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GROUP HOMES IN RICHMOND, BC

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(quotes from the Richmond News, 11 March 2001) 'INCLUSION OR EXCLUSION' For: ... 14 x meetings held between May October, 2001 ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: GROUP HOMES IN RICHMOND, BC


1
GROUP HOMES IN RICHMOND, BC
  • David W. Edgington
  • Department of Geography
  • University of British Columbia

2
  • Research Objectives
  • Literature Review
  • The Group Homes Task Force
  • Conclusions

3
Ethnoburbs
  • Immigrants residents are more actively involved
    in mainstream politics and community affairs than
    the residents of ghettos and enclaves
  • The ethnoburb model challenges the dominant
    view that suburban assimilation is inevitable and
    the best solution for ethnic minorities Wei Li,
    2006 From Enclave to Ethnoburb, forthcoming

4
Multicultural Planning
  • For planners, the practical imperative is no
    longer whether planning ought to be culturally
    sensitive, but how?
  • How do planners accommodate one groups view of
    the physical environment when it conflicts with
    that of another group?
  • More importantly, the question remains
    whether.planning can be sensitive to diverse
    cultures and yet maintain a unified public realm?
  • Michael Burayidi, Urban Planning in a
    Multicultural Society, 2000

5
Group Homes
  • Offer an important service to substance dependent
    individuals and others needing special care
  • Chinese traditional attitudes to drug addicts
  • Canadian society and inclusiveness

6
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7
Maps of Richmond
8
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9
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10
GROUP HOMES IN RICHMOND I
  • Turning Point gtgtgtgtgtgt Setting up the Task Force
  • 1990-91 Adams Place, a group home for male
    recovery from drug and alcohol addiction
  • 1999 forced to relocate chose a 6,000 sq ft
    house in up-scale Odlin Road, Richmond Turning
    Point Recovery Home (10 beds)
  • seeks approval from Vancouver/Richmond Health
    Board and Richmond City Council
  • pickets and public protests by local residents,
    mainly members of the Chinese community

11
GROUP HOMES IN RICHMOND I
  • March 2001. Planning Committee of Councl
    considers a made-in-Richmond by-law to allow
    7-10 person group homes without a public hearing
    process
  • 2-day hearing 00 of residents turn out of
    those who spoke, the overwhelming majority felt
    they wanted a say on where the group homes should
    be allowed to set up (preferably outside
    residential neighbourhoods) and how they should
    be run
  • by-law or not?? (drug rehabilitation vs battered
    womens shelters, hospice homes, etc)

12
INCLUSION OR EXCLUSION
  • Against
  • It is unfair to the children of Richmond since
    they will be exposed to foreseeable danger, said
    Philip Tang, one of the speakers on Tuesday.
  • Were concerned about the drug dealers coming
    into our area, said Julie Lin. How can we
    protect our children? Our families?
  • They should move out of residential areas, said
    Julies father, Simon Lin. They can be set up in
    restricted areas where they are not harmful
  • (quotes from the Richmond News, 11 March 2001)

13
INCLUSION OR EXCLUSION
  • For
  • I can tell you, people with mental handicaps,
    physical handicaps, people who suffer from drug
    and alcohol addiction or mental illness, will not
    hurt you or your family, I can say that from my
    own experience, said Brian Wardley, a member of
    the Richmond community health committee.
  • If those concerned with group homes spent some
    time visiting or volunteering in one, youll find
    the (residents) are good human beings, just like
    you and me, Wardley said.
  • (quotes from the Richmond News, 11 March 2001)

14
GROUP HOMES IN RICHMOND II
  • The Task Force
  • March 2001 Group Homes Task Force Appointed
  • Composition
  • 3 members, Association of Richmond Homeowners
  • 2 members, Richmond Community Services Advisory
    Council
  • 1 member, Vancouver/Richmond Health Board
  • 4 members, chosen at random from the ratepayers
    list

15
GROUP HOMES IN RICHMOND II
  • 14 x meetings held between May October, 2001
  • consultants appointed by city planning staff
    (including Chinese media PR consultant)
  • 100,000 budget

16
GROUP HOMES IN RICHMOND II
  • Task Force heard presentations from Group Home
    operators and residents, social planners,
    neighbours of Turning Point
  • it found that 32 residential groups were already
    set up in the City (but that only 1 involved
    drug/alcohol recovery)
  • found out that HK and China still have a punitive
    model of addressing drug addiction, rather than
    one focused on rehabilitation and education

17
GROUP HOMES IN RICHMOND III
  • Politics
  • June 2001. Betrayal!!!
  • John Wong Association of Richmond Homeowners
    quits the Task Force in frustration that the
    group was operating on a city-driven agenda
  • 2 weeks later he is back on the Task Force after
    the Citys Policy Planner T. Crowe is
    re-assigned and the Citys Urban Development
    Manager D. McCllelan steps down as Task Force
    Chair.

18
GROUP HOMES IN RICHMOND III
  • October 2001. City By-election (issues are Group
    Homes Traffic and Gambling)
  • eight Chinese Canadians out of 29 hopefuls on the
    election ballot
  • three run under a new Richmond Canadian Voters
    (RCV) Party
  • none with a Chinese name or background was
    successful in landing a seat on council
  • 33.39 of Chinese-Canadian voters cast a ballot
    in the by-election,
  • c.f. 32.07 for the population-at-large Civic
    Education Society

19
2001 Civic By-election
20
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21
GROUP HOMES IN RICHMOND IV
  • The End?
  • September 2001. Information brochure produced by
    Task Force/City Staff/Consultant - bilingual
    version too
  • 6 x community meetings

22
GROUP HOMES IN RICHMOND IV
  • October 2001. Final Report and Recommendations
    given to Council
  • Group Homes (7-10 bed facility) be allowed as of
    right in residential areas, but with
    notification for new applications to neighbours
    within five-house radius
  • Overall process managed by the City and Richmond
    Health Services
  • Recommends establishment of a Cultural Relations
    Advisory Committee
  • John Wong refuses to sign-off

23
GROUP HOMES IN RICHMOND IV
  • November 2001. Council wants more control over
    drug/alcohol recovery homes and seeks legal
    advice
  • December 2001. BC Provincial Government changes
    Community Care Act to withdraw licensing
    requirement from 7-10 bed facilities
  • Therefore no longer any requirement for Group
    Homes (7-10 bed facility) to be provincially (or
    municipally) licensed
  • ..stalemate

24
CONCLUSIONS
  • Richmond City Council took a leadership role
  • Increasing Chinese/HK political participation
  • What prospects for municipal learning?

25
Thank You!
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