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Video of Woman reporter who is a Tent City resident arrested by Psych-Police in Downtown Eastside (DTES) on March 19, 2010
In this video, Diane Claveau, reporter and Tent City resident is pursued, SWARMED, handcuffed and ARRESTED by 8 Vancouver Police and Psychiatric workers on March 19, 2010
Immediate Release 20 March 2010
Contacts: Wendy Pedersen, 839-0379 Rider Cooey, 872-1382
Vancouver Tent City Woman Arrested, Held for Psychiatric Assessment
Diane Claveau, a reporter and tent city resident often quoted in the media, was arrested Friday night. She was tied to a stretcher, and transported to St Paul’s Hospital for 48-hour “assessment.”
Fellow campers Rene, Marley, and Gillian were outraged, emphasizing that Claveau was quiet and polite, with a friendly and calming manner that had a positive influence on others in the tent city. They speculated her apprehension under the mental health act was instigated by Concord Pacific, owner of the site.
Concord wants to build a controversial condo development at 58 West Hastings. Homeless people and supporters have demanded for two years that the full-block sized site be used instead for social housing. They’ve peacefully occupied the land since February 15.
On Wednesday, in response to a CoV directive, Concord’s contract employees teamed with housing agencies to sweep the site clear of campers and their sometimes makeshift camping gear. Campers who weren’t present returned to find their possessions gone.
The housing agencies offered a variety of “housing” and inducements for campers to leave, and— despite campers’ fear that some housing would be pest-ridden SRO hotel rooms— all campers were persuaded to leave the tent city by Wednesday night.
Except Claveau. She stayed, insisting she wanted to pay rent for “real housing,” not for a pestilential SRO or an institutional cubicle.
She was effectively imprisoned for the night when Concord representatives chained the gates shut. Friends passed her food and supplies over the 6-foot fence. The Vancouver Fire Department—after a month of multiple campfires on this property—gained entry and poured water on her tiny fire. A breach of the Fire Bylaw, they said.
By Friday, the fears of other campers about bedbugs and other pests had come true, and a few had returned to the campsite. When the VPD appeared seeking Diane, the campers succeeded in delaying any action by demanding that Claveau be allowed to consult a lawyer.
After the lawyer (David Eby) arrived and determined the paperwork was in order, a squad of eight VPD and health unit officials pursued and cornered Diane at the western end of the site. She shouted and fought, aided by three women friends, but all were overpowered by the police. Her hands were cuffed behind her back and she was pushed and pulled across the vacant lot, onto a stretcher, and into an ambulance.
Three supporters drove to St Paul’s and called encouragement to Diane from the lobby, until until asked to leave.
Wendy Pedersen, 839-0379 Rider Cooey, 872-1382
April Smith of AHA MEDIA on SWISS TV on how PHS and Woodwards Housing helps her and others with housing, employment and life opportunities in Vancouver Downtown Eastside
In this photo and video, April Smith of AHA MEDIA speaks with SWISS TV on how PHS and Woodwards housing helps her and others in Vancouver Downtown Eastside by providing housing, employment and life opportunities.
April’s interview highlights the new Woodwards Housing run by PHS and also AHA MEDIA’s new videos ” The 12 Days of Olympics” about life in the Vancouver Downtown Eastside (DTES) and how residents are affected by it
The original link to the story on SWISS TV is here
http://tinyurl.com/yg9cdrl
This video was filmed by April Smith of AHA MEDIA (off the Swiss TV website online http://www.rsi.ch) on a New Media camera – Panasonic DMC-ZS3. AHA MEDIA is about exploring mobile media production through New Media cameras. For a better quality version of this video, please DM April Smith @AprilFilms on Twitter or Facebook.com/AprilFilms
AHA MEDIA is pleased to help announce Under One Umbrella 2010 on Saturday Jan 16 at Maritime Labor Centre in East Vancouver
Hi everyone,
The Under One Umbrella Society (formerly known as the Grandview Woodlands Drug and Alcohol Coalition) is pleased to announce Under One Umbrella 2010, our third annual service fair for people who are homeless or at risk of homelessness in East Vancouver. Please find attached the poster and wallet card for the event. We have printed posters ready to go and will be asking outreach workers in the community to hand out wallet cards during the week leading up to the event.
This year’s event will be on Saturday, January 16th from 10 am to 3 pm at the Maritime Labour Centre. We have around 40 service providers booked to attend this year’s event with a focus on direct service provision on site (see the poster for a list of just some of the services that will be there this year). Something new this year is mini skill-building workshops throughout the day. Some examples will be a women’s safety training workshop by PACE, tenants rights workshop by TRAC and an employment search workshop by Pathways. Of course, our event always includes free clothing, lots of delicious and healthy food and entertainment too.
