Homeless in Abbotsford, BC

I DO NOT, HAVE NOT, WOULD NOT ever suggest throwing money at a problem. I am a REALIST, believing in examining a problem to understand what the situation IS. I am not an Ideologue who, wearing the blinders of ideology, looks at a situation and sees what they want to see, not what really is. There is NO perfect solution. A system dealing with people demands flexibility and denies neat, easy answers. Rigidly applying Ideology guarantees failure. How I came to homelessness: click Backstory below.




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Transparent? Whole Story? Fiscal Responsibility? Where?

One could only wish that councillor Bruce Beck would practice what he preaches about “…owe it to our taxpayers to tell the whole story, not just the parts that support their own agendas” in his response to the letter from the Canadian Taxpayers Federation citing Abbotsford for “arena envy” and the fact Abbotsford taxpayers are on the hook for the entire cost of the structure.

Let us review a few of the thins Mr. Beck left out of “... the whole story, not just the parts that support their (that is to say Mr. Beck’s) own agendas”.

Mr. Beck chooses to ignore the fact that there were no monies from the provincial government because Mr. Beck and others failed to secure provincial funding before rushing into Plan A. Flagrantly ignoring the fact that during the debate over Plan A, those questioning the management of the entire Plan A process pointed out the need to obtain provincial funds before finalizing plans and financing. Securing provincial funds before or during the process is exactly what Premier Campbell told them should have been done when he said NO provincial funding.

Of course Mr. Beck also chooses to ignore the fact that despite selling taxpayers on a maximum cost of $85 million, costs are well over $100 million and climbing. Which is not surprising considering that he now acknowledges that council was aware of other “incidental” costs such as the close to $10 million dollar cost for land.

In light of these and other facts we had best get Mr. Beck to define what exactly he means by “… tell the whole story…”, since what took place during the Plan A debate and continues to take place vis-à-vis Plan A, certainly does not meet my definition of telling the whole story?

We definitely have to have him define what he means when he states that “…Our approach was more transparent”. I fail to see how you can call a process transparent when taxpayers are required to file and pursue Freedom of Information request to obtain information about Plan A in order to determine facts such as the city spent $140,000 advertising Plan A while telling taxpayers they only spent $40,000 – a small error of only 250%.

Failing to secure provincial grants, failing to disclose incidental costs such as the millions for property, total costs that have escalated past the price “sold’ to taxpayers of $85 million (to $108 million and climbing). This is “enhanced fiscally responsibility”?

While on the topic of fiscally responsibility is it just me who considers it pure smug self-exaltation for Mr. Beck, at this point in time, to be patting himself on the back about “Abbotsford’s model, calls for the facility’s operations to be completely self-funding and profitable within three years of start up.” This without a major tenant or a single performance booked for the arena?

The costs Mr. Beck cites for Chilliwack are actual costs of operation. Not some pipe dream. Public facilities run operating deficits which is why they are public facilities, built by the public for the benefit of the public. If you could make money by building say … a 7,000 seat arena in Abbotsford, would not some entrepreneur do so and make those profits for themselves?

The most disturbing aspect Mr. Beck’s response, especially in light of his statement about “owe it to our taxpayers to tell the whole story, not just the parts that support their own agendas” is that he has chosen to ignore or failed to address the main point of the Canadian Taxpayers Federation letter. Other than dismissively saying they called infrastructure “unsexy” and fatuously speaking about how much the funds the city has to spend.

I say disturbing because his reply suggests that Mr. Beck, as one of those responsible for making important infrastructure decisions and choices, lacks an understanding of what is involved in those decisions.

Mr. Beck, it is not a question of how much you have to spend on infrastructure, even if you are spending $4 million, but of how much you need to be spending on infrastructure. If you need to be investing $10 million a year in infrastructure in order to attract business and high paying jobs or meet the needs of unmanaged residential growth, spending $4 million only gets you into a bigger infrastructure deficit – that at some point you have to make up.

The taxpayers federation’s point was that because they can be completed within a councils term of office and that there is a much “sexier” photo-op with a fancy new arena as opposed to a sewage lagoon, politicians let ego or even “arena envy” cause them to opt for arenas over the “unsexy” infrastructure needs of their cities and taxpayers.

The result of this behaviour is to saddle their cities with a debt load that prevents those cities from being able to build needed infrastructure or infrastructure upgrades – except by imposing heavy tax increases on the taxpayers.

