struggling to afford housing in the private rental market. They should lean on the provincial, not the federal government for aid, the email added. With Delawar departing for Calgary, Qudratullah checked out provincial social assistance — and was shocked at the $610 monthly rate for employable singles. Instead, he’s doubling up on his search for work. He says he’s grateful for the help he has received so far, worried about his future prospects, but also optimistic. “In Islam, we call it luck,” he says. “If luck is not with you now, it’s going to be okay one day.” Canada may be a safer home for Delawar, Qudratullah and the Mang family than the troubled countries they have left behind. But while this country may happily be free of violence, abuse or intimidation, the haven it provides still stops far short of secure, affordable or sufficient shelter for many. 83 going deeper: in-depth series on housing hot zones Bonded by Shared Horrors, Refugees Find Housing Solutions An exceptional Achehnese community in BC works towards prosperity. By Jackie Wong In an alley behind a run-down noodle shop off Kingsway in East Vancouver, a group of men in T-shirts, jeans, and flip-flops stands smoking, laughing, and talking among parked cars. A piece of hand-painted plywood mounted high on the garage door behind them displays the name of the group, the Achehnese Canadian Community Society. Its members comprise Canada’s first generation of newcomers from Acheh Province, Indonesia, a troubled, violent region on the northern tip of the island of Sumatra, west of Malaysia. The 15 or so men gathered in the alley are relatively young. Most are in their mid-thirties, part of approximately 200 families from Acheh province living in Metro Vancouver. About 60 of those families contribute $20 a month each to help pay rent for the Community Society’s basement meeting space, which features a large common room for Muslim faith practices, and for sitting together in wide circles to socialize and share information. Most importantly, they come here to support one another. They have all lived through unspeakable events that forced them out of their home country. Now they grapple with new challenges. Chief among them are the gaps between the incomes they earn, mostly in the construction or food-service industry, and how much it costs to put a roof over their heads — even at the bottom end of the rental market. Abdul Andib, right with friends Muhazier Bahrum, left, and Faisal Aminsyah, centre, at the Achehnese Canadian Community Society hall make a “wish-list” for collective action in 2013. Photo by Jackie Wong. Their housing and income struggles are similar to other refugees in the Lower Mainland, who commonly struggle with poverty, low incomes, and precarious or substandard housing. But few other refugees share the unique solidarity of the Achehnese community. Finding Home: Affordable Housing Solutions for Greater Vancouver and B.C. The people mingling at the Community Society today are among thousands of Achehnese who fled their home province in 2003. In May that year, after eleventh-hour negotiations over demands for local independence failed, some 50,000 Indonesian soldiers and police imposed martial law in Acheh, launching a large-scale crackdown on members or supporters of the separatist Free Acheh Movement, known in Indonesia as Gerakan Acheh Merdeka, or GAM. Indonesian forces routinely singled out young Achehnese men on suspicion that they were among GAM’s estimated 5,000 armed members or supporters. Suspects were beaten, arbitrarily detained, forced to disappear, or killed. If men failed to cooperate, the military went after their families. Abdul Halim Andib describes his country at the time as a “war zone” where it soon became impossible to live. He fled by boat across the busy Malacca Strait to nearby Malaysia. But the refuge it offered was scant. “There’s no government,” is how Andib puts it. What Malaysia’s government lacks is a system to receive or protect asylum seekers. Among the lucky ones, Andib found shelter in a refugee camp. Other Achehnese in Malaysia were less fortunate. They faced police extortion and extreme poverty. Some were even deported back to the violent conflict they had risked their lives to escape. 85 A Canadian welcome Acknowledging the unbearable situation for Achehnese refugees in Malaysia, the federal government, at the time under Liberal Party of Canada political management, stepped in. “Canadian Immigration supported us from the UNHCR [United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees] in Malaysia,” recalls Safrizal Dulysah. He and Andib both reached Vancouver in June 2004; they were 25. “Usually, the men or the husbands were in refugee camps in Malaysia, so we came here first,” Dulysah, now 34, adds. “Then, we supported our wives and some kids. They came here after that.” The Canadian federal government supported families fleeing Acheh as landed immigrants, not as refugees. They received permanent residency as soon as they arrived. As is the custom for other government-assisted refugees, they spent their first two weeks in Canada at the Immigrant Services Society of BC’s Welcome House in downtown Vancouver. “They gave single men $500 welfare for rent, but a family, maybe more,” Dulysah recalls. “Enough for rent and food.” Armed with the barest essentials, the Achehnese worked steadily to rebuild their lives in Canada. They searched for jobs. They studied English and became fluent speakers. They rented what apartments they could afford to accommodate their growing families. Finding Home: Affordable Housing Solutions for Greater Vancouver and B.C. Nine years later, Dulysah is the father of three children and works as a finishing carpenter. He pays $1,100 a month for a two-bedroom apartment in Burnaby for his five-person family. Their success, community members say, comes from the fact that they have each other. Early on, the men and women who fled Acheh’s violent divisions took steps to keep connected and support each other, even when prohibitive housing costs forced them to live in far-flung spots across the Lower Mainland. “As soon as we came here, we thought we might need to stay together, so we decided to rent Father of three Dulysah: “Right a place,” Andib says, explaining now, it’s very hard to pay rent.” the origins of the East Vancouver gathering space. “Because we are Muslim, we needed a place to gather together.” Only a year after most had arrived, the group registered the Achehnese Canadian Community Society with the provincial government in 2005. Approaching their tenth anniversary in Canada next year, the community has much to be proud of in addition to its modest meeting hall. All its members have learned English. They’re employed and self-supporting. They don’t make use of income assistance from the provincial government. 86 ‘They won’t cry for help’ But the Achehnese community’s record of steadfast mutual support of one another is exceptional. “There’s a popular myth that in newcomer communities, everybody takes care of everyone. I hear that all the time,” says Stephen Gaetz, director of the Canadian Homelessness Research Network (CHRN) and an associate dean of York University’s education faculty. Behind the popular ideas that ethnic immigrant communities take care of themselves, he says, is the harsher reality that people of all backgrounds face setbacks, job loss, financial difficulty — and struggle to keep a roof over their head. “Newcomer homelessness is a very complicated and important issue,” Gaetz says. “It’s not all hugs. Issues around settlement, and the breakdowns that can happen: breakdowns with refugees, breakdowns in families, moving with family, reunification, things like that can happen.” A 2005 study for the National Secretariat on Homelessness, conducted by MOSAIC, a settlement services agency, and the UBC geography department, examined relative and absolute homelessness among immigrants, refugees, and refugee claimants in Greater Vancouver. It found that newcomers’ success in finding housing relies heavily on the social capital of ethnic or cultural communities that already reside here. The youthful Achehnese community, determined to stick together, built their own social capital. Finding Home: Affordable Housing Solutions for Greater Vancouver and B.C. “Something that I really appreciate about the Achehnese community is the way that they come together, [to] make decisions as a community,” says Byron Cruz, a Downtown Eastside healthcare worker who has been working with the Achehnese community since its members arrived in 2004. But while it has unity on its side, the community still faces significant challenges, Cruz says. “Despite the fact they are not on social assistance, and they are working so hard, housing is an issue for them. For a hardworking person in the construction industry, they have a hard time paying the rent.” And not every refugee has a ready-made community of people from their home country to buffer their landing in Canada. “While established ethno-cultural communities may have the ability to ‘take care of their own,’” MOSAIC found, “Other groups who lack extensive social networks, including recently arrived individuals and refugee claimants, may fall through the cracks.” Even for those with support, success is relative. “The extent of relative and absolute homelessness among immigrants, refugees, and refugee claimants is less than would be expected given the income levels of these groups,” the MOSAIC report reads. “This is not to say that the delineated groups are well housed.” Social networks may keep newcomers off the street, but the alternative for many is to live in crowded, often substandard homes, with family members double-bunking in living rooms in what small spaces they can afford. 87 Sherman Chan was the principal investigator on that 2005 report. In his view, refugees will continue to be poorly sheltered until people start speaking out. But the settlement services director of MOSAIC says that outcry won’t come from refugee communities themselves, even those who are struggling. “They won’t cry for help,” Chan says. “It’s unlikely they will do anything big to voice their concerns or to really deal with the issues that they are suffering from,” he says. “I think that’s always the challenge, in terms of becoming more visible and voicing out the concerns, pushing the policy makers.” As Chan sees it, policy makers are “paying more attention to the aboriginal homelessness issue, the youth homelessness issue, seniors’ homelessness issues, [and] mental health, because they are more visible. “Many of the ethnic communities, they tend to accommodate themselves, couch-surfing, or they’ll stay with somebody’s family for a while and then move to another one, or they may be housing in a really overcrowded environment,” Chan says. “So they are not coming out.” Aiming higher The Achehnese community is exceptional in that as well. Proud of its achievements to date, the group is eager to aim higher. Finding Home: Affordable Housing Solutions for Greater Vancouver and B.C. “When we started working, we got paid very low [sic],” says Dulysah. “We started from $10 without experience and without English.” He improved his own circumstances slowly over time, forcing himself to study English in the evenings after work, finding new work through his community of friends. But while everyone’s found some sort of shelter in the private market, Achehnese families are scattered in various configurations across Burnaby, Surrey, and East Vancouver. Many struggle with affordability and inadequate space. Andib, like Dulysah a finishing carpenter, makes $3,000 a month. He lives in Surrey with his wife and two children, sharing a one-bedroom apartment that rents for $850 — just barely affordable by national standards that dictate shelter should consume no more than 30 per cent of one’s income. “Right now,” Dulysah volunteers, “it’s very hard to pay rent.” He wants something better that he can rely on. The same is true for others in the group. Once again, they’ve come together through the Achehnese Canadian Community Society, this time to draft a community “wish-list” for 2013. Exploring alternative housing possibilities is high on the list. There are as yet no concrete plans for how to proceed, but Dulysah says some ideas have been floated already. “What we want,” Dulysah says, “is a place for the community [to gather] and a co-op building or rent-to-own for life.” The dream is for Achehnese families to live in the same co-operative housing complex, or another such affordable, community-oriented space they co-own or rent to own. Ideally, 88 there would be enough room for the kids as they grow up, as many Achehnese children are now double- or triple-bunking with siblings or parents in small apartments. Most importantly, secure long-term, affordable housing would free the group’s energies to pursue ambitions that extend beyond housing innovations. They want to build a social enterprise, for example, where those employed as carpenters donate their skills to the community at large. With characteristic solidarity, the community’s 2013 wish-list also includes doing more for parents, siblings and cousins left behind in Acheh. For the many who did not flee, a destructive tsunami on Boxing Day, 2004, added homelessness to the existing miseries of the troubled region. Like many others, Andib’s small budget for shelter and other household expenses in Canada is stretched further by the amounts he regularly sends back to family in Acheh province. “I’m really proud that we have come together,” Andib says. He looks around at his friends, who nod. “We have close friendships, and we have stayed together.” It’s a good bet the same spirit will find a way to secure affordable housing too. going deeper: in-depth series on housing hot zones Fleeing Danger, Refugee ShelterSeekers Find Exploitation One Victoria non-profit's efforts to assist vulnerable renters offers hope. By Jackie Wong Amelia’s family was large and influential in the West Asian country where she grew up. That brought her the opportunity, rare for a woman in the Arab nation, to study medicine. (Fearing for her safety, she asked not to reveal her real name or home country.) Although not a doctor, she was still the woman whom friends and relatives would call during their final moments of pregnancy. “I helped them give birth,” she says. Now 48, she adds, two generations of children “were born in my hands.” Her friendships with women, particularly those who accomplished the extraordinary feat of going to medical school, felt deliciously radical, Amelia recalls. All of her life, both men and women told her she was stupid, shameful and worthless, she says: “The female is not a respected person in our society, even if she is a doctor or a professor.” Brothers and male cousins abused her physically, emotionally and financially for decades, Amelia says. When she went against their wishes, she adds, they would admit her to a psychiatric hospital. There she met other women similarly confined: in one stay, she encountered a gynaecologist whose son had admitted her under similar circumstances. The sunny view from Victoria’s Immigrant and Refugee Society. It’s hard to find shelter without basics like ID or the word for ‘tenant.’ Photo by Jackie Wong. Amelia’s last confinement in a mental institution became the first step in her escape plan. A monthly pension provided her with some cash that her hospitalization allowed her to save, along with the passport she had acquired and hidden from prying family members. She also found help. Finding Home: Affordable Housing Solutions for Greater Vancouver and B.C. “The nurses there, they were feeling sympathy towards me,” she says. When her release date arrived, one persuaded a hospital driver not to take her home. “There is one hotel [in my home city] that allows females to live without [a] divorce,” Amelia says. “I told them, take me there.” As soon as she could, Amelia bought a plane ticket and fled her native country. Four months later, she presented herself at the Canadian embassy in Abu Dhabi, a desperate, fuzzy picture of Victoria, B.C. in her mind. She’d visited that faraway place with family in 1997. Others were there applying for investment visas that would give them permanent residency in Canada. But with only $5,000 to her name, Amelia was eligible only for a visitor’s visa that would let her stay in Canada for up to six months. Making a formal refugee claim, she says, didn’t enter her mind. “I told them, ‘That’s okay. I will go.’” Who’s a ‘refugee’? Although Amelia’s flight from pervasive physical maltreatment, financial exploitation and incarceration may seem the very definition of a “refugee,” in Canadian law and policy the word has a more specific and narrow meaning. Under the six-decades old U.N. Convention Relating to the Status of Refugees, Canada promises not to send people back to home countries where they may be persecuted on the basis 90 of “race, religion, nationality, membership in a particular social group or political opinion.” Gender, however, is not on the list. Other laws and agreements distinguish “migrants” — those seeking to enter Canada solely for economic advantage — from “refugees.” The federal government prefers to determine who meets its test to be considered a refugee before they come to Canada. Those who pass that test arrive as governmentassisted refugees entitled to settlement assistance and a small income during their first year in Canada. People who arrive before making a claim, totaling nearly 700 in the first third of this year, are known as “inland” refugees. They receive no assistance and are subject to different rules. Toughened up in 2012, those rules include for many the threat of detention while their claim is assessed. Amelia’s visitor’s visa and one-way ticket landed her at Vancouver International Airport on a cold November Saturday in 2012. Borrowing quarters for the payphone in the arrivals terminal, she called the only person she knew in Canada, her uncle in Victoria. He begrudgingly let her stay at his home. But he made it clear she wasn’t welcome. “From the first day I arrived in Canada, they were treating me badly,” she says. “I cried.” His family members repeatedly threatened to “teach her a lesson,” and told her she should feel sorry for leaving the happy life they were convinced she led back home, she recalls. After putting up with her extended family’s hostility and verbal abuse for three months, Amelia found a landlord’s Finding Home: Affordable Housing Solutions for Greater Vancouver and B.C. name in a magazine, called her, threw her belongings in three garbage bags and left. The landlord charged $1,000 a month for a one-bedroom apartment. Amelia was still collecting $1,500 a month in a pension from her government, but was left with only $500 for the rest of her monthly living expenses. “Maybe she thought I was a very rich woman. I don’t know,” she says of the landlord. “She treated me like a bloodsucker.” On Canada Day, Amelia moved again, this time to a suite where, by her account, a neighbour had said she could stay for free. The day she moved in, the neighbour demanded $925 a month in rent. Meanwhile, Amelia’s family back home has cut off her pension. Now running out of money as well as options for a place to live, and with her six-month visitor’s visa expired, Amelia is working with a lawyer to make an inland refugee claim. The most vulnerable renters For those like Amelia whose status in Canada is uncertain at best, exploitative landlords are a common story. Still reeling from the traumas that forced them to flee their home countries, forced into the legal margins and typically without income, social connections or knowledge of the B.C. laws that might otherwise protect them, they make ripe targets for exploitation. “Finding housing is very difficult, especially if you are not Canadian,” Amelia says. “I’ve been forced to live in places where I don’t feel comfortable. 91 “I’m new to the culture, environment, community. Everything. I need at least five years in order to [become] familiar. So during these five years, should I have to be a homeless person, or live in a house where I feel not more than 10 per cent comfortable?” A 2011 Metropolis BC report on Canadian newcomers’ housing described Amelia’s experience as common among refugees. “There is not space in this report,” its authors wrote, “to describe the many abuses residents were forced to put up with.” That certainly rings true for Carlos, 33. He and his wife have moved around Sidney four times since they arrived in B.C. as refugee claimants from Colombia six years ago. Before that, he’d been studying marketing in Connecticut, while she was working as a psychologist with poor children at risk of being recruited into violent gangs. Then Carlos got an emergency phone call from home. “[Certain] people didn’t like my wife’s job. She was taking the future workforce out of their [the gangs'] hands,” he says. “My wife’s work was to give them more choices, help them with education, help them get into trade schools.” Gang leaders threatened to kill her. So she joined Carlos in the United States, and they made their way to Canada and submitted a refugee claim. They had extended family to stay with at first, but it was important to Carlos that the couple find a space of their own. With so few choices, he remembers living in suites he knew Finding Home: Affordable Housing Solutions for Greater Vancouver and B.C. were illegal and for a while was stuck with half an entire home’s hydro bill while only occupying the basement. After a hearing before the Immigration and Refugee Board of Canada, which accepted their refugee claim, Carlos and his wife are landed immigrants now. He’s working as a janitor while taking pre-med classes at Camosun College. With her psychologist’s training, his wife is having a hard time finding work on Vancouver Island that matches her professional qualifications. She is now following some leads on working with seniors. Life is stable for Carlos and his wife now, but they are reliving the tensions of being refugee claimants through his parents. Carlos’s father worked in human rights in Colombia and fled with Carlos’s mother under threats to his life. The older couple is sleeping on their son’s couch, preparing for a refugee hearing of their own in late August. (Out of concern not to affect their chances, Carlos also asked that his name be changed for this story.) “It’s scary,” Carlos says, of the tense anticipation a claimant feels. “I’m here, but am I going to stay? You’re working. You have your apartment, your stuff, your computer, your life. But it’s a really sour feeling.” Many unaware of rights Neither Amelia nor Carlos knew that they have rights under B.C.’s residential tenancy system. That’s a common occurrence among new immigrants and other vulnerable groups — and a 92 weakness that Ready to Rent BC, a two-year-old Victoria-based non-profit, is trying to remedy with information, resources and community connections, to help both singles and families find and keep rental housing. Kim Shelley, Ready to Rent’s acting coordinator, used to facilitate rental workshops at the Victoria Immigrant and Refugee Centre Society. She found that newcomers to Canada in her workshops shared a host of similar challenges. Most faced difficulty communicating with prospective landlords, both in writing and in person. Some weren’t even familiar with the words “landlord” or “tenant,” let alone ideas like “arbitration” and “dispute resolution.” When asked for a credit history, references or a rental history in B.C., most refugees had little to provide. Ready to Rent provides a 12-hour course, based on one pioneered in Portland, Ore., to educate renters in the Capital Regional District on their rights and responsibilities and arm them with information and a renter’s portfolio to take to prospective landlords. “BC Housing takes the certificate from program grads to act as landlord references,” Shelley says. “And part of the exercise is to write a letter of explanation for any of the blanks that might be on the application form,” including explanations for why a renter might have no credit or rental history in Canada. Ready to Rent’s course might have helped Amelia and Carlos during their first days in B.C., had they known about it. “Every time we talk about a resource,” Shelley notes, people say, “‘Oh, I wish I knew about that five years ago’. One [need] Finding Home: Affordable Housing Solutions for Greater Vancouver and B.C. that stands out for me is how to get the word out before they take their first plunge into the rental market.” Company for shelter seekers Were there funds, Ready to Rent’s coordinator would like to provide one-on-one support workers to accompany vulnerable shelter-seekers in the Victoria region on their search for housing. In Vancouver, Andrew Kuipers is already providing that rare assistance. The soft-spoken and approachable recent masters in social work graduate is the settlement coordinator at Kinbrace House, a six-unit transitional housing facility for refugee claimants. He’s also taken on the mission of personally accompanying clients to apartment viewings. When their English is limited, he’ll phone prospective landlords on their behalf to set up an apartment viewing. He’ll drive the renter and family members to the apartment in his small car to walk with them through a suite. He’ll coach them on the ins-and-outs of application forms, lease agreements and damage deposits. Located on Venables Street, off Commercial Drive in East Vancouver, Kinbrace is designed to house refugee claimants for up to three months while they find their footing in Canada, get paperwork together and prepare for their hearings before the Immigration and Refugee Board. The residence charges $375 a month for a room — keyed to shelter allowance rates for a person on income assistance. Once the three months 93 is up, or they’re ready to take a swing at the private rental market, it’s one of Kuiper’s many responsibilities to help them find permanent housing. The task is increasingly difficult. “When Kinbrace started in 1998, everybody was sort of moving out to this [nearby] apartment building or that apartment building. It was easy and there were no real problems,” Kuipers says. No more. Rising rents are pricing would-be residents out of the Commercial Drive neighbourhood. “It’s way, way, too expensive, especially on income-assistance rates for a single person,” Kuipers says. The hunt for affordable housing for his clients is sending him on long drives out from East Vancouver to Surrey, New Westminster and Burnaby. Kuipers cites two other barriers his refugee clients run up against repeatedly. “The first [challenge] is somehow bringing up [that] whoever it is, is on welfare,” he says. “Once the [landlords] hear that, I think they quickly pigeonhole who this person is or what they’re about.” The second barrier, Kuipers says, stands in the way of “families with kids. Lots of landlords just don’t want kids. Especially a family of five in a two-bedroom. They think that’s too many. But that’s the money that we have to work with.” The Metropolis BC