Gung Haggis Fat Choy wins Gold B Mixed – David Samis, Holly Parsons, and Todd Wong – photo by Stephen Mirowski
Walking the CUPE 391 Vancouver Library Workers strike line.
Walking the CUPE 391 Vancouver Library Workers strike line.
It's Day 8 and Day 9 of the CUPE 391 Vancouver Library Workers Union strike. We are at Vancouver Public Library, Central Branch, at Library Square downtown. People are in generally good spirits – but still in disbelief that they are on strike for the first time in the union's 77 year history.
Yesterday and today were my first days on the strike line, as I had returned from dragon boat vacation in Vernon BC. One Day 1, I had dropped in to register for strike duty, and say hello to my friends on the line. On Day 1, it was definitely a surreal atmosphere. Usually, the only time you see everybody on the outside of the library is for the Word on the Street Book and Magazine Festival. But instead of standing behind information booths, presenting authors and readings in tents, or selling books… people are walking around with strike placards.
CUPE 391 on Friday morning, Day 9 of the strike – morning meeting – photo Todd Wong
There is a tremendous feeling of community and good will. I am surprised by all the familiar faces I haven't seen in years, as I bump into co-workers that I have known over my 30 years of library work at every division, and every branch throughout the VPL system.
Rosanne is a librarian who compliments me on the recent article “True Patriot Love in the North Shore News about the CBC Newsworld documentary Generations: The Chan Legacy about my family history and my community activism. We talk about both of our family histories. The Vancouver Public Library History department and Special Collections is a tremendous resource for family genealogy and historical photos.
Ironically it was at a History Division's “BC Genealogy” event when I first developed my friendly acquaintance with Vancouver Mayor Sam Sullivan, then still a city councillor. I had set up a display on the Rev. Chan Yu Tan family, and Sam came by to chat. We quickly discovered that we both went to Vancouver Technical Secondary School. Sam has attended the last 4 or 5 Gung Haggis Fat Choy dinner events that I have put on.
And now each year, with the Ariadne Sawyer's World Poetry series, we put on Gung Haggis Fat Choy World Poetry Night as a free event. We are thankful for the library's support in making events possible for many small but vitally and culturally potent community groups like ourselves. But now, groups like the Vancouver Inter-Cultural Orchestra will have to cancel their plans for the August 7th presentation of Classical Western and Classical Chinese Music as part of a Music of the Whole World series. I remember how during the CBC lock-out, that access and information about many smaller community events were negatively impacted.
Cupe 391: Claudia and Wendy sitting in the rain on Day 9 of Strike Action – photo Todd Wong
I have known Claudia and Wendy for many years at the library. Wendy works in the Special Collection division where I would sometimes go to check on historical photos of Vancouver Chinatown. The history division also has the micro fiche where Chinese head tax descendants can look up the immigration records of their ancestors. The library resources became very popular after Prime Minister Stephen Harper announced the apology for Chinese Head Tax and that ex-gratia payments would be made to surviving head tax spouses and payers – but not descendants đ
CUPE 391 learning Tai Chi on Day 9 of Strike Action – photo Todd Wong
Cupe 391 – Group morning Tai Chi exercise on Day 9 of Strike Action – photo Todd Wong
On Friday morning, the library Wellness Committee organized an introductory Tai Chi lesson. This was a great way to draw on the many resources of our fellow co-workers and strike-walkers. Every year we have a staff conference with many interesting topics. I have presented workshops in visualization for health and achievement, as well as performing my accordion. The Wellness Committee leads workshops and talk to help improve the lives and health of our employees. The morning Tai Chi lesson was a great way to get everybody moving, make new friends and find a creative way to use our time on the picket line.
