Open Letter from Mayor Sam Sullivan

Open Letter from Mayor Sam Sullivan

Southeast False Creek planning a decade in the making – Mayors Owen, Campbell & Sullivan have helped see this historic project through

As most Vancouverites know, I am not seeking re-election. And while I do not have a direct political stake in the outcome of Saturday’s election for the first time in 15 years, I do feel compelled to formally address recent reports about the construction of the Athletes Village at Southeast False Creek.

As Mayor, it is my duty to reinforce a number of facts. First, the Olympic Village will be delivered on time next year. Second, our city staff has been acting in the best interests of taxpayers in managing this complex project through turbulent economic times. Third, at all times over the past 14 years, City Councils have been appropriately consulted and have endorsed our staff in their planning and management of this project.

The Southeast False Creek development consists of 50 acres of city-owned land in one of the most desirable waterfront real estate locations in North America. Half the site is designated for public parks, seawall and a state of the art community centre that is accessible to all. A significant number of the housing units have been sold – and the ones remaining are in prime waterfront locations. Heritage buildings are being restored – as is the natural environment for marine life. And, more than 20% of the units have been designated for social housing.

Regrets and triumphs of Vancouver’s outgoing mayor, in his own words

By Don Cayo, Vancouver Sun
As some bloggers tell it, about-to-be-former-mayor Sam Sullivan is so enraged at being dumped from the NPA ticket that he probably leaked the secret Olympic Village report that’s causing his party’s incumbents such grief.
So, when I tell you how Sullivan mused in an end-of-term interview with me on Monday that being squeezed off the ballot by his colleague Peter Ladner might be what he secretly wanted all along, I imagine some readers will dismiss it as spin. Some will see a smokescreen to hide his real intent, others as a sop to explain failure.
Me? I’m not so sure. I think what I heard was maybe just Sam being Sam.

Mayor’s Communiqué: Celebrating Arts, Culture & Our Great Beginnings

Mayor’s Communiqué: Celebrating Arts, Culture & Our Great Beginnings

In this edition

  • Remembrance Day Services Across Vancouver – Free Parking for Veterans
  • Improvements to Chinatown, Japantown, Gastown & Stratchcona
  • Investing in Arts, Culture & Heritage
  • Meeting of Canada’s First Ministers
  • Liberal Party of Canada Leadership-Biennial Convention coming to Vancouver

Clr. Elizabeth Ball (2nd from left) with Mayor Sullivan and members of the East side arts community.
A shuttered Hastings Street business is now a vibrant art studio.

Remembrance Day Services

I hope you and members of your family will take the opportunity to participate in one of the many special Remembrance Day services taking place across the City. Lynn and I will be attending the City’s annual service in Victory Square. Prior to the service, the Vancouver Bach Youth Choir will perform.

For the second year in a row, vehicles displaying veteran license plates have been exempted from on-street parking meter fees from November 4 to 11. EasyPark will also provide free parking to vehicles with veteran license plates.

City Hall will be closed on Tuesday, November 11 for Remembrance Day. It will reopen Wednesday, November 12 at 8:30 am.

Libs stick with Vancouver convention

Party to select successor to Dion from April 30 to May 3, 2009
Source: Canwest News Service; with a file from Christina Montgomery
OTTAWA — Vancouver will host the $10-million party when federal Liberals gather May 2 to pick a replacement for leader Stephane Dion.
Party president Doug Ferguson announced yesterday that the national executive decided to stick with Vancouver as the site of the convention, to be held April 30 through May 3, 2009.
The 22-member executive rejected rival bids from Toronto, Ottawa, and Quebec City to host as many as 10,000 delegates and rake in at least $10 million.

Mayor’s Communiqué: Vancouver’s Leadership in Sustainable Growth

Mayor’s Communiqué: Vancouver’s Leadership in Sustainable Growth

In this edition:

  • City Council Unanimously Approves EcoDensity Laneway Housing Plan
  • Making Vancouver a World Leader in Sustainable Development
  • EcoDensity Survey Results
  • BC Place Development Approved – Future Secured in Vancouver
  • Poppy Week in Vancouver

Councillor Suzanne Anton (with Park Board Chair Konna Houghton, left) has helped
lead City Council’s effort to make Vancouver one of the world’s greenest cities

EcoDensity Laneway Housing Plan Approved

Last week, Vancouver City Council approved a series of recommendations to expand access to laneway housing across the City of Vancouver. The recommendations deliver on a key EcoDensity action item unanimously approved by Council in June.

AC/DC will have its day in Vancouver: Mayor

Sam ‘Frickin’ Sullivan says music key in city
By Stuart Derdeyn, The Province
Listeners to the Jeff O’Neil Show on 99.3 The FOX (CFOX-FM) yesterday were surprised to hear none other than Vancouver Mayor Sam Sullivan co-hosting the open-phones segment of the show and announcing an upcoming official proclamation that Nov. 28, 2008, is AC/DC Day in Terminal City.
Introduced as “Sam ‘Frickin’ Sullivan,” the mayor opened the segment declaring that he is re-forming Spinal Chord, the band that first brought him into the public eye prior to his involvement in civic politics. He was joking — maybe.
“I said it tongue-in-cheek to some of the interviewers on the radio,” he told The Province later. “But, hey, why not?”