Please post and forward to those you think might be interested. If you’re interested in volunteering or if you have any questions, please contact Damian, our event coordinator at uousociety@gmail.com
Many thanks and Happy Holidays!
Katie Hume
On behalf of the Under One Umbrella Society
http://rosecharitiesevents.blogspot.com/2009/12/under-one-umbrella-2010-venue-announced.html
April Smith of AHA MEDIA is a featured storyline in ” With Glowing Hearts” – WGH the Movie
Vodpod videos no longer available.
This storyline is from the Documentary ‘With Glowing Hearts‘. It follows April Smith on her journey building AHA Media as the preeminent news source for Vancouver’s DTES using social media for social justice. Along the way April faces many challenges including homelessness
” April Smith is an incredible young woman facing a boat load of challenges. She has graciously allowed us to follow her for the last 8 months and gather the footage we used to compile this story thread. Hers is a story full of both despair and inspiration. ”
A Social Media revolution has been brewing for the past five years on websites from FaceBook, to Wikipedia, to Flickr, and as it spreads throughout the Internet and into popular culture through an increasing number of portals, it is creating a new sense of community and empowerment amongst those who have embraced it.History has shown that poor and marginalized communities stand to gain the most from leaps forward in the democratization of information, so the excitement in areas like Vancouver’s maligned Downtown Eastside about the possibilities of Web 2.0 and beyond is palpable.
With the Winter Olympics less than a year away, billions have been spent in preparations and many poverty advocates are concerned about how the city’s several thousand homeless and working poor will fit into the equation as Vancouver puts on its best face for the world.
Against this background the film examines Social Media in action as a group named Fearless City embarks on a campaign to empower and protect its neighbours with cellphones, video-streaming, and the World Wide Web.
With great thanks to Director Andrew Lavigne and Producer Jon Ornoy !
April Smith of AHA MEDIA is very honored to be featured by Gillian Shaw – Digital Life Writer for The Vancouver Sun Newspaper on Christmas Eve 2009
By GILLIAN SHAW
23 DEC 2009 DIGITAL LIFE
As it comes time to wrap up 2009, I wanted to share the story of a journalist who has inspired me this year.
A citizen journalist – April Smith, who is making an impact not only for her work chronicling the news and stories of Vancouver’s inner city but also for giving back to her community by mentoring others.
April didn’t graduate from any journalism program. Hers was truly the school of hard knocks and her background one of hardship.
I first met April at WordCamp Whistler last January. She was a grad of the Downtown Eastside’s Fearless City Mobile project, which helped residents and artists of the neighborhood learn to tell stories through mobile media.
At the time April said the experience had been ‘life-changing.’
“I have moved from one side of the tracks to the other,” she told me.
The other side of the tracks was pretty ugly. It was a life of homelessness and struggling to survive on the streets.
April shares her story with eloquence and honesty that is all the more compelling because it is free of self-pity. Her optimism for the future is what comes through loud and clear.
You can listen to Vancouver’s CBC radio did with April. And you see her at work in an episode of With Glowing Hearts the Movie. She is @AprilFilms on Twitter.
WGHthemovie.ca -April Smith storyline from Andrew Lavigne on Vimeo.
The mentoring April received is being returned to the community many times over with the creation of AHA Media, a fledgling new media company started by April along with Hendrik Beune and Al Tkatch – AHA coming from the first letters of their names.
April is teaching and mentoring others in the Downtown Eastside, sharing her skills and enthusiasm in the hope of offering alternatives that will help improve lives.
April lives in a single room in the DTES and carries out her work and volunteering on a shoestring budget – no shoestring might be too generous to describe it. When I talk to April on the phone, I know that it’s using up precious minutes that she must buy to recharge her cell phone. I recently found out that the Nokia video phone that April was using in her work was borrowed and had to be returned. So I asked her what she needs to carry on.
While it has been a tough year for media organizations, not many list food and warm clothing on their wish list, but those are among the items AHA Media, which does volunteer peer training at the LifeSkills Centre near Oppenheimer Park, is seeking for its DTES neighbors.
The organization also needs: FIDO Pay as You Go Phone Cards for cell phones, digital cameras, SD memory cards, laptop and desktop computers, video cameras and audio equipment.
If you have any of these things kicking around, consider sharing them with others who will pay it forward many times over.