report on newcomer housing found that newcomers often felt driven to desperate measures to find suitable rental shelter, including lying to landlords and moving frequently. “These buttressing mechanisms tend to be reactive,” the report dryly noted, “and, as is the case with Finding Home: Affordable Housing Solutions for Greater Vancouver and B.C. living in overcrowded conditions to address affordability issues, do not ultimately lead to improved housing outcomes.” While it paints a bleak picture of newcomers “making do” in a rental market that provides few options, the report describes even those as increasingly precarious. Metro Vancouver’s most affordable rental housing stock is shrinking, even as the number of more expensive rentals goes up. “Although the total stock of rental housing grew by over eight thousand units between 2009 and 2010, most were in the form of investor owned condos and single-family homes,” the report reads. “Losses from the rental inventory tend to be at the bottom end of the spectrum, while new additions tend to be in the upper parts; therefore, while the rental inventory may be stable or even growing, it is shrinking at the lower end.” More than a bed Personal connections and a community were two of the things Amelia longed for most during her first few months in Canada, she confided. Had she arrived in Vancouver instead of Victoria and promptly made a refugee claim, she might have become acquainted with a supportive network of friends from the weekly community dinners and social events that Kinbrace House hosts. “We try to integrate people into systems and then connect people into meaningful, supportive relationships,” Kuipers says. 94 “This idea of welcoming people and being the first to put out your hand, it’s something I hadn’t thought about so much before working here,” he admits. “But I think a lot of people are looking to be connected. And I think as Canadians, and Vancouverites, sometimes we don’t do a really good job of this. It happens in some pockets; the Commercial Drive area is fairly good for that. But that would go a long ways in a lot of different areas.” A few blocks south of Kinbrace House, construction is slated to begin this winter on a new community resource and housing hub for refugee newcomers, at East 11th Avenue and Victoria Drive. The Immigrant Service Society of BC’s new Welcome House Centre will be the first of its kind in the world. going deeper: in-depth series on housing hot zones A Home for Refugees ‘Caught In-Between’ One-of-a-kind Welcome House centre could offer stable shelter for marginalized newcomers. By Jackie Wong The evening was warm and bright as three dozen members of the African immigrant community solemnly filed into the Dodson Hotel on East Hastings Street last Thursday. They were there to remember John “Mudi” Salilar, a dear friend whom many considered to be a hero, the “Robin Hood” of the community. It’s a perception that might have surprised those from outside his community who knew Salilar. And it reveals a reality for an unknown number of refugees who come to Canada fleeing horror, only to wind up at the very margins of their new society. For them, precarious shelter becomes both symptom and cause of a discouraging cycle. Salilar fled Liberia by boat at 18 and arrived in Canada as an undocumented refugee in 1986. He died on July 12 at 45, unable to recover from injuries sustained after people beat him up at the Balmoral Hotel last month, leaving him bleeding from the head. As his friend Jean de Dieu Hakizimana describes it, he was “kicked like a dog.” Salilar was homeless for the decades he spent in Vancouver, staying with friends, sleeping on the streets, and spending considerable time in jail — he was well known to police, and incarcerated 57 times for shoplifting. But his minor crimes belied a generous nature. He routinely stole food, alcohol, and cigarettes to give to those he felt needed it most, primarily single mothers and low-income African immigrants. Artist’s rendering of the planned Welcome House transitional shelter and centre for refugee settlement services. Refugee newcomers form a significant part of the homeless population. Photo courtesy of ISSBC /Henriquez Partners Architects. “He really [meant] a lot to people in Vancouver, Surrey, Richmond. People who are low-income [and] don’t have food, drink,” Hakizimana says. “They called him Johnny the Supplier. Anything he had, he gave away.” Finding Home: Affordable Housing Solutions for Greater Vancouver and B.C. Going from place to place on his delivery runs, Salilar attracted a strong network of people who both relied on him and loved him. He also had other ambitions. “He wanted to know how to read the newspaper and to speak English. He’d never been in school. He wanted, so bad, to go to school,” Hakizimana says. “He wanted to change his life. He was tired.” But change wasn’t easy. And sadly, it never came for Salilar. ID, driver’s license, ‘he didn’t have it’ Hakizimana, through his work as the founder of Neighborhood International, a non-profit aimed at empowering newcomer individuals, families, and communities, tried to help Salilar where he could. He got Salilar onto income assistance — for the first time in his life — in January this year. The two had met as young men in 1998, a year after Hakizimana had arrived in Canada as a refugee claimant fleeing the fallout of the Rwandan genocide. “He had no social insurance number, no identification except the papers from jail,” Hakizimana says. His friend’s lack of identifying documents, his limited language ability, and Salilar’s own reluctance to deal with government officials (itself a sign of trauma) made it especially difficult for him to find a foothold that would allow him to escape the streets. “When he [wanted] a room, they [asked] for social insurance number. He didn’t have it. They ask for driver’s 96 license, he didn’t have it. The ID all Canadians have, he didn’t have it,” Hakizimana says. “It was impossible for him.” Salilar never was formally accepted into Canada. Instead he simply stayed, an undocumented refugee. At various times in his life, he was among the visible street homeless and the more nebulous “hidden homeless”— those who aren’t sleeping on the street or in shelters but staying temporarily, sometimes precariously, with friends or family with no permanent place to call their home. Like other newcomers in his situation, he often resorted to emergency shelter, lacking the means to house himself. “For refugee claimants, of which there are upwards of 2,000 that come in to British Columbia [annually], they arrive, in many cases, essentially homeless,” says Chris Friesen, settlement services director of the Immigrant Services Society of BC (ISSBC), the province’s largest immigrant-serving agency. A ‘huge need’ The ISSBC operates a downtown Vancouver transitional housing facility called Welcome House, which has some 80 beds. The 800 to 900 government-assisted refugees coming to B.C. each year are brought to Welcome House, leaving little room for refugee claimants. “We are mandated, whether we have space or not, to find [government-assisted refugees] temporary accommodation — temporary being two-week accommodation — while we Finding Home: Affordable Housing Solutions for Greater Vancouver and B.C. support their search for longer-term rental housing,” Friesen says. That becomes harder in the waning months of the calendar year, “between mid-September and mid-December,” he says. “Because the target of government-assisted refugees is done on a calendar-year basis, often in the rush to meet the targets, we have upwards of 40 to 50 per cent of the annual target arrive in the last quarter of the calendar year. And so we often have to go to nearby hotels on temporary basis.” With government-assisted refugees getting preference, the modest, 28-year-old Welcome House facility can’t always accommodate everyone it’s designed to serve. “In the past year, there were well over 800 people — refugees without legal status — that required emergency shelter. And we were not able to meet that need,” Friesen says. “It is a huge need.” It’s a population he refers to as “uncounted homelessness,” individuals who fly under the radar of conventional homeless documentation and tallying methods, chiefly the Metro Vancouver and City of Vancouver’s homeless counts. Vancouver’s few refugee-serving agencies do keep some record of local newcomers who are either homeless or at risk of homelessness. Between 2011 and 2012, the Inland Refugee Society placed 190 newcomers into emergency housing, including hotels, shelters, private homes, or housing provided by faith groups. During that same period, Settlement Orientation Services reported 60 to 70 per cent of its clients — 590 to 689 people — needed emergency shelter because they had nowhere to live. 97 And then, in 2011 Metro Vancouver Regional Homeless Count noted in its tally — widely understood to be an undercount of the total number of homeless people in the region — that 58 homeless people surveyed described themselves as new Canadians. In that light, it is possible as many as 1,000 people a year — or half of all of those arriving in B.C. each year in search of a new and safer life — fall into the statistical gap of the uncounted, or “hidden” homeless. This is familiar information to settlement workers like Friesen. But to most everyone else, “the issue of homelessness among newcomers isn’t understood and not widely documented,” he says. “The [regional homeless] count that’s done annually doesn’t, in my opinion, do enough outreach to non-English speaking people who are homeless,” Friesen says. Among other things, non-English-speaking refugees, like Salilar, may be reluctant to participate in a survey where the language spoken is not their own. “Also, there are issues of honour, shame, vulnerability,” he adds. “Mistrust of how this information is captured and how it will be used, whether it will have any impact on their claim process if they’re refugee claimants. It’s more complex than doing a count with Canadian-born individuals.” Newcomers require more assistance than others, but relatively little is known about their housing situation, or lack thereof. “The issue of homelessness among newcomers isn’t understood and not widely documented,” Friesen says. “We’re trying to spray paint the invisible man.” Finding Home: Affordable Housing Solutions for Greater Vancouver and B.C. Shelter key to settling Previous installments of this series found that newcomers, particularly refugee claimants, are greatly helped in their settlement success if they receive some concerted assistance when it comes to finding and securing housing. The authors of 2011′s Metropolis BC study of newcomer housing experiences conclude their 132-page report with this: “maintaining suitable, adequate, and affordable housing requires more intensive assistance than simply providing ‘how to’ instructions. Therefore, just as employment resource centres have been created to assist unemployed people with finding and maintaining employment, it would be beneficial to have a housing resource centre where newcomers who are struggling in the housing market can access effective assistance over a longer time frame than settlement workers are able to provide given their limited mandate and busy schedules.” ISSBC is trying to respond. It has plans for a new and expanded Welcome House, with some 200 beds in 28 reconfigurable units to accommodate singles and families of different sizes. The ambitious scope also includes an onsite health clinic, a refugee trauma support and treatment centre, child-minding, a youth drop-in space, food bank and community kitchen, a law clinic, multilingual support staff, a teaching facility linked to local post-secondary institutions, and ISSBC’s corporate service offices. So far the agency has lined up funding toward the anticipated $24-million project from a $1-million capital grant 98 from Vancity Credit Union, equity leveraged from selling the current Welcome House location at Seymour and Drake streets downtown, pre-existing revenue transfers from all three levels of government, and donations from private foundations and individuals. The City of Vancouver gave ISSBC a 60year lease on land at 2610 Victoria Drive, in East Vancouver’s Grandview-Woodland neighbourhood near John Hendry Park, for $1 a year. Still, Friesen says, “We have a shortfall, at the moment, of between $4 and $5 million for the project,” Friesen says. “The housing component is essentially the largest shortfall area.” ISSBC has tried unsuccessfully to secure funding from both the Streetohome Foundation and BC Housing. “[Streetohome] did not see a clear match between their current priorities and our project,” Friesen says. “BC Housing has given us a small [proposal development funding, to pay some of the costs of a full formal proposal], but we have up to now been unsuccessful in obtaining a capital grant through BC Housing.” Finding Home: Affordable Housing Solutions for Greater Vancouver and B.C. 99 “We’ve really come to the conclusion that this population is so vulnerable and at-risk when they first arrive in this country that whatever we can do to bring those systems together under one roof will, undoubtedly, provide a better starting point for them as they continue and become future Canadians,” Friesen adds. Another rendering of the planned Welcome House transitional shelter and centre for refugee settlement services. Photo courtesy of ISSBC /Henriquez Partners Architects. The agency is committed to breaking ground on the project nonetheless. Construction is scheduled to begin in winter 2013. The facility is expected to open on June 20, 2015, World Refugee Day. Breaking ground The new Welcome House Centre will be the first integrated housing and service facility of its kind in the world. The aim is for it to serve people across the region, not just those in Vancouver. “The intent is that this regional facility will be a hub, with spokes going out to various other cities in the Metro Vancouver area and offices to continue to provide the support that this particular population needs, regardless of where they live,” Friesen says. If John Salilar had spent his first few nights in Canada at the new Welcome House Centre, the rest might not have been lost to the street and emergency shelters. “His life would have been different,” his friend Jean de Dieu Hakizimana says. The loss was not his alone. Whether they arrive in secret flight or under the government’s wing, refugees are following the same path taken by the rest of Canada’s settler majority, with much to contribute if they’re able to leave the fringes and fully participate in society. Salilar “was caught in between,” Hakizimana remembers. His haven in Canada from the violence of the past proved largely an illusion. “The doctor says it’s very rare to see someone 45 years old [have the physical traits of an] old man,” Hakizimana shares. But with what Salilar had experienced in his life, says his friend, “He was old.” Are Stats Glossing over Vancouver’s Housing Crisis? First set of data since long-form census axed suggest affordability progress, but others doubt. By David P. Ball The long-awaited release of 2011 National Household Survey data garnered headlines earlier this month by hinting Vancouver is not actually doing all that terribly on homeownership and affordable living. To the bafflement of some observers, the city seemed scarcely behind the rest of the country in the number of us owning our own homes. It also apparently came close in affordability to Montreal and Toronto (our sibling cities in the planner-nicknamed “MTV” trio). The data seemed a bit comforting. More than 65 per cent of Vancouverites now own their own homes. Just over one-third of households spend more than 30 per cent of their income on lodgings, the official definition of “unaffordable”; on that count it seems we’re doing better than the rest of the MTV by a couple points. So much for the outcry that Vancouver is the “most unaffordable city” in North America. Right? Well, maybe not so fast. Spend a little more time swimming in the government’s vast data stream — wading through agglomerations, divisions, subdivisions, tracts and districts (six hours of which induces a distinct sense of info-suffocation) — and questions begin to swirl in eddies. Squeezed between the sea and the neighbours, Vancouver gets more reason to consider higher density accommodation. Photo by Dan Fairchild in Your BC: The Tyee’s Photo Pool. Among the first things you learn is that to Statistics Canada, most data about Vancouver actually refer to the Census Metropolitan Area (CMA), encompassing everything from West Vancouver to Langley and all the way down to White Rock. Finding Home: Affordable Housing Solutions for Greater Vancouver and B.C. When you zoom in on the actual City of Vancouver itself, the numbers are less surprising: The majority of us (51.5 per cent) are indeed renters. The only major Canadian city with fewer homeowners per capita is Montreal — and the average rent there is massively more affordable. Tenants here fork over an average of $1,089 in rent every month, almost 50 per cent more than the fortunate renters of la belle ville. In Vancouver, nearly half of us (46 per cent) are paying more for lodging than we can afford, at least according to the official definition. But some analysts warn that even these numbers could be understating the problem. The National Housing Survey provides the first nationwide, official data to emerge since Prime Minister Stephen Harper axed the mandatory long-form census in Aug. 2010, to the chagrin of statisticians. And as with many things, the devil’s in the details. A closer look at the numbers reveals much about the state of today’s housing crisis in B.C. But it also raises the worrisome question of how political leaders can make vital policy decisions with less accurate data than ever before. ‘Not representative’ The demise of the long-form census continues to vex planners, policy wonks and researchers three years after its forced retirement. “The housing questions themselves are pretty much the same as they were on the long-form census,” explained Jerry 101 Situ, senior housing analyst with Statistics Canada, of the National Housing Survey. “But now it’s a voluntary survey. “Definitely the methodology is different from a mandatory survey to a voluntary survey. With the topic of housing, when we look at things like affordability, it does become more difficult.” In the absence of margins of error from random sampling and required responses, Statistics Canada had to invent a new indicator to reflect their incomplete data: the Global NonResponse Rate. It blends the overall percentage of no-shows with partially completed answers. Across the country, it was roughly onequarter of all recipients of the National Housing Survey, despite national advertising and selective nagging. “In addition to media campaigns to encourage Canadians to answer the survey, if a household was selected for the survey and they did not answer, there were several follow-ups,” he explained. “The follow-up was very targeted to focus on where there were large differences in characteristics, where we needed responses.” For critics, however, the elimination of the mandatory longform survey dealt an insurmountable blow to accurate data collection. “The Conservatives have changed the way we do statistics in Canada,” says Sean Antrim, executive director of the Coalition of Progressive Electors. “I have the utmost faith in the staff at StatsCan, but I have no faith in their leadership.” Finding Home: Affordable Housing Solutions for Greater Vancouver and B.C. 102 Among the consequences that could have affected the results, suggests planner and researcher Andy Yan, is the roughly one-quarter of City of Vancouver respondents who didn’t bother filling out the voluntary survey. Geller says. “There’s a very large number of illegal basement suites in Metro Vancouver,” he offered as an example. “[They] may well not be responding to such questionnaires. Yan, senior urban planner at Bing Thom Architects, speculates that among those significantly overlooked in the new survey’s data are poorer communities and those who don’t speak English — many of whom rely on services that governments provide based on the very demographic statistics that may now be failing to include them. ‘Dream’ homes just that “It’s a pretty substantial non-response rate,” said the researcher. “There are also questions about whether people have honestly responded.” “There’s an issue with certain communities being undercounted, like the renter community and those underhoused,” Yan said. “It would not be surprising if they were lower-income, with English or French not their primary language. Arguably that would affect the results of the National Household Survey.” Even Statistics Canada admits that missing responses pose “a substantial risk of non-response bias,” according to its website, and that therefore “the results are not representative of the true population.” Could the voluntary aspect of the National Housing Survey mean that certain sectors of the population are systematically less likely to fill it out than others, thus biasing the results? One individual who thinks so is architect Michael Geller. “This is based on the people who filled out the new census,” “They may not have gotten them, or they may be reluctant to fill them out when they know the suite they’re in may be illegal.” But even in its shortcomings, the survey offers some curious revelations. StatsCan’s Situ said the Metro Vancouver data show that home ownership levels are decelerating after decades of steady rise. “In Vancouver, we still see that homeownership rate is increasing, but at a much slower rate than in the past.” And a clear lesson from the survey’s first detailed look at condominiums, he added, is that whether owned or rented, condos are becoming a central source of housing here. “We now have almost a complete picture of condominiums. In Vancouver, in terms of new constructions, condominiums are now playing a very large role in terms of housing,” Situ said. Comparing Vancouver’s neighbouring cities also offers some curiosities. Those most likely to skip filling out their optional housing survey form were the wealthy of West Vancouver, with nearly a 28 per cent non-response rate. Surrey and New Westminster tied for second-highest non-response rate, at 26.5 per cent. Finding Home: Affordable Housing Solutions for Greater Vancouver and B.C. 103 Richmond residents participated in the survey with most gusto: four out of five recipients filled out and returned their forms. If Vancouver is to truly be liveable, he argues, poorer renters’ concerns need to be heard and addressed. Within the Metro region, the highest rate of home ownership appeared to be in survey-shy West Van, with only two of five households renting. As one might expect, the North Shore community also has by far the most expensive monthly housing costs, at $1,787 on average. But whether attainable or not, the dream of home ownership hasn’t died by any means. “The fact that housing is very expensive in Vancouver doesn’t mean people don’t become owner-occupiers,” says Tsur Somerville, at UBC’s Sauder School of Business. “But it does mean that they do so at higher price, for less unit, than somewhere else. When it came to the subject of the exercise, Burnaby revealed higher levels of home-ownership than Vancouver, at 63.5 per cent, but still lagged behind Calgary (72.4) and Ottawa (67.3). “I see a huge potential there,” he says. “But you have to ask the people affected how to solve them… If we started building a movement to talk to the people most affected by the crisis, and listening to their voices, we’d start moving in the direction of finding solutions to these problems.” For COPE’s Antrim, Vancouver’s majority-renter population reflects the collapse of the “ideal” late-20th century life trajectory — get a job, move up the work ladder, save for a down payment and buy a house that becomes a nest egg for your future. “Condominiums reflect a reality that people are keen to enter homeownership, even if they don’t have the resources to buy a house. Part of that is they see it as a path to eventually owning a house.” “The focus on home ownership is still built on that dream,” he argues. “[But] I know very few people who can afford to buy a home. Even those I know who own can’t even afford to maintain their homes. Most renters are just struggling to pay their rent, let alone dreaming of buying a home. In those circumstances, Antrim considers the preoccupation with home ownership a distraction from deeper issues. “We’re the most unaffordable city in North America for a reason,” Antrim says. “On the ground for renters, it’s not getting better.” By sea, by land, by air we prosper The contrast between home ownership rates and housing affordability in Vancouver and its surrounding municipalities should put a spotlight on one of the tensions currently simmering at city hall. They reflect a fact of geography not all Vancouverites seem ready to acknowledge. Surrounded on all sides by sea and other municipalities, Vancouver proper has nowhere to expand — to build the new units that might tip the supply-demand equation toward lower Finding Home: Affordable Housing Solutions for Greater Vancouver and B.C. prices — but up. And that will only happen if its residents accept greater housing density. But while many people complain about Vancouver’s expensive housing, to just as many “density is a bad word,” notes Anne Mullin, president & CEO of the Urban Development Institute (UDI), which represents Canadian developers. “But it’s an important discussion to have.” She’s alluding to neighbourhood uprisings that have blossomed across Vancouver against city hall’s efforts to boost density. Marpole residents, for instance, blocked a “thin streets” proposal to allow more houses per lot. GrandviewWoodland neighbours became incensed at the idea of high-rise towers being added to the bustling transit hub at Commercial and Broadway. “Vancouver land prices are high,” Mullin says, “but if we provided more of a diversity of housing, there’d be more opportunities.” As for the National Household Survey’s admitted weakness, urban planning researcher Andy Yan hopes the federal government will consider better public engagement and follow-up, to get the non-response rates down from their current heights. That would at least make sure civic decision-makers have all the facts before they lock in — or out — developments that will influence housing availability and cost in Vancouver for decades. 