Category Archives: Literary Events

Nov 10th, Joy Kogawa House event: War and Remembrance featuring authors Ruth Ozeki and Shaena Lambert

Nov 10th, Joy Kogawa House event: 
War and Remembrance
featuring authors Ruth Ozeki and Shaena Lambert



Joy and brother Tim at Kogawa House pre-1942…
Joy and brother Tim with neighbood friends – the Steeves boys.
Joy at the house when it was threatened with demolition… 
Joy and Richmond school children during the Save Kogawa House campaign.
Joy with old childhood friend Mr. Steevs, at last year's September Open House event.

This is going to be an incredible event.  The Joy Kogawa House Society has now been incorporated as a society.


Ruth Ozeki  was the 2007 author for the One Book One Vancouver program at the Vancouver Public Library, launching in May.  Shaena Lambert is also an incredibly gifted and moving writer.

We are beginning our next phase of fundraising to preserve and restore the house to it's 1942 character, when Joy lived at the house, before the family was sent to WW2 internment camps at Slocan, and before the house was confiscated by the Canadian government.

And… Joy Kogawa has suprised her friends and family in Metro Vancouver by popping into town last week to help celebrate her daughter's birthday….   She will attend our Nov 10th special reading event.  Yipppeee!!!!
Joy and her daughter Dee Dee enjoy a laugh and a smile with oranges at a family dinner in April – photo Todd Wong


THE JADE RUBIES, book launch by Valerie Wong Oct 28

THE JADE RUBIES, book launch by Valerie Wong Oct 28

My cousin Valerie Wong is having a Vancouver book launch this weekend.
It is an independently published work of fiction.

JADE RUBIES – book launch

Sunday, October
28th,
3 – 5PM
Saffron Fourth Avenue Gourmet Foods,

2836 West Fourth Ave.,  Vancouver, B. C. 

Valerie is a great-grand-daughter of Rev. Chan Yu Tan.  She grew up in
Vancouver and was childhood friends with Wayson Choy.  She has written
a fiction book titled “the Jade Rubies.” 

 
As a young girl, Valerie heard many stories about Chinese handmaidens in
Canada.  The topic was fascinating, at times bittersweet, but also oddly
literating to learn just how strong the human spirit can be. She lives in San Jose CA

Please come, enjoy good company, and the publication by one of our Chan Clan members,

Cheers, Todd Wong
778-846-7090

Vancouver International Writers and Readers Festival delights with authors and intercultural insights

Vancouver International Writers and Readers Festival delights with authors and intercultural insights

On Friday morning I listened to CBC Radio's Sheila Rogers interview with Jen Sookfong Lee as they talked about Lee's debut novel The End of East, which is partly set in Vancouver's Chinatown.  Lee is one of the many featured writers at the Vancouver International Writers and Readers Festival this week.  She is featured in the program Fresh Faces in Fiction on Friday and GAWK on Thursday night.

The interview was pre-taped at the Dr. Sun Yat Sen Garden.  Rogers asked Lee about the state of Vancouver's Chinatown, and what it meant to her, as well as what it meant to be a Chinese-Canadian author.  Lee, of course, said that there are many different views to Chinatown and she could only represent her own.  And in the same way there are many different types of Chinese-Canadians, but to be put in the same grouping as Wayson Choy was wonderful.

Dan Seto, Christine Chin and Todd Wong meet Jen Sookfont Lee in May 2007 – photo Julie Wong

Hearing Jen Sookfong Lee on the radio reminded me of
meeting her at the CBC Radio Studio One Book Club back in May.  She is lively, expressive and articulate.  She loved the SKY Lee book “Disappearing Moon Cafe” and would use that as a guide post for her own novel. “No incest – good,” she joked. 

The Festival runs until Sunday.  And many writers from around the world and from different cultures are featured including Helen Oyeyemi, Kiran Desai,

I would have loved to have seen Severn Cullis-Suzuki, who is hapa and the daughter of the famed Dr. David Suzuki, dicuss how youth can help change the world.  Vincent Lam won the Governor General's award for his novel Bloodletting and other Miraculous Cures – which I enjoyed immensely.

But somehow being on the picket line at the library seemed to deny me the usual connections with books, literary festivals and money.

If you can check out events for Sunday, October 21.  It includes the 11:30 Sunday Brunch at Performance Works  hosted by Gloria Macarenco  and authors Peter Behrens, Justin Cartwright and others.

