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Happy New Year!

January 4, 2012 6 comments

Kicking over the traces with good friends Didi & Lil!

“Out with the Old and In with the New!” has never rung more true for me than it does with the advent of 2012!

It’s only been five years since I moved back to Vancouver after twenty years away in New York. It’s taken that long just to find good Mexican!

So it was a complete  accident when I got caught up in local politics during efforts to improve my building.

When Peter Ladner came over to ask me to run, I spent the first half hour pointing out to him how unsuited I was then to be a candidate, having just moved home, with so few connections, etc.

But I’m incapable of doing anything half-heartedly, especially when it comes to underdogs, and what should have been a brief political detour ended up consuming the next three years of my life.

Some have taken exception to my post-campaign public renunciation of local politics and the demands of public life, thinking it originates from pique or is just a bruised ego talking.

Bruised ego aside, something I readily own up to, this last campaign left me in debt and it’s out of necessity that I must turn my attention to the responsibility I owe first to my family, as well as to the cadre of internationally-celebrated, grammy-award-winning clients we serve through our business, ArtistManager.Net: Talented Websites For The Most Talented People In The World!

I have spent my entire life involved in the performing arts and entertainment and had the privilege of working at the top of that profession internationally, first as a VP with Columbia Artists Management and with my own agency IAG, and now producing state-of-the-art websites that renowned artists use to communicate with the world.

I love Vancouver and the hundreds of remarkable people we’ve had the pleasure of meeting through politics since moving back, and I’ve grown immensely through the experience.

But I believe after three years of intense service that I’ve more than discharged any obligation I ever had to the NPA – twice over in my own estimation.

Now I must – and am eager to – focus my energy and attention on the re-imagined, reinvented, next-generation incarnation of our business that we will be launching next month.

The importance of community remains one of my fundamental values though, as does the prime importance in life of the arts. So I continue as Strata Chair of my building – Paris Place – continuing efforts to improve quality of life for our residents and for my neighborhood, in cooperation with the Crosstown Residents Association and False Creek Residents Association.

I also remain Chair of a Strategic Task Force for the Langley Community Music School co-founded by my sister Linda, third-largest music school in BC and one of the largest in western Canada.

And I will continue to write and speak out on issues I believe are important to a Canadian way of life I see as increasingly threatened.

Tom and I end 2011 a little leaner but much greener and even keener than ever before to meet the challenges of trying to invent a small but excellent slice of the future, an adventure we’ve been involved in conducting together since we first met in 1986, my first year in New York.

To everyone chasing their dreams, I salute you and share your passion for what comes next!

Here’s to a fabulous 2012!

A Funny Thing Happened On The Way To the Voting Booth

November 28, 2011 8 comments

It can be a bit humbling, learning just where one fits on a scale of the city’s affections, in my case somewhere just below the barn-burning Tim Louis (Love you Tim!), just higher than a newbie with a bit of baggage. Even tougher to contemplate the lack of enthusiasm from a party I’ve worked hard to help rebuild over the past three years.

C’est la vie.

But I wasn’t the only casualty. How is it possible we’ve spent more than $2.5 million to go from the lowest-ever representation on council to our second-lowest representation ever?

There were only seven incumbents running for ten spots and one didn’t make it, leaving four spots open. Given that the NPA was the only viable alternative, we should have taken at least three council seats, if not four.

Especially after one of the worst riots in the city’s history, a quarter billion dollars in losses at the Olympic Village, and neighborhoods across the city up in arms. Everyone agreed council needed re-balancing.

Read more…

Dear Friends, Supporters, Donors & Volunteers

November 20, 2011 Leave a comment

Many thanks for the thousands of kindnesses you’ve shown me over the past eight months!

Thank you for the hours spent phoning, the free haircut, the time spent on cold, rainy nights handing out my flyers, and for the friendliness you showed meeting me on corners when I was handing out my own.

Thank you for encouraging me along the way, helping my campaign, telling your friends to vote for me, advising me, introducing me to your circle, donating, volunteering, endorsing my candidacy, showing up, taking a sign, etc. Together, we have done everything possible to make voters aware of the issues I believed were important in this campaign.