104 going deeper: in-depth series on housing hot zones Generation Rent: Two Cities, Two Directions . Beautiful, eclectic, iconic, Pacific harbour towns: the words describe both Vancouver and San Francisco. Yet the two cities have taken different directions in the treatment of renters. In 2013, Tyee Solutions Society reporter Jackie Wong visited San Francisco to see what that older but similar city could teach us. going deeper: in-depth series on housing hot zones Generation Rent: Cities of Renters While Vancouver worships homeowners, San Francisco tenants are first-class citizens. By Jackie Wong If we always want what we can’t have, Vancouver’s unwavering obsession with real estate is approaching masochism. Despite exhaustive local research and evidence to suggest home ownership is out of reach for most of us, the idea of one day owning property remains an undead, albeit unattainable, dream. Vancouver most recently tried to expand home ownership through former city councillor-turned-SFU-fellow Peter Ladner’s HomesNow initiative, an ideas competition for non-profit housing operators and developers proposing to build homes on municipal land that people earning $35,000 to $80,000 could afford to own. Ownership of their homes, Ladner argued, would strengthen neighbourhoods. “People who own tend to have more of a stake in the community,” Ladner said last month. “They’re more involved politically. They’re paying more taxes more directly. And they tend to be more active in schools and community centres and so on.” The project failed. A June 2013 report blames its demise on numerous factors. Local government refused to invest without senior government support. There was political dissent against publicly subsidizing shelter for any but the most vulnerable and impoverished. Still, HomesNow was just one of many attempts to make home ownership possible for more people by changing the way we think about real estate. And researchers will likely continue to look for ways to fine-tune the system to give more of us a shot at home ownership. Finding Home: Affordable Housing Solutions for Greater Vancouver and B.C. In the meantime, more than half of us in Vancouver — 300,000 households, 53 per cent of all the households in the city — will continue to rent. A different dream So maybe it’s time to change the dream. After all, there’s also mounting proof that purchasing a home doesn’t yield the happiness we’ve been taught to expect. People still consider owning real estate to be a “central component of happiness and a critical aspect of the American dream,” UBC psychology professor and Vancouver condo owner Elizabeth Dunn told the New York Times this summer. “But there is little research to support that.” There’s also little to suggest that every renter in Vancouver lies in a state of catlike readiness to buy real estate at the first opportunity. For one thing, almost half of all tenant households in the city can barely afford to pay the rent as it is — spending 30 per cent or more of their household income, a level considered unaffordable by the Canada Mortgage and Housing Corporation. So, what can be done to improve the lot of Vancouver’s renting majority? The current Vision Vancouver-led city council has attempted to turn the corner on the city’s accommodation crisis by announcing several affordable-housing initiatives this fall. In the last three weeks, the city approved two affordable rental projects in southeast Vancouver; approved a 107 new green building code for rental buildings; passed a milestone in approving over 1,000 new permits to build laneway houses; and extended the timeline for public consultation on the impacts for tenants and others of its beleaguered and controversial community plans in four neighbourhoods. As well, the City has hired a new staff officer, Muktar Latif, from the United Kingdom to work on affordable housing projects, starting this month. Motivating Vision Vancouver party Mayor Gregor Robertson may be the potential loss of voters in the next election to the further-left Coalition of Progressive Electors, whose affiliates founded the Vancouver Renters Union. Such recent steps notwithstanding, Vancouver has only lately turned its attention from seeking solutions to homelessness to addressing the much wider spectrum of citizens facing housing affordability stress, especially those making low or modest incomes who will rent for the foreseeable future. A sibling city by the Bay Not far down the coast, another city shares our stress. San Francisco is even more of a renter city than Vancouver is. Nearly two-thirds, 65 per cent, of its residents are renters. And also like Vancouver, San Francisco is a waterfront metropolis short on extra land to develop. Its natural beauty and arts communities draw professional creative workers (sound familiar?), especially those working in technology. It Finding Home: Affordable Housing Solutions for Greater Vancouver and B.C. also boasts an even more attractive-to-investors real estate market. Those parallels end however, when it comes to comparing the rental culture between the two cities. San Francisco handily eclipses Vancouver in its sophisticated, historic, and politically influential tenant advocate organizations. Its 34-year-old Rent Control and Stabilization Ordinance covers some 183,500 rental units, more than four-fifths (83 per cent) of the city’s rental stock. The ordinance puts restrictions on annual rent increases, and when and how tenants can be evicted. Controlled rents can go up by a limited amount each year; for 2013, it was 1.9 per cent. There is no cap on how much landlords of non-rentcontrolled apartments may boost the monthly charge. In B.C., by contrast, annual allowable rent increases are set at the rate of inflation (the 12-month average change in the all-items B.C. Consumer Price Index), plus two per cent — currently 3.8 per cent. That’s twice San Francisco’s allowable rent hike this year, but there is a trade-off: B.C.’s cap covers all rental housing — not just units built before June 1979, as San Francisco’s ordinance does. While Vancouver’s tenant advocates have a strong history of forming ad-hoc groups around flashpoint evictions or condo conversions, San Francisco is home to scores of continuing groups and hundreds of activists. They wield enough influence at City Hall that San Francisco mayor Ed Lee recently called a landlord to suspend the eviction of an elderly couple who had no other housing prospects. 108 A tenant identity “San Francisco has an identity as a tenant city,” says Maria Zamudio, the San Francisco housing rights organizer for Causa Justa, which promotes equality for low-income San Franciscans. “Anyone who wants to get elected — regardless of what they actually feel — when they’re out campaigning, they talk about how much they support rent control and how much they value it.” While strong bylaws and a vital renter culture give tenant citizens in San Francisco a measure of support Vancouverites can only envy, other forces, mainly economic, are challenging those protections. And in a cautionary note to Vancouver’s courtship of the tech industry, many Bay area housing advocates blame San Francisco’s recently skyrocketing noncontrolled rental rates (one-bedrooms go for about $3,023, twice the price of similar units in Vancouver) on its red-hot tech boom. Social media giant Twitter, DIY accommodations booker Airbnb, and social media for corporations service Yammer have all put down roots in the heart of San Francisco, and the city is just an hour’s drive away from Silicon Valley, home to the famously sprawling campuses of Facebook and Google. This isn’t San Francisco’s first flood of high-paid tech workers. In the dot-com boom of the 1990s — roughly from 1994 until the bubble burst in 2000 — the average rent for a two-bedroom apartment in San Francisco (including both rentcontrolled and uncontrolled stock) more than doubled, from Finding Home: Affordable Housing Solutions for Greater Vancouver and B.C. $1,274 in 1994 to $2,750 in 2000. The median price of a threebedroom house rose 70 per cent. The latest tech rush has brought a fresh influx of highly paid employees into previously working-class neighbourhoods and, to serve them, upmarket wine bars, coffee shops, and grocery stores. But affordable housing advocates say the influx of wellheeled new residents with ample budgets is pushing up rents citywide. And while 83 per cent of all rental units in the city are rent-controlled, San Francisco’s rent ordinance lacks what advocates call “vacancy control”: once a person moves out of a rent-controlled apartment, there is no legal limit on how much a landlord can raise the rent on that unit. “We have some of the strongest laws in the United States around rent control,” says Sarah Sherburn-Zimmer, an organizer with the San Francisco Housing Rights Committee. “And we are still losing.” “I’ve been doing rent control for a long, long time,” says San Francisco Rent Board executive director Delene Wolf. “I have never seen the rents like this. Now that the economy has picked up, studio apartments are renting in parts of town that nobody used to want to live in, and they’re more than my mortgage on my three-bedroom house in San Francisco. I’m talking about $2,000 studios in the Tenderloin [San Francisco's Downtown Eastside].” Landlords are doing everything they can to get tenants out so they can raise the rent. The rising cost of shelter in San Francisco is pushing middle-income earners out of the city, adds Marcia Rosen, 109 executive director of San Francisco’s National Housing Law Project. “It’s affecting the ability of the people who are teachers, nurses, bus drivers, BART [the Bay Area's transit system] workers. The NGO world and the arts world are also affected and having a hard time hanging on. “There’s a real affordability crisis for even middle-income families,” Rosen say. “We see an exodus of families. San Francisco has the lowest family rate of any major city in America. It really threatens to erode the diversity and the cultural flavour of the city.” As I’ll be reporting in the rest of this series, San Francisco’s present may be Vancouver’s future. Lucky for us, that gives us a chance to take some lessons — and warnings — from a twin city. going deeper: in-depth series on housing hot zones Generation Rent: San Francisco’s Citizen Tenants Why does San Fran's tenant majority have so much more clout than Vancouver's? By Jackie Wong Amy Farah Weiss thought she’d landed her dream home when she moved into a beautiful San Francisco apartment near the diverse, centrally-located Divisadero Corridor in 2008. “I loved it, and I loved my housemates,” the 36-year-old says. She paid $750 for her spot in the space she shared with two people. City rent control assured her, she says, that she could afford to live there for years. “If you had asked me two years ago where I was going to to be in 10 years, I would have said in that apartment,” she says. “I was thinking I was going to live in that place forever.” It turned out not to be so. Weiss butted heads with her landlord when, according to her, she tried to assert tenant rights that the landlord refused to acknowledge. Weiss was evicted, sharing a fate that’s befallen thousands of other San Francisco renters. Getting turfed from her home was heartbreaking. She’d grown attached to the place and had started to put down roots and plan her future. Forced to leave, she found herself asking: “When I rent, am I allowed to say that I belong to this neighbourhood and it belongs to me? I haven’t quite gotten that message. But if you own property, you can say that.” Amy Farah Weiss, 36, was evicted from her San Francisco apartment last year. She moved into her current home near the Divisadero Corridor, shown here, this spring. “When I rent, am I allowed to say that I belong to this neighbourhood and it belongs to me?” she asks. Photo by Jackie Wong. A double standard of citizenship between renters and property owners has been with us a long time. Early in Canada’s history, only the latter could vote (if they were also male). To this day, it’s a widely-held belief that home owners have a stronger stake in their communities than renters and therefore make better citizens. Finding Home: Affordable Housing Solutions for Greater Vancouver and B.C. 111 But that idea discounts more than half of us: the renting majority. In Vancouver it’s 53 per cent of all households. In San Francisco it’s nearly two out of three: 65 per cent of San Francisco households rent. Weiss’s goal, she says, is to engender a sense of empowerment and belonging among local renting residents that she hopes will fortify them to resist mounting pressures from investors to redevelop the neighbourhood for a wealthier demographic. Last year Weiss founded a non-profit to explore the potential power behind the citizen renter. Her group, called Neighbors Developing Divisadero (NDD), brings new and longtime residents, especially renters, together to support inclusive, enriching and sustainable development in the rapidly-changing Divisadero Corridor and several surrounding neighbourhoods including the Western Addition, North of the Panhandle and Alamo Square. From rent control, strong neighbourhoods So are renters really civic non-entities? Not if Weiss is any example. The group cares for a community garden where it holds neighbourhood events. It’s also leading a local campaign to save the Harding Theater, an historic vaudeville house reminiscent of Vancouver’s Pantages, from demolition. Weiss’s group is just one of a rich and flourishing ecology of pro-renter groups in the Bay Area. The 43-year-old San Francisco Tenant Union has two paid staff, nearly three dozen volunteer counsellors and publishes an annually updated Tenants Rights Handbook. The current edition runs to 315 pages. Not far from the union’s headquarters, in the historically working-class Mission district (reminiscent of Vancouver’s Commercial Drive), the San Francisco Housing Rights Committee provides tenant counselling services to about 5,000 low-income renters per year. Central to her message is the idea that controlled-rent tenants can be just as committed urban citizens as their mortgage-paying neighbours. They may not own their land or airspace the way title- holders do, she concedes. But tenants who live in rentcontrolled apartments have a strong extra incentive to invest in their community. Predictable, modest rent increases give a reason to stay put, Weiss argues, and social and personal investment by long-term residents — as well as financial investment — are what neighbourhoods need to thrive as inclusive spaces for everyone. For many of those fortunate San Franciscans living in one of the 183,500 rent-controlled apartments in the city — that’s 83 per cent of the city’s entire rental housing stock — it would take a major life change or an eviction to get them to leave. For some, affordable accommodation can even feel a little like a pair of golden handcuffs.”The more time I’m here, the better deal [on rent] I’m getting, so I’m going to continue staying,” Weiss says of her own experience in the new rent-controlled apartment she Finding Home: Affordable Housing Solutions for Greater Vancouver and B.C. found this spring near the Divisadero Corridor for a little over $800 a month. “Rent control ties you to a place.” 112 fleeing hostile homes and homophobic communities in the rest of America. Tommi Mecca has rented in the Castro for the 21 years he’s lived in San Francisco. He came here from Philadelphia at 42, reeling from the loss of both parents within a year of each other and on the heels of a decade burdened by the deaths of most of his friends from AIDS. Like other gay men who lived through the AIDS crisis, Mecca was traumatized by his own survival. “I came through the epidemic [HIV] negative,” he says. “That’s a thing I was feeling a lot of guilt about.” Moving to the Castro was transformative and healing. A minimum-wage job at a bookstore easily covered his share of the controlled rent in a two-bedroom apartment, and left him time to volunteer in the housing justice movement. Amy Farah Weiss pays about $800 for a room in a Victorian home she shares with eight people. Since the house was built before 1979, it is covered by San Francisco’s Rent Control and Stabilization Ordinance. That means rents can only go up a certain amount every year. For 2013, it’s 1.9 per cent. Photo by Jackie Wong. The Castro is an iconic San Francisco neighbourhood about 10 blocks south of where Weiss lives. It’s also been one of the most prominent sites of gay activism in the United States, amassing political influence due in large part to its affordable rents that became a magnet for gay and transgender youth “It was a neighbourhood that was so alive with everything, not just the activism, but life — celebrating life and being alive,” he remembers. “And having a freedom. You could live cheap.” Affordable living was central to the political vitality of the Castro of the past, Mecca says. Protection under rent control meant landlords were limited in how much they could raise rents each year (for 2013, it’s 1.9 per cent). Now that’s disappearing, as dwellings are removed from the coverage of San Francisco’s Rent Control and Stabilization Ordinance. “The people moving into the Castro today are very upscale. The rents are among the highest in the city,” he says. “People with AIDS are being pushed out of their long-term apartments left and right.” Finding Home: Affordable Housing Solutions for Greater Vancouver and B.C. Mecca is 62 now, and still living in the same apartment. Even though his minimum-wage bookstore days are behind him and he’s got a steady job as counselling director at the San Francisco Housing Rights Committee, Mecca says he can’t afford to retire. Nor can he afford to move out of his apartment. Thanks to two decades of controlled rent, he still only pays $566 a month for a shared two-bedroom. He’s well aware that he couldn’t afford the going market rents in the Castro. “My apartment’s worth about $3,000 [a month] now. It’s absolutely immoral,” he says. 113 Some landlords leaving their jobs under the Ellis Act sell their former buildings to real estate developers, and both parties turn a profit. Tenant advocates like Gullicksen point to the Act as a primary culprit for depleting San Francisco’s stock of affordable, rent-controlled housing. For some, nowhere else to go Tommi Mecca, 62, lives in a rent-controlled apartment in San Francisco’s Castro neighbourhood. He pays $566 a month and works as a housing counselling director. “I grew up at a time where working-class people could retire,” he says. “I can’t have a retirement.” Photo by Jackie Wong. Immoral or not, the growing gap between the income a property can return to its owner under rent-control versus the open market is the powerful force behind a wave of conversions that have taken apartments out from under rent control. Mass evictions conducted using the Ellis Act, a California state law, have tripled since the start of this year, according to the San Francisco Tenants Union’s Ted Gullicksen. “There’s no defence to it whatsoever. It’s very effective,” Gullicksen says. The Ellis Act allows landlords to get out of the landlord business by evicting all tenants from their building. Six kilometres northeast of the Castro, the lively hum of restaurant patios lining fashionable Nob Hill’s Polk Street stops abruptly at the corner of Jackson Street. The quiet bulk of a Chinese Community Church punctuates a nondescript residential block. Here, 73-year-old Gum Gee Lee lives in a rent-controlled two-bedroom up a narrow flight of stairs across the street from the church. It’s the only home she’s known since immigrating to the United States with her family from China in 1979, the same year the Rent Control Ordinance came into effect. She raised seven children in the cramped space, working at different times as a seamstress, dishwasher and caregiver, while her husband worked in restaurants and later as a cleaner at the Marriott Hotel downtown. “It was ample space for us all. I considered myself very fortunate,” she says in Cantonese. “I was always very happy here.” Now the couple shares the rooms with their last daughter at home, a 48-year-old with a developmental disability. Finding Home: Affordable Housing Solutions for Greater Vancouver and B.C. 114 has lived in a place for a year or more is supposed to receive $5,153 — half on the event of eviction notice, half when they move out. Seniors and people with disabilities are entitled to another $3,436 each. Eviction orders also have to give tenants at least 120 days’ notice, with senior and disabled tenants getting a full year’s warning. By contrast, tenants being lawfully evicted in British Columbia are entitled to compensation of one month’s rent. In Vancouver, that could amount to $1,200 to $1,500 for a typical one-bedroom apartment, about a fifth of what renters in San Francisco receive for relocating. Gum Gee Lee, 73, raised seven children in this two-bedroom Nob Hill apartment. Photo by Jackie Wong. When the family moved in 34 years ago, they paid about $325 a month for their apartment. Earlier this year, they were still paying only $778, a fraction of the $2,800 a month that a onebedroom in the centrally-located neighbourhood fetches on the open market today. But Lee’s days in the apartment are numbered. A year ago she received an eviction notice: her building’s owner sold the building for $1.2 million to a condominium developer. The former landlord stepped out of the residential rental market altogether which, under the Ellis Act, allowed him to evict all tenants. On Sept. 25, the Lees were ordered to leave their home of three decades. Benefits somewhat soften the blow. Tenants evicted under the Ellis Act are entitled to relocation payments: a renter who Despite San Francisco’s comparatively generous support and year-long advance notice, by the end of last month the Lees had overstayed their tenancy and faced forcible removal from the apartment. At that point, the city’s large and influential tenant advocacy community swung into action. About a hundred people attended an all-day demonstration at the family’s apartment, which attracted local and national media coverage. San Francisco’s Mayor, Ed Lee, called the landlord on their behalf. And the Chinatown Community Development Center (CCDC) redoubled its year-long effort to find the family a new home. Lee was grateful, but not entirely optimistic. “I’ve searched so many places,” she said. CCDC housing support workers “have helped me apply for so many housing opportunities. But I haven’t been lucky. My name doesn’t get drawn in the lotteries.” Her luck may soon change. Some San Francisco supervisors (the equivalent of Vancouver city councillors) have called for Finding Home: Affordable Housing Solutions for Greater Vancouver and B.C. Ellis Act evictees to jump to the head of wait lists for citysubsidized affordable housing. 115 partly because units are being converted into condos, or they’re being brought up to market-rate rent.” A ‘backdoor’ for controlled-rent leakage San Francisco’s tenant-positive rental ordinance turns out to have a backdoor. It limits the amount the landlord of a covered building or unit may raise its rent each year. But it lacks vacancy control. That means that when a tenant, voluntarily or under inducement, moves out of a rent-controlled unit, the landlord can raise its rents to whatever the market will bear without regard for the permitted annual increase. Matthew Miller purchased several neighbouring buildings on Jackson Street in Nob Hill, a downtown San Francisco neighbourhood, for $1.2 million in 2012. The eight-unit peach-coloured building (centre) was home to workingclass immigrant families. Its former landlord used the Ellis Act, a California State law, to evict all tenants. Photo by Jackie Wong. The response to the Lees’ predicament reflects San Francisco’s vigorous tenant-support agencies, pro-tenant local politicians and large renter majority. Yet despite a civic identity built in part on tenant clout, the Lees aren’t the only San Francisco renters being pushed aside. Says Maria Zamudio, a housing rights organizer for Causa Justa, a multi-ethnic social justice organization: “Our stock of deeply affordable housing, which is rent-controlled housing stock, we’re losing it. They’re being taken off the rental market, (The same is true for Vancouver. Though all rental units in B.C. — not just some as in San Francisco — are subject to annual limits on rent increases, when a tenant vacates a unit a landlord may raise the rents as much as they wish.) Like other observers, Zamadio blames deep-pocketed techsters for luring landlords to encourage their tenants in rent-controlled units to depart. “The rental market has become so saturated by all of the people that the tech boom has brought into our city. It has been not only saturated with people, but saturated with money,” Zamudio says. “It’s not uncommon to go to an open house and have 20 people there for one two-bedroom apartment. And have half those people offer $1,000 more than the asking price, right then and there. Landlords are going to take whatever’s given to them.” Finding Home: Affordable Housing Solutions for Greater Vancouver and B.C. But, she points out, “that inflates the cost of housing overall.” Back in Amy Farah Weiss’ Divisadero apartment, the indie rock band Idiot Glee plays while she makes a banner for a friend’s birthday party. Like Mecca, she’s a non-profit worker living in relative poverty, making $1,200 a month as a patient consultant for a Vancouver-esque medical cannabis dispensary. It’s a lifestyle San Francisco has allowed her. “I’ve lived for the last five years in San Francisco [earning] at least under $20,000, and some years under $15,000,” she says. She’s yet to see a paycheque from the hundreds of hours she’s dedicated to Neighbors Developing Divisadero. “I could find a job where I was making a decent living,” Weiss says. “But I’m willing to struggle to do something I love.” 116 going deeper: in-depth series on housing hot zones Generation Rent: Urban Facelifts Serve the Well-Heeled Do nicer neighbourhoods price residents out of their homes? Third in a series. By Jackie Wong Vancouver is a self-consciously pretty city. And like a teenager counting the brush strokes through her hair in the morning, it strives daily to become even more so. Perhaps it should be careful what it wishes for. The City of Vancouver’s Greenest City 2020 Action Plan set the ambitious goal of becoming “the greenest city in the world” in just seven years. Like a personal fitness program, the effort is having secondary benefits: while expanding bike paths, food-producing gardens and composting, green initiatives are adding grace notes to the face of the city, like public gathering spaces called parklets where parking spaces used to be. Once voters elected former farmer, Happy Planet juice company entrepreneur, and avid commuter cyclist Gregor Robertson to the mayor’s chair in 2008, the 2010 Olympics shot the city down a rabbit hole of compulsive civic introspection to reassure itself that yes, Vancouver was indeed the world-class city of its own advertising. But even as it prepared for its close-up in the world’s spotlight, Vancouver worried about its poorer citizens being displaced. Remy Nelson, 33, opened the Mojo Bicycle Cafe (the storefront to the right) in 2007. His bicycle repair and coffee shop is one of many businesses catering to a new wave of residents in San Francisco’s Divisadero Corridor, named “Comeback Neighbourhood of the Year” in 2011. Photo by Jackie Wong. Those tensions didn’t deter international accolades. Vancouver celebrated its ranking in The Economist magazine’s international list of the world’s most livable cities — scaled on stability, health care, culture and environment, education, and infrastructure. But after topping the ranking’s “livability” scale for almost a decade, Vancouver recently slipped to third place. Like Finding Home: Affordable Housing Solutions for Greater Vancouver and B.C. runners-up in a beauty pageant, civic leaders and business improvement associations are now redoubling their efforts to restore livability to under-toned neighbourhoods. The two-year-old Hastings Crossing Business Improvement Association is Vancouver’s newest civic group with ambitions. Led by 33-year-old Wesley Regan, it seeks to balance the business and social interests of an area spanning the eastern fringe of upscale Yaletown and the heart of the hard-luck Downtown Eastside. One neighbourhood further east, the 12-year-old Hastings North Business Improvement Association has rebranded what used to be known as Hastings Sunrise as the new “East Village” — drawing some controversy for its effort to appropriate the cachet of the Manhattan neighbourhood of the same name. Such initiatives aren’t housing providers, but they do influence who can afford to live where. Retooling the Downtown Eastside and Hastings Sunrise, both historically working-class and immigrant neighbourhoods, to appeal to wealthier new residents can, like the lovely, eco-friendly “parklets” budding across the city, foster both a greater neighbourhood appreciation for some, while leaving others feeling pushed to the door. 118 A little bit older, deeper in redevelopment In looks, as in so much else, San Francisco is our American doppelganger city, just a little bit older and further along some of the same paths Vancouver is following. San Francisco’s Hastings Sunrise neighbourhood is the Divisadero Corridor. The historically African- and JapaneseAmerican neighbourhood is northeast of the famed bohemia of Haight-Ashbury, next to the predominantly African-American Western Addition. Until recently the Divisadero was a hotbed of crack cocaine sales and use, sex work, and associated violence. Remy Nelson, a lifelong San Franciscan and owner of the neighbourhood’s Mojo Bicycle Cafe, remembers the early 2000s, when at least once a month he heard gunshots, and every few months someone was shot down. The view of across the street from the Mojo Bicycle Cafe offers a glimpse of Divisadero Street’s blue-collar roots. Photo by Jackie Wong. Finding Home: Affordable Housing Solutions for Greater Vancouver and B.C. He remembers the summer he opened his bike repair store and coffee shop, in 2007. “Up [Divisadero Street] at the barbecue joint, guys got an automatic and went and hosed down the entire joint, the street, the cars, everything. There were bullet shells everywhere,” Nelson says. “That was one of the last [big shootings]. That was a moment when something had to happen. The supervisor [San Franciscan for city councillor] came through and demanded foot patrols. And really that changed a lot of it, having a police presence.” The movement for crime-free streets coincided with the arrival of new residents. “A largely Caucasian crowd,” as Nelson describes it, “bought property and was going to have kids and wanted to send them to school. They wanted their property values to go up. And that blight — of unemployment, people shooting each other in the middle of the day — it was kind of taking away from their money.” The Divisadero Corridor is different now. Thanks in part to a $3.4-million city-led revitalization project, “the Divis,” as new residents call it, was named 2011′s comeback neighbourhood of the year by San Francisco’s Neighborhood Empowerment Network. The now-fashionable area boasts two Tumblr blogs mainly celebrating hot restaurants on the strip, plus its own Twitter account. The streets are safer now than a decade ago. But the Divisadero’s new popularity makes it increasingly hard to hold on to for people of modest means. 