Maritime Medley features author Alistair MacLeod and the Chor Leoni Choir, at 1:30 at Waterfront Theatre.

Paul Gran hosts the After Noon Tea at 3:30 at Performance works with Gail Anderson-Dargatz, Edward O. Phillips, and Célestine Hitiura Vaite – who comes originally from Tahiti and writes about frangipani.

The Bill Duthie Memorial Lecture is given by Eleanor Wachtel who will speak about her long friendship and communications with author Carol Shields. “Random Illuminations is Wachtel’s collection of
those discussions, which offer us an intimate portrait of a great
Canadian writer. Wachtel is widely admired for her contribution to arts
journalism and as the host of CBC Radio’s Writers & Company.”

Joy Kogawa House Society is now legal…. next step – restore the house

Joy Kogawa House Society is now legal…. next step – restore the house

It has now been just been over two years since we launched the drive to save historic Joy Kogawa House from demolition.  It was mid-September when a demolition permit inquiry was made, but by the end of the week, we had notified news media, and made announcements at the Asian Canadian Writers' Workshop Community Dinner, Vancouver Arts Awards and Word On The Street book and magazine fair. 

It was an amazingly busy week for Joy, as she was feted by the One Book One Vancouver finale at Word On the Street, and received the community builder's award from the Asian Canadian Writers' Workshop.  As well Vancouver Opera launched the premiere of “Naomi's Road” based on Joy's children's novel of the same name – a retelling of her famous novel Obasan.

Soon after in November, we held a special “Kogawa House Awareness
event” at the Vancouver Public Library where we presented the Vancouver
Opera Touring Ensemble's production of “Naomi's Road” in 2005.  In December, the Land Conservancy of BC became our partner in the struggle to save the house, and to lead our fundraising efforts.

By May 2006, the house had been paid in full by The Land Conservancy of BC, and we breathed a collective sigh of relief.  We celebrated in June when Joy received the Order of BC.

On Sep 15, 2006, we held the first public open house event. One of the first people through the door was a childhood friend of Joy and her brother Tim.  “We didn't know where you had gone,” said Ralph Steeves.  Tears were in everybody's eyes at witnessing this reunion of two friends, 63 years later.

Last month, Joy's brother, Rev. Timothy Nakayama, came to visit the house he had left at age 10 in 1942.  Timothy shared his recollections of the house and yard, as we try to determine ways to restore the house to its 1942 character when their family was forced to leave the house, and board a train taking them to internment camps near Slocan BC.

We will hold the next public open house event on November 10th.  Special guest speakers will be authors Ruth Ozeki and Shaena Lambert.  The theme is War and Remembrance.

The
Historic Joy Kogawa House Society is now incorporated with the BC
Registry of Societies, which means we’re now a legal entity that can
carry forward the purposes of the society:

Purposes

            The purposes of the Society shall be:

 

1.                  To
operate and preserve the former Joy Kogawa family home at 1450 West
64th Avenue in Vancouver as a heritage and cultural centre and as a
site of healing and reconciliation.

2.                  To
establish in the former Joy Kogawa family home a centre for writers in
which they can reflect on issues of conscience and reconciliation and
write about their own personal experiences or the experiences of
others, past or present.

3.                  To promote and negotiate the raising of funds for the pursuit of the Society’s purposes.

4.                  To
encourage in the former Joy Kogawa family home educational programming
along themes of social justice and social history, and to provide
docent services for such programming.

5.                  To advocate on behalf of the continuing operation of the house in the public interest consistent with the above purposes.

For contacts in Vancouver
Call Ann-Marie Metten or Todd Wong

The DUNSMUIRS – a theatrical telling of the enigmatic BC historical figure who employed Chinese labourers

The DUNSMUIRS – a theatrical telling of the enigmatic BC historical figure who employed Chinese labourers


Todd Wong aka “Toddish McWong” stands in front or Craigdarroch Castle, the real castle imported stone by stone from Scotland, built by Robert Dunsmuir, BC's richest man, and 5th richest in North America. – photo Tracey Louie

 

The Dunsmuirs: Alone at the Edge

Oct 5 -20, 2007

Presentation House Theatre

333 Chesterfield Ave

North Vancouver, BC V7M 3G9

Rod Langley has written a play about Robert Dunsmuir and his family. Learn about The Dunsmuirs
who built Craigdarroch Castle in Victoria, and how Robert Dunsmuir
became the 5th richest man in North America, on the backs of Asian coal
miners in Nanaimo/Cumberland.