In the case of Abbotsford having assumed $85 million in debt for Plan A, where are the funds going to come from to finance the $100+ million (unsexy) infrastructure needs Abbotsford faces over the next several years? From the mythical profits of the arena or more promises of provincial or federal grants that do not materialize?

Letters refered to:

January 26, 2008 Bruce Beck letter – Abbotsford News

Editor, The News:

I am responding to the letter from the Canadian Taxpayer’s Federation (CTF) in your Jan. 19 edition.

The CTF writes of Chilliwack’s arena: “Private investment and expertise not only saved ratepayers from debt and property tax increases, it ensured the future viability of the facility.”

That’s simply not true.

The majority of Prospera Place’s funding was taxpayer debt. The debt doesn’t show on the books of the City of Chilliwack, because it’s in the developer’s name. However, Chilliwack taxpayers are contractually obligated to make 100 per cent of all debt repayments. They’re also stuck with an interest rate higher than what was available through municipal financing (and a rate much higher than Abbotsford was able to lock in for 25 years).

When it comes to private sector expertise, Chilliwack and Abbotsford both chose ‘for profit companies’ to design, build and operate their facilities.

Chilliwack chose a company who, at the time, had absolutely no experience in building or operating a sports complex.

Abbotsford chose PCL, one of Canada’s largest construction companies to build ours. We hired Global Spectrum, one of North America’s largest operators of sports facilities to operate it.

As for viability, the CTF would do well to review the ongoing operational subsidies Chilliwack taxpayers are forced to make. Three years ago, the annual cost to Chilliwack taxpayers on top of debt servicing was roughly $400,000/year. Today that cost has reportedly risen to above $600,000 per year – that’s a 50 per cent increase in three years.

Abbotsford’s model, calls for the facility’s operations to be completely self-funding and profitable within three years of start up.

Abbotsford could have built the E&S Centre without a tax increase. Over $4 million/year that had been used for servicing other debts was free to fund that project. Instead, Abbotsford chose to seek voter approval (with not one but two ballots) to borrow $85 million, so that $4 million could go towards infrastructure like water, sewer and roads. Things the CTF called “unsexy.”

Contrary what the CTF implied, last year’s 16 per cent tax increase was not solely linked to the E&S Centre. It covered the two other Plan A projects, additional police, firefighters, additional customer service staffing and a host of other new programs for one of the fastest growing cities in all of Canada.

Chilliwack residents are fortunate to have a first-class facility run by a truly outstanding management team. But contrary to the CTF, they got that facility with significant new debt, higher taxes and built-in operational subsidies from local taxpayers.

Abbotsford extensively reviewed Chilliwack’s model. Our approach was more transparent, gave us more private sector expertise, lower debt costs and enhanced fiscally responsibility.

If the CTF and others are going to criticize Abbotsford, they owe it to our taxpayers to tell the whole story, not just the parts that support their own agendas.

Coun. Bruce Beck, Chair

Plan A Steering Committee

January 19, 2008 Canadian Taxpayer’s Federation letter – Abbotsford News

Editor, The News:

It is fairly easy to see why many B.C. municipalities have a so-called “infrastructure deficit.” Infrastructure, like wastewater treatment plants, are unsexy projects that usually can’t be completed in one municipal election cycle. Recreational facilities, on the other hand, are highly visible and appear, at least on the surface, to bring great benefits to the community. But do they?

When a municipality such as Kamloops spends almost $40 million to build a sports facility to attract tournaments from all over Canada – if not North America – it is engaging in a very risky strategy. Kamloops could be left with its own Fast Ferry fiasco.

Why? Because the “if we built it they will come” strategy doesn’t always work. It can saddle local ratepayers with huge bills that can only be paid by higher taxes in the future. Not only may this strategy leave local ratepayers with a legacy of debt, Kamloops now doesn’t have the money to build the wastewater treatment plant it needs.

Kamloops’ $106 million municipal debt, about $1,325 per person, means more municipal tax dollars are being used to pay debt interest every year. The amount of interest Kamloops pays on its debt increased from $8.8 million in 2005 to $11.6 million in 2006 and may go to $15 million in 2007. So instead of building core infrastructure, city politicians are collecting tax dollars to pay bondholders.