119 Inevitably, rising costs The topic comes up often between Nelson and his father. Both men are landlords. The younger Nelson rents five rooms above his Mojo Bicycle Café for $400 to $1,000 a month, depending on the size of the room. His father, Joel, is a former high school teacher who now earns an income from rental properties in the area. They exchange stories of the people who rent from them — especially the recent influx of 20-somethings working in the tech industry. Nelson finds the rents some are willing to pay eye-popping. He used to live above his café too, but now rents a small, top-floor studio nearby for a rent-controlled $1,450 a month. The place is mouldy and leaky when it rains, he says. But he can do his own repairs and even remodelled the kitchen. The low rent justified the extra work. It’s “a kick-ass deal,” he boasts. “[Market] rents start at $2,300 for a one-bedroom.” Not that he begrudges landlords who charge that much. “Landlords, they’re running a business. They’re going to raise prices whenever they can, to whatever the market will bear,” he says. “If I could sell a cup of coffee for an extra $0.25, I bet I’d do it.” It’s no surprise to Nelson that rents continue to go up in San Francisco. “No one ever said it was affordable,” he says. “It was always crazy. We live in a very desirable place.” Finding Home: Affordable Housing Solutions for Greater Vancouver and B.C. 120 He’s made peace with it. But he’s also among those riding the wave of the neighbourhood’s new popularity. He knows other longtime residents are having a harder time. Other residents can’t compete with the money that tech workers can spend on accommodation, Wolf adds. “It’s just that housing happens to be a necessity.” Vancouver celebrates every opening of a new high-tech head office. Even Pixar’s recent exodus from Gastown made the news. But in San Francisco, the young, moneyed tech worker has become a gleefully-derided caricature. As the gap widens between market rents and those allowed under the city’s Rent Control and Stabilization Ordinance, incentives mount for property owners to find ways to push tenants out of rent-controlled units and re-rent them at often much higher rates. “Evictions haven’t been this crazy since the late ’90s when the last tech boom happened,” says SherburnZimmer. “I feel like the locals have been a little bit drowned out, just because there’s so many more people coming to this neighbourhood,” he says. “With a new wash of people coming in, a certain number of those are going to have higher incomes than people who currently live here. Those people are going to want to move in, to take over the apartments that are made available, and raise the rents.” “This is a 20-year-old’s town now,” says Delene Wolf, executive director of the San Francisco Rent Board. She’s talking about the scores of young tech workers renting apartments in San Francisco, commuting to work in the Silicon Valley, and congregating in the hipster enclave Mission district to party on weekends. They’ve changed the whole feel of the city, she says. “The [tech] corporations have made it possible to do it without stress and strain. The Google buses, they’ve made it [so] that you can live and play in the city and work down there [in the Valley]. But it’s not a hassle because they will pick you up and drive you back and forth and do your damn laundry.” “Prices have gone up because of the tech boom,” agrees San Francisco Housing Rights Committee organizer Sarah Sherburn-Zimmer. And that’s had a worrisome knock-on effect. Intact community On a typical Tuesday night, 27-year-old Alejandro Villarreal is at home, nursing an after-work Anchor Steam beer in the company of his housemates’ cat, Croissant. His bed is on a makeshift loft above a forest of bicycle frames, repair stands and spare tires. Soft-spoken and thoughtful, Villarreal hardly embodies the hyperspeed Aaron Sorkin character that some San Franciscans see as the tech-kid stereotype. Briefly an auto mechanic, he’s spent the bulk of his adult life working for Google, now as a program manager in the mapping department. He’s one of Wolf’s ‘Google Bus’-riders. Unless he ambitiously decides to make the 65-kilometre trip to Finding Home: Affordable Housing Solutions for Greater Vancouver and B.C. Google’s Mountain View campus on his bike, he walks three blocks to catch one of the company’s white private shuttles for the one-hour drive. He considers himself lucky to have landed a room for $1,020 in a bright, spacious rent-controlled apartment he shares with three roommates. The apartment is ideally located near Mission Dolores Park, a popular hangout for bike-loving, microbrew enthusiasts like him. 121 a building that just went up in North Mission near Market Street. They set aside a certain amount of apartments that will be affordable to people who couldn’t afford a normal unit. I would like to see that expanded,” he says. “It helps to keep the community intact while allowing for growth. I think that’s really important.” He doesn’t believe that tech workers like himself deserve the scorn widely directed at them. Besides, Villarreal adds, the technology sector includes many people who work in biotechnology, engineering, and other fields away from the high-profile stars like Google, Facebook and Twitter. “This attitude that all tech people don’t care about where they’re living, and they can just throw money at things, I don’t think it’s fair to paint everyone with that stroke,” he says. “Myself, I live above a family business, I shop there all the time, I make relationships with people around me. I frequent the same places. I care about this place.” An ideal San Francisco, Villarreal suggests, would allow people like him and his roommates to thrive alongside the family who owns the Guerrero Market and Deli on the corner. Such a reality may be increasingly difficult to achieve, however, if the city continues on its current trajectory. Alejandro Villarreal at home in his apartment. An avid cyclist, Villarreal sometimes makes the 62-kilometre commute to his job at Google’s headquarters on his bike. Photo by Jackie Wong. Comfortable as he is, Villarreal thinks often about housing inequities. He supports a city policy mandating the inclusion of affordable units in new housing developments. “There’s Everything’s for sale In the parklet in front of his Mojo Bicycle Cafe, Remy Nelson balances a cup of hot black coffee and slides into the last open spot on a shared banquette. The space is packed with Finding Home: Affordable Housing Solutions for Greater Vancouver and B.C. 30-somethings meeting friends or reclining solo with their iPhones in the late-August heat. Friendly, funny and self-assured, Nelson’s got the easy charisma of the popular kid in high school. Not surprisingly, Nelson loves it here. He’s proud of the community of artists and cyclists he helped bring together through the Mojo Bicycle Cafe. It’s certainly hard to deny that his sun-dappled parklet is preferable to the gun violence that once shattered the peace of the Divisadero. If not everyone who lived there then can afford it now, he expresses no regret. “It’s not beautiful,” he says, “but the reality is that San Francisco is becoming very much a socioeconomically divided city that’s not at all inclusive. There’s an increasing divide between black and white, rich and poor. I think it’s going to get worse. The rich will want the most desirable, and they will be able to afford it.” Unconsciously echoing a pair of young Vancouver landlords who consider their city to be a young New York in the making, Nelson considers that evolution the way of the world. “I don’t know if there’s any way to control that, stop it, change it,” he says. “Because everything’s for sale.” 122 going deeper: in-depth series on housing hot zones Generation Rent: The Secret to a Great Rental Home A visit to San Fran and my new place revealed it. By Jackie Wong “I’m moving into a really nice two-bedroom for July 1. It’s very cheap. The whole place is $1,000. Top floor, lots of light, two full-size rooms, original hardwood, and the front door fully closes! You’d be welcome to the second bedroom.” For a moment I thought I’d misread the text from my friend. Or just imagined it. Reading the message a few more times, I realized she wasn’t kidding, and I couldn’t believe it. I stared at the claw-like tangle of house keys in my lap, each one a symbol of the pity-flecked generosity of friends with extra room in their apartments. A one-two punch of life events earlier this year had left me with nowhere to live. I had thrown my belongings into a knapsack and two grocery bags and for the next 21 days couchsurfed across three neighbourhoods, pretending all the time to be a dignified professional. I spent the first few nights on a West End couch usually the domain of a charming and toothless FIV-positive cat. Then, it was a single mattress on the floor in an empty room over Victoria Drive, next to an abandoned kitchen filled with boxes of 1970s Penthouse Forum and Playboy magazines. We nicknamed that place “Widow’s Peak,” for the remarkable succession of heartbroken people who stayed there this summer. Finally, relative comfort: a tastefully appointed Yaletown office closet in which the pull-out single bed/ armchair occupied the entire surface area of the floor. San Francisco’s secret? A ‘warm’ rental landscape. Photo by Jackie Wong. Life at the time was so chaotic and, well, blackly comedic, that I couldn’t even begin thinking about the daunting search for a new apartment in expensive, low-vacancy Vancouver. Finding Home: Affordable Housing Solutions for Greater Vancouver and B.C. That Thursday afternoon, through what felt like an overdue stroke of luck, my new home found me. A walkup of one’s own I love everything about living here, from our yellow Formica countertops in the kitchen, to the stairs covered in cigarette ash down the side of the building. It’s a three-storey, nine-unit Fairview walkup. We found the place through my roommate’s old roommate, who lives downstairs and moonlights as the building manager. It’s a building where our big-hearted, salty-tongued neighbours keep the doors open when they have parties, emerging from their bedrooms in sparkly blue tights and campy blonde wigs to blow out the candles on a birthday cake. I feel deeply grateful for the rent we pay. I know it’s a terrible rarity and exquisite gift. After all, accommodation in Vancouver is notoriously unaffordable. As I’ve come to realize however, we also found a place that we both like and can afford to live because of something else that’s rare and precious: a supportive community. Both my roommate and I grew up in Vancouver suburbs. We have many deep roots and connections here, including the longtime friends who helped us find this apartment. But that’s something not everybody has. Amy Farah Weiss, a community organizer in San Francisco, noted earlier in this series that rent control ties 124 people to a neighbourhood. The longer you stay, she said, the better the deal is. A similar thing might be said about renting in Vancouver: the longer you live here and the more people you know, the easier it is to find a good spot. That’s not because housing becomes any cheaper over time. It’s because more time spent living in the city improves the chances of building a personal community that can help you find and secure a home. After investigating the rental situation in famously tenantfriendly San Francisco, and coming home to my snug thirdfloor flat in Vancouver, it seems clear to me that a supportive community is perhaps the most vital determinant of securing affordable housing in either city. Housing takes a village Earlier in this series, we met a number of San Francisco renters who have found affordable accommodation: Amy Weiss, Tommi Mecca, Remy Nelson, and Alejandro Villareal. They are all quite different people, with different lives and incomes. What allowed them to secure living spaces they could afford wasn’t incredible wealth (although Nelson is also a landlord, and Villareal a well-paid tech worker. Instead, they all possessed a strong arsenal of knowledge- and communitybased supports that help them navigate the system. San Francisco has a notoriously competitive and expensive rental market. As they do here in Vancouver, prospective tenants compete fiercely for limited spots in choice apartments. Finding Home: Affordable Housing Solutions for Greater Vancouver and B.C. Most of the renters I met were successful because they knew how to work their networks to their advantage to help them find housing. Weiss snagged her room in a Divisadero house through a coworker. Nelson wrote his now-landlord an engaging personal letter about his life history in San Francisco. Villareal is the only renter I met who found his apartment the (relatively) old-fashioned way, through a classified ad on Craigslist. But his personality and predilections sealed the deal: his enthusiasm for the SF trifecta of bikes, beards, and craft brews induced his now-housemates to offer him space ahead of a crowd of other would-be tenants. But other renters lose out: those who lack such social networks or, critically, fluency with the prevailing language, culture, and social tastes of the moment. Cantonese-speaking Mrs. Gum Gee Lee is about to be evicted from her longtime home, a rent-controlled apartment in San Francisco’s Nob Hill. With the help of local housing outreach workers, Lee has applied for a spot in publicly subsidized housing in the city. But her name hasn’t moved up on the list. Apart from that help, she doesn’t know what else to do, or where to go. She lacks the language ability to advocate for herself in English. Without San Francisco’s robust network of housing outreach and tenant support workers to help her, it’s likely she, her husband, and their developmentally-disabled daughter who lives with them, would face straits even more dire than their current precarious situation. 125 Pillars of affordable housing The kind of dedicated housing advocacy community that has swung into action on Mrs. Lee’s behalf is one of four pillars of an affordable housing system, according to Marcia Rosen and Wendy Sullivan, who last year reported on three decades of affordable housing policy in San Francisco. “The overall success of the housing system and policies employed is a result of an interaction of four key factors,” they write. Those factors are: • Dedicated community advocacy and strong coalitions. • Development of and access to substantial funding sources. • A holistic vision of building “not just housing, but communities.” • Constantly evolving housing programs that meet new challenges and opportunities. Vancouver’s municipal government is doing what it can to work on point four. But here are some ideas that San Francisco inspired for how Vancouver can start to address the other parts of the list. Idea #1: Give renters more political clout Vancouver’s tenant advocates have been trying for years to sell B.C. politicians on reform of the B.C. Residential Tenancy Act. And while high-profile moments may bring out Vancouver’s housing activists, the city lacks unified, ongoing renter representation at either the ballot box or the boardroom table. In San Francisco, the opposite is true. Finding Home: Affordable Housing Solutions for Greater Vancouver and B.C. “The political forces are very aware that we’re a force to be reckoned with. We have clout,” adds Sara Shortt, executive director of the San Francisco Housing Rights Committee. “To get votes, politicians know they’d better be on the right side of tenants. There’s a sort of ‘don’t mess with us’ kind of attitude.” Idea #2: Improve B.C.’s tenant-landlord arbitration process The San Francisco Rent Board is an agency of the city and county of San Francisco. It makes and enforces rent laws for the city. In B.C., the provincial, not municipal, government oversees rent law. Tenant-landlord disputes are arbitrated in hearings over the phone or in person at B.C.’s Residential Tenancy Branch offices in either Burnaby or Victoria. Disputeresolution officers, better known as DROs, convene the hearings. DROs have varying degrees of legal training — some are law students, others have no formal legal education. Their decision-making process and judgements have been criticised for sometimes lacking procedural fairness, transparency or accountability. Last week, the Vancouver-based Community Legal Assistance Society released a report identifying systemic problems with decision-making and enforcement at the B.C. Residential Tenancy Branch. “There are significant and ongoing [the authors' emphasis] problems with the Branch’s adjudication services at all stages 126 of the adjudication process, resulting in inconsistent and unreliable enforcement of the legislation,” write report authors and housing lawyers Jessie Hadley and Kendra Milne. “Our findings in this report are troubling and, in our view, reflect serious threats to the public’s faith in the Branch and the efficacy of current legislative protections.” San Francisco’s equivalent of B.C.’s Residential Tenancy Branch, meanwhile, is staffed by legal practitioners, not criticized by them. A team of Administrative Law Judges (called ALJs) convene tenant-landlord mediations and arbitrations in the downtown former Masonic temple where the San Francisco Rent Board is headquartered. If tenants disagree with an ALJ’s decision, they are entitled to file an appeal that goes through a mayor-appointed board of commissioners consisting of tenants, landlords, and neutral parties. They can also sue the rent board. “Rent control is a pro-tenant ordinance,” says Delene Wolf, executive director of the San Francisco Rent Board. “This is a tenant town. This city would be totally changed without rent control.” Idea #3: Help housing outreach workers expand their work Murk and mystification pervade many Vancouver conversations about housing. This city lacks the widely available tenant information, support and outreach that San Franciscans enjoy, from a detailed history of their city’s Finding Home: Affordable Housing Solutions for Greater Vancouver and B.C. changing housing policies over three-and-a-half decades, to the robust tenant organizations that serve multi-ethnic and multi-lingual communities. As a result, vulnerable renters who lack the ability to advocate for themselves risk exploitation, harassment, and are often forced to settle for sub-standard housing because it’s all they can afford. The Vancouver Renters Union was formed only last year. Its members stage housing protests at eviction sites across the city. The San Francisco Tenant Union (SFTU), on the other hand, is 43 years old with two paid staff. It operates a drop-in clinic where some 400 people receive accommodation counselling each month. “Our attitude has been that the law is not complicated at all. The law is really easy to understand, and anybody can pick it up,” says SFTU executive director Ted Gullicksen. The volunteer counselling model works at the SFTU in part because it’s based on a self-help model: counsellors strive to equip renters to help themselves. Open your doors The apartment I finally found is the first I’ve lived in where neighbours routinely enjoy each other’s company. Everywhere else, there have been nodding acquaintances at best. That’s not surprising. Vancouverites are known for their aloofness and reserve, to the point that 3,841 residents polled by the Vancouver Foundation last year 127 described the city’s most pressing local issue — worse even the lack of affordable housing — was social isolation and loneliness. To live well in a city is to feel connected to the people you share it with. Living well also means living affordably. Much as I hoped to find them, San Francisco didn’t present big-ticket policy fixes on rental affordability. But I was struck by the easy, open way people welcomed each other into their homes, whether it from necessity (renter-roommate households were often enormous by Vancouver standards, with five to eight people routinely sharing accommodations) or simply because renters are more accustomed than property owners to sharing space with others. The culture of civic engagement in San Francisco likewise takes many forms, from widespread participation in political events to the way so many people I met had a strikingly encyclopedic knowledge of the San Francisco rent ordinance. “The successful evolution of affordable housing programs in San Francisco cannot be understood by simply looking at the local codes and ordinances, policies, development requirements and restrictions separately,” Rosen and Sullivan conclude. “The whole is greater than the sum of its parts.” There’s clearly more to affordable housing than what decisions pass (or don’t) at city hall. Hopes of creating more affordable rentals in Vancouver don’t rest solely on municipal or provincial legislation, either — though a more effective and better financed Residential Tenancy Branch and more housing outreach workers would go a long way. Still, some of the most Finding Home: Affordable Housing Solutions for Greater Vancouver and B.C. effective solutions that might lead us later to larger, systemic changes may be simpler and more human than that. We just need show each other how that’s done. 128 going deeper: in-depth series on housing hot zones Infographic: Cities of Renters, Vancouver vs. San Francisco How two West Coast housing markets stack up. going deeper: in-depth series on housing hot zones going deeper: in-depth series on housing hot zones More Lower Mainland Rental Housing, but For Whom? New developments won't much help affordability without deeper system change, says planner. By Jackie Wong Jerking the portafilter onto the head of the espresso machine, Jeremy’s mind would race as he struggled to recall customers’ special requests, the high choking screech of the milk steamer like a dental drill to his brain. It’s a popular notion that minimumwage service-industry jobs like his as a barista are plentiful and easy to do, providing an employment lifeline for generations of young people. For Jeremy, however, that’s simply not true. Jeremy asked Tyee Solutions Society not to publish his real name because he feels too vulnerable to speak publicly about his experiences. The 25-year-old is smart, affable and diligent, but he struggles mightily to keep a roof over his head. Today he pays $469 a month for a small room in a waterlogged, mouldy basement suite shared with a roommate near Fraser Street and 49th Avenue in Vancouver’s Sunset neighbourhood. The rent is 52 per cent of the $906 he receives each month. The reason for Jeremy’s struggle to hold down a job is also the reason the provincial government sends him that monthly $906, the amount a single person is entitled to receive on British Columbia’s Persons with Disabilities (PWD) benefit. Jeremy became entitled to it after several mental health teams diagnosed him with Asperger syndrome, an autism spectrum disorder. The proposed Landing Post purpose-built rental tower next to the New Westminster SkyTrain station is estimated to cost $110 million. The 40-storey tower will feature 32 storeys of purpose-built studio, one-bedroom, and