Check out this play about Robert Dunsmuir, the BC Premier who spoke out against anti-Asian legislation… partly because he employed Japanese and Canadian coal miners at lower wages.

Earlier this year I visited Craigdarroch Castle in Victoria, and talked with operations manager Yvonne Sharpe.  We discussed Dunsmuir's interactions with the Asian populations, and what a Gung Haggis Fat Choy event might look like… at Craigdarroch Castle.  That's why… I have to see this play!

Opening October 5
Sea Theatre Presents

The Dunsmuirs:

Alone at the Edge

By
Rod Langley. Directed by Bill Devine. Starring Duncan Fraser, Lee Van
Paassen, Daniel Arnold, Mike Wasko, Cat Main, and Wiliam Samples.
Lighting design: Michael Schaldemose, Set design: Gary and Lynda Chu,
Costumes: Sandy Buck, Sound Design: Paul Moniz De Sa, Stage Manager:
Colleen Totten.

The
play chronicles Robert Dunsmuir's rags to riches ascent and the
eventual price he pays for money and power. It focuses on the early
years when the family was clawing their way from mine workers to
owners. Dunsmuir's discovery of a vast coal deposit in Nanaimo, his
scramble to gain control over the Wellington Mine, and his scab labour
tactics, netted him a fortune in coal. His ascent, literally over the
dead bodies of his friends and supporters, brings this play to a
stunning climax.

“The story of the Dunsmuirs is a hell of a tale that's got everything:
ambition, greed, ruthlessness, scandal, danger and despair…the
writing is tight and lively.”

2 for 1 Tuesdays: Oct 9 $ 16

Tickets are $20 for Adults and $15 for Students/Seniors. October 4-20 at 8pm.

Click here to see an interview with some of the cast.

Naomi Klein speaks to Vancouver library workers

Naomi Klein speaks to Vancouver library workers

Naomi Klein poses with CUPE 391 strike placard for media photographers, while Vancouver library workers sit on the south steps of Library Square.  Todd Wong (me) can be seen behind Klein on the immediate right in a yellow jacket. – photo Beth Lowther

Naomi Klein, author of No Logo, came to Library Square to speak to Vancouver library workers.  She said that libraries and library workers are important, and that she supported the pay equity issue that the library workers are fighting for.

Klein introduced her researcher, a librarian, to great applause.  And said that they greatly utilized library resources, especially the inter-library loan system… to more applause.

See the 6 minute video of Klein speaking to Vancouver library workers on YouTube:

Add Video to QuickList
From: workingtv


I had the opportunity to meet her after her brief talk and thank her for coming out, and took some pictures with her with Craig Searle, who had asked her to come speak to the library workers.


Naomi Klein stands with library workers Craig Searle and Todd Wong.  Craig Searle invited Naomi Klein to speak to Vancouver library workers, striking for pay equity issues.  Todd had previously organized a reading series for authors coming to speak to the library workers on the picket line in August and September. photo Beth Lowther.

CUPE 391 President Alex Youngberg wrote this on the www.cupe391.ca blog:

Naomi Klein stands in solidarity with Vancouver Public Library
workers. The author of “No Logo” told road stories from her latest book
“The Shock Doctrine: the Rise of Disaster Capitalism, last night to a sold-out
audience at John Oliver Secondary School. She gave several excellent
examples of the infringement of the public’s democratic rights when
those in and with power capitalise on war and other gloabal disasters.
Naomi thanked library workers for help with her research and librarians
were credited with their work in protecting in the commons. Great
applause from the packed room! Obviously people of taste and erudition.

This CUPE 391 Vancouver Public Library worker thanked Naomi for her
kinds words. I gave her one of our famous collector buttons and said I
would be proud to share her words with the members on the picket line.
Naomi said she will be on that line at 1.00 p.m. Friday, October 5,
2007, at Central Library. Thunderous applause from our well-read
public. We love our members of the public and we love Naomi Klein.

Poets at the library: George McWhirter – Vancouver Poet Laureate coming tomorrow

Poets at the library:  George McWhirter – Vancouver Poet Laureate coming tomorrow

Today poet Rita Wong came to read at Library Square to our Vancouver library workers.  Yesterday, Fiona Tinwei Lam came to read from her book “Intimate Distances.”  And tomorrow…. Vancouver Poet Laureate George McWhirter is coming.