Over my years in VPL, I have also done lots of community volunteer work to help the Asian-Canadian arts community to access library resources. I had helped to lead joint organization and programming between explorASIAN and VPL to further enhance Asian Heritage Month in May. And in 2002, I served on the inaugural One Book One Vancouver committee that celebrated the novel Jade Peony by Wayson Choy. It was an award winning program that made the book come alive and introduced many readers and library patrons to Chinese Canadian culture and history. Check out the great website on Chinese Canadian genealogy that the History Division set up: http://www.vpl.ca/ccg/
CUPE 391: Trivial Pursuit accesses our wide range of knowledge and skills
Walking the line on Thursday and Friday, I was struck by the amazing amount of intellectual resources at a standstill. Normally the library is a very busy place. I have worked on the Quick Information Services desk, directing patrons to the many subject divisions and resources they require. I have helped organize and attended many of the community programs and reading series that are offered free of charge. I know that many of our library workers are very involved in their communities as I am, and are “experts” and “fountains of knowledge.” I brought out a Trival Pursuit game to test “how knowledgable” my co-workers really are!
I like Mike… we always have friendly conversations when I was working at the Information desk, and he was working nearby. When former library director Madge D'Alto first came to VPL, she said what a wonderful institution it was, and if she were an invading country, the first thing she would do would be to shut down the libraries in order to cut off people's access to information. Too bad the library cannot actively exercise it's motto “Access to all.”
CUPE 391: We get great press and supportive stories in the media – photo Todd Wong
More of my pictures posted on flickr
http://flickr.com/photos/53803790@N00/sets/72157601270240993/
Here are great pictures of the CUPE 391 strike in action – taken by a co-worker.
for more information on the civic strike go to
www.fairnessforcivicworkers.ca and www.cupe391.ca
Harmony Arts Festival: featuring Gung Haggis paddler Richard Montagna + The Paperboys
Harmony Arts Festival: featuring Gung Haggis paddler Richard Montagna + The Paperboys
Richard Montagna was our “official photographer” for the Gung Haggis Fat Choy
Robbie Burns Chinese New Year Dinner in January… as well, he is part
of this year's gold medal winning Gung Haggis dragon boat team in Vernon, where Richard's first dragon boat race was last year. Interesting thing about Richard… he lived in China and taught english in Beijing. While living in Alaska he ran sled dogs and organized Iditarod Tours. On the drive back from Vernon a few days ago, we discovered that he has spent more time in China, than the 3 Chinese-Canadian paddlers riding with him, who were born in Vancouver, High River AB, and South Africa.
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3:00
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⢠Richard
Montaga |
Landscape Photography in the Digital World Join professional photographer, Richard Montagna, for an |
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The Paper Boys were featured in the CBC Vancouver award-nominated television performance special CBC TV Special “Gung Haggis Fat Choy” They were part of the very first music video” every filmed at Vancouver's famed Dr. Sun Yat Sen Classical Chinese Gardens. Playing with them in gardens were Vancouver police Constable Tim Fanning on bagpipes and chinese flautist Ming Pan.
7:30 John Lawson Park The Paperboys Each |
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The The Itâs |
Vancouver Civic Strike: Send the City negotiators to the Chinatown Night market to learn how to bargain
Vancouver Civic Strike: Send the City negotiators to the Chinatown Night market to learn how to bargain
If you went to the Vancouver Chinatown Nightmarket and wanted to buy something that you needed, you normally would ask the price. If you feel the price is too high, you make a counter-offer and say… “I can pay this much.” Then the vendor accepts or makes another counter-offer. If you don't like the price, you either counter-offer or walk away.
But why do Vancouver City bargaining representatives keep walking away from the table. Earlier this year, Vancouver City Library workers CUPE 391, met four times with the Vancouver Public Library Board and their GVRD bargaining representatives. Four times, CUPE 391 was essentially told, “Thank you for your offer, see you next month.” No counter offer was given.
Last week, as a member of CUPE 391, I attended the “study session” on Wednesday, and talked with our union leaders and representatives from CUPE National. They all expressed dismay at the city's refusal to participate in the “collective bargaining” process.
CUPE 391 is now on strike for the first time in its history. We have a workforce that is incredibly diverse and devoted to serving the public. We engage on the “front-line” with library patrons everyday with our smiles and service, helping them find information, find books they want to read, and help them check out their books. Sometimes we even “bargain” when they have late books, or fines. But in the end, everybody is a winner, because they work together towards a mutual end.
The city's refusal to bargain and force workers to strike has created what many people are calling an “unecessary strike,” with un-needed hardship for city staff, city workers and the taxpayers and visitors of Vancouver.
