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Gung Haggis paddlers place 1st and 3rd in B Final for Ft. Langley Cranberry Festival Canoe Regatta

Gung Haggis paddlers place 1st and 3rd in B Final for Ft. Langley Cranberry Festival Canoe Regatta


Gung Haggis FUN Choy leads the pack with Adam Purvis steering and Nicole Purvis as lead stroke.  Gung Haggis & Friends follows in 2nd place with Dave Samis steering- photo Deb Martin

It was an exciting day… lots of smiles on faces… lots of learning experiences on both teams… lots of achievements too!

That
we could come together not only as two individual teams, but also as
one team on two boats…  There was no separation between paddlers as
evidenced by our “team picture.”

Thank you to Cheryl Ing,
Charlie Cho, and Alexei who paddled with Gung Haggis for the first time
– who answered the call this week to join us.

Thank you to Remus
Wong, Raphael Fang, Teresa Plesner for joining us again, also answering
the call to paddler with us this week.

Thank you to our Gung
Haggis core and family paddlers: Dave, Arthur, Georgia, Dan, Sarah.
Stuart, Adam, Nicole, Kristine, Keng, Cindy, Leanne… who have paddled
with Gung Haggis at race events from April and May, through to
September and October.

Everybody worked well together and
supported each other.  We didn't yell or criticize each other when
things went off-track.  We learned how challenging it is to steer
voyageur canoes, turn around pylons, and get knocked off course by
other boats.  We assessed the problems, worked on solutions, and
succeeded by coming 1st and 3rd in the B Final.


Gung Haggis Fat Choy paddlers raced two team: Gung Haggis FUN Choy and Gung Haggis & Friends…
front row crouching: Raphael, Kristine, Keng, Leanne, Sarah, Rebecca, Cheryl
Standing Adam (back) Deb, Dave, Arthur (back) Charlie, Nicole, Alexei, Georgia, Stuart (back), Remus, Cindy, Teresa, Dan, Todd + race organizer Cheryl Macintosh
missing (Sarah)

It WAS fun…
and I hope everybody can come back and do it with us again for next
year.  SMILES on faces, and the cameraderie at the pub was great, a
true testament to Gung Haggis spirit.  People like Manfred Preuss of
the Fraser Valley Dragon Boat Club, and Ian Paul of the Pirates, all said hello and congratulatd us… as well as paddlers from
other teams such as Saints Preserve us, as we said hello and congratulated them.

We all
paddled hard.  It was amazing to watch the power in the Gung Haggis
& Friends boat, as you came into each corner, bumping boats out of
your way…. correcting your course, then catching up to other teams.

Gung
Haggis Fun Choy was inspiring, taking good leads in our races…
especially the B Final… as well as showing what NOT to do in our
first race, by missing a pylon, and having to go back.  You really
showed what a boat of rookies (Cindy, Adam, Nicole, Leanne, Raphael)
can do.

We all were suprised by the jostling and colliding of
boats.  I overheard Cheryl telling a friend, “It's like a demolition
derby!”

But no boats tipped over.  Aside from an unmentioned
team, that cussed and jabbed some paddles at the GH&F team… I
think everybody handled themselves very well.  GH Fun Choy had good
spirits… raising and waving their paddles whenever we heard the
announcer call our name, calling out “Hello – How Are you… Nice to
meet you…” as we bumped into other teams… and cheering on the other
teams as they finished.

Steering techniques really play an
important role in this race, as well as steering strategies, being able
to recover from being bumped, and managing to avoid collisions with
other teams.  It was wonderful to watch team members, as they commented
on one 2nd heat race, where 4 boats all got jammed up on a corner,
stopping dead and getting pushed down stream as they had to paddle
upstream to get around a buoy marker for a turn.  CRAZY!!!

Check out pictures by Deb Martin, Dave Samis and Todd Wong
– loaded onto Todd's Flickr account.

