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Children, Childcare, & Youth in Care
Childcare
Promesse de BC Greens
- Professional development opportunities to increase qualifications of existing child care workers, and the training of more early childhood educators in certified programs;
- Establishment of professional wages for early childhood educators;
We will maintain child care subsidies and supports as needed to ensure adequate financial support for all families.
We will move the Ministry of State for Childcare into the Ministry of Education in recognition of the importance of ECE in the education outcomes for our children.
— From The BC Greens' Plan for a More Equitable and Sustainable BC.
Early childhood development
Promesse de BC Greens
Stay-at-home parents
Promesse de BC Greens
Youth in care
Promesse de BC Greens
Climate Change & the Environment
BC Parks
Promesse de BC Greens
Carbon tax
Promesse de BC Greens
Climate resilience
Promesse de BC Greens
Conservation
Promesse de BC Greens
Prioritize protection of wildlife and their habitat across government including through:
- Establishing a strategy to manage our wetlands;
- Protecting coastal ecosystems with a Coastal Law and Strategy;
- Ensuring appropriate legislative oversight through creating legislated objectives for fish and wildlife;
- Moving the fish and wildlife branch from FLNRO and the Ministry of Environment;
- Urgently match and exceed historic provincial funding levels for the fish and wildlife branch to match the unprecedented challenges we now face;
- Ensuring that science about the status of our wildlife and environment is independent from political interference and made freely available to the public;
Enhance funding for wildlife conservation, habitat protection and habitat acquisition and dedicate all fishing, hunting, guide-outfitting, and trapping license fees for this purpose.
Create an endangered species law that establishes legal protection of species and their habitat to ensure their recovery and survival.
Take action on fish farms to protect wild salmon:
- Support the full implementation of the Wild Salmon Advisory Council recommendations and Cohen Commission recommendations, working urgently to enforce all measures within provincial jurisdiction;
- Negotiate strongly with DFO to complete the recommendations under federal jurisdiction;
- Working with DFO, First Nations, local communities, and industry, provide stimulus and incentives to create a close-containment land based fish farming industry and cancel open-pen fish farm tenures.
Establish a made-in-BC Environmental Charter that lays out:
- Substantive rights to clean air, clean water, and healthy ecosystems
- Procedural rights that allow everyone to participate in decisions that affect the environment;
- Information rights that ensure we all have the access to all information relevant to decisions that affect the environment;
- Application of the precautionary principle to decisions that affect the environment.
— From The BC Greens' Plan for a More Equitable and Sustainable BC.
Electric bikes
Promesse de BC Greens
Electric vehicles
Promesse de BC Greens
Work with industry to set new [zero-emission vehicle] targets for commercial vehicles and on and off-road medium and heavy duty vehicles
— From The BC Greens' Plan for a More Equitable and Sustainable BC.
Emissions
Promesse de BC Greens
Support the creation of a biofuels strategy and clean hydrogen roadmap as part of the energy mix we use to replace fossil fuels in our transportation sector.
Integrate a GHG emissions lens into all government procurement processes.
— From The BC Greens' Plan for a More Equitable and Sustainable BC.
Enact Property Assessed Clean Energy (PACE)-enabling legislation.
— From The BC Greens' Plan for a More Equitable and Sustainable BC.
Retrofits
Promesse de BC Greens
Water
Promesse de BC Greens
Allocate $50 million to create a dedicated Watershed Security Fund that will create sustainable jobs in communities across BC in watershed restoration, monitoring, technology, training, and education.
Expanding the model of the Cowichan Watershed Board across the province and establishing shared decision-making authority with watershed boards, with watershed sustainability as a core mandate.
Conducting comprehensive watershed planning in conjunction with First Nations, communities, government agencies, stewardship organizations and industry and including watersheds as a part of a landscape-level ecosystem-based management approach to development.
Implementing the Water Sustainability Act to secure the environmental flows needed to sustain healthy and functioning rivers, lakes and watersheds.
Working with local governments, school districts and other stakeholders to upgrade municipal infrastructure and replace household pipes through grants and incentives.
Exploring science-based solutions to reduce water acidity.
Implementing a ban on fracking, a [...] process that has been shown to contaminate freshwater, trigger earthquakes, leak methane, and poses an unacceptable risk to human health.
— From The BC Greens' Plan for a More Equitable and Sustainable BC.
Education
Funding for public education
Promesse de BC Greens
[...] This would include:
- Addressing the continued disparities in wages, class size and composition between districts;
- Access to speech-language pathologists and school psychologists, and develop new resources for students with special needs.
- This starts with the development of a new funding formula that supports a 21st century education system.
- Double the funding of the B.C. Access Grant to help support post-secondary part-time students, and those enrolled in multi-year programs.
— From The BC Greens' Plan for a More Equitable and Sustainable BC.