Kamloops isn’t the only municipality in danger of a Fast Ferry fiasco. About half of Kelowna’s property tax increase is to build its $44 million Aquatic Centre. Vancouver, meanwhile, set aside $20 million for an Olympic legacy fund and is using $2 million of that to host dignitaries. Now, this probably won’t result in a big new building, but it does give new meaning to the term “legacy.”

Yes, sports facilities can be great community assets. But too often, politics trumps economics and ratepayers end up paying a lot more than what they bargained for. One way to bring these facilities to a community without creating a huge burden on ratepayers is with a public private partnership, or P3.

A P3 is a contract between a government and a private sector company to provide public infrastructure. A good example of how a P3 saved local ratepayers millions of dollars is in the new arena in Chilliwack. Chilliwack built a 5,500 seat arena for $25 million, and used only $6 million in public funds. The private sector invested the rest. The private partner, the Chilliwack Chiefs Development Corp., owned the town’s Tier 2 B.C. Hockey League franchise and was involved with the WHL franchise ownership group. The WHL is a league in Western Canada, Washington and Oregon where junior players with professional aspirations play. Private investment and expertise not only saved ratepayers from debt and property tax increases, it ensured the future viability of the facility – Chilliwack now has a WHL franchise.

Let’s compare the arena in Chilliwack with the arena in Abbotsford, a neighboring municipality. Abbotsford, in a fit of “arena envy” decided to build a 7,000 seat arena for $55 million. Like Kamloops, Abbotsford is doing this entirely with public funds. Abbotsford’s property taxes, unsurprisingly, went up by 16 per cent last year.

P3s are not a magic bullet but they do provide a way to build infrastructure without saddling ratepayers with higher debt and property taxes. Governments’ shift away from their core mandate has created an infrastructure deficit in B.C. Private sector money and expertise can help both remedy that deficit without increasing taxes and make these projects a financial success.

Canadian Taxpayer’s Federation



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Saying Thank You.

We all to often forget how important it is to say thank you to others, forgetting how good it feels to us when someone expresses thanks for something we have done.

I did not realize, did not appreciate at the time, the gift my mother and father gave me when they made me sit down during the Christmas holidays and write thank you notes for gifts received. At the kitchen table it was “Please pass …” and “Thank you.” In public it was “What do you say? Please or Thank You.”

It left me with a set of manners that is an integral part of my nature. I was reminded of this today by feedback on how pleased a note of thanks had made the people who had given me a much needed and treasured helping hand.

I am not good at asking for help and sometimes struggle to find the right words to say “Thank you” appropriately. But give me a pen or keyboard and I produce a thank you note grounded in those Christmas holiday (wasting) notes of my youth.

So I was glad that taking a little time to express my thoughts and feelings about how much I valued the help and friendship I received pleased those who I wrote the note for.

Ii also got me to thinking about what would happen if we all took the time to ask “Please…” and say “Thank you”. I would certainly disperse a great deal more civility into our society. Which begs the question of what would flow from this civility? Courtesy, consideration, concern, caring, compassion, contemplation, consequence?

We are always going on about how bad society is getting, all the problems in the country and world and… and… and …

What if part of the solution is as simple as an increased level of civility? I see no reason not to experiment with this propitious proposition – join me?

Please and Thank You.


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Tragically ...

... the irony of earmarking $105 million to help children in Africa and Asia, is lost on Mr. Harper and his fellow Ideologues in the Conservative party.

A government that vigorously refuses funding to provide the support and programs Canadian children need to get them off to a good and healthy start to their lives and schooling.

This refusal to do our best for ALL Canadian children results in a privileged class of children gaining a decided and unfair advantage from the start of their lives over their less wealthy peers. Adding to the growing imbalance and unfairness of Canadian society.

To add insult to the injury Mr. Harper is doing to these most vulnerable young Canadian citizens, he also vowed to double aid to Africa by 2008-09. This promise of increased aid to Africa comes on the heels of the UN report censuring Canada for the number of citizens living in “3rd world living conditions”.

When a government chooses to pursue fiscal and economic policies that promote the transfer of wealth to a privileged class favoured by government policies, the government has a moral responsibility to ensure that those Canadians forsaken by government policy do not find themselves living in “3rd world conditions”.

Given the federal government's pursuit of policies that result in the creation of an ever faster growing class of Canadians unable to afford basic shelter, the federal government must either change policies or formulate ways to ensure the availability of affordable housing for all Canadians, not just those privileged to be economically enriched by government policies.