Oct 6, Ft. Langley Cranberry Canoe RegattaCran Fest tents 0911 SamisIMG_0162IMG_0163IMG_0165

IMG_0150IMG_0154IMG_0158IMG_0159Cran Fest 922 picking up pumpkins Martin
Cran Fest final GH + Friends 0940 Martin(3)Cran Fest 2007 both GH teams 0944

Oct 6, Ft. Langley Cranberry Canoe…

Gung Haggis Fat Choy dragon boat team going to Fort Langley Cranberry Festival Canoe Regatta

Gung Haggis Fat Choy dragon boat team going to Fort Langley Cranberry Festival Canoe Regatta

This will be the 3rd time the Gung Haggis Fat Choy dragon boat team has entered the Fort Langley Cranberry Festival Canoe Regatta.  It is a fundraiser for the Fort Langley Canoe Club.  One of the race and club organizers is Cheryl MacIntosh, whom I have known for 4 years.  It was great that Cheryl joined the Gung Haggis dragon boat team for the races in Vernon.  So… we are all friends.

Saturday, Oct 6
10am to 3:30pm
3 races per team / 20 teams of 10 paddlers.

First 2 races are 1 km mini-Guts & Glory type races with 5 boats
Grand
finale is 1.5km 10 boat heat… pick up a pumpkin that is tossed from the
bridge, paddle around obstacles, drop a paddler off on the beach, they
walk along the shore holding a paddle with a wine glass filled with
cranberry wine… pick up paddler, do some more turns – then sprint to
finish line.

No white caps, no wind, calm water on a slough off the Fraser River, beside Fort Langley…

Here are the directions for our team:
Map is available on Map of Langley

Location is Marina Park

Take #1 Trans-Canada Highway to Fort Langley
After the exit, turn right on Glover Road
Gor North, through Fort Langley, toward Albion
Ferry

DO NOT cross the bridge.
Turn right on Mavis Road,
Turn left onto River Road towards Marina Park.

We will set up tents in the Park.
Look for two tents with blue tops, and Gung Haggis banner.


9am – arrival – sign waivers – stretch and warm-up
9:30, marshall & warm up
10am first race

2:30 and 3:00 are the FINALS…. hopefully, we will have a team in each final.  more fun to watch.

2 teams for the canoe regatta.
10 paddlers per boat
This is a fun race…
no divisions… no prizes

suggested rosters:
put more experienced paddlers on Gung Haggis & Friends
put rookie paddlers and people paddling for fun on Gung Haggis FUN Choy

Gung Haggis & Friends
Dave Samis – Captain / steers
Sarah Glazzard / paddler/steers
Stuart Higginson
Kristine Shum / lead stroke
Dan Seto
Art Calderwood
Teresa Plesner
Cheryl Ing
Charlie Cho
Georgia Thorburn
Joe Easton ?

Gung Haggis FUN Choy
Todd Wong – Captain / steers
Adam Purvis / paddler /steers
Nicole Purvis
Leanne Riding
Keng Graal
Alexei
Cindy Chow
Remus Wong
Raphael Fang
(Remus' daughters Rebecca, Sarah)

FOOD
food is available in Fort Langley…
bring your own snacks…
Deb and I have made a chili for the team…
BRING your own BOWL (to save on disposable styrofoam
non-recycleables)

CLOTHES
wear whatever team uniform you want…  Gung Haggis is preferred
but… you may be wearing a wind breaker over it.
dress warmly…
dress in layers…
bring a change of clothes…
bring a change of shoes
Weather is good for the morning.
expected to rain in the late afternoon (hopefully after our races).

COST
$20 – this includes registration and chili

Cheers, Todd

Friday Oct 5th, good and sunny day on the strike line

Friday Oct 5th, good and sunny day on the strike line


Naomi Klein, author of No Logo, holds up CUPE 391 Strike placard – photo Beth Lowther

Good day on the strike line today… Author Naomi Klein came to visit Vancouver Library workers and gave a short talk.  She was invited by Craig Searle.