Fiona and Rita both expressed the sadness at the library being closed due to the strike, and extended empathy to the library workers.  Fiona introduced her sister Shona, who is a librarian at the Cancer Control Agency of BC.  Rita shared that when she worked at the Delta Museum, they were out on a long strike.

Rita started off reading a poem from her collection Monkey Puzzle, which was written during that time on strike.

Both Rita and Fiona were well received and our library worker audience supplemented with members of the public, were appreciative and listened well.

Tomorrow… George McWhirter, Vancouver poet laureate, comes to read.

“Let’s talk” in black and white

Aliza wrote this in the late afternoon:

Tomorrow is going to be action packed, so get ready!

Members can start their day by picking out a wardrobe that is black & white. This is the theme for the day.

In the morning, members are encouraged to make and wear signs that
will bring public attention to our website, where they can access the
full picture of who we are and why we are out here walking the lines,
in “black & white”.

At 11:00 AM there will be a fabulous puppet show, a fantasy tale about a farmer named Sam and how he learns to negotiate.

12.00 PM is another filling and fun BBQ.

1.00 PM Poet Laureate of the City of Vancouver George McWhirter
will be speaking to the members. He is the author of Queen of the Sea :
Poems, Catalan Poems, Eyes to See Otherwise. He is also professor
emeritus of the UBC Creative Writing Department where he was department
head from 1983 until 1993. On March 8, 2007, Prof. McWhirter was named
the inaugural Poet Laureate of the City of Vancouver – an honourary
two-year term. As a champion for poetry, language and the arts, he is
tasked to create a unique artistic legacy through public readings and
civic interactions.

1:30 PM– Members will be making a human wall around
the pillars of the library, then moving that wall out to the sidewalk.
This wall will then shift over to the North Plaza where, at 2:00 PM, our members will be spelling out a message to our employer and the City of Vancouver:

“Let’s Talk”

If you know anyone who works in the Federal Tower, let them know what a great photo opportunity this will be.

Finally, at 2:30 PM, everyone will be collecting on the South Plaza for “Grandeur on Georgia”, our daily “hello” to the citizens of Vancouver.

“Read-In” for literacy.

Saturday is World Literacy day. To celebrate CUPE 391 is having
another “Read-In” from 2:00 PM until 2:30 PM on the South Plaza. Bring
your favorite book and some family and friends, and sit down to enjoy
the printed page in honour of literacy.

Finally, another reminder about Saturday night and the great benefit
planned for our local. Details are available on our bargaining
resources page (see right) and our “Splash” page. Look for the bright
green icon.

Writers reading for Library Workers 1pm Wed, Thurs + beyond

Writers reading for Library Workers 1pm Wed, Thurs + beyond

Hi everybody.  Here are the newest authors and writers to come to my
reading series for library workers and the public, at Library Square. 
Past authors and writers have included Terry Glavin, Stand Persky,
Chuck Davis, Tom Sandborn, Daniel Gawthrop, Hiromi Goto and the World
Poetry collective.

Lined up this week are:

Wednesday, Sep 5th
Fiona Tinwei Lam
author of “Intimate Distance” poetry collection
finalist for the 2003 Vancouver Book Award
Fiona
was born in Scotland of Chinese ancestry, and came to Canada at an
early age.  She has Her work has been published in The New Quarterly,
Descant, Event, Grain, The Malahat Review, Quarry, The Antigonish
Review, Contemporary Verse II, and Canadian Literature. Her poems have
also been anthologized in A Room at the Heart of Things (Vehicule, 1999), Swallowing Clouds, an anthology of Chinese Canadian poetry (Arsenal Pulp Press, 1999), and Vintage 2000 (Ronsdale 2000).  Her debut book of poetry, Intimate Distances explores childhood, family death, relationships and
childbirth.

Thursday, Sep 6th
Rita Wong
author of “Monkey Puzzle”
winner of the Asian Canadian Writers' Workshop emerging artist award.
Rita is now an Assistant Professor in Critical and Cultural Studies at the Emily Carr Institute.
Her work investigates the intersections and relationships between
decolonization, social justice, gender, racialization, labour,
migration, and contemporary poetics.


(date to be confirmed)
George McWhirter??? (possible)
Author of Queen of the Sea :
Poems
Catalan Poems, Eyes to See Otherwise.  He is also professor emeritus of the UBC Creative Writing Department where he was department head from 1983 until 1993.  On March 8, 2007, Prof. McWhirter was named the inaugural Poet Laureate of the City of Vancouver – an
honourary two-year term, as a champion for poetry, language and the
arts, and create a unique artistic legacy through public readings and
civic interactions.