But the voters have spoken, decisively rejecting a Mayoral campaign based on puerile, sophomoric, gotcha-style attacks and trivial wedge issues.

In the process, voters have also rejected my candidacy for a second time. Having no choice but to accept the wisdom of their decision, I will be withdrawing from public life and service in order to focus more time and attention on our business.

Congratulations to Mayor Robertson on his victory, and to his Vision council which has received a resounding endorsement of their policies and a clear mandate for the next three years.

I would also like to congratulate two exemplary council candidates, Elizabeth Ball and George Affleck, who conducted themselves with grace and class throughout a grueling and contentious election, and to two super new Park Board candidates John Coupar and Melissa De Genova.

Thank you again,
Sean

Categories: NPA, Politics

College of Family Physicians Recognizes Sam Sullivan’s Work on Addiction & Homelessness

October 15, 2010 Leave a comment

The College of Family Physicians of Canada is awarding former Vancouver Mayor Sam Sullivan an Honourary Membership, citing his work on behalf of “… the needs of the homeless and inner-city populations and programs for those battling drug and substance abuse”. The College states that “Mr. Sullivan has demonstrated courageous leadership in introducing and supporting programs for inner-city populations in need”.

This recognition marks the first time a former Mayor receives this award and he is one of only three “outstanding Canadians” being recognized in 2010.

As Vancouver City Councillor he was a supporter of the establishment of North America’s only supervised injection site for people with drug addictions. As Mayor he raised the $175,000 required to develop the SALOME project proposal which has now received several million dollars of government and private funding commitments. The project will see hundreds of people with drug addictions in Vancouver transitioned from illegal street drugs to legal medications as a way of reducing crime, medical and other societal costs and improving health.

Mayor Sam Sullivan oversaw the largest commitment to social and supportive housing in the City of Vancouver in over 30 years. He received provincial support for 12 new supportive housing projects on city-owned land for more than 1000 hard to house people. He also supported the provincial government purchase of 18 low-income hotels with a $5 million contribution. He lent his personal support to the establishment of the Street to Home Foundation and worked with the federal government and Senator Michael Kirby on getting $20 million to support those with mental illnesses in Vancouver.

Sam Sullivan advocates for those with mental illness and drug addiction through his Global Civic Policy Society. In 2009 he hosted a forum on these issues attended by 250 people. On November 3 at the Vancouver Playhouse Theatre he will host a Public Salon featuring former City Drug Policy Coordinator Donald MacPherson among others. As Mayor, Sullivan was heavily criticized for his position on drug addiction, mental illness and homelessness and narrowly lost the opportunity to run for Mayor in the 2008 election.

Sam Sullivan said, “I am very honoured that the professionals who are most knowledgeable about the needs of our most vulnerable have chosen to recognize my efforts. I hope this will remind people that these issues require our continued support”.

Sam Sullivan has received the Order of Canada, Christopher Reeves Award and Terry Fox Award for supporting Canadians with disabilities. He has received the Peter F Drucker Award for non-profit innovation. His EcoDensity Initiative won the 2009 Canadian Planners Institute highest award for City Planning. This latest award marks the first time a prestigious national body has recognized his work on addiction, mental illness and homelessness issues.

The Mayor Has Caused Quite A STIR!

September 7, 2010 3 comments

Even in the dog days of summer, when most Vancouverites are happily tuned out to politics and tuned into the beach, baseball and backyard BBQs, Mayor Robertson’s program to increase rental housing in the city has created such a stir he’s been forced to call a halt to the signature project of his STIR initiative – a new 22-story tower proposed for 1401 Comox in the West End.

Incredibly, what began with the Mayor’s unguarded, expletive-laced tirade against the city’s Non-Partisan Association has metastasized into a crisis of confidence in the legitimacy of the city’s planning and consultation processes.

In a recent interview with the Vancouver Sun, Mayor Robertson himself admitted “the city doesn’t have strong relations any more with many community groups” and that “many neighbourhoods are actually wary and distrustful of city hall.”