Naomi Klein poses with Vancouver library workers Craig Searle and Todd Wong.  Craig invited Klein to come speak to CUPE 391.  Todd had organized a series or writer's readings from August to September. – photo Beth Lowther

Monica Chattaway brought her violin, and we did some violin/accordion duets on some '20's and '30's songs.

CBC Canada Now reporter came down to the Library Square picket line and interviewed some of us, looking for a reaction to the released recommendations by mediator Brian Foley.  We kept it pretty tight with no comments, as we are waiting for deeper analysis.  My accordion and me… made it on to the evening news.

Vote on the recommendations coming up on Sunday.
(vote was since rescheduled to Tuesday to allow for more members returning from Thanksgiving holidays, and to give our bargaining committee more time to go over the recommendations).

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.

Kilts Night Oct 4th…

Kilts Night Oct 4th…

It was a fun kilts night on Thursday, Oct 4th.  We go to Doolin's Irish Pub on the first Thursday of each month.  The free pint of Guinness is nice… but the music by the Halifax Wharf Rats is excellent!

Several people from our Gung Haggis Fat Choy dragon boat team were there: Hillary, Alf, Leanne and myself.  Kilts night organizers Bear and Raphael were also there.  Cecilia also joined us.  A small group we were.

Then five young women wearing mini-kilts showed up.  Wondering how they had heard about Kilts Night, I introduced myself and the Gung Haggis dragon boat team.  It was their first time at Kilts Night.  I ordered the free pints of Guinness for them… and for me and Leanne on our team.  One of the young women was hapa (half-asian) and I quickly introduced her to Leanne who is also hapa.  I talked about how our dragon boat team and Kilts Night often features Asians in kilts, and one of the women answered, “Why is that strange?  This is Vancouver!”

Soon after, somebody approached our table asking, “Are you dragon boaters?”

It was Ashleigh, who had e-mailed last month, asking if she could join the Gung Haggis dragon boat team.  She had brought her friend Kayla.  Introductions to the team were made, and also to our resident kilt maker Terry “Bear” Varga, who has made each of the team's 4 kilts + 1 mini-kilt.

Soon, everybody body was dancing to the Johnny Cash song “I Walk the Line.”  There was no way to keep Alf or Hillary from the dance floor during a Johnny Cash song.

More Canadiana songs soon followed with Barrett's Privateers, Alberta Bound and then some celtic tunes.  The Halifax Wharf Rats were in great form Thursday night.  New songs I hadn't heard before were the Doobie Brothers song “Listen to the Music” and then… something that has slipped my mind.

A group of 3 young women, not wearing kilts, were definitely intrigued by our kilted group.  They were students from Brazil, anxious to learn more about Canadian culture and Canadian music.  We obliged.

pictures to come soon….

How(e) Sound: Heather Pawsey takes “New Music in New Places” to Brittania Mines

How(e) Sound: Heather Pawsey takes “New Music in New Places” to Brittania Mines

How(e) Sound
October 7, 2007 at 2:00 pm
B.C. Museum of Mining
Britannia Beach, “Sea to Sky” Highway 99
FREE (Reservations toll-free 1-866-640-9881)

Soprano Heather Pawsey is always creating “don't want to miss” concerts in really cool spaces.  Earlier this year, she was singing at the aquarium.  A few years ago, she was singing in a Kelowna wine vat.  I have known Heather since 2003, when she invited me to a performance where she sung in Mandarin Chinese.  This Scots-Canadian lass who grew up wearing tartan, soon joined the Gung Haggis Fat Choy roster for our annual Robbie Burns Chinese New Year Dinner fundraiser.

Pianist Rachel Kiyo Iwassa is hapa, and a Japanese Canadian descendant.  She also plays in a flute/piano duo called Tiresias with fellow hapa musician Mark McGregor.  I first met her after a concert at West Vancouver's Silk Purse.

Kathryn Cernauskas came to play at Gung Haggis Fat Choy Robbie Burns Chinese New Year Dinner earlier this year with Heather.  Kathryn plays wonderful flute, and also hand drums.