Globe & Mail: Fiona Tinwei Lam has an essay about her music, her mother and dementia

Globe & Mail: Fiona Tinwei Lam has an essay about her music, her mother and dementia

Fiona Tinwei Lam
was a finalist for the Vancouver Book Prize in 2003 for her poetry collection “Intimate Distances.  Over the years we have become friends, and have shared our joy of Robbie Burns poetry, things Scottish, and discovered we were related through shared cousins.

Fiona was born in Scotland, moved to Canada as a young child, and has been a guest for both Gung Haggis Fat Choy: Toddish McWong's Robbie Burns Chinese New Year Dinner and also the Gung Haggis Fat Choy World Poetry readings.  She has a younger sister who is a librarian, and whom once paddled on the Gung Haggis Fat Choy dragon boat team.

I heard about when Fiona's mother was moved to a care home, as her sister Shona gave me some of their mother's old accordion music.  I regret that I was never able to play my accordion for their mother, as she used to play accordion in addition to piano.

The following is a very touching story that Fiona has written for the Globe & Mail.
http://www.theglobeandmail.com/servlet/story/LAC.20070828.FACTS28/TPStory/?query=Fiona+Lam

Playing for time

Although dementia often made my mother's speech
nonsensical, she could sustain a wonderful musical dialogue through
rhythm, tempo and volume

I used to wake up some mornings as a teenager to the sounds of my mother playing the piano. But it was never Rustle of Spring or a gentle Minuet in G. Rather, it was the thunderous chords of Chopin's Funeral March. Either it was time to get up, or someone – probably me – was in deep trouble.

My petite mother would be perched over the keyboard, small hands
hammering down, creating sounds that made the room shake. If I tried to
close the door, she'd only open it again and return to the piano to
play even louder.

What my mother played always signalled her mood. A waltz meant
all-clear. A nocturne meant she needed to be left alone. But the
opening bars of the Funeral March spelled doom and had me racing for cover.

It was expected that I take piano lessons and piano exams, even
stumble through recitals, despite my mortification. Worse yet was the
year I was required to play the national anthem at high-school
assemblies.

One time, I misplaced the score. As I had played it so often, and
almost had it memorized, I thought I could manage. After everyone stood
up to sing, I began to play. When I reached “the True North strong and
free,” my panicked fingers faltered and stopped. People kept singing,
but the right notes eluded me. It happened again another time. I
decided I'd had enough of the piano.

After I left home, my mother had to retire early because of
deteriorating eyesight. Eventually, she couldn't read music. I hardly
noticed this, as she had committed so many pieces to memory.

She then developed Alzheimer's disease. Her repertoire began to
shrink along with the rest of her memory. But it didn't stop her. Once,
while we were visiting a care facility, my mother spotted an ancient
upright piano in the corner of the room. She marched over faster than
you could say Battle Hymn of the Republic, and launched into a medley of pub tunes intermingled with hymns, ending with a rousing rendition of Ten Little Indians.

I smiled wryly at the doctor as she arrived. “Sorry about this.”

“No one minds! It's wonderful that your mother still plays!” She went over to lavish her with praise.

Delighted with her audience, my mother played on.

As I watched song after song evaporate from her memory, I decided to
take up lessons again as an adult. But my performance anxiety was
almost insurmountable. At the introductory audition with the new
teacher, I tried to avoid playing a single note.

“Do I have to actually play?” I asked the teacher in desperation.

When I finally learned one of my mother's former pieces, the adagio from Beethoven's Pathétique
sonata, I played it for her. She listened for a while, nodding but
looking confused. After a few moments, she stood up: “Can I go home
now?”

Other attempts failed as well. Classical music just couldn't keep
her attention. I resorted to Christmas carols, whatever the season. I'd
urge her to clap or la-la along, trying to recover even a small portion
of the mother I had known growing up.

Later, I started playing the piano on my mother's secure floor at her care facility, sight-reading and stumbling my way through Red River Valley and Tea for Two.
Slowly, the other residents would find their way over from the TV
lounge. A few (usually mute) residents would suddenly start to sing;
others would even dance. My mother would pat my shoulder appreciatively
or pound out the time on the dining table. One time, she stood up at
the end of a song to applaud.