twobedroom units. If approved, renters could move in by 2015. Image courtesy VIA Architecture. “I have trouble with anxiety and depressive episodes. I’ve had long suicidal periods, and basically am doing better because of the PWD income and the small amount of freedom it provides,” he says. “But the amount is still inadequate.” He’s had the most success landing jobs in customer service, but struggled with the short-term memory requirements and Finding Home: Affordable Housing Solutions for Greater Vancouver and B.C. claustrophobic hustle of those jobs. He gave the barista gig his best shot, but in the end the stress was so intense that he broke down in tears in front of his boss. Humiliated, he quit. He’s now out of work, scraping by each month on $437 after paying rent with most of his PWD benefit. “This is the fundamental absurdity: [the B.C. government] gives $375 for shelter, but this is not enough for market housing anywhere in the province,” Jeremy says. “And then they put people on housing lists for years, giving them false hope.” Jeremy has lived in his current home for five years. For the last two, he’s waited on the BC Housing applicant list for a spot in subsidized housing. He joins thousands of other British Columbians on that list, and he’s rapidly giving up hope that his name will ever be drawn. Jeremy wants to go to university and earn a degree so he can work from home as a copywriter, one job he can imagine doing with happiness and peace. But he’s put off using his part-time college transfer credits (he earned a 4.18 Grade Point Average over five years) because he can’t afford to move closer to the University of British Columbia, where he would like to complete an undergraduate degree. “It’s stable yet precarious at the same time,” he says. “I can’t move if I can’t find anything more affordable.” B.C.’s private rental market is not designed to house people like Jeremy. Market landlords are in the business of providing homes to people, and they are also are in the business to make a profit. Those motivations have been made clear for 133 years by both individuals and representatives of professional associations. Even today, in the rezoning submission for a proposed purpose-built rental tower with 32 floors of residential units adjacent to the New Westminster SkyTrain Station, the architects state explicitly, several times, that the development “is intended to be market rental and not ‘social’ or ‘affordable’ housing.” The same is true of many of the new market rental units city councillor Geoff Meggs discussed in his recent Tyee editorial on what the City of Vancouver has done in encouraging more rental housing construction. “To go further, faster, all levels of government have to hear the voices of renters, loud and clear: build rental housing!” Meggs concluded. Most would agree with Meggs that it is critically important to build more rental housing. But most of the new stock being built is not the kind people like Jeremy can afford. ‘Massive’ intervention needed: planner “Housing affordability — the reasons why it’s not happening — are very deep-seated. And they’re very structural. And all you’re ever going to be able to do is toy with that larger structural machine to get housing affordability. Within the current economic system that we work in now, unfortunately, it’s very, very difficult to achieve,” says Tom Lancaster. Finding Home: Affordable Housing Solutions for Greater Vancouver and B.C. “Unless there is massive government intervention, or some third-party intervention to change the playing field, you’re going to see increasing unaffordability as opposed to heading in the direction of affordable housing.” Lancaster is an urban planner working for VIA Architecture, the progressive Vancouver architecture firm working in consultation with PWL architects to bring the New Westminster purpose-built rental tower proposal to life. The 40-storey tower, called the Landing Post, features 32 residential floors, eight storeys of above-ground parking, and two storeys of amenity and commercial space. It’s the fourth of four new residential towers going up around New West SkyTrain station. The towers are part of a project called Plaza 88, backed by developers Mike and Patti Degelder. Plaza 88 is part of an ambitious downtown revitalization initiative that aims to change the hard-luck face of downtown New Westminster by adding public gathering spaces, new commercial strips and new residents. The Landing Post is the only purposebuilt rental tower of the four — the others are strata title condominiums. “Our mission [at VIA Architecture] is about creating connected and connective communities,” Lancaster says. “This [Plaza 88] project really speaks to me because of the transformation that it’s had in the area, and how it catalyzed a safer place for people to live. And when the possibility for doing rental [at the Landing Post] popped up and we had a couple of lenders who were willing to throw the money in for 134 this project, I saw that as a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity. It’s just strictly a developer willing to take a risk, a lender willing to take a risk to do purpose-built rental housing.” The Landing Post development is still pending approval by New Westminster city council (the last meeting on the subject took place Nov. 4). But the fact the project has come this far is, in its own way, a miracle. Rental housing is typically risky, and difficult to secure funding to build. Site of the proposed Landing Post tower in New Westminster, B.C. Photo by Jackie Wong. “Banks are not generally willing to throw a bunch of money at something with a flexible return,” Lancaster explains. “Cap rates are a measure of how fast a development pays itself off. Hotels have cap rates. Rental buildings have cap rates. Nonstrata offices have cap rates. A straight-up strata development? Finding Home: Affordable Housing Solutions for Greater Vancouver and B.C. There’s no cap rate, because I’m selling you something and I’m generally pre-selling it. Rental buildings are much riskier because you never know what’s going to happen.” But people invested in the condos in the three other Plaza 88 towers. Many investors are renting the condos at market rates. “They have resold at really high values. Investors are willing to come in and throw money at them,” Lancaster acknowledges. That security set the stage for the Degelders to roll the dice on the Landing Post and develop it as purposebuilt rental. Unlike other new rental projects, it has no support from the municipal government. “There’s no offset of cost provided by a housing authority,” Lancaster says. Reaching ‘deep market affordability’ The Landing Post responds to widespread calls for more rental housing stock near transit lines. New Westminster’s May 2013 Secured Market Rental Housing Policy is designed to meet some of the housing directions called for in the city’s February 2010 Affordable Housing Strategy. “[New Westminster] city staff are very progressive in what they’re trying to do,” says Lancaster. New Westminster Mayor Wayne Wright chairs Metro Vancouver’s Housing Committee and co-founded the Canadian Rental Housing Coalition, a group aimed at working with all levels of government to increase rental housing supply across Canada. If council approves it, the Landing Post could see its first renters moving in by 2015. Rental rates will vary according to 135 unit type and floor — there could be approximately 16 units per floor of varying sizes to accommodate different family type. But, Lancaster says, “we have to generate approximately $30 per square foot per year on average before deducting property taxes, property management and operating expenses.” While the Landing Post rezoning submission states that it is “intended to be market rental and not ‘social’ or ‘affordable’ housing,” it also notes “that purpose-built rental stock tends to become more affordable over time because rates are not set by individual strata owners.” Even so, reaching deep market affordability — the kind that people like Jeremy can afford — will take more than projects like Landing Post. “Until there is some mechanism of stepping in and halting that accumulation of wealth through land assembly and ownership, it’s very, very difficult to come up with a real solution to this problem,” Lancaster says. “That’s why government intervention, or some kind of third-party intervention, has to step in, if you are to look at a real, systemic housing affordability solution.” Lancaster sees the Landing Post as one solution to one component of affordable housing. He’s also embarking on extra-curricular research to bring an innovative, Europeanstyle idea to B.C. called “community development corporations.” “[It's] a partnership between a group of people who own a little bit of capital,” he explains. “It’s mission-based instead Finding Home: Affordable Housing Solutions for Greater Vancouver and B.C. of profit-based. When you create that scenario, you create the opportunity to change the rules of the game.” It works like this: groups of people create mission-based community development corporations in Vancouver. They work with the City of Vancouver to depress the value of cityowned land by putting a development moratorium on it. “The City can do that. It’s well within their jurisdiction to find a chunk of land and say, that land is going to be an affordable housing block that has a certain density on it if you’re a community development corporation,” he says. “If the City gets involved and we have this non-profit development thing and a lending institution backs us, we can afford to build something that stays functionally off the market.” To Lancaster, the proposal is “radical, but it’s not so radical that it’s imaginary.” To him, the key to building housing affordability is to find new ways of structuring the world of development. “That doesn’t mean you’re going to preclude other means of doing development; that’s a full-on restructuring of the capitalist system that we’re not in any position to do right now,” he says. Housing ‘defines who are’ Lancaster will continue research on how to bring community development corporations to B.C., and continue work on purpose-built projects like the Landing Post. He’s 136 in the business, he says, because housing is not just about keeping people safe and healthy. “It’s part of grounding people mentally in a place they can call home, which then dramatically increases their overall happiness, and parallel to that, their mental health and emotional health. Where we live impacts dramatically who we are, how we think, how we interpret the world, and how we interface with the world. It’s critical. It defines who we are.” Lancaster and other urban planning professionals are well aware of the impact housing has on people’s livelihoods and mental health. Jeremy is, too. While others grapple with systemic changes to increase housing affordability for people like him, Jeremy waits for change. Since it’s the only place he can barely afford, he plans to stay at his apartment near Fraser and 49th for now. He’ll tolerate the mould and rot, a situation that has become so severe that the third bedroom has squishy craters in the hardwood floor. His foot sinks in when he steps on the holes. But he’s had several nice roommates, he says. It’s home. “It’s the only place I’ve ever lived in Vancouver. It was the first place I interviewed at,” he says, recalling when he found the place at 20 and was accepted by the landlord. “In comparison to everything else in my life, relatively speaking, that was a stroke of luck.” The Quiet Agony of the Landlord For property owners in BC, it's hard to stay in the game. By Jackie Wong It’s been about two decades since Calvin and his wife Sarah started earning an income as landlords. They live in Richmond and rent out a four-unit Burnaby duplex, renting the twobedroom, 850-square-foot units for $875 a month downstairs and $1,000 a month upstairs. “I would say each unit can be rented for $25 to $50 higher, but I prefer to charge good tenants a little less than market rent,” Calvin says. His tenants’ quality of life and safety are important to him, he adds. He’s spent many weekends maintaining the 60-yearold building. “We spent a lot of money updating it so it looks and functions newer than [its age]. In fact, parts of it are nicer than what I have in my own home,” he says. Both a carbon monoxide detector and smoke detector can be found in each suite, something most landlords don’t provide, he notes. “I try to provide decent living units where I personally wouldn’t mind living myself. I also try to put myself in the tenants’ shoes.” Calvin works full-time as an accountant. He never aspired nor expected to become a landlord. But Sarah had purchased the building before they were married. “She lived at home with her family until she was in her 30s and spent her salary on mortgage payment for the rental property,” he explains. “She got into it because other family members invested in real estate and she was regularly reminded that real estate is a good investment versus, say, stocks.” Being a tenant can be tough, but landlords hit their brick walls, too. Photo in Vancouver’s Chinatown by dons projects in Your BC: The Tyee’s Photo Pool. Calvin sees landlording as one way to diversify his investment portfolio. But after going through three arbitrations at B.C.’s Residential Tenancy Branch (RTB) over the last six years, his enthusiasm for landlording is wearing thin. He’s Finding Home: Affordable Housing Solutions for Greater Vancouver and B.C. 138 still embroiled in his most recent dispute with the RTB. Not wanting to prejudice his case with the arbitrators, he asked Tyee Solutions Society not to publish his real name. and taken disputes to the RTB, Calvin doesn’t feel he’s received the service he should have from the agency in charge of administering provincial residential tenancy legislation. He knows there would be consequences to selling the building at this stage. He gets along well with three of the four tenant households in the duplex. He thinks they’ll be “sad” if he quits his job as a landlord. “Arbitrators need to be better trained,” he says. “Yes, part of the decision should be based on the laws and regulations. But just as importantly, the decision should be based on common sense. RTB staff need to treat clients and taxpayers better.” “I am amazed,” he says, “at how biased the DROs [the dispute-resolution officers who run landlord-tenant hearings] were in favour of the tenants. With all the hassles I have been experiencing, I have also been thinking of selling and getting out [of landlording] entirely. The hassles are due to unreasonable and irrational tenants, as well as the RTB.” One reason is what he knows is likely to happen to the building if he sells it: “If I sell out, a developer may buy it and build a new duplex on it to sell. “If that happens, there goes four units of affordable housing.” Three fixes for an unloved agency B.C.’s rental housing landscape can be unforgiving to renters. But those providing housing to rent in the private market don’t seem to have it much easier. Calvin and Sarah are small-time landlords whose property is not part of a professional property management corporation, and whose professional and personal lives go beyond the Burnaby duplex. But when they’ve had trouble with tenants, “By no means am I asking the RTB to be biased in favour of landlords,” he says. “I am just hoping one day the playing field will be leveled.” Perhaps unwittingly echoing a group of exhausted West End tenants who struggled for years with the RTB, Calvin calls for more balance, professionalism and transparency in B.C.’s landlord-tenant arbitration process. According to the advocacy agency Landlord BC, the RTB convenes some 22,000 dispute hearings each year. Calvin offers three unfussy solutions for improving them: 1. Commission an independent survey of client satisfaction with RTB staff, and work to improve whatever the survey results indicate needs improving. 2. Require an independent review of an arbitrator’s decision upon a landlord or tenant’s request. 3. Move towards a more accessible appeals process, after decisions are handed down. The last idea addresses a quirk of the system: as it stands now, any appeal of an arbitrator’s decision — whether by a landlord or tenant — cannot be made at the RTB. It must apply for judicial review at the BC Supreme Court: a prohibitively Finding Home: Affordable Housing Solutions for Greater Vancouver and B.C. expensive and time-consuming process, even for most landlords. “I just checked yesterday to see how much a judicial review at the BC Supreme Court would cost,” Calvin says. “I was told about $3,500 to $4,000.” He understands the system may be challenged for resources. “I have no doubt the RTB is under-funded,” he says, “as suggested by ‘On Shaky Ground,’” referring to a critical report by tenant advocates earlier this year that called for a major overhaul of B.C.’s system. “However, with the funding they do get, I am sure they can do a better job.” ‘Only so much a landlord can take’ But raising the standards of the residential tenancy system includes landlords, says Amy Spencer, spokesperson for Landlord BC, recently-renamed from the BC Apartment Owners and Managers Association. The group represents some 3,500 landlords in B.C., a small fraction of the untold real number of property owners renting suites to tenants across the province. It’s an advocacy organization aimed at professionalizing the landlord and property management industry. “We offer education for landlords. We offer networking opportunities. We exist to make a landlord’s life easier, to make it easier for them to do business,” Spencer says. 139 “We are also looking for more balance in landlord-tenant relations,” Spencer says, “thinking about landlords and tenants as a community rather than separate fighting entities.” Her membership includes large firms like Hollyburn Properties and Concert Properties, but 80 to 90 per cent are more like Calvin and Sarah, owners of 10 or fewer rental units. And Spencer says most landlords aren’t looking to make life miserable for their tenants. “In the media, probably about five years ago, you were starting to see a lot of words like ‘renovictions’and ‘slumlords,’” she acknowledges. “That small percentage of people were really tarnishing the industry as a whole. We want to talk about all the good landlords that are out there, not just the bad ones. And our ideal hope would be to not have anyone do untoward business practices, not have anyone be called a slumlord.” Spencer spends her weekdays in the office fielding calls from landlords like Calvin and Sarah across the province. They complain about the Residential Tenancy Act, or about the decision from a hearing at the RTB. She will hear them and direct them back to the RTB, to investigate what happened, but she knows those powers — and her own — are limited. “This is the interesting part: they don’t have the power to change a decision,” she says. “So the onus is on the landlord, then, to take it to judicial review. It’s kind of an onerous process, I would say, for landlords, especially those who maybe only have a secondary suite, basement suite or laneway house, something like that.” Finding Home: Affordable Housing Solutions for Greater Vancouver and B.C. Absent a more supportive RTB, the landlord group is planning a number of initiatives next year to provide its members and other landlords in B.C. with more resources and some support. It’s launching an online education initiative called the Connected Landlord, and considering bringing Ontario’s Certified Rental Building program, which streamlines practice standards, to B.C. The organization is also considering providing a mediation service to its member landlords and their tenants in efforts to help them avoid taking their case to the RTB, thus reducing the RTB’s already-crowded caseload.* Such professional community supports are crucial for improving the occupation overall, Spencer says. Many landlords work in isolation and under stress, many trying to stretch the annual allowable rent increases in B.C. (the price of inflation plus two per cent) to cover routine maintenance costs. “There’s only so much a landlord can take,” Spencer says. Striving for professionalism Scott Ullrich has worked in rental housing property management for 30 years. He’s now the CEO of Gateway Property Management, a 50-year-old property management corporation with properties under contract in B.C., Alberta, and Quebec. Gateway works as an agent for landlords (the company does not own the buildings it operates) and has 16,000 residential rental units under its belt. 140 Ullrich has seen great change in the landlording industry over his decades in the business. “When we first started, property managers and landlords were basically like custodians. Pretty simple, pretty basic. They owned or managed a unit, they found a tenant, put the tenant in, collected the rent, paid the expenses,” he says. “It wasn’t, in a lot of cases, even considered a profession.” Gateway is now part of Landlord BC and has worked, like other firms, to professionalize and legitimize the landlord industry, Ullrich says. But he still sees educational gaps among property managers — housing literacy, it seems, is something that could use improvement among both tenants and landlords. What Ullrich, and Landlord BC’s thousands of property managers and landlords in B.C., as well as Calvin and Sarah, have in common, is that they are renting homes on the private market in order to generate income — to turn a profit. People forget that, they say. “What I wish more people knew is the difference between providing market housing and affordable housing,” Spencer says. “We have to start making that distinction and think about what we can do to help people who can’t afford market housing.” Adds Ullrich: “Landlords have to eat, too. There’s got to be some sort of profit in it for them. I think what has to happen is thinking outside of the box. How else can you make it work?” Affordable Housing: Some Parts Just Aren’t City Hall’s Job Vancouver councillor and new housing officer call for clarity, and candour, on housing file. By Jackie Wong On the phone from the home he shares with his wife and children in East Vancouver, David Wong’s voice is heavy with exhaustion. The Vancouver-raised architect and author is burnt out, he says. He’s spent the last two weeks speaking out publicly on behalf of the Ming Sun Benevolent Society, whose former headquarters at 439 Powell Street made headlines when news of the 122-year-old building’s impending demolition spread. Until recently the building’s upper floor housed 10 lowincome, Chinese-speaking seniors, a population known to struggle to find affordable and culturally appropriate housing. The Ming Sun Benevolent Society, which owns the building, also rented out the 1,000-square-foot space on the main floor to a local artists’ collective, Instant Coffee, for $1,000 a month. In late November, City engineers ordered both the seniors upstairs and the artists downstairs out, saying the aging building had become unsafe. Most of the seniors are now living with relatives outside the inner city, says Wong, a third-generation descendant of one of the Ming Sun society’s founding families. They’re not happy, he adds. According to Wong, residents “were given no notice” of the emergency eviction. Some were so rushed they “left their things behind. One old lady, she came back several times. She came back with a little plastic bag and did a whole bunch of trips back and forth all by herself on the bus. She was crying on the floor. I had to pick her up off the floor and comfort her.” City of Vancouver housing officer Mukhtar Latif (left) and Vision Vancouver councillor Geoff Meggs (right) stand in front of city hall. Photo by Jackie Wong. Wong says he considers some city councillors to be friends. “[Vision Vancouver councillor] Kerry [Jang] and those guys… I still consider them friends,” Wong says. “Their job’s difficult. They’ve got lots of pressure. I understand where Finding Home: Affordable Housing Solutions for Greater Vancouver and B.C. they’re coming from. And I don’t really want to vilify the City [of Vancouver] because it takes good people to run it.” Nonetheless, Wong is an outspoken critic of many of the City’s decisions, particularly regarding the Ming Sun building. “I’m just sad that [the City] somehow put the blame on this old family society. They say that [the Sun Ming Society] are bad landlords, which isn’t true.” 142 our city staff is to make sure people don’t die in fires. So we make no apology for enforcing the basic rules around those buildings, even if unfortunately, from time to time, there’s consequences.” ‘Willful confusion’ Geoff Meggs bristles at Wong’s comments. “David Wong is not telling the truth about what the City has said and done with regard to the Ming Sun project,” says the two-term Vision Vancouver councillor, “and that’s caused a lot of confusion.” The demolition, Meggs insists, was not initiated by the City, as Wong describes it. Rather, it was a necessary response to the building’s imminent “landlordcaused collapse.” “This is a very, very old building. And the building next door did collapse. So life-safety issues came to the fore and city engineers intervened and established that further work was needed.” After the brick east facade of the Ming Sun building collapsed onto its neighbour in July, City inspectors determined that the entire building was inadequately maintained, and required significant structural improvements to remain habitable. “People condemn the City for shutting down a building that could burn down at any moment!” Megg objects. “The job of The former Powell Street headquarters of Instant Coffee artist collective and the Ming Sun Benevolent Society. Photo by Jackie Wong. The controversy surrounding the Ming Sun demolition, Meggs says, is an example of what he describes as frustratingly widespread, “willful confusion” within the affordable housing advocacy community. Irked by what he heard from panelists at Tyee Solutions Society’s Generation Rent storytelling night and panel discussion last month, Meggs fired back in an opinion Finding Home: Affordable Housing Solutions for Greater Vancouver and B.C. piece lauding City progress in addressing rental housing — efforts he felt the panelists failed to acknowledge. His remarks set off a spirited exchange. First Filipino community advocate R.J. Aquino and former NDP MLA David Chudnovsky countered Meggs’ commentary. Then Sean Antrim, a frequent Meggs critic and executive director of the Coalition of Progressive Electors, the far-left municipal party that has lost members to Vision Vancouver recently, penned an essay on the Mainlander news site that lays out three recommendations for the city to move forward on affordable rental housing solutions. Antrim called on the city to: 1. Stop zoning high-end market rentals and condominiums in neighbourhoods with high existing concentrations of affordable housing; 2. To curb evictions for renovations, or “renovictions,” refuse renovation permits unless