Here's the press release that Rachel just sent me:
 


Psst ….. Wanna hear some
truly “underground” music?


Grab your hard hat and descend into the cavernous 1912 tunnels of the
B.C. Museum of Mining


(Britannia Beach, “Sea to Sky” Highway 99) as HOW(E) SOUND excavates some
buried


treasure. Critically acclaimed musicians
Kathryn
Cernauskas
, flute;
AK
Coope
, clarinet;

Rachel Kiyo
Iwaasa
, piano; and
Heather
Pawsey
, soprano take you on
a musical adventure


through the stunning and mysterious spaces of this National Historic Site
(including the core


sheds, load-haul dump, Mining House, 235 tonnes “Super” Haul Truck, and
the awe-inspiring


1923 gravity-fed concentrator mill, with its 1,194 windows and 18,792
panes overlooking Howe


Sound) at this limited-seating, one-performance-only concert,
Sunday, October 7 at 2:00
p.m.


Mining a wealth of
contemporary Canadian classical repertoire, works (including, among
others,


Harry Freedman’s
Lines;
Paul Steenhuisen’s
Foundry;
Patrick Cardy’s
Sparkle;
Mary

Gardiner’s
A Resonance in
Time;
James M. Gayfer’s
Cave Pools;
Violet Archer’s
If the Stars

are Burning and
Leila Lustig’s
Wretched Highway) on the
themes of minerals and gems,


caverns and caves, dreams and aspirations, and history will be
highlighted, with a special nod to


early British Columbian heritage music dealing specifically with the
history of mining in our


province. Admission to HOW(E) SOUND is free; however, due to space
restrictions, seating is


limited and available on a first-come, first-served basis. To book a
space, please call the


reservations line at 1-604-815-4073, or toll-free at 1-866-640-9881,
beginning September 10.


Please advise if you have to cancel your seats so that others may be
admitted.


DRESS ADVISORY:
As portions of this concert
will be held outdoors, please dress appropriately


for weather and underground temperatures, and wear footwear suitable for
uneven terrain.


Musicians Kathryn Cernauskas, flute; AK Coope, clarinet; Rachel Kiyo
Iwaasa, piano; and


Heather Pawsey, soprano are particularly noted for their fearless and
innovative approaches to


contemporary music. Collectively, they have premiered hundreds of new
Canadian works, many


written specifically for them, and their performance histories span North
America, Europe, Asia


and Australia.


HOW(E) SOUND is part of
the Canada Music Centre's “New Music in New Places” initiative
to take


Canadian music out of concert halls and in to alternative venues, and is
made possible through the


generous support and assistance of the B.C. Museum of Mining, Tom Lee
Music, Epcor, and the Howe


Sound Performing Arts Association.The Canadian Music Centre is an
independent, not for profit, nongovernment


agency that promotes and disseminates the music of Canadian composers.
The Canadian


Music Centre gratefully acknowledges the support of the SOCAN Foundation
and the Government of


Canada through the Canada Music Fund.


More Info:
Canadian Music Centre |
www.musiccentre.ca
| 604.734.4622


-30-

Media Contact: Kara Gibbs | kara@karagibbs.com | cell 604.644.6985

Gung Haggis Fat Choy dragon boat team braved the white cap waves of Sunday's UBC Day of the Long Boats

Gung Haggis Fat Choy dragon boat team braved the white cap waves of Sunday's UBC Day of the Long Boats


It's a wild start as 9 teams take off from the beach at the same time, jostling and hitting each other.  The Gung Haggis Fat Choy mixed team (center), gets a good start heading to open water… but nobody realized there was a yellow rope trailing from the canoe creating drag until steersperson Todd Wong couldn't figure out why the boat wasn't turning. – photo Dave Samis.

Boats were capsizing off Jericho Beach for Saturday's UBC Day of the Long Boats, so Sunday's community teams were limited to one race per team.

Our Community Mixed Race was rescheduled to 11:20am.  Our Gung Haggis Braveheart Warriors Mens team was rescheduled to 12:00 noon.

