Monday, October 27, 2014

3 things to feel good about & one last request.

 Hey ReNewton Nation friends,

 Three things to feel good about today.

 1. The Newton Business Improvement Association is up and running!  Philip Aguirre from the landmark Old Surrey Restaurant in the heart of downtown Newton is the executive director. 
We're excited  to see what events the NBIA has planned for the DT core.

2. The pay parking that was in place for the last few years on the 7300 block of 137th St. has been eliminated. You now have 2 hours free  parking. This was something the business owners had fought hard for. Already there is more foot traffic on the sidewalk and in the shops and that's a good thing for everyone. Well done! And thank you to Councillor Judy Villeneuve who had a key role in this change.




3.  The people of  Newton, an area that emcompasses Sullivan Heights, Panorama Village, Strawberry Hill as well as Hyland and Panorama Northwoods are coming together as one voice.




They are demanding that attention be paid to our downtown core and the south King George corridor. This neighbourhood has been forced to absorb a disproportionate number of socio-correctional services and facilities with nothing positive given in return. 
The effects of this shift in demographics has been startling for this long time south Newton resident to witness. While other areas of Surrey get new multi million dollar recreation facilities and upgrades, Newton, with the largest population in  the city, is left to make do with inadequate and aging buildings. Now we hear that the top priority for rapid transit won't be  south along King George, but east  along 104th Ave. Newton residents deserve better than this, and they are coming out of the woodwork to have their say.  
These taxpayers aren't going to sit back and allow places like the boarded up gaming and retail complex at King George, 70th Avenue and Hall Road to sit abandoned for 16 years.
 That's how long the public market property on 64th Avenue and King George  has stood ( barely), unoccupied and rotting

King George and Hall Rd. near 70th Ave.

 16 long years is enough.  
We have asked for the city to purchase the property. We have pleaded, begged, and done everything we could think of to have the city of Surrey enforce its unsightly property bylaw. ( This place fits the criteria and then some) and yet, this eyesore remains as a constant visual to everyone who travels through the extremely busy intersection at King George & 64th Ave: "This is Surrey"

And we wonder why we can't shake our bad reputation...



 Abandoned building King George and 64th Ave.
Mayor Watts, as one last act before leaving office we're begging you, please tear down these walls.



Newton residents know they deserve better than this.
And that's something to feel very optimistic about.  

ReNewton ReMinder:  Voting day is Saturday November 15.

Wednesday, October 15, 2014

Who's Your City?

 Richard Florida will be in Vancouver next Wednesday along with Ray Kurzweil.
The topic is Will Innovation Save Us?
 Part of SFU's Public Square Lecture series.


Tuesday, October 7, 2014

Downtown Newton Deserves Better.



Maybe low-income neighbourhoods would function better if cities provided them with the same amenities and maintenance as well-off areas. The best way to create an equal society would be to treat people equally. -Angela Chapin



At the official opening of South Surrey Recreation and Arts Centre 
Teen Skate in Newton cancelled in early December 2013 prior to the murder of Julie Paskall 
Open House  at Surrey City Hall Spring 2014

Gorgeous First Nations Art at South Surrey facility

A city is judged on how it treats its most vulnerable citizens.  They, more than anyone deserve the best recreation, arts and cultural facilities that the city can offer. An aesthetically beautiful  community centre and first class facilities should be available to every person who calls Surrey home. Some parts of this city enjoy  state of the art facilities, others do not.

Time after time, we hear how children and  lower income families benefit from having access to  sports, arts, music classes & facilities that don't look like they are inner-city.  It makes a difference in their lives.  And it matters to everyone else too.  Think of the money it costs you as a taxpayer when even one teen gets off track and ends up in the court system. Add up the costs of policing, lawyers, drug addiction treatment, housing costs, and well, it doesn't take a genius to see that investing in people is the smart way to run a city, and saves taxpayers money in the long run. 