Wikipedia says: Bargaining is a type of negotiation
in which the buyer and seller of a good or service dispute the price
which will be paid and the exact nature of the transaction that will
take place, and eventually come to an agreement. Bargaining is an
alternative pricing strategy to fixed prices.
The following is from the Fairness for Civic Workers website:
News
Counter-offer momentum building: Tieleman agrees
Well-known 24 hours columnist and former BC Federation of Labour
Assistant to the President, Bill Tieleman, agrees with CUPE that the
next move is in the city's court. Mayor Sullivan and his negotiators
have got to make the next move, and in bargaining, that is a
COUNTER-OFFER. Tieleman also sets the record straight in some news
reports. Check out more on his blog http://billtieleman.blogspot.com or
read an excerpt here. [August 2, 2007 12:44 PM]
ALERT: CUPE BARGAINING & STRIKE UPDATE
This update is relevant as of 12:15am today. [August 2, 2007 12:10 PM]
Bargaining 101: After receiving an OFFER, present a COUNTEROFFER
The greatest frustration for CUPE from the first day ânegotiationsâ,
which began in September last year, is the total refusal of the
Vancouver led-Bureau (GVRD Labour Relations Bureau) to actually
bargain. This incredible stubbornness is what has led to this strike.
We wonder if the real problem is that they donât understand bargaining.
This short lesson should help the city of Vancouver, in particular,
understand that when you are presented with an âofferâ from the union,
that the next step is to issue a âcounter-offerâ. [August 2, 2007 11:31 AM]
Generations: The Chan Legacy – re-scheduled for August 19th on CBC Newsworld
Generations: The Chan Legacy
re-scheduled for August 19th on CBC Newsworld
*** Re-schedule for August 19th ***
On July 29th, 4pm PST / 7pm EST, CBC Newsworld showed Generations: The Crowfoot Dynasty instead of The Chan Legacy on July 29th – contrary to their http://www.cbc.ca/newsworld website.
so…. set your VHS recorders… or go buy a new DVD recorder!
Generations: 100 Years in Alberta – on CBC Newsworld
Generations: 100 Years in Alberta – on CBC Newsworld
| 7:00 p.m PST. | Generations: 100 Years in Alberta – Marking the Alberta centennial through the story of a Lebanese immigrant family. |
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| 10:00 p.m. PST |
Generations: 100 Years in Alberta – Marking the Alberta centennial through the story of a Lebanese immigrant family. |
It's Wednesday… and time to start another episode of CBC's new documentary series of Canadian history told through the experiences of a family's generations. 100 Years in Alberta is the 5th episode of this incredible series which started with my own family history – The Chan Legacy which began when Rev. Chan Yu Tan arrived in Canada in 1896.
You may have heard of CBC's hit show “Little Mosque on the Prairie,” a comedy about an inter-racial Muslim couple raising their inter-racial daughter in a small prairie town, where the new town doctor is a nice Muslim boy from Toronto. That was fictional – Generations: 100 Years in Alberta is the real thing.
Check out the story from the www.cbc.ca/documentaries/generations website.
The Hamdon/Shaben family dates to the turn of the last century when
two Lebanese peddlers came to Alberta to seek a better life. Ali Hamdon
became a fur trader in Fort Chipewyan. Saleem Shaben opened a general
store in Endiang. Decades later, their two families became one through
a marriage, and a mosque.

Hilwie and Ali Hamdon
Hilwie Hamdon, Ali Hamdon's wife, found it difficult to raise
her children as Muslims in small town where no others practiced their
faith. So, eventually, the family moved to Edmonton, and in the midst
of the Great Depression, Hilwie helped raise money from Muslims all
over Alberta and Saskatchewan, to build Canada's first mosque, in
Edmonton in 1938. The Shaben family, attracted by the mosque, also
moved to Edmonton, and when Saleem Shaben's granddaughter married Ali
Hamdon's son the families became relatives and business partners. Larry
Shaben, Saleem's grandson, developed an interest in politics and became
the first Muslim cabinet minister in Canada when he was sworn into the
government of Peter Lougheed.