Our teams had fun, there were smiles on people's faces after each race.  Nobody capsized…

But during our Community MIXED race, I
was steering the boat, and it wouldn't turn right.  We bumped into a
number of boats resulting in cussing, and jostled humours, as we kept
heading away from the 1st pylon marker, towards the North Shore
Mountains.

Imagine my surprise,
when I discovered there was a long yellow rope dragging behind our
boat, acting as an anchor drag, restricting our turning abilities.  I
managed to turn our boat back on course… and reach over and pull the
long yellow rope into the boat.  We found ourselves in last place, and
worked hard to catch up to the other teams.  After picking up our
baton, we passed some more boats in the turn, passed another boat on
the long stretch – but could not catch the 1st place team False Creek
“What's the Catch?”


Gung Haggis Fat Choy mixed team struggles to pull away from the pack.  You can see the yellow rope trailing from our stern.  Todd Wong steers, while Kristine Shum is in lead stroke at the front. – photo Dave Samis.

Our Men's race was equally challenging.  Instead of 10 men, we raced our 10 most veteran paddlers including 2 women.  We jostled and bumped our way against other men's teams, went off course a bit on the baton pick up as another boat hit us.  We grabbed our baton, then took some teams on the turn.  We tried our best to catch up to TD Lightning Men… but not quite good enough.  It was a fun, race and we congratulated them, as we landed on the beach beside them.

After the races, I headed down to Word on the Street Book and Magazine Fair + the Word on the Strike enhanced picket line for CUPE 391, Vancouver Library workers union. 

Our dragon boat paddlers reconvened at 5pm for a farewell party for rookie paddler Emilie Quevillon.  She joined the dragon boat team after bumping into me at the finish of the Alcan Dragon Boat Festival.  She joined the team for our annual after-party at Doolin's Irish Pub, and paddled the summer with us.  Emilie was often away in her job as a flight attendant but finally paddled with us for the Vancouver Taiwanese Dragon Boat races.  Emilie was an enthusiastic and upbeat contribution to the team, bringing Montreal flair to our gatherings.  She has now returned to Montreal to re-join her musical theatre group.  No doubt team members will have a new friend to visit in Montreal for dragon boat races in August next year.

see pictures on Flickr

longboat1longboat4Longboat3longboat5

Next Race:
Saturday Oct 6th
Fort Langley Cranberry Festival Canoe Regatta.
20 teams only
3 races.

Word on the Strike…CUPE 391 picket line adds creativity to annual Word on the Street event

Word on the Strike…CUPE 391 picket line adds creativity to annual Word on the Street event

It was a busy day down at Vancouver's biggest book and magazine fair, Word on the Street.  Lots of authors including Ruth Ozeki, Meg Tilly, Stan Persky, Vincent Lam and many many more.  Unfortunately… it rained a lot, but it didn't dampen spirits!

IMG_0114
When I bumped into author Stan Persky and Hal Wake, Stan told Hal that the last reading he had done was the one I set up with Stan for the CUPE 391 picket line on August 24th.  Stan thought it was so appropriate that since his books at the library were “locked up” and unavailable to the public, he could come down to Library Square and give a reading.

IMG_0127IMG_0117
Joy Kogawa House Society also had a booth at the fair, located at the Canada Post parking lot site.  Joy Kogawa House is not only the childhood home of one of Canada's most important authors, it is also the only publicly known house that was confiscated by the Canadian government while Japanese Canadians were being held in internment camps during WW2.

Ann-Marie Metten set up the display.  David Kogawa took a turn attending it, then my girlfriend Deb Martin and I also took some turns.  The display featured pictures of Joy Kogawa as a child at the house, and her grade 2 picture at David Lloyd George Elementary School in Marpole before the 1942 internment of Japanese Canadians during WW2. 

We handed out postcard invitations to the November 10th Open House event, which will feature authors Ruth Ozeki and Shaena Lambert.  The title of the event is War and Remembrance, and follows the 2 year anniversary of when we presented the Vancouver Opera's Touring production of Naomi's Road, at the Vancouver Public Library in 2005 to help build awareness of the campaign to save Joy Kogawa's childhood home.