As my mother's dementia deepened, our family arranged private
one-on-one music therapy for her. Although my mother's speech was often
nonsensical, she could sustain a wonderful musical dialogue through
rhythm, tempo and volume that would deeply satisfy and calm her.

During my mother's last weeks, as she lay unconscious in palliative
care at the hospital after suffering a stroke, I talked to her, held
her hand, read to her, played her favourite tunes on the CD player. But
it didn't feel like enough.

So one day, I started to sing, self-consciously, quietly, so no one outside the room could hear: “Now
you are come, all my cares are remov'd./ Let me forget that so long you
have rov'd./ Let me believe that you love as you loved./ Long, long
ago./ Long ago.”

Suddenly, it felt as though my mother were singing to me, even while
I was singing to her. Every phrase became clear and alive. Years of
occasional tension, of living on opposite sides of the country, a
decade of dementia – it all fell away, leaving only the essential
truths.

Recently, I've been searching for a piano of my own. In stores, I
look around furtively to ensure no one's around, choose a piano and sit
down to play Chopin's Funeral March. The major piano stores must know me as the Morbid One.

Although I doubt I'll ever learn a third of my mother's extensive
classical repertoire, I'm going to make the effort, piece by piece.
It's my way of remembering her – not so much how she telegraphed her
dark moods when I was growing up, but how she could create such beauty
through her hands.

Fiona Tinwei Lam lives in Vancouver.

Daniel Gawthrop, author and CUPE National worker, speaks and reads to Vancouver Library workers

Daniel Gawthrop, author and CUPE National worker, speaks and reads to Vancouver Library workers

Author
Daniel Gawthrop (Rice Queen Diaries, Highwire Act: Power, Pragmatism
and the Harcourt Legacy, Affirmation: The AIDS Odyssey of Dr. Peter)
and also a CUPE national worker, comes to read at the Library Square to
library workers.

Daniel talked to the Vancouver Library workers about how important their jobs are to the community, especially when it comes to promoting and supporting writers.  He complimented the reading events put on by VPL, and said that “No matter if you are a major figure like Alice Munro or Margaret Atwood, or little me… everybody gets the same poster!”

He also gave words of support to the striking library workers, telling them to hold tight, speak their truth, and get their message out.  He criticized the city of Vancouver's use of the Wilcox Group PR firm, to create a media spin on the labour dispute, instead of using their resources to manage a resolution.  He praised the creativity of the CUPE 391 library workers in getting their message out and getting recent media attention:

see: Globe & Mail: Library workers picket with pizzazz
see video: “Grandeur on Georgia”  Wilcox Group vs Pay Equity
see video: “Pay Equity – Recipe for Disaster”

Daniel Gawthrop then told the assembled library workers that he had brought a number of short articles to read from and offered them a choice:  a story about The Curse of Leni Riefenstahl, the killing of Theo Van Gogh, an article about post 9-11, an article about 9-11 in Thailand… but the winning vote was for an debut reading for a soon-to-be-published story titled “Marriage: Why I took the plunge.”  It was an entertaining and enlightening story about gay marriage, and the social impact of it both personally and culturally to somebody who had said that he would never get married.

Check out pictures of Daniel Gawthrop reading at Library Square:
Aug 27 CUPE 391, Daniel Gawthrop comes to read

IMG_2376IMG_2377IMG_2374IMG_2373

Paul Whitney, city librarian stopped briefly by the picket line to say hello.  Okay, Paul is management and the union doesn't like some of the things he has said to the media.  I have known Paul for over 20 years, mostly by association, but he's always been a nice guy and supportive of some of the events I have organized.  He's probably caught between a rock and a hard place as the City negotiates with our Union… so in his own way, he's walking the line.

IMG_2414IMG_2415Paul Whitney, City Librarian, with picket captain Alexis Greenwood and library employee/accordionist Todd Wong

Tom Hansen, retired library finances officer, union rep and former VPL board member also came by.  But Tom was not diplomatic in his criticism of the city's handling of the civic strikes.  Tom congratulated on us going on strike to stand up for what we believe in, and to tell city hall what we think.  He told me that the city is saving a big whack of money every week we are on strike.  “$1 million dollars every two weeks,” he told me.  Hmmm… so much for the library's motto ”
Inspiration through information. Access for all.
http://www.vpl.ca/general/collDevPolicy.html

IMG_2419IMG_2420 Tom Hansen, retired library worker, former union organizer and former VPL board member comes to give support.