Pubdate: Wed, 12 Dec 2007
Source: Vancouver Sun (CN BC)
Copyright: 2007 The Vancouver Sun
Contact:  http://www.canada.com/vancouver/vancouversun/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/477
Author: Adam J. Leamy and Jamie Lamb, Special to the Sun
Note: Adam J. Leamy and Jamie Lamb are partners in Northwest Public 
Affairs, a B.C.-based consulting firm.
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/topic/Downtown+Eastside
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/people/Gordon+Campbell

GORDON CAMPBELL, MEET THE DOWNTOWN EASTSIDE

It's Time for an End to Political Me-Too-Ism on the Tough Files

Is it just us or does it seem British Columbians are being asked to 
accept "me-too" leadership from the provincial government instead of 
the real deal?

Don't get us wrong, the B.C. premier's webpage tells us some things 
are getting done.

B.C. is acting on climate change, with the premier going to such 
lengths as to declare war on it. While this puts him out in front of 
the provincial pack, it was Al Gore's message and Arnold 
Schwarzenegger's lead that paved the way for the likes of B.C. to follow.

Aboriginal treaties, too, are a definite accomplishment, but are 
relevant really within our own borders as they come long after other 
provinces dealt with the matter and only after the courts required 
that B.C. act to secure resolution.

Good things, both. Worthy of acknowledgement and recognition. Yet 
both are "me-too" campaigns, prompted by the actions of others.

We make this observation at a time when recent Vancouver Sun stories 
about Victoria's failure remind us that even when it comes to flops, 
we're still travelling the path blazed by others: A crass child 
car-safety-seat seat program working to save lives in government 
constituencies but not Opposition ones. All these years after Matthew 
Vaudreuil, and accusations that children's lives are, unbelievably, 
still at risk.

"Following Others and Failing, Too" is hardly the stuff of catchy 
licence-plate slogans, nor is it the legacy British Columbia 
deserves. But that's the trouble with me-tooism: That in taking 
action -- no matter how well deserved -- on an issue defined by 
others, you might not have enough left over to tackle the issue in 
your own back yard, the one that is known -- or about to be better 
known -- around the world as your signature issue, your signature 
failure, and the one issue that no one but you can take on.

Welcome to the Downtown Eastside.

We know what sort of place it is. A heartbreaking place. A shattering 
place. An unsafe place. To some, it is home. For others, a place to ignore.

People -- good people, dedicated people, remarkable people -- spend 
difficult hours every day, every month, every year working to address 
its health problems, its economic problems, its social problems. 
These efforts have and continue to consume mammoth amounts of money, 
hope and spirit.

The result? The Downtown Eastside of Vancouver has become a 
provincial, national and international symbol of those who have lost 
hope, health, direction and dignity.

The United Nations calls it one of "North America's most blighted and 
drug-infested neighbourhoods . . . home to a Hepatitis C rate of just 
below 70 per cent and an HIV prevalence rate of an estimated 30 per 
cent -- the same as Botswana's." Whether you take your information 
from the United Nations, or the local Pivot Legal Society, which 
tells us that "an estimated 5,000 injection users live in the 
Downtown Eastside . . . where overdose and suicide are the leading 
causes of death . . . in Canada's poorest postal code," the truth is 
that the neighbourhood literally sheds blood and lives for want of a 
way out, for want of leadership.

Just so we're clear, that leadership won't be coming from Al Gore. Or 
the governor of California. Nor should it. Because what begins on 
Main Street in B.C. communities winds up at Main and Hastings. The 
Downtown Eastside is ours, and ours to resolve.

Put simply, someone needs to declare war on the problems of the 
Downtown Eastside.

Won't be easy, of course. Mike Harcourt had the background -- 
storefront lawyer, Vancouver mayor, B.C. premier -- to make it 
happen, but he was unable to dent the problem. Gordon Campbell, who 
followed Harcourt as mayor, has spent six years as premier, and seems 
to be on his way to a third term, yet, the problems of Downtown 
Eastside persist, exacting their devastating toll. And it's still news.

Campbell may well be on stage at the opening of the Winter Games in 
2010. We know from the experience of other Olympic cities that the 
pageantry and pleasantry of the Olympics will easily and quickly be 
contrasted by the world's media with the brutal realities offered by 
the Downtown Eastside. That's how those things work.

But amid that comparison, surely some journalists will ask, how could 
such a situation exist, such devastation consume so many, on the 
watch of a former three-term Vancouver mayor, by then a three-term 
B.C. premier?

It's a question that can be answered one of three ways.

One is that it takes a three-term mayor and premier to know that the 
Downtown Eastside problems are so big, so intractable, so insoluble, 
the situation simply so hopeless, that it can't be dealt with.

The second is that amid all that electoral victory, and all those 
years in the power seat, political me-tooism trumped original 
leadership, and with no Gores or Schwarzeneggers stepping forward to 
take on the Downtown Eastside, the call to action was never raised.

The third is that someone with the premier's experience of this 
province would know that a decline of the U.S. economy, a softening 
of commodity prices, or something equally beyond our control would 
exact a harsh toll on B.C., removing the means to act.

Does it have to be this way? Several years ago, on this page for B.C. 
Day, we wrote about the remarkable achievements of British Columbians 
that were hailed as world firsts that improved life and the human 
condition in B.C., across Canada and around the globe. We know 
British Columbians do amazing, wonderful, life-changing things.

We say this, because the two of us do not pretend to know the 
prescription for Downtown Eastside success. But we have to believe 
that with more than 20 years in elected office, 13 of them in the top 
elected jobs the province has to offer, the premier will have a 
better idea than most of us on what it would take to halt and reverse 
the global-scale devastation of the Downtown Eastside. He occupies 
the position of power -- and surely he still has the will -- to make it happen.

But if it's a push he needs, then this: Premier, there is a 
neighbourhood a mere stone's throw from your office, not that far 
from your home -- or from any of our homes, really -- that has been 
under siege for decades by a force that has consumed generations of 
dignity, health, hope, peace and life. Want a war? Declare war on this enemy.

In your arsenal, pull together the people you know and who are known 
by others for their expertise and build the strategy to win the war 
in the Downtown Eastside. Put them in a room and give them 100 days 
to build upon your knowledge and years of experience in the top 
government jobs in B.C. and produce the strategy that will win back 
the Downtown Eastside to the side of health, safety, stability and, 
above all, hope.

Take a page out of your recently created Climate Action Team, an 
initiative that brings together the best minds in B.C. to fight the 
war you declared on climate change. Only this time, don't wait for 
others to validate the legitimacy of the issue before you venture 
into it. No more leadership carpooling. No more coattail followship. Step up.

Then, premier, implement this strategy, and make all of us your 
troops. Tell us what we must do to play our role for our 
neighbourhoods and for the Downtown Eastside -- for we are all 
connected -- and encourage us to use our voices to drive all levels 
of government to take the action required.

Win this war. Provide the original, made-in-B.C. leadership that 
allows you to write the book on how cities in our time can reclaim 
what's been lost, on how neighbourhoods and their residents can be 
released from the forces that oppress them.
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MAP posted-by: Richard Lake