IMG_0112IMG_0113
For the Word on the Strike event held by CUPE 391, as an “enhanced picket line,”  I played my accordion to help add musical ambiance.  It was great to see so many people dancing to my tango, or waltzes.  Author Jean Barman dropped by to say hello.  Bill Saunders, president of the Vancouver District Labour Council, dropped by and we sang “O Solo Mio” together.

IMG_0122
Cupe15 workers Randy and Diane, are also the leaders of the Cantastoria street theatre
group that has been going from strike site to strike site putting on their story about
hard-working labourers who build a strong community, only to be stepped on by the
"big foot."

Check out my flickr pictures

Music Cabaret for Vancouver Districet Labour Council at the Rhizome

Music Cabaret for Vancouver District Labour Council at the Rhizome

Friday Night, September 28th
Rhizome Café
317 East Broadway, Vancouver. Phone: 604.872.3166.

It was the first VDLC music cabaret, held at the Rhizome Cafe.  Organized by Earle Peach, donations at the door were raised for CUPE 391 Vancouver Library workers' hardship fund.  I was MC for the event, and I have worked for the Vancouver Public Library for over thirty years, all but one year as a part-time employee. 

Each month Earle Peach has organized a music cabaret held at the Mount Pleasant Community Centre… but that is closed now due to the Vancouver civic strike.  He contacted a few months ago and asked me to MC this new event at the Rhizome.

This was an incredible night of community, labour songs and superb musicianship.  I didn't know a lot of songs from the labour canon, other than “Solidarity Forever” – but this turned into an evening where I learned a lot about the labour movement, its history, and some of the players in Vancouver.  And I told them all that I wished I could wrap my arms around them all, give them a big big hug, and bring them down to Library Square to meet my CUPE 391 Union brothers and sisters, and have them perform at Word on the Strike.


At the end of the evening almost $500 had been raiser for the CUPE 391 hardship fund for the Vancouver Library Workers.  Here I am holding the money jar with (l-r) Phil Vernon, Dan Keeton, Todd Wong (me), Bill Saunders, Bob Rosen, Earle Peach and Barbara Jackson.

I started off by introducing myself and my accordion, and telling the audience that I was putting in my time on the picket line at Library Square.  I told them about how we have a very creative and engaging picket line with musicians and knitters, flying bicycle pickets that go visit other library sites, community centres and other picket sites for CUPE 15 and 1004 Vancouver City inside and outside workers, who are also on strike.  I demonstrated the songs I play on the line, and how I make my accordion sound like an organ at a hockey game…

Liz Thor-Larsen, started the evening off playing on her accoustic guitar and sing songs about being a union maid.

More Than Just Pay, are a group of school teachers that sang lively tunes about labour strife.

Tom Hawken–songs

Sandy Cameron read a short poem then a long poem about when the Relief Camp Workers' Union went on strike in 1935, occupying the Carnegie Centre, then going On to Ottawa.

Dave Lidstone & Andrea Smith–songs

I acknowledged that Bill Saunders, president of the Vancouver District Labour Council, was in the audience and that he spoke at the Anniversaries 1907 Reconciliation Dinner – about the role that organized labour played in the Anti-Asian riots 100 year ago, and how things have changed 100 years labour with racial diversity becoming a positive issue for labour unions. 

I then read a poem I had written about my great-great grandfather Rev. Chan Yu Tan, who came to Canada in 1896, upon the occasion of seeing a picture of him hanging on the wall of a photo exhibit at the Vancouver Art Gallery.

Jen Efting– sang a beautiful accapella song.

Earle Peach & Barbara Jackson were next.  I told the story of how I first met Earle on Facebook.  Soon after I was driving down Clark Drive and spotted him at a bus stop recognizing his picture from Facebook.  I drove around the corner to come by the bus stop, and offered him a ride.  Earle and Barbara did some wonderful harmonies on their songs.  Earle also leads the Solidarity Notes Choir, which has performed at Library Square and Brittania Branch libraries during the library strike.

