Archive
AHA MEDIA films at “VANDU Tickets Day” in Vancouver on Monday May 17, 2010
AHA MEDIA films at VANDU – Vancouver Area Network of Drug Users where AHA MEDIA is helping to document “VANDU Tickets Day”
” 800 Tickets withdrawn by City of Vancouver…Is yours one of them? Come to VANDU to see if you have outstanding tickets”
City of Vancouver Representatives are at VANDU to provide community members with info about tickets, court dates and community services possibilities.
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Below is Aiyanas Ormond and Marion Allaart of VANDU helping the members
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Below are photos of City of Vancouver representatives working with VANDU members on tickets
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AHA MEDIA is so proud of Jon Ornoy and Andrew Lavigne on their article in The Georgia Straight newspaper “Activist documentary filmmakers get interactive”
AHA MEDIA is so proud of Jon Ornoy and Andrew Lavigne on their article in The Georgia Straight newspaper “Activist documentary filmmakers get interactive”
Many thanks to Jon Ornoy and Andrew Lavigne of Animal Mother Films for the upcoming film “With Glowing Hearts” for all their hard work and REAL care and concern for all the people they interviewed and cultivating a life long working relationship especially for us at AHA MEDIA.
Below is a photo of Andrew Lavigne and Jon Ornoy from their Georgia Straight article written by Shana Myara
Jon and Andrew were the only filmmakers we’ve seen who were dedicated in telling the REAL stories of our lives and other community members in the Vancouver Downtown Eastside. We are immensely grateful for their time, patience and care in working with us at AHA MEDIA over the year for their documentary film.
We at AHA MEDIA are very proud to count Jon Ornoy and Andrew Lavigne as mentors, advisors and most importantly friends of AHA MEDIA.
So many people are always interested in what, where and why we do our citizen journalism and social media documentation with cameraphones of events, functions and daily life activities in our community the Vancouver Downtown Eastside. One thing we were most impressed and touched by Jon and Andrew was that they geniunely wanted to KNOW us and be there with us through the good and bad times.
In the Vancouver Downtown Eastside, so much goes on in our community and it’s rapidly changing everyday. We deal with many issues including gentrification, poverty, lack of social housing and during the film process of With Glowing Hearts, we all learned more about ourselves and how we could change things together!!
Thanks to Jon and Andrew for being there for us and helping us tell our story to an international audience. Thank you for encouraging us and supporting our endeavors to tell the stories of the most marginalized people in our City of Vancouver.
Please see Jon Ornoy and Andrew Lavigne of With Glowing Hearts article in this week’s Georgia Straight newspaper http://www.straight.com/node/323597
Hendrik Beune of AHA MEDIA attends “Homeless and Advocates Response to Impending Shelter Closures” at Northern Street Shelter, 240 Northern Street, Vancouver on Monday April 12, 2010
Homeless and Advocates Respond to Impending Shelter Closures
Media Advisory – April 11, 2010
On Monday morning, homeless residents of the Northern Street shelter and housing advocates will announce a coordinated response to the upcoming closure of the HEAT shelters. A total of seven HEAT shelters, which housed more than 600 homeless individuals during the Olympics, are scheduled to begin closing on April 20, with the last shelter to close on April 31.
What: Coordinated response to shelter closures
When: 9am, Monday April 12, 2010
Where: Northern Street Shelter, 240 Northern Street, Vancouver
Who: Shelter residents and representatives from Citywide Housing Coalition, Downtown Neighbourhood Council, Carnegie Community Action Project, and Pivot Legal Society
According to homeless count statistics released earlier this week, the number of homeless in Vancouver has increased 12% from 2008, from 1576 to 1762. Until now, most homeless people have been able to find beds; the closure of the HEAT shelters will increase Vancouver’s street homeless population from approximately 400 to more than 1000.
Homeless will start Tent City to Demand Shelter
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The following is from
Red Tent 2010 – For a National Housing Strategy
For Immediate Release, April 12, 2010
Homeless representatives from the Aboriginal Central Shelter on Central Street announced their intention to start a tent city if their 100-bed shelter closes, on April 20.
