Recently, I was hanging out with a bunch of political candidates in this upcoming federal election. I was asked to share with them my experience as a candidate and now as a Member of the British Columbia Legislative Assembly.
We were talking about the power of storytelling and I was reminded of a beautiful example from the 2017 election.
It was still fairly early in the campaign and we were on the stage in the multi-purpose room at Stelly’s Secondary in Central Saanich. The BC Greens had launched our housing policy just a few hours before the meeting. Housing was developing as the key ballot box question of the election.
This is a difficult situation for a candidate. I was on the run from one event to the next throughout the day and barely able to dig into the specifics of these complex and crucially important platform planks that were offering bold and contentious initiatives.
Bringing it home
The BC NDP candidate rolled out his party’s policy to build a massive number of new units. The BC Liberal candidate was on the defensive as his party stewarded one of the worst housing crises in the history of the province but yet had a handful of sound bites to fear monger about the BC Greens’ new proposals. I supported our position on housing but I had yet to have the opportunity to understand the nuances and so I was feeling out of my depth. I was a ball of nerves; however, I knew the outcome we were aiming to achieve.
When it came to my turn, third or fourth, I opened with an acknowledgement that what the audience had just heard was two political parties battling over who could deliver (or why they didn’t deliver) housing units. This is a common view of housing held by most political parties and their politicians. The basics are: increase supply and the market takes care of the rest. Even though more supply of housing units had come on-line in the last decade than maybe ever before in our province and construction companies have been barely able to keep up, still the housing market was bubbling dangerously close to bursting and housing units were out of reach and unaffordable for many British Columbians.
Take a deep breath
I had a different idea that night. I invited the audience to join me in closing their eyes. Do you remember your grandparents family home? Pick the most fond memory you have and dwell for a moment just outside. Linger a little near a favourite tree or a garden of flowers and vegetables vibrating with the buzzing wings of the bumblebees.
Freeze that perfect memory in time as you reach to open the front door. Turn the handle, push, pause, inhale. Flooding back are familiar smells and sounds of grandma’s and grandpa’s home with fresh baked bread, soup and always a full cookie jar of old-school oatmeal cookies.
Our federal and provincial governments made a decision decades ago that housing is a commodity. Rather than it being an instrument to provide a safe and secure foundation for people to build on, it’s an investment, a place to store savings and a key economic driver. As it turns out, that was a costly decision in which the winners have accumulated tremendous wealth and the losers are devastated by generational poverty.
I hope our housing policy will provide the safety, security and good feelings that we are reminded of when thinking about the fondest memories of our grandparents’ house I said confidently. The difference between our approach and that of my colleagues on the stage is they want to wrap bandages around a deep social and economic problem by building housing units and we want to ensure each and every one of you has the ability to create a home.
Safety, security and good feelings
I have written about my idea of home recently and I’m thankful to have thought of that moment again today. I’m as committed to that vision today as I was at that forum. Two years has passed and many new housing policies have been enacted based on counting units. To be self-critical, I do not think we have done as good a job as we could have done in the previous months working to shift the paradigm. That is something I’m going to lean into.
If you would like to know more about what I and my BC Green Caucus colleagues proposed in advance of the 2018 budget you can see the plan here.
Image by 47shadesofgray from Pixabay
0 Comments