the landlord can guarantee tenants will be allowed to return to the new unit without an extraordinary rent increase; 3. Reactivate the city’s dormant public housing corporation. Meggs dismisses Antrim’s ideas as infeasible. Allowing tenants back into renovated suites without extraordinary rent increases, he says, would unfairly force landlords to lose money. “I don’t think anybody, regardless of their perspective on rents, can afford to renovate a home and not pay off that renovation somehow,” he reasons. Drawing another distinction, Meggs adds: “Our critics reject new [housing] supply as part of the solution because 143 they consider it too expensive. We [in Vision Vancouver] think there’s a value to building new rental housing, provided it doesn’t destroy old rental housing, because it’s at price points that are very accessible to people who could not afford to buy a home. And we are trying to respond to the housing needs of everybody below the home ownership level to the degree we can.” Meanwhile, he insists that Vancouver is using what regulatory tools it can to protect existing rental stock, “which is very significant, and has been completely ignored [by the City's critics].” Meggs places the blame for threats to that housing on forces beyond city hall’s control. “It’s at risk because the [Canada Mortgage and Housing Corporation, or CMHC] mortgage program is ending, the CMHC itself may be ending. Our leases [on city-owned land] are coming to an end.” He’s talking about the expiry in 2014 of the federal housing agency’s Investment in Affordable Housing (IAH), though work is underway to extend the program to 2019;* federal Finance Minister Jim Flaherty’s recent musings that the agency itself has grown too large and needs trimming back; and the somewhat more distance expiries of leases on city-owned sites occupied by affordable and market rental housing. As for adding to affordable housing units, “what we’ve heard from our critics is, well, the City should build housing: it should become a landlord. That’s a viewpoint that simply ignores a lot of the financial realities,” Meggs insists. Finding Home: Affordable Housing Solutions for Greater Vancouver and B.C. The idea, popular among advocates, that the City could tap the $3-billion value of its property endowment fund to construct housing in the city, he says, misunderstands the nature of that fund. “Very little of those assets are in cash form. A lot of them are parks, schools, other community assets like community centres and so on, which have a value from the standpoint of managing the City’s finances as collateral,” Meggs says. “But they could never be developed.” The challenge is regional, not city alone According to Meggs, the City of Vancouver has “the best record in the region” for affordable housing initiatives. One 144 such initiative was its October appointment of new chief housing officer Mukhtar Latif. Vancouver wooed the housing project manager and development director away from London, U.K., in response to a 2012 recommendation from the Mayor’s Task Force on Housing Affordability. Latif’s first assignment is the creation of a Vancouver housing authority, but he’ll also spend part of the next year investigating ways to make two- and three-bedroom units more affordable to families in the private rental market. Expectations for Latif’s mission are hemmed in by what Meggs calls the city’s “brutal” land costs. “And we are not able to repeal those market laws on our own.” HOUSING LESSONS FROM LONDON The City of Vancouver appointed its first-ever chief housing officer earlier this fall. Mukhtar Latif brings with him ideas from his last post as director of Savills, a global real estate services provider, and board member of the Inquilab affordable housing association in London, England: On options for middle-income families: “One of the difficulties people have is raising the deposit to access housing. So one option is you can create an opportunity where part of the mortgage is supported by either the government or the developer, and there’s a lower deposit requirement from the actual purchaser. [In Britain] the government will support part of the mortgage payment so that people can get access to housing.” On rental supplements: “In the U.K., you’ve got housing benefits. It takes into account your needs and the rents you pay; it supports the difference. They are means tested, but they do recognize the private sector as well as the public sector. If they can’t accommodate you in public-sector housing, and you are housed in a private-sector house, they will cover the rental difference.” On federal investment in housing: “The government in the U.K. recently invested $1.7 billion into private rental stock because they wanted to show institutional investors that this was a good asset class for them to invest in. What governments tend to do is initiate, show what can be achievable, and then hopefully the market can sustain that going forward.” Jackie Wong Finding Home: Affordable Housing Solutions for Greater Vancouver and B.C. He finds it frustrating to see the city so criticized, Meggs says, when he doesn’t see the same pressure placed on surrounding municipalities. “The rental stock that’s in Burnaby, New West, and Surrey, in many cases, doesn’t have the same protection that it does here,” he says. “I think it’s long overdue that people looked at the housing crisis in the region as a regional problem.” It’s not only the other regional municipalities he’d like to see called out on their support for housing. “It’s frustrating to be in a debate where the alleged shortcomings of our program are 80 per cent of the focus,” Meggs says, “when we know that to fix the problem we need action at senior levels [of government]. The City has demonstrated the possibility and raised the hopes, I think. But we can’t close the deal without provincial action and federal action. And those are very remote right now.” A new rise for the Ming Sun? Residue from December’s rain darkens the wooden exterior walls of the former Ming Sun Benevolent Society headquarters. For the first time in over a century, its upstairs hallways are no longer full of people. David Wong remains optimistic about the future of the society. He’s hopeful that community members could collaborate with the City on building a new space for Ming Sun. “After this incident, a whole bunch of different groups have come together, from the Dunbar Residents Association, to 145 Downtown Eastside groups, to the Nikkei Museum, the Powell Street Festival, the Chinese-Canadian Historial Society,” he says. “I’m sure the artists and the whole community could come out to work with the city.” Meggs is less sanguine. “There may be a solution there, but it seems like the situation’s becoming more irretrievable by the day. There are buildings of that age that are perfectly safe. And this one is not,” he says. “And why is that? Is that the City’s fault? I get impatient with people who feel that the City should be able to fix everything after the fact, retroactively. It’s simply not possible for us to do. ” Meggs is aware that his stand garners him criticism. But he’s clearly unapologetic in his view that the City is moving in the best ways possible to build affordable housing for lowerto middle-income citizens — those identified as a priority by the Mayor’s Task Force on Housing Affordability. Very low income citizens on social assistance are the responsibility of the provincial government; those who can afford to buy condos are, as Meggs puts it, “not our department.” Meggs will take his case to voters next year, when Vision Vancouver prepares for the fall’s municipal elections. But even if he fails to win a third term next November, he says, “at least I’ll have the satisfaction of knowing that there’s two to three thousand additional rental units that wouldn’t have been there otherwise. “And I invite those like Sean [Antrim], who hope I’m defeated next year, to produce some practical proposals to do better. I haven’t heard them yet.” Latest in Vancouver Density Battle: Demolition at Marine Gardens Townhouses along key SkyTrain line must be torn down to make way for big development, city says. By David P. Ball As part of Vancouver council’s plan to densify housing in the city, more than 200 residents of a townhouse complex in Vancouver will be forced to leave their homes behind to accommodate a long-planned tower development. Residents of Marpole’s Marine Gardens complex insist their longstanding opposition to the demolition of their community has been ignored, despite numerous open houses on the issue. But city council says the demolition must occur if plans to greatly increase densification along a main SkyTrain artery is to succeed. After a series of city-mandated consultations, GBL Architects Inc. filed a rezoning application on March 12 to build three buildings on the site owned by Concord Pacific, including towers 27- and 23-storeys high, totaling 584 residential units, including 70 at “affordable” rates. Now the 70 existing rental households at 445 Southwest Marine Drive have formed a new resident association to advocate against the demolition with a “single voice,” according to a spokeswoman. A Dec. 10 letter to the city demanded that any offers to residents, short of saving the townhouse complex, would be unacceptable. Children play in the courtyard at the heart of Vancouver’s Marine Gardens complex, slated to be replaced by three Concord Pacific towers. Photo: Jillian Skeet, submitted. “The demolition of Marine Gardens is a tragedy on so many levels,” said Jillian Skeet, representing the Marine Gardens Residents’ Association. “I have been to virtually every open house and town hall. The level of consultation, in terms of holding these meetings, has been unprecedented, but the City has not been listening. They are not open to actually accepting the input from residents.” Finding Home: Affordable Housing Solutions for Greater Vancouver and B.C. Demolition may still may be several years away, as the rezoning application process continues. City Councillor Raymond Louie said that although his council still must make a final decision when the 445 Southwest Marine Drive proposal comes before them, and staff can request changes to the building plans, there is no question that Marine Gardens must be torn down as part of the process of densifying the area around Marine Drive Canada Line station and installing new amenities there, known as the Cambie Corridor Plan. 147 “Council made a very clear decision this would be an area where densification would happen,” he explained. “The city is planning for the people currently in our city, but also for future generations to come as well. “Transportation-oriented development is the key to us having a sustainable city. We cannot continue to have people drive cars as the primary mode of transport in our city,” he added. Density or bust Marine Gardens was designed by architects Michael Katz and Cornelia Oberlander in 1974, as a demonstration project for the Vancouver-hosted United Nations Habitat Forum two years later. The complex included several rows of townhouses clustered around a central courtyard. Skeet said that children’s safety in the enclosed outdoor space has been a defining feature of life in the community, as well as a central shared laundry facility designed to bring people into contact with one another. “The whole idea was how to design a housing development that will really foster community,” she said. Marine Gardens was created as a demonstration project for the UN’s Habitat Conference in 1976, but today is in the path of the city’s green and housing priorities. Photo: Jillian Skeet, submitted. Louie said an “extensive process” went into the plan to densify around transit stations, including many open houses, and at this point only the “actual form and how it’s actually laid out” can potentially be modified, not the demolition itself. “Everyone who lives in Marine Gardens really values the community we have, the affordable housing we have, the type of housing we have… Our children have an opportunity to play outside. Our homes are small, our kitchens are tiny, but it doesn’t matter because we have community here,” said Skeet. Finding Home: Affordable Housing Solutions for Greater Vancouver and B.C. Louie agreed that the townhouse complex served an important and historic function in the city. “Certainly that development was ahead of its time in providing higher levels of density and family housing in our city,” he said. “But if the community’s opinion is that nothing should change short of saving the houses, that’s not possible given that council has decided this is a densification area. A redevelopment of the space will require the demolition of these townhouses to accommodate the new development.” According to the developer application, the buildings slated to replace Marine Gardens are compatible with the city’s plan to create a dense urban core surrounding Marine Drive station to make “effective use of land, transportation, and energy.” “Our intention is to respect these goals through heightened density, an enlarged daycare, and renewed rental housing,” GBL Architects Inc. stated in its design document. “The landscape design intent is to create a ‘permeable sanctuary’ that not only proposes a series of sheltered open spaces, but also addresses public access through the site.” The city has faced increased push-back lately from several neighbourhoods undergoing community planning processes. In Marpole, residents held protests earlier this year and thousands of lawn signs have risen against densification of the south Vancouver region. Likewise, proposals for towers at the Commercial-Broadway SkyTrain station drew protests over the Grandview-Woodland plan. In both cases, the city agreed to improve its consultation process as well as amend its proposals 148 Retirement Savings Could Jump-start Victoria Affordable Housing Redirect RRSP investments into local projects, and re-engage progressive citizens. By Jackie Wong Victoria, B.C. is a study in contrasts. On one hand, the capital city’s tony-campy Downton Abbey-esque Oak Bay district retains its reputation for being “more English than England itself” (residents are jokingly said to live inside “the Tweed Curtain”). Elsewhere though, fleece-jacketed, thicksocked phalanxes of generally leftish-leaning frontline workers, researchers, academics, and public servants fill the streets and offices, evoking a 1990s grunge aesthetic and political sensibility a little reminiscent of its historical sibling Portland, Oregon, founded just five years after the Canadian city. Politically, the result is a seemingly dissonant collision of deep-pocketed, old-money wealth, with a socially progressive citizenry that elected the only Green Party MP in B.C., and exclusively New Democratic and Green MLAs in this year’s provincial election. The preponderance of well-paid, highly educated people in the city provides a supportive environment for organizations like the Community Social Planning Council of Greater Victoria and now, an ambitious new attempt to expand the city’s housing options, while enriching its community social bonds. Using RRSPs for today, as well as tomorrow A population given to progressive activism: Victoria on Idle No More Day. Photo by Professional Recreationalist in Your BC: The Tyee’s Photo Pool. As 2013 ran out the clock, the Social Planning Council was putting the finishing touches on an innovative ‘Community Investment Fund.’ The essential idea is to invite Victoria’s citizens to direct a portion of their individual Registered Finding Home: Affordable Housing Solutions for Greater Vancouver and B.C. Retirement Savings Plans (RRSPs) money to finance new affordable housing projects in their own region instead. 150 A national shift The CIF will be independent of banks or investment companies. The Community Social Planning Council of Greater Victoria has set up an independent organization to govern the CIF: the Vancouver Island Community Investment Cooperative is to be a multi-stakeholder group of local residents and people with professional backgrounds in the non-profit sector, small business and venture capitalism. The Social Planning Council will incorporate the cooperative’s board of directors in early 2014. The founding board will offer memberships to the public, and later set about raising its first round of investment capital. Victoria’s CIF is inspired by Nova Scotia’s Community Economic Development Funds, provincially-supported pools of capital aimed at re-investing a percentage of the maritime province’s estimated $600 million of RRSP investments into public-interest community projects. But it’s part of a growing number of such initiatives across Canada that also includes a Community Bond Project launched by Toronto’s Centre for Social Innovation. Instead of trying to solve that problem by raising money through traditional philanthropic channels, fundraising drives or bids for donations, its creators hope the CIF will leverage already-existing funds: money that Greater Victoria’s citizens are already putting into their RRSPs. By investing some of those RRSP savings in local rental housing instead, proponents say, progressive-minded Victorians will be rewarded twice: earning both financial returns and a social return from helping improve their community. The CIF aims to tap a percentage of the estimated $360 million that Greater Victoria residents invest in RRSPs each year, and use that to finance affordable housing projects. Amyot has already been in talks with the Greater Victoria Housing Society and St. John the Divine, a Victoria Anglican Church, about collaborating on both organizations’ many forthcoming housing projects, including a mixed-use affordable housing development spearheaded by the church. The idea grew out of Nicole Chaland’s 2011 research on social finance options for affordable housing in the Victoria area. Chaland found the main barrier to building affordable housing was a lack of access to long-term, low-cost financing. All these, believes Sarah Amyot, the Community Social Planning Council’s program manager who has been working with prospective investors to launch the CIF, are “part of a broader trend to try to think of having a more relationshipbased economy. It’s about shifting how we think about projects in our communities, to where we use our relationships and our social capital to support projects that we want to see happen.” At present, progressively minded Victorians have no vehicle for investing retirement savings dollars in desirable community initiatives, according to Amyot. That needs to Finding Home: Affordable Housing Solutions for Greater Vancouver and B.C. change, she says, reflecting changing perspectives on how people approach civic participation. “We’re in a time of immense change in the way we think about the traditional dividing lines between public, private, and civil society or non-profit pursuits. I think those lines are increasingly blurry,” she says. “That value, of citizen engagement, citizen investment and contribution, in affordable housing and other social-purpose projects, is a really important part of the work that we’re trying to do.” The CIF, she says, is unlike traditional philanthropy in that it’s an investment that comes with both risk and return. Its goal is to complement, not displace, traditional philanthropy and public funding sources. And the larger aim is to empower citizens to engage differently in their communities by investing their private capital in social-purpose housing in new ways. “It’s a way of engaging citizens in decision-making and goal-setting for our community,” Amyot says. “In some ways, the [Vancouver] Island culture is really one of the strengths of being able to do this here, which is that these initiatives are dependent on people’s relationships, and their sense of trust, and the reputation of people in your communities who are going to champion local projects and champion investment in those projects.” Seeking a legal shoe-horn Starting a CIF in B.C., and working with the legal rules governing RRSPs, has proven technically challenging, Amyot 151 says. “We are operating in a regulatory and in a policy environment that is really not set up to support this type of community driven initiative to raise community sourced capital,” she explains. “There’s a number of communities, and a number of projects, including our own, that have found a way to make that regulatory environment work. But in many ways, we’re really trying to shoe-horn ourselves into an environment that’s not built to facilitate individual citizens investing in their own communities.” She calls on British Columbia’s government to follow several steps already in place in Nova Scotia: 1) Provide a tax credit to people investing in local community investment funds. In Nova Scotia, “that tax credit rolls over a number of times, so that it encourages you to keep your money in that fund for longer so that it can be, essentially, more and more patient for the projects it invests in,” Amyot says. 2) Authorize the use of a “simplified offering statement” for community investment funds — in contrast to the dense legalese in the fine print of most financial-product offerings. “They simplify the process to meet the regulatory requirements and in doing so, they made it much more affordable for community investment funds to get started.” 3) Advocate to the Canada Revenue Agency to have any investment in a local community investment fund be considered eligible for inclusion in a self-directed RRSP. Finding Home: Affordable Housing Solutions for Greater Vancouver and B.C. Victoria’s CIF is still in its earliest days. But its creators hope to use the fund to increase the region’s stock of purpose-built rental housing units, which has stagnated in recent years. “The secondary rental market here — condos and basement suites — make up half of our rental market. And condominium rentals are, on average, 19 per cent higher than they are for purpose-built rentals,” noted Marika Albert, who works with Amyot at the Community Social Planning Council on poverty reduction initiatives. “Secondary suites are an important part of the solution, but that can’t be [all of] it,” Albert adds. “We see the potential of diversifying the rental housing stock to make it more accessible for more people.” Using — and rewarding — other Victoria residents for investing in that diversification may also strengthen their sense of being involved participants in their community, enriching everyone’s social capital. 152 Judge Again Orders Abbotsford Homeless Camp Eviction By David P. Ball As temperatures plummet and snow billows down before the holidays, today a B.C. Supreme Court judge ordered the eviction of an Abbotsford homeless camp by 4 p.m. Saturday. Justice Murray Blok approved an injunction for the city, after months of legal wrangling and a previous eviction order against the Jubilee Park encampment, and authorized police to “dispose” of their structures and arrest anyone interfering. The camp saw its residents camped out since October in the park and inside a wooden structure in a nearby parking lot, which must itself be removed by Monday. The move to Jubilee followed the city slashing their tents at a previous location in early June dumping chicken manure into their lodgings, for which the city manager later apologized after widespread media attention. “The City of Abbotsford will be serving this notice to the protest organizers as well as to all current residents at the encampment at Jubilee Park today,” the city stated in a press release today. “Jubilee camp must be vacated by 4:00 pm tomorrow … All tents and belongings must be removed.” The statement added that community service agencies will be present until the eviction “offering all persons requiring shelter accommodations,” and that the Salvation Army would offer those evicted “temporary storage for anyone entering a shelter that needs to store belongings.” In his decision, the Supreme Court judge ruled that the defendants must “forthwith cease, and shall be enjoined and restrained from erecting, placing, constructing or building Finding Home: Affordable Housing Solutions for Greater Vancouver and B.C. 154 tents, shelters, and other constructions in the lands known as Jubilee Park.” belongings and dumping chicken manure over the makeshift lodgings. encampment’s residents, warned in a statement earlier this week that evicting the camp would “place a sweeping set of restrictions on homeless peoples’ access to parks and other public spaces across Abbotsford.” down, so these people don’t continue to be displaced,” Larkin said. “This is unconstitutional. Pivot Legal Society, which was in court advocating for the “Obviously we were very disappointed,” Pivot housing lawyer DJ Larkin told Tyee Solutions Society. “They know the importance of complying, but the reality is they’re panicking right now.” She said that homeless campers are now “honestly trying” to find shelter, but with the judge basing his decision on the city’s promise there are enough shelter beds available to house the 30 to 40 residents, Larkin questioned if the listed lodgings are in fact available to them. “The reality is, we don’t know if that’s actually the case,” she said. But Justice Blok concluded that “there will be places for them to go,” he told the court. One of the camp’s residents, who identified himself as “Tiny,” told the Abbotsford News, “It’s a despicable thing to do before Christmas. “There is no human aspect to this,” he added. “How can you make a judgment like this on people who are just trying to survive?” In November, Pivot filed its own complaint before the B.C. Human Rights Tribunal on behalf of homeless residents over police coating their tents with pepper spray, slashing their “We have to take it to trial so these laws can be struck “They are making people’s lives dangerous. The bylaws have to go and they have to do better.” In November, Abbotsford Mayor Bruce Banman argued the camp was a safety issue. “Since the weather turned cold we now have people using open barbecues, open heaters, candles, the tents and clumped together, this is a real fire hazard,” he told CBC News on Nov. 26. “There’s not that many that are really homeless in that particular camp. So we will work with them to make sure we find them a place.” To Help Vulnerable Renters, Boost Housing Literacy 'Ready to Rent BC' gives Vancouver Island residents the keys to a great tenancy. By Jackie Wong Megan Wright cradles her cellphone on one shoulder while her 10-month-old daughter, Kandra, stirs in her arms. It’s a crowded house in Victoria, B.C., and Wright has few places and moments to conduct conversations in peace. At night Kandra sleeps in the bedroom Wright shares with her common-law husband, Tony Edwards, and 10-year-old son Aidan is in the second bedroom down the hall. There isn’t enough space for everyone to live comfortably, Wright says, a frustration compounded by “a huge list of stuff” in need of repairs. For two years, the family has lived in the two-bedroom apartment part of a house without smoke detectors, with a barely-functioning stove and a refrigerator that doesn’t work. But at $1,100 a month, it’s hard to complain; the apartment is what they can afford. Wright is a hairdresser. Tony, unable to work due to a longstanding hip injury, is on disability. Currently, Wright is on maternity leave from work. “It’s been a tough year, paying that much for an apartment,” she says. In June, Wright added her family to the thousands of applicants on the BC Housing wait list for subsidized, lowincome housing. Ready to Rent BC aims for ‘fewer evictions, fewer bad tenancies.’ Households like Wright’s form the majority in Victoria, where 60 per cent of households rent (in Vancouver that number is slightly lower, at 53 per cent). While renting is a long-term reality for many B.C. families, renters still face a host of systemic barriers that have the effect of treating many renters — especially the most vulnerable ones — like secondclass citizens, even though renters have considerable political and social clout in nearby American cities. Finding Home: Affordable Housing Solutions for Greater Vancouver and B.C. One particularly sore gap in B.C. over the years, say housing advocates, has been the widespread lack of educational opportunities for renters to learn about their rights and responsibilities. For 15 years, The Portland Housing Center in Portland, Oregon has operated a housing readiness course for renters facing barriers such as criminal records, credit histories, or a lack of references, that prevent them from easily finding homes. In 2007, 11 housing agencies in Victoria’s Capital Regional District started research on adapting a similar program on Vancouver Island. Two years later, Ready to Rent BC held its first courses on renter education. Today, Ready to Rent BC’s six-week, 12-hour course on tenant and landlord rights and responsibilities has been held 101 times in Victoria and surrounding municipalities. Over 702 people have graduated from the course, including Wright, who took it this summer on the advice of a person helping her with her BC Housing application. Renters like Wright — those “just slightly under the radar” — are precisely who Ready to Rent BC hopes to reach, says Colleen Kasting, the organization’s community development manager. “They may be working part-time, minimum wage. They can’t make it… they’re running their lives as well as they can. But a bit of help might be just enough to start a [ripple effect on] other parts of their life,” Kasting says. “When people realize they know something, and there’s value to it, they start to believe in themselves.” 156 Tools for self-empowerment Participating in free weekly Ready to Rent classes was transformative for Wright. The program’s childminding services let her leave Kandra in the care of others for the first time. She left the course with a handbook of housing resources, a good reference that strengthened her BC Housing application, and fresh perspective on her living situation. “We learned quite a bit of stuff [our landlord] is doing is not legal. It was eye-opening,” she says. Workshops by the fire department on what tenants can ask of landlords to safeguard their homes from fire, and BC Hydro on how to read hydro bills and save money, were helpful, she adds. The course also features a section on budgeting, personal finances, and how to form positive, collaborative relationships with landlords, adds Kate Lambert, a Ready to Rent BC facilitator and coordinator who ran one of the program’s first classes. Lambert joined Ready to Rent after working for decades in social services in B.C. and the United Kingdom. She was frustrated by what she describes as “revolving-door homelessness.” “It was just a matter of keeping people as alive as we could keep them: feeding them, giving them a bed for the night, making sure they didn’t freeze to death. And it doesn’t work,” she says. “It just keeps people in that crisis mode, full dependency with no skills and no power.” Finding Home: Affordable Housing Solutions for Greater Vancouver and B.C. Ready to Rent, on the other hand, provides lasting solutions to housing problems. “We give people the tools so that they can feel like they can do things themselves,” Lambert says. Ready to Rent’s self-empowerment model is similar to the self-help housing counselling model at work in tenant advocacy groups in San Francisco. A key difference from San Francisco’s large culture of grassroots tenant organizing, however, is that Ready to Rent aims to engender respectful tenancies by neither advocating for the side of the tenant or landlord. “Our whole purpose is to have a good, healthy tenancy,” Kasting says. On the first day of the six-week Ready to Rent class, a landlord visits as a guest speaker and talks about their tenant selection process and what they expect of good tenants. “‘Landlord empathy’ is what we call it,” Lambert says. “We’re trying to get people to put themselves inside the head of a landlord.” ‘This should be compulsory in Grade 12’ In the Lower Mainland, barriers to safe, secure, and affordable rental housing that disproportionately affect marginalized and vulnerable people persist. Ready to Rent targets its classes to marginalized groups. The program runs multilingual classes through the Victoria Immigrant and Refugee Society. Approximately half of all Ready to Rent participants are Aboriginal, living on or off 157 reserve, and according to this year’s statistics, 70 per cent are women. Ready to Rent plans to expand its programming up Vancouver Island to the Cowichan Valley and Duncan. The program will continue to look for communities interested in running Ready to Rent courses. There’s also an appetite to run the classes in high schools. “People say to us, ‘This should be compulsory in Grade 12. Kids should learn about this before they make the mistakes in their first tenancies,’” says Lambert. “Housing readiness is like financial literacy or health literacy,” adds Kasting. “Housing readiness education didn’t really exist much at all [before Ready to Rent]. Meeting the goals we want to meet would mean there would be fewer evictions, fewer bad tenancies because of either landlord or tenant.” Megan Wright expected to sit on BC Housing’s wait list for years; she’d been told the wait might last until 2015. But recently her family received a burst of good news. “I got a phone call saying they were going to offer us a townhouse,” she says. Thanks in part to a good reference from Ready to Rent, her family is moving sooner than expected. Wright will return to part-time work at the end of this month. “I think everyone should take it,” she says of Ready to Rent’s rental education course. “It was helpful to me. I’m sure it would help a lot of people.” going deeper: in-depth series on housing hot zones False Creek South: An Experiment in Community? Sky-high rents and housing prices are among Vancouver’s most pressing and persistent challenges. The answer, experts and developers say, is more “density” — packing more people into every square kilometre of Vancouver. Proposals to “densify” several areas of the city boiled over this year into neighbourhood rebellions and even tense picket lines. Yet overlooked in the sparring are 6,000 Vancouverites quietly living a “densified” life in a community created decades ago in a moment of unprecedented, and unrepeated, alignment of municipal, provincial and federal urban visions. False Creek South was created 40 years ago on city-owned land in the belief that mixed-income, green and walkable neighbourhoods could foster a real downtown community in the Age of Suburbs. But now city leases and federal funding that made the project possible are ticking down to their enddates. Still from False Creek South: An Experiment in Community; found online at http://vimeo.com/81271469 Beginning with a special video report and continuing with three reports, Tyee Solutions Society housing reporter David P. Ball explores one of the country’s most audacious, if now long-forgotten, experiments in social and urban engineering — and finds lots to appreciate, and plenty to question, in the new millennium. going deeper: in-depth series on housing hot zones Stars Aligned for False Creek South Decades ago, three levels of gov't agreed to build something a little crazy. Funny thing: it mostly worked. By David P. Ball Nestled near the heart of downtown Vancouver is a neighbourhood unlike any other in the city. Even a cursory stroll through False Creek South — a jumbled expanse of townhouses and low-rises bounded by the Cambie and Granville bridges — reveals surprises: An urban waterfall. Stones oddly embedded in every roadside wall. Donut-shaped enclaves and hidden corridors. A labyrinth of swirling, cobbled streets forever closed to cars. Communal courtyards that lead into other courtyards. The community might seem eccentrically laid out, but few Vancouverites know what it is that makes False Creek South truly unique. In fact, it’s a worldwide case study in urban planning, on land almost entirely leased from the city itself. “It’s kind of a little oasis,” says Kathleen McKinnon, president of the False Creek South Neighbourhood Association (FCSNA), “but not just for the people in False Creek. It’s an oasis for a lot of people throughout the city. “There’s so much green space — a waterfall, the seawall, the little boats — that are enjoyed not only by us, but by a lot of others. We ride our bikes everywhere. When we go for walks, we always meet several people we know.” ‘An experiment to use fewer cars’ Resident Kathleen McKinnon calls the low-rise community designed 40 years ago “a little oasis” for people from all over the city. Photo David P. Ball. Locals and passers-through alike praise the neighbourhood. Many spend a passing moment in the typically quirkily named Leg-in-Boot Square. Others gather over pints in the Wicklow pub at Stamps Landing or chat as their kids play outside the Finding Home: Affordable Housing Solutions for Greater Vancouver and B.C. elementary school that serves co-op members, low-income renters and condo owners alike. “We were basically an experiment to use fewer cars,” says Rider Cooey, one of the False Creek Co-operative’s first batch of residents in 1977. In fact, False Creek South was much more than that: a Trudeau-era experiment in urban social engineering where physical space and consciously contrived demographics were intended to create a new community from scratch, in close harmony with its unique setting. 160 But while False Creek South has been unique from the outset, today it also epitomizes some of Vancouver’s most urgent current crises around affordable housing, rising inequality and bewildering urban change. The project was built on former industrial land reclaimed by the city. To accommodate a five-year building schedule, the city signed land leases for each phase separately. Now, those 50-year leases are entering their home stretch: the first is set to expire in 2022. That’s left the intentionally diverse community looking apprehensively to the next decade. Indeed, for the one-third of the community who own their units, the looming expire is already causing problems. They have found banks reluctant to finance or renew mortgages on their properties. Other residents worry about whether the city will renew the leases that underlie co-op and rental tenancies as well. And everyone wonders what compromises may have to be made in the unique community arrangement in order to secure its future. Their fear: will Vancouver’s 40-year experiment with a carefully planned, mixed-income, livable neighbourhood be able to maintain its character and diversity in the face of development pressures? And will its long-time residents be able to afford to stay? The land along the south side of False Creek (purple in map) was formerly home to early Vancouver industries, from foundries to sawmills, before coming into city hands by the 1970s. ‘Revolutionary’ Dreamed up in a distant time when creative governments were willing to experiment, False Creek South boasts a very Finding Home: Affordable Housing Solutions for Greater Vancouver and B.C. conscious blend of income levels, the largest cluster of cooperative housing in the province and the city’s only directrepresentation neighbourhood association. “We represent buildings throughout the Creek, from Cambie all the way to the Granville bridge,” explains McKinnon, leaning on her balcony overlooking a vast green lawn shared by low-rise buildings on three sides; on the fourth side is the popular Seawall and waters of False Creek itself. “We’re unique in that all the other neighbourhood associations within the city are groups of interested people, sometimes with an axe to grind on one issue or just one area.” What made False Creek South possible was an unusually auspicious conjunction of political stars in the mid-1970s. Voters in British Columbia ended decades of Social Credit rule in 1972, to sweep the New Democrats under activist leader Dave Barrett to power in Victoria. The next year a worldwide energy crisis hit, and reducing fossil fuel dependency became an urgent priority. The year 1973 also saw Vancouver send The Electors’ Action Movement (TEAM) to city hall; part of mayor Art Phillips’ vision for a livable city was to unlock a huge tract of city-owned land downtown on which to try something entirely new. By 1974, then-prime minister Pierre Trudeau had been three-times elected, and was throwing federal cash at the cooperative housing model and other social experiments across the country (like Dauphin, Manitoba’s experiment with a guaranteed minimum income). 161 In 1975, the Greater Vancouver Regional District unveiled its “Livable Regions Strategy” to boost high-density building, preserve urban green space, and promote public transit. The model that emerged was a community that deliberately incorporated one-third of its residents in co-operatives, onethird in both subsidized and market rental housing and one-third as condominium owners — all living together on reclaimed industrial lands. “It was a different time — Trudeau’s era,” said Beryl Wilson, one of the earliest owners of a townhouse on the Seawall and for decades editor of the community’s now-defunct weekly newspaper. “It was so revolutionary. “A lot of people thought it was a ghastly mistake. Some people drove over the Granville Street bridge and said, ‘That will be a slum in no time!’ Other people thought we were mad. There wasn’t anything like this kind of development, and there hasn’t been since.” It hasn’t all been easy over the years. Businesses originally inserted into the community — “seeded,” as one initial architect phrased it — didn’t all take root. Many struggled for years before eventually moving out. The limited lifespan of many of the buildings gradually became evident, as construction standards were revealed to be woefully inadequate to the humid West Coast climate, and leaks took their toll. Nonetheless, False Creek South became an urban planning Mecca, attracting city designers from Europe and the U.S. Finding Home: Affordable Housing Solutions for Greater Vancouver and B.C. eager to learn from its diversity-rich model — and from its mistakes. A new lease on life? Now, as the community nears 40, its almost 6,000 residents gaze across the Creek to a vastly changed city of glass condominium towers and skyrocketing property values. The land beneath their buildings still belongs to the City of Vancouver. And the simmering question is whether the city will let them keep it, once their leases start to expire, in as little as nine years. The community has overcome its share of other hurdles already. For years it had to pay for its own transit service. Owners and co-op members alike were hard hit by water leaks that beset many buildings of their era. At times parts of the community lived under tarps, and many owners were forced to re-mortgage their homes to pay their share of the millions of dollars in repair costs. What little federal funding the project still receives will dry up by 2019. 162 going deeper: in-depth series on housing hot zones A Hippie-Era-Urban Experiment Hits 40 Eccentric False Creek South nailed one goal: creating real community in Vancouver’s core. By David P. Ball It’s a good bet that few of the drivers and bus-riders streaming over the Granville or Cambie bridges in Vancouver spare much thought for the stretch of low-rise buildings, pathways, courtyards and green spaces that fill in much of the south shore of False Creek between the two overpasses. They should. Created nearly 40 years ago in a rare alignment of federal, provincial and municipal leadership, the False Creek South community was, and remains, unique in more ways than one. “One of the goals,” recalls architect Michael Geller, who worked on the project for the Canada Mortgage and Housing Corporation in the early 1970s, “was to get a population mix that would replicate the population of Metro Vancouver.” An early convert to that goal was Monty Wood, another young architect who worked at the firm designing False Creek South’s layout. One of the leaders of the project, he recalls, was senior architect Jos Verbauwhede. Wood remembers the Belgian-born Verbauwhede as “a very odd man and a bit of a mystic, a mystic rationalist. A geomancer, that’s what he called himself. He believed land had healthy nodes and unhealthy nodes, and there was a geometry that fitted to that.” Leg-In-Boot Square is one of False Creek South’s more eccentric features. Named for an earlier era’s severed-foot mystery in 1887, the eliptical ‘square’s fountain points to the Lions mountain peaks, a view almost obscured by condo towers since the 1970s When Verbauwhede worked, sketching ideas on paper with felt markers “like Picasso with a long paintbrush just going at it,” Wood says, “it came out as an architectural expression, not in blocks but in these little walled cocoons with gradients of privacy and semi-public areas. It was very organic.” One day Verbauwhede returned to the office after a long weekend and unfurled a design 20 feet long and nearly as going deeper: in-depth series on housing hot zones high as a person. It was unrolled, “courtyard after courtyard, cluster by cluster,” Wood remembers. “There was a rationale for it: streets should be short, then you should have a bend. He wanted to make it as uncomfortable for automobiles as possible. To some extent, he succeeded.” Wood and eight architect friends were so enthused they hatched a plan to move into the community, in a building of their own design. “To see that we could do something quite different and relatively unique in Vancouver — that was compact, socially progressive, taking tired industrial areas and suddenly making them fabulous — I thought, ‘I wouldn’t want to miss this,’” he says. As the project neared completion in 1977, Wood had a fight with his girlfriend and drove down to the construction site with a sleeping bag and his dog. Camping out in his unfinished building, he was awakened around midnight by a boisterous party at a completed condo: newly occupied by Vancouver’s then-mayor, Art Phillips. “It was supposed to be a real community,” he says, “not a suburban monoculture, but a mixed-use, mixed-income, mixedages. It was supposed to reflect the ‘normal’ demographics of Canada, as opposed to Kerrisdale or the Downtown Eastside. It had a real feeling of being ours. We were a little village unto ourselves.” Thousands of joggers, cyclists and strolling tourists enjoy the False Creek South Seawall daily. A green space at its heart The centrepiece of False Creek South is sprawling Charleson Park, noisy with duck ponds and an artificial waterfall, but also offering quiet forest walking paths and stunning views of Vancouver’s downtown skyline and iconic mountain backdrop. The ample green space, splitting the community into two sizeable clusters, was designed to compensate for what at the time was an untested population density for the city. Today, many residents describe the park as a highlight of life in the Creek, a place where children can safely play, adults can chat about community business on their strolls, and other Vancouverites can get a glimpse of what an urban setting planned for quality of life, not cars and freeways, looks like. going deeper: in-depth series on housing hot zones Charleson Park is flanked on both sides by the 170 units of the False Creek Co-operative Housing Association — Vancouver’s largest housing co-op — roughly evenly divided to east and west. One of its first residents was Ana Maddox, who moved there in 1977 after immigrating from the former Yugoslavia. Maddox was attracted to the forward-looking vision of what at the time was a muddy, post-industrial wasteland beside a polluted harbour. She walked with me along a raised berm which mutes the noise from 6th Ave. and the railway tracks that run beside it. When she arrived, it was nothing more than a pile of fill excavated to dig the neighbourhood’s foundations, dotted with spindly saplings. Today, they have grown into a quiet pine forest where crowds of dog-walkers amble daily. about living in a small town, but I’d never done it. A little voice inside me said, ‘There’s your small town, where you’ll know your neighbours and be part of a community.’” Soon, Wilson was brainstorming social ideas over her back fence: evening “salon” discussion groups on environmental and equality themes, held in neighbours’ suites; a local kids’ bicycle festival; a childcare co-operative. Eventually she hatched the idea of launching a newspaper just for the neighbourhood. The Creek lasted several decades, issuing its last edition in 2002. A small town To ensure a mix of working, middle, and upper-middle class occupants, one-third of its units were to be resident-owned condominiums. Beryl Wilson, at the time a modestly paid university employee, moved into one in 1979. It seemed like “a crazy idea” to many, Wilson recalled. The condos were not cheap. Newspaper editorials and opposition city councillors scoffed at the blatant experiment in social engineering. But the moment she saw the emerging community, Wilson was intrigued. “What it looked like to me was a small town,” she says, pouring two cups of coffee in her small kitchen which opens onto an expansive common courtyard. “I’d always been curious Inspired by its small-town quality, Beryl Wilson was one of the first to move to False Creek South. Photo by David P. Ball. “It really was a funny, unique little newspaper,” she chuckles as she leafs through a small stack of yellowed issues fished out of storage. “People used to say they liked it because it gave Finding Home: Affordable Housing Solutions for Greater Vancouver and B.C. them a sense of community. That was its real value. It made people feel that they knew each other.” The community that unfolded often crossed the lines of owner, renter and co-op member. Wilson met Maureen Powers early on and the two became fast friends. Powers left the community but later returned to live in a co-op unit. She still marvels at the audacity of the insight that building a community meant marginalizing the automobile. “It was based on getting people out of their cars,” Powers says. “They anticipated a certain percentage of people just would not have a car. There’s transit right outside the door, why would you need a car? That was forward thinking a long time ago.” Beating the predictions Rider Cooey was another original co-op member. They were pioneers of sorts. Nothing was established, and residents had to figure out how to make their own community decisions, set up internal rent subsidies for low-income residents, create a governance structure that would last the life of the neighbourhood. The Canadian Mortgage and Housing Corporation provided funding and early training to set up committees and manage the finances, but Cooey was struck by both the level of democratic empowerment and responsibilities of co-op life. He takes pride in having defied the initial “great hostility” to False Creek South’s progressive vision and eccentric design. 166 “There were hostile editorials,” he says. “It was predicted to fail because it was too dense. They thought people can’t live at that level of density. They compared us to rats in mazes.” “I’ve raised two batches of kids here,” Cooey adds, sitting at his kitchen table surrounded by children’s drawings. “It’s been a wonderful place to raise kids — the waterfall, the beach, the rocky creek, the muddy stream, the small and big pond — it’s all totally artificial, but it works perfectly as a little bit of nature in the city right outside our door.” While the handful of different co-ops in False Creek South form the largest concentration of that housing form in the province, a key intention of the community plan was that onethird of its residents would be low-income renters. A number of nonprofit societies took responsibility for running several rental complexes, or ‘enclaves’ as locals call them. Wilma DeVito moved into the first of several False Creek rental suites in 1986 and now lives in the largest such enclave, Vancoeverden Court. Minutes from the waterfront and surrounded by green space, it’s affordable housing unlike almost any other. Operated by the New Chelsea Society, the blue-painted complex features staggered balconies, semiprivate backyards, and Verbauwhede’s snowflake-like nested courtyards. We meet in one of these. “I don’t like high-rises,” DeVito says, waving to the condominium towers lining the north shore of False Creek. “I wouldn’t live in one. This is perfect with three floors. It feels secure.” Finding Home: Affordable Housing Solutions for Greater Vancouver and B.C. 167 Like many renters here, DeVito feels a strong sense of ownership and belonging, even though she’s neither condoowner nor co-op member. “The nature of the dwellings — where some people own, some rent, some are in co-ops — it’s a real mix of accommodation, from kids to 90-year-olds,” she says, where renters have a sense of ‘home’ in the community too. A high-risk project Not all has been perfect in False Creek South: more on that in tomorrow’s report. And not everything has worked out as Verbauwhede or the project’s political godfathers planned. The bustling plaza designed to give a feel of European café life never materialized, scuttled by residents who complained about noise and city planners who doubted there was enough business to keep most shops afloat. The project was designed to match the city’s mix of incomes; it still comes close. Still, some joked that the vision of a liveable neighbourhood has worked perhaps a little too well: Few have wanted to leave, regardless of their changing income levels, mobility needs, or departed children. Even in the rental buildings, DeVito seldom sees moving trucks or people leaving. One early enthusiast who no longer lives in False Creek South is Monty Wood. He was forced to move out recently when he was unable to refinance his condo: banks were spooked by the uncertainty hanging over the project’s future tenure on land the city leased to residents four decades ago… until 2036. Before it was housing, south False Creek was the site of decaying industries. The City of Vancouver acquired the ‘brownfield’ site, and leased it in stages to the various project. Finding Home: Affordable Housing Solutions for Greater Vancouver and B.C. Train tracks stills snaked past downtown, and B.C. Place had yet to be built when the first buildings began going up at False South Creek. (Photo: False Creek South Neighbourhood Association.) For years, early residents lived with continuing construction. (Photo: Ray Galbraith.) 