Affordable housing is a necessity, not just for the fairness and balance of Canadian society, but for the continued growth and health of the Canadian economy. Similarly programs that promote the wellness, health and education of all Canadian children promote the Canadian economy. Both are part of the infrastructure needed for Canada to compete and prosper globally.

In an increasingly integrated world, Canada simply cannot afford the ideological blindness of our current government policies. Indeed, Canada cannot afford the competitive disadvantages contained in the policies espoused by any current national party.

Federal political parties and politicians must formulate policy based on what is needed for the long-term health and growth of the Canadian economy not on ideology. Otherwise Canadians must look elsewhere for the leadership needed to thrive in a fast changing world.

Or we may well find ourselves looking for foreign aid, as more and more Canadians find themselves living in what we think of as “3rd world conditions”. The conditions far too many Canadians, and a shaming number of Canadian children, currently live in.


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You know you might be an Ideologue if …

… Your first reaction to a report from your own handpicked advisers is to make excuses rather than consider and address the issues they highlight as needing action. Exactly what happened with the report released December 13, 2007.

The BC Progress Board – 18 business executives and academic leaders handpicked by Gordon Campbell – named BC the second-worst province in the country on a number of social indicators.

"The most troubling social indicator is the proportion of British Columbians living below the low-income threshold," says the report, which calls the social condition category "one of the most compelling considerations" for judging a society.

The report says the proportion of people living on low incomes in B.C. has been greater than other provinces through much of the past decade.

The government’s response came in the form of Minister of Employment and Income Assistance Claude Richmond making excuses and offering explanations of why the board was wrong. Together with the old political standby, vague promises that the government will take the report seriously and see where improvements can be made.

It is this type of “what problem, I don’t see a problem, sorry not in my ideological world view”, non-responses that explain why this is the second year in a row for BC’s unacceptable rating and position on the list. As long as the man at the wheel sees only what his ideology allows him to perceive, excuses and denial will be the response to issues lying in the blind spots imposed by ideology.

Mr. Campbell needs to ponder the words of Robert Frost, or if preferred, George Bernard Shaw.

Mr. Frost warned that donning the blinders of purpose will, like the blinders on a horse, inevitably lead to narrowness of point of view. Mr. Shaw cautioned that the moment we WANT to believe something, one becomes blind to arguments against it.

If Mr. Campbell fails to shed his ideological blinders, stop making excuses, listen to his own hand-picked experts and address the social issues existing in our cities and province ...... his hand-picked Progress Board will continue, year after year, to find increasing social problems and inequities.

If you are going to hand-pick experts to report, it would be prudent to listen to them and address the issues they bring forward as requiring attention.

Rather than blindly saying "Neigh".


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Gordon Campbell - Ideologue?

Having a firmly held world view based on one's Ideology is like travelling through life and the world around you wearing a set of blinders. It narrows your vision down to tunnel vision, denying one a full and true view of the real world existing around you.

It is this narrowness of vision that can result in the ideologue being taken by surprise by things such as homeless and addiction issues, a mistake-prone child protection system, the B.C. Lotteries scandal. It can lead to a management style where the Ideologye keeps the reins firmly in his hands because he is the keeper of THE VISION. At some point you begin to lose valuable people because of this interferrence. You also lose some of your best people because your Ideology blinds you to issues they see as important.

Labour Minister Olga Ilich's unhappiness manifested itself in her confirmation that she wouldn't be seeking re-election. Finance Minister Carole Taylor is also leaving, with reports saying she's grown tired of Campbell's managing style and his refusal to see and deal with social issues of concern to her.

I read with interest a piece by Keith Baldrey about Campbell and recent events which included his evaluation that Campbell is "... incredibly well-versed in all sorts of issues, and can talk knowledgeably about everything from forestry to health care and climate change." Undoubtably Mr. Campbell would agree with this statement - as would many others.

Therein lies a major problem, perhaps the major problem, with and for Campbell and his Liberals. An Ideologue is well-versed and knowledgable within the framework of his Ideology. If the reality of the causes and solutions of issues lies outside his ideology, an ideologue will find causes/explainations that fit within his world view. The problem is that solutions based on addressing the wrong causatity factors cannot suceed in bringing about the outcomes needed to address the issues. This is particularily true in many of the social issues because at their root lies people, giving rise to very chaotic cause/effect/solutions conditions.

