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MEGA-NEWS: DTES planning process not working for low-income people

On November 8, over 50 people attended a meeting at the Carnegie Community Centre to discuss whether the Downtown Eastside Local Area Planning Process (LAPP) was working for low-income community members. The general consensus was no. 

“Everybody here who’s involved with LAPP is spending tons of time at bureaucratic meetings and reading reams of paper that the City churns out,” says Jean Swanson, coordinator of the Carnegie Community Action Project, adding 10-12 members are spending 160 hours a week on the LAPP. “Could this time be spent more effectively doing something else?”

Committee members acknowledged they spent less time organizing demonstrations and grassroots campaigns against gentrification than in previous years because of the LAPP. They cite the approval of the condo and commercial development at 955 East Hastings as an example of a failure to organize strong opposition. 

“We’re getting screwed by the process, and the people who are screwing us are the developers and people who have contracts, investments, and properties tied up in the Downtown Eastside,” says Ivan Drury, former co-chair of the LAPP and a member of the Downtown Eastside Neighbourhood Council.

But that doesn’t mean low-income committee members will be quitting the LAPP. Instead they vowed to create a “people’s plan” within the LAPP by focusing on grassroots, peer group campaigns to improve living conditions in the Downtown Eastside (DTES), stopping further development in the neighbourhood, and developing their own plan for the future of the DTES by consulting with low-income residents. 

“I think it’s true what people said about rallying numbers and making alliances, but we can’t just have numbers, we also need a vision of what’s to be done. We need to have a program and ideas that we unite around and that we fight for,” says Drury. 

“This group that’s been developing vision through the LAPP is developing as a leadership that can put forward some ideas to rally around.”

by Katie Hyslop

This article originally appeared in Megaphone Magazine #117.

    • #vancouver
    • #dtes
    • #gentrification
    • #renoviction
    • #vanpoli
    • #lapp
    • #local area planning process
    • #Carnegie Community Action Project
    • #CCAP
    • #jean swanson
    • #955 east hastings
    • #east hastings
    • #downtown eastside neighbourhood council
    • #DENC
    • #ivan drury
    • #katie hyslop
  • 6 months ago
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Megaphone is a magazine sold on the streets of Vancouver by homeless and low-income vendors. This Tumblr is maintained by our Online Editor Ryan Longoz. Check us out at MegaphoneMagazine.com.

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