Today, the great grandchildren of those Muslim pioneers are
contributing in their own way to building a better Alberta and a better
world.
Produced and narrated by Jim MacQuarrie.
Vernon Morning Star: Vernon home-town girl steers Gung Haggis dragon boat team to gold medal
Vernon Morning Star: Vernon home-town girl steers Gung Haggis dragon boat team to gold medal
Deb Martin (far right) steers the Gung Haggis Fat Choy dragon boat team to a beach landing. Sitting in the boat Steven Wong (hidden w/red hat), Cheryl McIntosh (yellow & black hat), Dan Seto (partially hidden), Jim Blathewick (big smile and blue pdf), Dave Samis (looking at camera), Jonas Ng (black sleeves), Gerry Black (partially hidden behind paddle), Leanne Riding (black hat), Richard Montagna (partially hidden with white hat), Emma Hopkins (green hair), Hyuma (black glove) – photo Ginger Snaps
The Gung Haggis Fat Choy dragon boat team gets some more media! They liked the angle of home-town Vernon-raised Deb Martin, returning to Vernon and steering her dragon boat team to a gold medal in Mixed Adult B division.
Deb Martin grew up at her parents'
lakeside home on Kalamalka Lake. She learned to canoe, kayak and
sail. Every summer she looks forward to swimming in the lake, and is
happy to bring her dragon boat team along with her to visit her parents
and lakeside home.
Deb
Martin started paddling on the Gung Haggis Fat Choy dragon boat team in
2003, shortly after dating Gung Haggis
dragon boat team founder Todd Wong. She now helps Wong manage the the team, and assists with the Gung Haggis Fat Choy: Toddish McWong's Robbie Burns Chinese New Year Dinner annual fundraiser for the team which has attracted up to 570 people in past years.
Deb paddled dragon boats for her first two
years on the team, then quickly took to drumming. Coaches Todd Wong
and Bob Brinson found her to be a quick study with a naturally inspiring
manner for the team. This year Deb has taken over the steering job,
after spending lots of time steering the boats during practice over the
past two years.
This was the first time she had steered a medal
finish. On Saturday there were two 200m sprints, a 500m race and
a 1000m race with a challenging turn. Deb steered the boat to 1st place in both the 500m semi-final and 500m final on the
Sunday. The team has lots of confidence in Deb's abilities, and she
has even steered for other teams during races, such as last week's
Fraser Valley Dragon Boat Races held on Harrison Lake.
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Todd Wong & Deb Martin, Clan Chieftain & Steers + organizers of the Gung Haggis Fat Choy dragon boat team.

Dragon boat races make a splash
By Jennifer Dyck
Morning Star Staff
Aug 01 2007
Behind a sea of paddles digging through the waters of Kalamalka
Lake was another record year for Vernonâs third annual Dragon Boat
Festival.
The weekend-long event, which wrapped up Sunday, brought 1,090
participants to town (not to mention spouses tagging along to cheer
them on) from across B.C. and Alberta.
âWe had double the teams from last year and the event may even
double again next year,â said Shawn Samol, president of the festival.
âA lot of the teams were very ecstatic, especially the ones that had never been here before. They said theyâd be back for sure.â
While there was a high number of participants, the spectators on shore far outweighed those numbers throughout the weekend.
An estimated 10,000 people took in the three days of action on Kal Beach.
âThe beach was pretty packed most of the day,â said Samol, who was pleased to see the community taking in the sport.
Those on board for the Sunday races were also in for a couple of events that made a big splash.
A Kelowna team capsized in the water during a race after hitting what one team member assumes was a wave.
âThe drummer got dumped and the steerer fell off, and all the
women on the right side of the boat began sliding down, and then it was
a few seconds of body parts and paddles flying as the boat tipped us in
the water,â said Cheryl Wierda, from the team.
Another bit of Sunday action (a planned event) was the Good
Life Fitness Waterski Challenge. Twelve teams competed in the
challenge, with several showing their paddle power by successfully
getting a waterskier up out of the water. Calgaryâs Top Made Plastics
took the winning title for that event.
Overall for the weekendâs dragon boat races, undefeated
champion Pacific Reach from Vancouver took the win for their third year
in a row in Vernon as No. 1 mix team.