Even Vision’s communications guru, Marcella Munro, agreed last week during our discussion on CBC Radio that “the city’s public consultation process is flawed, is broken.” Our debate of the Mayor’s ill-fated STIR program was featured on the CBC’s Early Edition program on Wednesday, September 1, hosted by Gregor Craigie. To hear it in full, click on the play button below:


It didn’t have to turn out this way. During the election, the Mayor promised more transparency of decision-making, more consultation and more sensitivity to neighbourhood concerns.

What happened?

To put it succinctly, Mayor Robertson’s STIR program was misguided from the start, seeking to address a problem that didn’t exist with a solution that doesn’t help.

In response to cries for help from West End Seniors and low-income renters wishing to stay in place but facing large rent hikes, the Mayor, instead of addressing their very real and specific problem, adopted the simplistic bromide that we need more rental housing in Vancouver. This despite the fact that more than 900 apartments were listed for rent on Craiglist in just one day last month, while a recent CMHC report showed Vancouver’s vacancy rate has doubled to 2% in recent years.

Having misdiagnosed the problem, Robertson compounded his mistake by proposing a solution not designed to reduce rents or create affordable housing, but instead designed to create more expensive market-rental housing. A recent analysis of the developer’s pro-forma reveals the projected suites will rent for approximately $2.70 per square foot, nearly double the city’s current average rental rate of $1.50 – $2 per square foot.

Even if you accept the Mayor’s program as a worthy initiative in and of itself – “this city needs more rental housing” – the question has to be asked: “What is the benefit, and at what cost?” Each STIR project will cost the city millions of dollars in foregone tax revenues and amenities, yet the result is market-rental housing. What business is it of government to produce market-rate anything?

Presumably, the Mayor’s trickle-down housing project would also eventually provide relief to the by-now-evicted seniors the program was supposedly created to help, but it’s unclear exactly how that would happen.

Lastly, for decades, Vancouver has adhered to a strict formula for assessing the community amenities each developer is required to contribute in order to compensate the local community for increased density. This formula is 2.75 acres of park for each 1000 residents in every new development. When sufficient parkland wasn’t available, the difference was made up by a comparable contribution towards needed city amenities.

One of the first things this Mayor did was throw that time-tested standard out the window, replacing the level-playing field it provided with STIR’s ad-hoc, spot-rezoning approach that requires a separate, back-room negotiation for every project. Instead of a steady, predictable regulatory environment, developers now face an uncertain environment, eroding business confidence and the underlying pinnings of this city’s economy.

Given a policy so full of holes and internal contradictions, yet so costly to taxpayers, it was inevitable that questions and eventually objections would arise. But listening hasn’t proven to be one of Mr. Robertson’s strong suits.

Determined to be the first Mayor to deliver new West End rental housing in more than thirty years, Robertson brushed off all objections as political obstructionism and, incredibly, conflating his own supporters in the West End Neighbours Association with his nemesis, the NPA.

Having negated all outside voices, the echo room in the lock-step, me-too Vision caucus ensured that no one bothered to ask any of the tough questions that could have helped this neophyte mayor avoid being hoisted on the petard of his very own pet program.

The regrettable result is that the Mayor has been forced to call a halt to a year-long development process he initiated, leaving the developers and Qmunity to dangle in the breeze along with those seniors he forgot about as soon as he came up with the acronym.

If that were all, it would be bad enough. But this half-baked, ad-hoc policy has left the city’s planning process a shambles, faith in public consultation broken, the city’s management team demoralized, developers unable to create new housing, Qmunity without a home and renters no better off than they were before the Mayor decided to create this unnecessary STIR in the first place.

Is Vancouver Being Taken For A Ride by Critical Mass?

August 14, 2010 1 comment

The Georgia Straight published the following article by Matthew Burrows on Thursday, August 12, 2001:

Former NPA candidate Sean Bickerton slams Critical Mass

A former Non-Partisan Association city council candidate is calling on Critical Mass riders to “declare victory” and reform the controversial month-end bicycle ride in light of recent gains.