I see the results of this clash between BC Liberal Ideology and reality daily - increasing numbers of homeless that include seniors and families; increasingly unaffordable housing; wage levels that even at full time, people cannot live on; increases in those sufferring mental illness and addiction ending up homeless and on our streets; poverty etc. Social problems that do not lend themselves, or the methods for addressing them, to ANY ideology. These types of issues have to be addressed based on the way they are, their reality, not upon how we want them to be.

Mr. Baldrey may be correct that their " ...continual lead in popularity has allowed the Liberals to retain a lofty air of arrogance..." I am not totally agreement with his conclusion that this lead " ....has prevented them from realizing a pattern of problems may be developing."

Undoubtably popularitity, success and arrogance can/will cause one to miss developing problems. However it seems to me that many of the developing and growing problems that face the BC government are growing in the blind spots caused by Campbell's and the Liberal Party's Ideological blinders.

One can only hope that if Campbell and the Liberals begin to worry about re-election, it may give those in the party with a wider, non-ridgid worldview an opportunity to cause Campbell and collegues to remove their Ideological blinders.


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Lament for Jacob Marley

Why is that Jacob Marley, the true hero of A Christmas Carol, is so oft unappreciated by readers or the viewing audience? While Scrooge may be the central character of the story, can there be any doubt that the hero of the story is Marley?

The dictionary defines hero as: A person noted for feats of courage or nobility of purpose, especially one who has risked or sacrificed his or her life.

While subsequent plays, stories and interpretations have Marley’s soul being saved by his actions leading to the redemption of Scrooge; in the original Lewis Carol tale there is no evidence that Marley received any benefit from his actions in saving his old partner and friend Scrooge.

Indeed the last we see or hear of Marley is: “The spectre, after listening for a moment, joined in the mournful dirge; and floated out upon the bleak, dark night.” The only comfort the reader is left to imagine is that even though Marley is condemned to walk the Earth bound in his chains of greed for eternity, his spirit can take some comfort in the knowledge that Scrooge will not share his fate.

Scrooge’s action, of allowing the light into his dark life and soul, led him to joy and friendship. Marley’s action, of securing “… a chance and hope of escaping my fate. A chance and hope of my procuring, Ebenezer”, still leaves Marley’s ghost wandering the earth with “'No rest, no peace. Incessant torture of remorse.”

Is this not the embodiment of nobility of purpose, to save Scrooge from sharing his own fate with no gain for Marley?

Why this concern for Marley? Because it is in Marley’s words the true lesson or principle of A Christmas Carol is found. A lesson often lost in the joy and happiness of Scrooge in reclaiming his humanity and letting the light back into his life.

Consider Marley’s words:

“I wear the chain I forged in life, I made it link by link, and yard by yard; I girded it on of my own free will, and of my own free will I wore it.”

“'It is required of every man, that the spirit within him should walk abroad among his fellow-men…”

“Mankind was my business. The common welfare was my business; charity, mercy, forbearance, and benevolence, were, all, my business. The dealings of my trade were but a drop of water in the comprehensive ocean of my business!”

Marley forged his chains, link by link, dollar by dollar, possession by possession, and girded them on of his own free will. It is our choice whether we let the spirit within us walk among our fellow men or hoard it to ourselves. Focusing, as did Marley, on accumulating possessions, property and wealth for no purpose but the amassing itself. As far too many today focus on the accumulation of possessions and dollars, rather than upon letting the spirit within walk among their fellow man.

In locking his spirit within Marley became possessed with his worldly goods letting them become the entirety rather than “…but a drop of water in the comprehensive ocean of my business!”

Whereas in truth “Mankind was my business. The common welfare was my business; charity, mercy, forbearance, and benevolence, were, all, my business.”

The common welfare, charity, mercy, forbearance, and benevolence are all of us our business. Mankind. No qualifiers or limitations, simply all of Mankind. Not those we judge deserving, not those who agree with us, not those we approve of, not those we go to church with, not those who profess the same faith. Simply Mankind in its entirety, no ifs, ands, or buts.

The welfare of every single person is our business and to him or her we owe charity, mercy, forbearance, and benevolence to help in achieving wellness; in order that we may achieve our own spiritual health and wellness.
Wishing All a Joyous and


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