In the mixed B division, Vernon-raised Deb Martin steered her team, Gung Haggis Fat Choy of Vancouver, to a gold finish Sunday.
Although Martin now lives in Vancouver, having been raised on
the shores of Kalamalka Lake gives her pride to see the dragon boat
festival reach such levels of success in her hometown.
âI am glad that Vernon has the chance to experience dragon
boating now, and I am sure itâs going to grow really big here too,â she
said.
With double the number of participants, Samol estimates this
yearâs event had a spinoff of well over $2 million during the weekend.
âPlus talking to a lot of the teams they actually spent a
couple extra days in Vernon, some are still here now and some of them
are even staying for the rest of the week.â
True patriot Love: North Shore News article on Todd Wong, Betty Wong and Tracey Hinder re: The Chan Legacy
True patriot Love: North Shore News article on Todd Wong, Betty Wong and Tracey Hinder re: The Chan Legacy
http://www.canada.com/northshorenews/news/live/story.html?id=281951b4-4181-4c68-a39b-5e5855445271
True patriot love
Family proud of its Canadian heritage
Erin Mcphee,
North Shore News
Published: Sunday, July 29, 2007
– Generations: The Chan Legacy is re-scheduled for August 19, on CBC Newsworld at 4 p.m. PST / 7pm EST
Three generations of the Chan family: Tracey Hinder (left), Betty Wong and Todd Wong look over their family's impressive legacy.
NEWS photo Mike Wakefield
To say that Todd Wong, a 47-year-old North Vancouver resident, is proud of his roots would be an understatement.
Wong's
family is one that has greatly impacted Canada's history and as a
result its members continue to celebrate where they come from.
ancestors arrived on the West Coast from China in 1896 and were able to
integrate into Canada despite the many barriers that existed. Inspired
by that impressive past, today, the Chan family, one of the oldest on
the West Coast, continues to thrive with its new generations working
hard to keep their legacy alive.
“We're just a Canadian family,”
says Wong, not downplaying his family's identity, but rather stating,
realistically, who they are.
Not only has the Chan family survived, its members are continuing to thrive, exemplifying what it means to truly be “Canadian.”
Wong's
family's unique story is being brought to life in Generations: The Chan
Legacy, a CBC documentary airing today on CBC Newsworld. It's part of a
series of documentaries called Generations and was produced by Halya
Kuchmij.
Filmmakers approached Wong, known in the Lower Mainland
for his unique interest in multiculturalism, community work and
activism. He's the founder of Gung Haggis Fat Choy, a website promoting
inter-cultural activities.
Wong is also behind a 10-year-old
Vancouver tradition, the Robbie Burns Chinese New Year Dinner — a mix
of Chinese and Scottish traditions meant to play against racial
stereotypes — and he's a member of the Gung Haggis Fat Choy dragon
boat team that further promotes multiculturalism and community spirit.
Wong's
website site also details his adventures, told at times through his
alter ego, “Toddish McWong,” further celebrating what it is to be
Canadian, he says.
The documentary discusses Wong's great, great
grandfather Reverend Chan Yu Tan and how he and his wife came to the
West Coast in 1896 to “spread the gospel” throughout, he says.
Methodist church missionaries, they were tasked with “Westernizing” and
“Christianizing” the Chinese pioneers, the majority working in
labour-based jobs like the railroad.
Filming and interviews with Wong and his relatives, encompassing a number of generations, happened last fall.
“Before
the documentary, I didn't know a lot about my ancestry,” says Wong's
second generation cousin, West Vancouver resident Tracey Hinder, 15,
who's featured in the film. Hinder attends West Vancouver secondary.
“I
only knew that I was Chinese-Canadian, that my mother was Chinese and
that my father was British-Canadian. With the making of the
documentary, I found that my family history started to unfold and I
never knew that part of myself. It was absolutely fascinating,” Hinder
says.
Hinder is a member of her school's multiculturalism club,
which organizes activities for students to participate in. She's also
learning Mandarin.
Wong says he's proud of her as he believes
it's important to ensure the younger generations of his family come to
know and recognize their ancestral roots.
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