“I saw the point of it when there wasn’t any dedicated bike infrastructure, when there were no protected or separated paths,” Sean Bickerton, an occasional cyclist, told the Straight by phone.

“But when we’ve got an integrated network of safe bike paths that are separated, I don’t understand how they can simultaneously insist on the right to take over the entire road infrastructure, tie up the traffic for an hour, endanger emergency vehicles, tie up needed police resources that are scarce, without any coordination, without a permit, without paying any of the policing costs that go with it.”

For these reasons, Bickerton feels, cyclists should “comply with city regulations and laws like everybody else using the roads has to do”.

Critical Mass sets off from the Vancouver Art Gallery at 6 p.m. on the last Friday of every month, with the number of participants varying according to the weather and time of year. The ride is often criticized because the route isn’t announced ahead of time, which would help motorists to avoid it, but is arrived at by consensus during the ride.

Brent Granby, president of the West End Residents Association and an avid cyclist, told the Straight, “A city is never just about the efficient transportation of goods and services; it’s also about celebrating the city itself and the values that we have.”

Granby, a regular at Critical Mass, disagrees with Bickerton.

“Fundamentally, I think he just misunderstands what Critical Mass is about,” Granby said. “Like in medieval cities, they would open up the town square and they would have celebrations, and they celebrate being together and they celebrate their values as a society, and that’s what Critical Mass is about as well.”

He added, “I don’t think it’s too much to ask on the last Friday of the month, and usually we’re only talking about four months in the summertime. It’s a great thing for the city. It’s tourism. It’s like the running of the bulls.”

Last year, Vancouver mayor Gregor Robertson and police chief Jim Chu called for a predetermined route for the ride in a joint news release ahead of the July 31 event, but the idea was not implemented.

Pride In The NPA

View from the NPA tent

First published on Citycaucus.com on Tuesday, August 3, 2010, reprinted here with additions:

The crowds were massive at Pride this year, circling half of the downtown, stretching from Robson and Jervis down Robson, Denman and all along Pacific and Beach to the Burrard Bridge.

I was proud to be part of the NPA outreach team for the event. Our booth was in a great spot up on the hill above Sunset Beach. We gave away nearly 600 NPA balloons that day until we had exhausted two tanks of helium, and have never had so many people come up to us to say how glad they were to see us. Pride organizers even helped us find additional ribbon for the balloons when we ran out.

People that signed the email sheets were getting more involved in local politics for the first time, and while we talked to people from every corner of the city, many of the first-timers were from the West End. Quite a few expressed regret after voting for Vision in the last election.

Bill McCreery and Sean Bickerton

We received a number of heated comments on the ad-hoc nature of the STIR program, the lack of meaningful consultation around development decisions and recent comments by the Mayor that many found shocking.

Others mentioned the spending priorities of this council, and were particularly incensed at what they saw as the lack of consultation and costs involved in transportation infrastructure taken away from vehicles and devoted to bikes, although many favored bike lanes that met those concerns.

I’m on record as supporting a network of linked and protected bike lanes and pedestrian pathways. But the process has not been inclusive, consultation was spotty at best and used to support preconceived notions.

Others in the team reported a number of conversations hoping the NPA will be more proactive in its opposition to Vision, more visible, more free of infighting, and eager to see fresh faces brought forward for office.

NPA tent at Pride 2010

Shortly after the last election, I met former Mayor and Premier Mike Harcourt for the first time. Having learned I had run and lost my race for Council, he said the kindest thing to me. He said:  ”Oh, don’t worry about that (loss), Sean. That was an outgoing tide, not an incoming tide …”

I now believe that tide has turned. The overarching feeling of the crowds attending the parade was one of welcome. Far more adults asked for NPA balloons at this event than at any events we’ve done over the past two years, and we had an exponentially higher number of people sign up for our email list than ever before.

It was a beautiful day, a great parade and a proud moment to be an out, gay member of the NPA. Kudos to the organizers for making it happen.

Dave Pasin gives an NPA balloon to a new supporter