Downtown Newton  needs a South Surrey type recreation  and arts centre. It is stunning, and it shows that the residents  for  whom it was built are valued. We need to give children and youth an alternative to  loitering & being out on the street where they are vulnerable to drug dealers and crime.  We want to believe that the diverse group of people who call Newton home, 140,000 strong and growing, will get the same treatment. Nothing less than the best.  Because if the future truly does live here,  investing in our children and families now is a good way to prove it.
-Jude Hannah  

It's Newton's time to shine. The future lives here. 140,000 strong and growing.
Recommended Reading by Angela Chapin:

How Mixed-Income Neighbourhoods Can Succeed.
-by Angela Chapin

Before I even walked through the door of a Toronto apartment earlier this month, I decided not to rent it. It wasn’t a crumbling walk-up or a rotting deck that turned me off. It was the building manager. On the steps outside, the young man bragged about how he had kicked out 24 of the building’s 26 original low-income tenants. He spoke with the excitement of someone who’d just set a record for keg stands. His lack of compassion was the verbal cockroach I needed to say “no thanks.”
But his message is one more and more people want to hear: you can live surrounded by people like you.
Neighbourhoods are becoming more segregated by income. A recent Pew study found the number of mixed-income neighbourhoods in America has decreased by almost 10 per cent since 1980. In Canada, rich and poor neighbourhoods have become even more polarized because of diverging family incomes and a tendency for people to “live nearby like,” according to the Canadian Labour Market and Skills Researcher Network.
The main obstacle to social mixing is that humans are tribal. We’re also hypocrites. While I chastised the insensitive building manager, I also want my immediate neighbours to be like me. Before I moved into my last place I had the choice between a bigger apartment in a “sketchier” building or a smaller place in a building with tenants who were also in their late 20s with steady jobs. You can guess where I ended up. The human instinct to favour the familiar exists in all people. Its the job of good policy to help us overcome our tendency to discriminate.
Mixed-income housing developments have been heralded by urban planners as a solution to residential segregation. They offer market-priced and affordable housing options to attract diverse renters to one area. But while this strategy may create physical diversity, it fails to break down class stereotypes.
Mixed-income housing dates back to the 1960s and 1970s, but hasn’t successfully created mixed social circles. For the most part, these communities have reinforced the idea that people from different backgrounds can’t get along. Toronto has a handful of these neighbourhoods – most famously the new iteration of Regent Park, Canada’s oldest and largest social housing project. Ottawa has a few smaller ones as well, such as the Beaver Barracks community housing project and Somerset Gardens in Centretown, but more will be built. The Ottawa Community Housing Corporation is keen to partner with private companies to put some of the 10,000 people on a waiting list for social housing into mixed-income communities.
The idea is that if higher-income residents move into poor neighbourhoods, they will improve the area. In theory, the more affluent will attract better schools and businesses to the community. They won’t stand for burnt-out street lights and will advocate for amenities like playgrounds. In reality, most low- and high-income residents don’t interact enough to create any of these benefits.
A study from Case Western Reserve University found that 60 per cent of residents in a mixed-income development experienced an “us vs. them” dynamic. 
The biggest schism existed between renters and owners; 43 per cent of mixed-income residents said these groups did not blend well.
Though they all want community, residents from different backgrounds expect the worst of one another. Mark Joseph, a professor at Case Western, says this self-fulfilling prophecy turns little frictions into big tensions.
Rather than being allies in creating a better neighbourhood, residents from different income backgrounds work against one another. “Often enough the efforts of some of the more politically active higher-income people are directly antagonistic towards lower income neighbours,” says Martine August, a PhD grad from the University of Toronto’s planning department. “Instead of getting together and saying let’s get a ball court for these kids, they say let’s get this homeless shelter out of our neighbourhood.”
The biggest problem is that property managers have not focused on social integration. The buildings look nice, but there are not enough community activities or groups dedicated to breaking down barriers. Residents move in with preconceived notions about the other tenants that fester once they become neighbours.
For August, the success of mixed-income neighbourhoods depends on the urban planning approach. Don’t send affluent people to low-income communities as saviours. Aside from being thinly-veiled gentrification, the idea condescends to the poor residents. “We shouldn’t wait until middle class people value neighbourhoods to invest in them,” she says. Maybe low-income neighbourhoods would function better if cities provided them with the same amenities and maintenance as well-off areas. The best way to create an equal society would be to treat people equally.
Mixed-income communities are welcome alternatives to segregated areas of haves and have-nots. But planners can’t expect that social interactions will grow like rooftop gardens. Residents will unpack old stereotypes into their new apartments. Discrimination towards people from different backgrounds can grow with proximity. The strongest foundation for mixed-income buildings is built on connecting social classes, not just making them neighbours.

Surrey, time to do the right thing and put people first. It's the only way to move this city in the direction it needs to go.  It's all about people. That's what a city is. People.