Dan Keeton hosts a show on Co-op Radio called Union Made.  He sang several songs including a Steve Earle song.

Peter Marcus–poetry

Phil Vernon has been a long time activist who now lives on Saltspring Island.  He told some great introductions to each of his songs.  In particular was a song titled Baruka, about supporting the labourers in Africa, where he and his partner do work.

Bob Rosen & the Gram Partisans closed the evening.  Prior to introducing them to the audience, they shared with me their love for the music of Gram Parsons, Steve Earle, and I shared with them my love for Emmylou Harris' music. All the band members are teachers. 

Very cool that Bill Hood is a member of this band.  I first met Bill when he told me about a fundraiser that he did at Chief Maquinna School for the “Save Kogawa House” campaign.  I had invited Bill to the first open house last year for Joy Kogawa House.  Of course I love almost any band with an accordion!

Georgia Straight: Commentary – A Strike about nothing throttles residents

Georgia Straight Commentary A strike about nothing throttles residents

During this 2007 Vancouver civic strike, I have told the Georgia Straight about the incredible intellectual, creative and cultural brain trust being wasted during the Vancouver Library CUPE 391 strike.

The Georgia Straight interviewed me for the August 30th News Features | Boss and union tell different tales | Straight.com. It was a story that revealed that Vancouver library workers are paid substantially less than their counterparts in Toronto, and starting labourers in other city jobs.  CUPE 391 President Alex Youngberg gave good reasons why pay equity is important for the library workers…

But one whole month later, Vancouver library workers hosted “Word on the Strike” as a parallel event to Vancouver's largest book and magazine fair, Word on the Street.  It was a large demonstration of CUPE 391's creative, intellectual and cultural response to being on their first strike in their union's 77 year history.  Puppet shows, street theatre performances, information tables, origami making workshops, musical performances, poetry and literary readings…

Community groups still can't present their shows or lectures at the library.  Historians can't access archives.  Small businesses can't access databases, Scientists can't access reference material, students can't access course and related material, ESL citizens can't access multilingual books, magazines and newspapers, citizens who don't have home computer or internet can't access their free hour of computer internet time, visitors can't ask for directions etc.

And why?

Because Vancouver library workers have been without a contract since December 16th…
Because the Library Management's negotiating team did not present their first proposals until 2 weeks into the strike, long after CUPE 391 made their opening proposal in December of 2006.
Because the NPA has a secret agenda?  see 24 Hours Vancouver – News: Mayor Sam's the real loser in strike
– written by ex-NPA board member Alex Tsakumis

Read Charlie Smith's commentary in the current Sep 27 Georgia Straight

Commentary By Charlie Smith

Library workers exercise their minds on the picket line, but that

Library workers exercise their minds on the picket line, but that's little comfort to seniors and kids who want to read.

Managers
save the city a few bucks at the cost of public health, literacy, a
thriving arts community, social justice, and a whole lot of jobs.

They
used to call Seinfeld a show about nothing. Well, for the past two
months, Vancouver residents have been subjected to a civic workers
strike about nothing. The unions and management can agree on wages.
They can agree on the term of the contract. They just can't work out a
few other details, such as job security and a whistle-blower provision.
The library workers want pay equity–otherwise known as equal pay for
work of equal value–which adds a complicating factor to their dispute.

It
defies common sense why the NPA government can't promise job security
when the city is going through a growth spurt and there is likely to be
a slew of retirements in the coming years. One possible explanation is
that city managers want to prolong the civic workers strike so they can
rake in oodles of extra overtime pay and save the city a bundle of
money by not paying public servants.

In the meantime, this has
created misery for hundreds of thousands of citizens. As the Georgia
Straight has chronicled during this sorry affair, it has meant that
mothers have to worry about their kids stepping on hypodermic needles
in city parks. Poor families can't go to community centres or to city
pools. Major real-estate developments have been put on hold because
companies can't get permits. Entrepreneurs who have spent their lives
working in this city now face the prospect of their tradespeople moving
to Alberta.