“We’ll try to stay here otherwise we’re going to the parks,” says Stuart Fraser, a resident of the Central Shelter. “People with poor mental health should not be living on the street. The cost of decent housing is ridiculous. It’s just wrong. ”
“We did our share, we worked, our relatives here in BC worked too and put their share in. We should not be put aside because we’re 45-50 years old and have trouble getting work,” said Kari Koivu, a resident of the Central Shelter. “They put so much into the Olympics. We should at least have support to live at the poverty line.”
“The same thing happens again and again. We all need this shelter,” says Dave, a resident of the Central shelter. “Shut it down and we go right back to sleeping outside. Like a circle that goes round and round.”
Members of the public are being asked to sponsor 100 red tents to go to Central shelter residents forced to live on City streets and Parks as a result of the shelter closure. More than 600 people face living on the street if planned HEAT shelter closures proceed. A coalition of housing organizations is calling on government to keep the shelters open.
“Rich Coleman needs to stop trying to force the City to pay the bill, and go after the federal government,” said Rider Cooey, of the Citywide Housing Coalition. “The City has no money, and it’s the federal government’s withdrawal of funding for social housing that has created this situation.”
“By funding the shelters, the province could prove that they were not set up solely to hide the homeless for the Olympics,” said Wendy Pederson of the Carnegie Community Action Project. “It’s hideous to fight for shelters but unfortunately, these shelters are needed until incomes are raised and real social housing is built.”

“The provincial government knows that people will be forced to live on the street and in parks if these shelters close,” said John Richardson, of Pivot Legal Society. “If the decision is to have homeless people living outside, we are asking the public to defend their right to shelter by sponsoring a red tent or a red tarp.”
Under a December 2009 BC Court of Appeal decision, homeless individuals have a constitutional right to erect a tent on public land if shelters are full. It is the first appeal court decision to find that the “right to life” under section 7 of the Charter of Rights and Freedoms includes the right to shelter. More than 70 homeless people were given permanent housing as a condition of closing the last tent city, during the Olympic Games.
The number of homeless in Vancouver has increased 12% from 2008, from 1576 to 1762. Until now, most homeless people have been able to find beds; the closure of the HEAT shelters will mean more than 1000 people will sleep on the streets of Vancouver.
For more information, contact:
Aboriginal Central Shelter 604-720-9761
Wendy Pederson, Carnegie Action Project (604) 839-0379
Rider Cooey, Citywide Housing Coalition (604) 872-1382
John Richardson, Pivot Legal Society (604) 417-6074
or visit www.redtents.org
CANADA’S RED TENT CAMPAIGN
BACKGROUND FACTS
Homelessness in Canada & British Columbia
- Canada’s homeless population is somewhere between 200,000 and 300,000 people and 1.7 million residents across the country struggle with housing affordability issues.
- There are between 10,500 and 15,000 homeless people in British Columbia.
- A homeless person dies every 12 days in British Columbia.
- The 2008 homelessness count identified 2,660 people who were homeless in the Metro Vancouver region.
- Homelessness has more than doubled since the Olympics were awarded to Vancouver.
- Roughly half of all Canadians live in fear of poverty, and 49 per cent polled believe they might be poverty stricken if they missed one or two pay cheques.
- 73% of homeless aboriginal people are street homeless in Metro Vancouver.
- 45% of homeless women in Metro Vancouver are aboriginal.
The High Cost of Homelessness
- Government numbers show a cost of up to $6 billion a year to service a “core” homeless population of 150,000 people. That cost includes health care, criminal justice, social services and emergency shelter costs.
- Canada is the only G-8 country in the world without a national housing strategy.
What is the Adams Decision?
– The Adams decision, which arose from a housing protest in a park in Victoria, held that homeless people have a constitutional right, under section 7 of the Charter of Rights and Freedoms, to erect temporary shelter on public space if there is insufficient shelter space.
– The consequence of the Adams decision is that municipalities in British Columbia must now respect the right of homeless people to erect temporary shelters on municipal property designated for public use.
What is the Red Tent Campaign?
– The Red Tent campaign is about exercising the right to housing, as dictated by the Adams decision, during a time when billions of dollars are being spent on the Olympics and Olympic security.
