However, the city added funding so it could stay open every night until April 14, instead of only during extreme weather. The province funded the emergency, cold-weather shelter and it was meant to be open when the temperature dropped below a certain point. “Any help I’ve asked for, they’re on top of it,” Kueber said.īut when the overnight warming centre closes next week, those sleeping there will be “hooped,” he explained. The Brighouse daytime drop-in centre helps those who are unhoused “so much,” Kueber explained with showers, laundry and support such as help navigating the legal system. Kueber said, that in addition to the 30 people usually staying at the warming centre, there are usually about 30 more in the park. Here Dwayne Kueber has set up his tent, furnished with a couple of chairs and with his food stored in a bag hanging high in the tent to discourage rodents. When the Richmond News dropped by Brighouse Park last Monday evening, a couple dozen people were milling around outside the centre.Īmong those staying in the park, unhoused, was a young woman who is seven months pregnant.Ĭlose to the Brighouse warming centre, which also serves as a drop-in centre for unhoused people during the day, there are tents where other unhoused people are staying. ![]() ![]() Keith Baldrey is chief political reporter for Global BC.Two warming centres in Richmond, at Brighouse Park and South Arm Pool, are set to close next week. That cabinet minister’s concerns about his party being complacent should sound a warning to his side. Conservatives finally pay off.īut if the polls remain the same and continue to show the NDP with a big lead over the various opposition parties for the next few months, the ruling party could sleepwalk into the election campaign, just as it did in 1991 before Clark rode to the rescue.Īn election campaign can sometimes get voters refocused on political parties in ways that don’t occur between elections. United can see its significant advantages over the B.C. A lot can happen between now and then, and perhaps B.C. The official election campaign begins almost five months from now. The ads featured party leader Kevin Falcon, whose negatives among voters in a recent Angus Reid poll were astonishingly high for an Opposition leader. United Party recently engaged in a $1-million saturation advertising campaign with no evidence it moved the needle among voters. Conservatives (significantly more money, a seasoned party infrastructure to name two) but they are not translating to any boost in support. United Party has various advantages over the B.C. Whatever the reason, the question is will the party’s standing in the polls continue to climb or will it plateau, as the B.C. There are various theories about the party’s emergence: it’s riding on the coattails of a surging federal Conservative Party, or it is the default right-wing vote parking lot because B.C. United among decided voters in a series of recent polls by various polling firms. Conservative Party, which has not had any political presence for decades, has either been ahead or tied with B.C. United Party, it has yet to connect with voters and poll after poll brings only misery its way (last week’s Leger poll had it in third place, 25 percentage points behind the NDP).īut just like in 1991, a fledgling political party appears to have taken root and may be emerging as the main alternative to the ruling NDP. Liberal party (it won the popular vote in six consecutive elections) is the one apparently in disarray. Today, the political dynasty once called the B.C. Liberal leader Gordon Wilson to dismantle his party’s platform. Liberals, who enjoyed a meteoric rise in the polls before coming back to earth after NDP MLA (and future premier) Glen Clark called a news conference and forced B.C. ![]() Indeed, the parallels between that campaign and the coming fall contest are striking.īack then, a political party (Social Credit) that had ruled B.C. What was supposed to be an easy NDP victory then almost turned into an upset win for the fledgling B.C. He referenced the 1991 election campaign as something that could repeat itself. “Too many people on our side think winning elections are easy.” “I think we are way too complacent,” he told me. It’s not housing, health care, affordability or any of the other hot button issues identified by pollsters. ![]() A veteran NDP cabinet minister stopped me in the legislature hallway last week and revealed what he thinks is the biggest vulnerability facing his government in the fall provincial election.
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