168 Finding Home: Affordable Housing Solutions for Greater Vancouver and B.C. Quirky architecture distinguishes the largest concentration of co-op housing in British Columbia. Even after kids have grown up and gone, many older residents linger. ‘No one wants to leave.’ 169 Courtyards lead to further courtyards in a pattern that’s been compared to snowflakes. going deeper: in-depth series on housing hot zones To Help Vulnerable Renters, Boost Second Life for False Creek South? A deal that made Vancouver's urban housing experiment possible now clouds its future. By David P. Ball Since its founding in the 1970s, False Creek South’s residents have quietly enjoyed the community’s waterfall, its duck ponds and cloistered courtyards, its green expanse of lawn in Charleson Square, its view of the changing skyline of downtown between the Granville and Cambie bridges. Unknown to most other Vancouverites, the nearly 6,000 people living in a dozen housing co-ops mixed in equal proportion with condo owners and subsidized renters — all on once-industrial city-leased land — was a conscious experiment in neighbourhood-scale urban design, since studied and applauded by planners and architects from around the world. It hasn’t all been a cake-walk for the occupants of the aging low-rise complexes curled around car-unfriendly streets, but community satisfaction seems high. Now though, False Creek South’s residents are getting a different type of jitters. As the entire city wrestles with stubbornly skyrocketing housing costs and development pressures, the expiry dates of the series of city land leases that made the project possible are coming into sight. When they do, absent other agreements, use of the land, now worth many times its 1970s value, goes back to the city. The first lease expires in 2022, with others following it. Nine years might seem like a long time to most people, but in urban planning terms it’s almost the blink of an eye. And unfortunately for False Creek residents, when it comes to financing and mortgages, banks see it the same way. Soaring towers across False Creek suggest the temptation facing city hall to call an end to a low-rise vision of urban community. Photo: David P. Ball. “People started talking about how they couldn’t sell, because the banks wouldn’t give them a mortgage on a Finding Home: Affordable Housing Solutions for Greater Vancouver and B.C. unit with only 25 years left,” explains Kathleen McKinnon, president of the False Creek South Neighbourhood Association, who lives in one of the Creek’s few condos on freehold (owned) land. “They couldn’t get loans to repair their buildings.” Architect Monty Wood worked for the firm commissioned to build the community. He helped design a row of waterfront condos and when they were done, he purchased one of them — as did eight architect friends. He moved out recently after a bank turned down a loan application because of the impending end of the city’s land lease. The problem, he believes, was that in the 1970s there was little legal experience with selling real estate on leased land. “They had to invent stuff,” Wood said over coffee. “They thought, ‘That’s good enough.’ 171 community dollars. Some of that was defrayed by the remains of federal funding committed at the project’s inception. But that fund is running out within the decade. And borrowing for new repairs is hampered by uncertainty over the co-ops’ land tenure. “It’s an urgent issue,” said Rider Cooey, one of False Creek Co-op’s original members. “As the countdown to lease end approaches, it will become harder and harder to borrow money for maintenance issues, and harder and harder for condo owners to get people to buy in if there may not be lease renewal or — if there is — that circumstances may change for the worse and it gets more expensive.” “We had all been promised at the beginning, ‘Don’t worry about the end of the lease. All your property values are going to hold up because there’s going to be a buy-out clause.’ The intention was to maintain the property value. But 35 years later, it’s turned out that’s not the case.” It’s not only condo owners, who make up a third of the community, who are anxious. In the community’s co-ops, the largest cluster of the form in British Columbia, were among the first to raise an alarm about the staggered expiries of False Creek’s patchwork of leases. Like many British Columbia building owner’s, the coops were hit hard by the ‘leaky condo’ problem of previous decades, and forced to spend years under tarps and millions of False Creek South’s planners didn’t count on so many residents developing different needs as they age. Photo: David P. Ball. Another problem could be put down to the experiment’s very success. Nobody wants to leave and make space for Finding Home: Affordable Housing Solutions for Greater Vancouver and B.C. newcomers. Many of the young families who moved in originally have shrunk as children moved away, but parents remain in suites larger than they need — in part because there’s nowhere in the neighbourhood for them to down-size. Equally worrying is the lack of accessible housing for seniors. “The future is the same big question mark for everybody who lives here,” said Beryl Wilson, founder and editor of the community’s newspaper The Creek, which stopped printing in 2002. The best use of city land? From the City of Vancouver’s standpoint, the termination of the area’s leases over a period of more than a decade starting in 2022 pits preserving an internationally recognized design project that is already providing a substantial chunk of lowcost rental and co-op living, against an opportunity to leverage the (now) high-value waterfront real estate it owns along south False Creek into making greater inroads on its affordable housing objectives. “Here we are 30 or 40 years later and the leases are starting to stare us down,” Kent Munro, Vancouver’s assistant planning director, told Tyee Solutions Society. “We want to ensure in the long term for the city’s supply of affordable housing, that the people living in it are the ones most in need. “The leases coming up are an opportunity to have a rethink of that.” 172 But while the loss of False Creek South’s affordable housing stock would set the city back from its goals, the fact that it’s such an “idyllic little niche,” Monty Wood fears, may lower its priority at city hall. “It doesn’t gain a lot of sympathy from the rest of the residents of the municipality,” he worries. “Why should one per cent of the population of Vancouver be handed another silver platter?” Although city staff say that planning for the Creek’s future won’t start until sometime in 2014 — when resources are hopefully freed up from increasingly contentious community plans under way elsewhere — they say they have met with residents. Residents themselves, under the aegis of their neighbourhood association, have formed a “Re*plan” committee to preemptively pitch solutions to the lease issue. The community has even hired its own architects and planners to develop ideas for dealing with the impending funding, lease and aging crises — effectively kickstarting its own planning conversation without waiting for the city. Although many residents have raised the spectre of development pressure from the astronomical property values surrounding the Creek, Councillor Andrea Reimer, stickhandling the matter at city hall, insisted the survival of the False Creek South project is paramount. Sure, prices have “gone substantially up” across the water in Yaletown, she admitted, “but the point of owning that big chunk of land wasn’t to make a lot of money off of it as a city. It was to ensure the long-term stability of the community. Finding Home: Affordable Housing Solutions for Greater Vancouver and B.C. 173 away, but it sneaks up on you. As anxious as they are, we are too. “We’re anxious and eager to roll up our sleeves and address these issues, to get this work done well in advance of the leases coming up.” Residents rise up Councillor Andrea Reimer: ‘the point wasn’t to make a lot of money as a city.’ Photo: David P. Ball. “The challenge down there is going to be, without federal or provincial dollars, being able to renew the co-op housing, the low-end-of-market rental housing, the quite a bit of supportive housing down there. We have to figure out how to renew the buildings that are there. That is going to create some pressure on that land base.” Reimer stepped in as city council’s point person for the neighbourhood because her Vision Vancouver colleague, Councillor Geoff Meggs, is a resident there. Meggs, Reimer and Munro all say they are impressed by Re*plan, and the neighbourhood association’s foresight in taking inventory and pitching solutions with time to go before the end of their leases. “It’s great they’re raising the flag on this,” Munro said. “On one hand 10 to 15 years, to some people, can feel a long way The residents have brainstormed a number of proposals, chief among them to consolidate the multiple leases into a single umbrella leaseholder. They’ve also taken inspiration from a land trust agreement between the BC Cooperative Housing Federation and the city: that kind of arrangement would also create a governance structure for the community to make more of its own planning decisions. But the idea is largely untested in Canada. Residents would also like to see their renewed leases run longer than the original batch 40 years ago. Monty Wood cited European leases which last 99 years or, in some cases, even for 999 years. Longer terms, he argues, would boost a sense of ownership amongst residents, promote longevity, and help ease future uncertainty about many leases coming to a close at different times. At a community meeting this summer, residents packed a common room off False Creek’s Sitka Square to discuss the Re*plan committee’s suggestions for surviving the lease expiries. While differences were apparent among leasehold condo owners, co-operative members and the small minority of the Creek’s strata owners who are on private land — styled Finding Home: Affordable Housing Solutions for Greater Vancouver and B.C. “freeholders” — most residents in attendance said they would support greater density. That willingness stands in contrast to the numerous protests and resistance elsewhere to city hall’s densification proposals. “This place can absorb some density,” Wood explained. “The first design, as wacky and ingenious as it is, turned out not to be perfect. It does need a tune-up after 35 years.” For instance, building on undeveloped land along 6th Ave. or near the Olympic Village Canada Line station could both help fund renovations on existing buildings, and perhaps provide accessible retirement housing for longtime Creek residents who want to stay in the neighbourhood they have built and cherished for decades. “It’s not often we have residents coming forward asking for density, if you look at the other plans!” the city’s Kent Munro said, with a laugh. “When they raised that in our early meetings and discussions, I was intrigued. “It’s an interesting sort of eyes-wide-open view of planning, right? They’re realists. Nobody’s going in thinking this area is going to change drastically. We want to find a way, and they do, to address these issues, to maybe accommodate some growth, but to keep the essential character of the neighbourhood the way it is.” But rumours of some older units being demolished to make way for such density has some residents anxious. Some nonmarket renters, who are not members of the neighbourhood association under its original mandate, feel left out of the discussions over their future. 174 “We’ve heard rumours of this place being pulled down and something else going up, at some point in time, not anytime soon I don’t think,” said Wilma DeVito, a longtime renter in the Vancoeverden Court affordable housing complex. “Hopefully not. If it’s more than three stories high, it’ll change too much. Anytime there’s a tower, there’s more isolation I think. “I definitely care about what happens,” DeVito says. “I feel… not that I own it, but I certainly feel I belong. You don’t feel that anywhere else; we’re all part of this island.” So, if the city supports False Creek’s survival, can’t it simply renew the leases outright and avoid the uncertainty? “In my mind, it’s definitely more a question of how?” Reimer said. “In a day and age like this, when there is no money from other levels of government, it’s so imperative that we’re able to hold onto the significant but still insufficient resources that we have to be able to support more affordable housing in the city. “We’re fighting so hard to build more — it would be odd to give up that opportunity in an area like this where we have had such good success.” Neighbourhood Association president Kathleen McKinnon is “hopeful” about city negotiations, but said the key question is how to ensure the Creek remains an affordable place to live for its residents in all the housing formats, considering the property values nearby. “There’s any number of possibilities of what the city could do,” McKinnon said. “They could decide to tear some Finding Home: Affordable Housing Solutions for Greater Vancouver and B.C. buildings down. Even if we get lease extensions, what’s it going to cost to stay?” But beyond False Creek South’s clusters and enclaves, some are already expressing reservations about how City Hall might handle False Creek South’s lease renewal. Architect Bill McCreery — who ran unsuccessfully for city council in 2011 under the Non-Partisan Association banner — was instrumental in overseeing the neighbourhood’s development in the 1970s as a member of False Creek’s planning committee. At the time, he was elected to Vancouver Parks Board under Mayor Art Phillips’ since-defunct municipal party, The Electors’ Action Movement (TEAM), which aborted the city’s downtown freeway plans in favour of a vision of “more humane, more people-oriented” development, he told Tyee Solutions Society. Now, as 2014 elections loom, McCreery has resurrected TEAM and vowed to campaign against Vision Vancouver’s development model, which he fears could ruin his forebear’s False Creek legacy. “I find whole thing quite scary,” he said. “I share (Reimer)’s concern about (affordable housing), but what I don’t share is the way they go about doing it. “Essentially, it tends to be heavy-handed and inappropriate. That does indeed give the residents, and the rest of the city, a good deal to be concerned about. Certainly their track record is that they start plunking in high-rises out of scale and context … It’s complete overkill around density.” 175 Most of False Creek South’s residents express pride in living in such a rare example of creative urban design. But as they struggle to secure its affordable future, most doubt it will ever be replicated. For Monty Wood, the 1970s era of visionary urban planning is over. Certainly, he argues, it hasn’t been attempted again on this scale. But while the glass towers reaching skyward across the Creek are proof of the booming success of Vancouver’s real estate industry, he muses, for all its flaws the south shore remains a testament to the “social success” of a long-ago experiment to design for equality, diversity and green living. In fact, the Re*plan committee’s demographic research showed that, following the founding vision of an equal income mix matching the city’s mix, False Creek South today retains its economic diversity. For her part, Beryl Wilson has a guarded view born of a long life. “Things change over 30 years,” she said, placing her stack of yellowing The Creek newspaper clippings back onto a chair. “And you’re no longer pioneers, you’re no longer newcomers. “It would be lovely if [False Creek South] continued, but I wouldn’t bet on it. Who knows how politicians will think 20 years from now?” ‘Inspiring’ Shipping Container Housing Set to Multiply Five months after launching its prototype, Atira aims for a seven-storey recycled tower. By David P. Ball Five months after doors opened, tenants from a variety of backgrounds fill Atira Women’s Resource Society’s 12 shipping-container dwellings at 502 Alexander Street. Photo: David P. Ball. Two women chop vegetables at a large central table in a tight common kitchen, chatting as they gently drop celery and red peppers into a central bowl, destined for snacks during upcoming community programs. A stream of younger women move in and out of the space from the other rooms at Imouto Housing for Young Women, talking happily with each other. “What a beautiful place it is!” Gayle, one of the snackpreparers tells me. “I love the opportunity for community with the other women, because we have so much in common.” Mostly, however, Gayle (who only provided her first name) loves having her own home. She says she had been “traveling around a lot,” staying with friends or nannying her granddaughter. In late November, she moved into a corrugated metal shipping container on the adjacent Atira-owned property. Operated by Atira Women’s Resource Society, the 12 shipping containers stacked three-storeys high at 502 Alexander Street in Vancouver are finally full of tenants five months after opening their doors on Sept. 1. At 280 to 290 square feet, each suite is a self-contained home with wood laminate flooring, a separate entrance, and its own bathroom and — best of all, three tenants told me — a European-style combined washer-dryer machine. In each unit, a full container wall has been replaced by a giant window, many with perfect views of the harbour or the complex’s central courtyard garden. Finding Home: Affordable Housing Solutions for Greater Vancouver and B.C. “I love that it’s my own space,” Gayle says, laughing heartily. “Just walking in through your door; [your neighbours] invite you over for tea.” Across the Imouto kitchen table, Ahjahla Nelson chimes in. She used to live in co-operative housing, but gave up her apartment for a friend and moved here in October. “When I saw the container home, I’d been thinking of a trailer or treehouse or something,” she recalls. “It was like a dream come true. Being able to enter your place from the outside has a real home-feeling to it. It just felt like it was built for me.” Media attention may have dropped away since Atira did a flurry of interviews about the then-empty containers last August. But as they’ve filled with tenants — six units for older women who serve as “intergenerational mentors” to six younger women — the windows have become cluttered with knick-knacks and personal decorations, and the common kitchen at neighbouring Imouto is getting busier, even though each container has its own kitchen space. Community, it seems, is forming. “It’s really in its infancy,” says Atira CEO Janice Abbott over coffee in a nearby Downtown Eastside café. “It’s been interesting to see this little community of women come together around this new, unique kind of construction. They feel really proud to live there. It’ll be interesting in a year from 177 now to see how that community develops, but it’s inspiring to watch it.” Abbott always had faith the exquisitely-staged, architecturally-repurposed containers would prove “how liveable small spaces can be,” she says. “Even though I was a believer in the beginning, the containers look a hundred times better than I ever imagined they could,” she says. “They’re really beautiful.” In addition to the 12 container suites, the $3.3-million construction paid for 19 other non-market rental units, plus a heritage restoration of the Imouto building. The project was built on a city-owned lot in partnership with Canada Mortgage & Housing Corporation and BC Hydro. With the suites quickly filled, Atira intends to submit a rezoning application by the end of January for a property it already owns in Strathcona. But the organization plans to go a step further: a seven-storey-high shipping container housing complex, with its requisite elevator and a new design. The site at the corner of Hawks and Hastings streets has the same square-footage as the one where the pilot project sits, but it’s a different shape and the new structure aims for twice the height of the first, all requiring a new architectural plan. Unlike the bachelor-suite prototypes at Imouto, the new family-oriented project will transform shipping containers into a mix of one and two-bedroom units. One challenge will be securing the necessary land rezoning from light-industrial to residential, for which Atira will submit its application by “the end of the month,” Abbott Finding Home: Affordable Housing Solutions for Greater Vancouver and B.C. 178 says. Another will be to scale down the $82,500 per-unit costs. Abbott says the pilot version spared no expense with some of its “premium elements” — the fixtures, countertops and so on — because she wanted the units “to show well” as the first container housing in Canada. “There were a bunch of cost premiums associated with building the first,” she says. “The square-foot costs are really high, they really are, but what costs money in any unit are the kitchen cabinets, the plumbing, the fixtures, the bathrooms… it’s going to take a few projects to figure out. “If you’re building small units, and each of them has a kitchen, bathroom, and front door, your square-foot cost goes up,” she adds. “But the cost per unit is really low.” Happily contained Climbing the stairs beside the current three-storey container complex at Imouto, the blue and orange corrugated metal is icy to the touch. A bitter wind sweeps in from the port to the north. A smiling woman with curly white hair and round blue glasses opens her door, and I’m greeted by an enveloping warmth and a slight scent of roses. Susan Edwards beckons me to sit at her small kitchen table as the CBC hourly news jingle chimes in the background, where a mattress is pushed neatly against the wall-length window. From steel box to home: former CBC Radio host Susan Edwards was the first to move into the completed shipping container project. Now she’s seen as a mentor to younger women in the complex. Photo: David P. Ball. In the four years since she moved to Vancouver, where her daughter lives, Edwards has moved five times for a variety of reasons all-too-common among the city’s renters. “It’s been just incredibly difficult to find a place to live,” she said. “I went through the experience of renoviction, I saw it happen to a lot of neighbours too… then I saw a TV item about [Atira's container project], and thought, ‘Oh my gosh, look at that!’” Edwards was the first tenant to move into the pilot project in September. Her unit looks out over Burrard Inlet and the North Shore mountains. She has mingled photos of her family with goalie Robert Luongo on the wall beside her entrance. A quiet, rhythmic churning sound emanates from the corner of the home. Finding Home: Affordable Housing Solutions for Greater Vancouver and B.C. “Listen to that magic washing machine!” she says excitedly. “You put your clothes in and they come out dry. How could anything be more efficient?! The space is amazing.” 179 broadcasting, but not the anxiety. Although Edwards doesn’t consider herself a mentor to the younger women in the enclave, she attends communal gatherings and has formed a bond with some of the other tenants. During the holidays, she painted a portrait of the block and had Christmas cards printed with the image. One card is addressed to the young women in the Imouto community, and sits in the main building across the courtyard. “You have much to teach all of us,” Edwards wrote them, “and beautiful spirits that I sense in your presence. May the year ahead be one of blossoms and sunshine, so your music will be heard.” Joining us in the unit is the manager of Atira’s intergeneration mentorship program, Jennifer Kleinsteuber, who argues that Edwards is plays a vital role in the community. Many of the younger residents have struggled with addiction, mental health and poverty, but are seeking a new life. “One woman told me, ‘I get to have a safe place to be so I can make some positive changes in my life,” Kleinsteuber says. “She came here, and it was like a fresh start in life. She’s just flourishing, she’s blooming.” The radio is always on, she tells me, harkening back to her work years ago as co-host of CBC Radio’s morning show in Saint John, New Brunswick. She misses the excitement of Atira’s intergeneration mentorship program coordinator Jennifer Kleinsteuber inside a soon-to-be-occupied suite. Misgivings about housing women in ‘crates’ evaporated amid ‘amazement at how beautiful these looked on the outside and on the inside,’ she says. Photo: David P. Ball. As an artist, Edwards is fascinated by architecture and design and believes this kind of housing — using recycled containers as the structure to lower costs — could be replicated “everywhere.” “It’s amazing to do housing of this kind,” she said. “I wish I could promote that angle of things. The program is developing here, it will take time. It’s a really interesting work-inprogress.” Finding Home: Affordable Housing Solutions for Greater Vancouver and B.C. ‘A sort of protection’ With its ever-expanding collection of properties in Vancouver’s Downtown Eastside, Atira is not without its detractors. So it’s no surprise some people scoffed at the optics of the project. “There was a lot of hesitation about housing women in shipping crates,” Kleinsteuber admits. “But I didn’t have the same kind of emotional reaction as a lot of people. I read about how they are doing student residences in the Netherlands, and in the U.S. people are making studios out of shipping containers. In the end, there was amazement at how beautiful these looked on the outside and on the inside.” Other tenants like Gayle developed a keen interest in the raised-bed gardens in the courtyard between the containers, which were the source of herbs and seasonings for the community’s turkey suppers over the holidays. “I have ideas in my head about things to do,” she says. “The mentoring really interests me.” But even more so the gardening, she adds with a broad smile. “I’m really a foodie; I’m into food security and food sovereignty. [There are] so many things we could do right at this location.” Describing herself as a poet who likes “to look deeper into things,” Ahjahla Nelson pauses from chopping vegetables across the table to philosophize about container living. 180 “What does it mean to be contained?” she muses. “Will it contain who you are, your emotions? I see [this project] as a sort of protection.” When she was accepted into the new Imouto container suites, her “heart was really happy” to finally live “someplace I could call my home, that surrounded me.” “I’ve been in 16 different foster homes; you learn to get along with each other and help each other out. I felt like I really fit in here,” she adds. “It’s a little contained community.”