Meanwhile, seniors and the visually impaired have
been deprived of reading material, as have Vancouver's vibrant
multicultural communities, who rely on the library's extensive
collection of multilingual books.

That's not all. Arts groups
have been shafted by the closure of civic facilities such as the
Orpheum and Queen Elizabeth theatres. Many organizations had their
hopes dashed that the strike would be over by September, including the
Vancouver Symphony Orchestra. The gay and lesbian community took its
lumps during Pride week when the Roundhouse Community Arts &
Recreation Centre was shut down. The Vancouver Recital Society
scrambled to find a venue for star soprano Kiri Te Kanawa, thanks to
this strike about nothing.

During the last election, Mayor Sam
Sullivan claimed he cared about the arts in Vancouver. He had the nerve
to send invitations to the media, asking reporters to offer input on
creating an arts policy for the city. Memo to the mayor: actions speak
louder than words. The closure of civic facilities suggests you really
don't care about the arts, and Vancouver's sizeable arts community will
not forget this during the next election campaign–or during an NPA
nomination race, if Sullivan's board has the guts to reverse a recent
decision and allow a competitive contest.

Once this strike is
settled, heads should roll, starting with Vancouver's grossly overpaid
city manager, Judy Rogers, who collected $318,838 in compensation last
year, but who couldn't be bothered to show up at a hotel for
negotiations with the unions earlier this summer. In the meantime,
several talented city planners have buggered off to Abu Dhabi.

The
unions aren't entirely without blame for this mess. CUPE Local 15 has
demanded union jurisdiction in all Olympic and Paralympic facilities
during and after the Games, according to the city Web site (www.vancouver.ca/).
NPA councillor Peter Ladner wrote an opinion piece in the Vancouver Sun
claiming that the unions are demanding no layoffs for five years, and
want the City to forfeit any chance of contracting out services.

What
Ladner neglected to mention was that job security is a very real
consideration to any public servant subject to the whims of right-wing
politicians. In this new era in British Columbia, every right-wing dolt
drools at the mere mention of the words public-private partnership.
That's no comfort to people worried about their jobs. Perhaps if Ladner
and city officials set some parameters in this area, the workers might
not be so suspicious.

But let's not kid ourselves about what is
really extending this ugly strike. It's money. By its own very
conservative estimate, the City saved over $1.3 million during the
seven-week dispute in 2000. Gross savings were close to $11 million,
but city staff claimed a whopping $9.6 million in lost revenues and
strike costs.

Is it any wonder that city managers are placing
such emphasis on parking enforcement this time around, rather than
keeping community centres open for the kids? Is it any wonder that
senior brass don't seem too concerned about needles in parks and no
talking books for the blind? If you're confused about why this strike
about nothing is taking so long to settle, just follow the money, and
you'll have your answer.

 

See related stories on the Vancouver civic workers strike at Straight.com:

A side exit from the strike (September 27, 2007)
A strike about nothing throttles residents (September 27, 2007)
Labour expert says it will be hard for union and city to reject an agreement based on mediator's recommendations (September 26, 2007)
Library workers agree to enhanced mediation (September 26, 2007)
Vancouver civic workers strike undermines MS patient's recovery (September 21, 2007)
Civic strike harms the poor (September 13, 2007)
Is the civic workers strike exacerbating the gap between rich and poor in Vancouver? (September 13, 2007)
Sam Sullivan's strike strategy (September 13, 2007)
Boss and union tell different tales (August 30, 2007)
Suzanne Anton: Vision using strike for political gain
(August 16, 2007)
Strike stalls developers (August 9, 2007)
Strike shuts down meeting (August 2, 2007)
NPA divided on strike refund (August 2, 2007)
Rats, yes, but bacteria love garbage strikes too (July 26, 2007)
Long strike could jeopardize construction (July 26, 2007)
Negotiations stalled on civic-worker contracts (June 14, 2007)