– The goal is to raise the visibility of homelessness through the international media that will be attending the 2010 Olympic Games, exposing the Federal Government of Canada’s deep lack of inaction and urging them to do fund a National Housing Strategy.
– Red Tent is an open-sourced campaign with a statement of unity that connects many different individuals and organizations working around housing issues.
– The Red Tent campaign is endorsed by:
- Carnegie Community Action Project
- Citywide Housing Coalition
- Check Your Head
- Grandview Woodland Food Connection
- Impact of Olympics on Community Coalition
- Frank Paul Society
- Justice for Migrant Workers
- Megaphone
- Pivot Legal Society
- Revelry Society
- Stop War
- Streams of Justice
- YWCA Violence Outreach for Female Survivors
- F Word Media Collective
The Red Tent Campaign is modeled off the 2006 campaign by French anti-poverty organization Children of Don Quixote, which used Red tents as a symbol to draw attention to the plight of the homeless in Paris. The organization launched the campaign to coincide with a French national election. The tents were used as a visual reminder that there were over 100,000 people who were homeless in France and that shelter did not have adequate space available for all those in need and that shelters are not a substitute for long-term housing. In the end the French government announced the creation of 27,000 new shelter beds across the country and introduced improvements to already existing shelters, they also guaranteed that a new law recognizing housing as a right would be passed.
– For more information on Canada’s Red Tent Campaign visit: http://www.redtents.org
Now is the time for action
- The Red Tent Campaign and our supporters are calling on the Federal Government of Canada to implement a fully funded National Housing Strategy to deal with the homelessness crisis in Canada.
- Member of Parliament for Vancouver East, Libby Davies currently has a national housing strategy bill coming to parliament for third reading after parliament is reconvened after the 2010 Olympics. For the full version of the Bill C-304 visit: http://www2.parl.gc.ca/HousePublications/Publication.aspx?Language=E&Parl=40&Ses=2&Mode=1&Pub=Bill&Doc=C-304_1&File=24
- It has been 17 years since Canada has had a national affordable housing strategy. The former plan, which created 650,000 units providing housing for more than two million Canadians, was cancelled in 1993.
For more information, visit www.redtents.org
AHA MEDIA is proud to help announce DNC- Downtown Eastside Neighbourhood Council Monthly General Meeting on Saturday April 17, 2010 from 2 – 4pm in Carnegie Theatre (Main and Hastings)
Monthly General Meeting Saturday April 17th 2pm to 4pm Carnegie Theatre (Main & Hastings)
The meeting will deal with these proposals from the newly elected Steering Committee:
First: To adopt new committees and get reports from their members
1. Safety committee
2. Constitution committee
3. Membership and communications committee
Second: To consider working on these 7 hot neighbourhood issues or opportunities:
1. Stop shelter closures April 30th.
2. Get a pool at the new VPL site on Hastings.
3. Start up a street market for second hand goods and get city funding available but not being used.
4. Get free wireless at Carnegie and in the whole DTES.
5. Start guerrilla police complaints process and emergency cel phone donation drive.
6. Work on safety complaints in Strathcona.
7. Stop closure of 2 DTES daycares Citygate and Phil Bouvier
April Smith of AHA MEDIA is very proud to be on the cover of Megaphone Magazine in Vancouver Downtown Eastside
Yes, in this issue we feature April Smith; once homeless and searching for herself on the streets of the Downtown Eastside, she is now one of the city’s leading social media activists.
We look at Leef Evans, who battled crippling depression in his Single Room Occupancy (SRO) hotel, yet has gone on to become one of the city’s most formidable artists and a big part in the burgeoning street soccer movement. And we remember Margaret Prevost, a disabled athlete known to many as ‘the mayor of the Downtown Eastside’, who sadly passed away last month.
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We encourage everyone to buy a copy from your favourite vendor or sign up to read online! 🙂
http://www.megaphonemagazine.com/content/subscribe.html
Megaphone’s mission is to provide an opportunity for our homeless and low-income vendors. We are very proud of how hard our vendors work – to become self-sufficient and build grassroots support to end poverty. Please support our vendors by buying a copy of the magazine from them.






























