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The party's 2014 election platform advocated for a new Vancouver Housing Authority, for Vancouver to become a sanctuary city, to implement a municipal minimum wage of $15 per hour, and to hold a referendum for electoral reform to consider switching from a first-past-the-post voting system to a proportional representation system. [17]
3 +2 Vision Vancouver 3 −1 Non-Partisan Association 2 −2 OneCity Vancouver 1 +1 This lists parties that won seats. See the complete results below. A municipal by-election was held in Vancouver, British Columbia, on October 14, 2017. One empty seat on city council and all the seats on the Vancouver school board were filled. These elections were held outside the normal four-year schedule ...
Sam Sullivan CM (born November 13, 1959 [2]) is a Canadian politician who served as the MLA for Vancouver-False Creek.Previously, he served as the Minister of Communities, Sport, and Cultural Development with responsibility for Translink in the short-lived BC Liberal government after the 2017 election, as well as the 38th mayor of Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada, and has been invested as a ...
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TEAM for a Livable Vancouver (TEAM) is a municipal political party in Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada.It was established by Vancouver city councillor Colleen Hardwick, first elected in 2018 with the Non-Partisan Association (NPA), and a group of citizens from across the political spectrum who shared Hardwick's concerns about the nature and direction of city policies regarding budget ...
With the party forming a majority on council, ABC approved several of its key policy planks in the first few council meetings of the 2022–2026 term, including adopting the IHRA definition of antisemitism, [11] green-lighting "urgent measures to uplift Vancouver's Chinatown," [12] and directing city staff to budget $16 million to hire 100 police officers and 100 mental health nurses.
The station's logo as Vancouver Television or VTV, used from 1997 to 2001.. Construction and planning for CIVT began immediately after the licence award. In March, Baton secured space in a former public library at Robson and Burrard streets; the space had been planned as an arcade, but the proposal was rejected by Vancouver's city council just days before the CRTC decision. [15]