Meal programmes
Promesse de BC Greens
Proposals would be developed by the district to ensure local needs are addressed;
Funding would be conditional on ensuring the program integrated nutrition into the curriculum and showed how the plan would eliminate the stigma associated with accessing food programming.
— From The BC Greens' Plan for a More Equitable and Sustainable BC.
Mental health and schools
Promesse de BC Greens
Post-secondary
Promesse de BC Greens
Racism and reconciliation
Promesse de BC Greens
Schools and COVID
Promesse de BC Greens
Healthcare
Acute and preventive care
Promesse de BC Greens
The task force will review the funding and range of services covered by the health care system to ensure the mix of services better meets the treatment and prevention needs of the population. The task force will deliver its recommendations to the government by May 2022.
— From The BC Greens' Plan for a More Equitable and Sustainable BC.
Care homes & assisted living
Promesse de BC Greens
Support pilot projects that bring young people and seniors together and integrate seniors more deeply into communities;
Give the office of the Seniors Advocate more independence and an expanded mandate.
— From The BC Greens' Plan for a More Equitable and Sustainable BC.
Contraception
Promesse de BC Greens
Healthcare staffing
Promesse de BC Greens
Inclusiveness
Promesse de BC Greens
Prescription drugs
Promesse de BC Greens
Sexual assault
Promesse de BC Greens
This funding would be part of a larger strategy that establishes a new funding model for medical and police integrated sexual assault services, ensuring communities across BC can establish clinics that meet their needs.
— From The BC Greens' Plan for a More Equitable and Sustainable BC.
Housing & Homelessness
Housing affordability
Promesse de BC Greens
These steps include:
- Taking a housing first approach and accelerate investments to affordable, supportive and social housing on a priority basis;
- Expanding supports for co-op housing through extending leases for existing co-ops about to expire, create a land bank for new co-ops, and provide security of tenure for co-ops on leased land;
- Work with local governments to expand the "missing middle", such as townhouses and triplexes;
- Establish a capital fund to support the acquisition and maintenance of rental housing by nonprofits to maintain affordable rental units and address the financialization of the rental market;
- Close the bare trust loophole
— From The BC Greens' Plan for a More Equitable and Sustainable BC.
Housing speculation
Promesse de BC Greens
Rent and evictions
Promesse de BC Greens
Stratas
Promesse de BC Greens
Human Rights & Equality
Accessibility
Promesse de BC Greens
Conversion therapy
Promesse de BC Greens
Gender pay gap
Promesse de BC Greens
Policing
Promesse de BC Greens
Restart the police act review [...] This would include a review of: all provincial police force contracts, a comprehensive analysis of funding, the depth of policing activity in BC and the roles and responsibilities of law enforcement.
Review procedures for wellness checks in consultation with Indigenous and BIPOC organizations, with a goal of expanding the use of integrated mental health crisis teams in BC for mental health wellness checks.
Invite the BC Human Rights Commissioner to do a study on the impact of police violence and racial discrimination on Indigenous peoples in BC.
— From _The BC Greens' Plan for a More Equitable and Sustainable BC_.
Racism
Promesse de BC Greens
Indigenous Issues
Indigenous child welfare
Promesse de BC Greens
Reconciliation
Promesse de BC Greens
Self-determination
Promesse de BC Greens
Jobs, the Economy, and Affordability
Agriculture
Promesse de BC Greens
Incentivize agro-ecological farming practices.
Support small-scale farms to adopt new technologies to reduce carbon emissions.
Identify options to make farming a more attractive and sustainable endeavour:
- Ensuring that farmers have access to local processing facilities and that they share in the returns from processing.
- Enabling the growing of high value crops, such as cannabis, to supplement farm income.
Provide $10 million per year to fund research and establish regional agricultural bureaus to provide expertise and support to local farmers to apply innovations on-farm and adapt to a changing climate.
Restrict and regulate foreign ownership of ALR land.
— From The BC Greens' Plan for a More Equitable and Sustainable BC.
Employment standards
Promesse de BC Greens
The task force will include representatives of the technology sector, business, workers, and economists.
The task force will recommend ways to modernize our employment standards to adapt to the changing nature of work and technology, and assess jurisdiction and advise on strategies for working with the federal government to ensure that multinational companies are paying their fair share of taxes in BC.
The terms of reference will include considering profit-sharing as a means to ensure businesses who are profitable are paying their workers a living wage, and that workers benefit from the profits that are too often only accrued at the top of an organization.
— From The BC Greens' Plan for a More Equitable and Sustainable BC.
Financial assistance
Promesse de BC Greens
Food security
Promesse de BC Greens
Infrastructure investment
Promesse de BC Greens
Restauraunts & hospitality
Promesse de BC Greens
Small businesses
Promesse de BC Greens
Sustainable jobs
Promesse de BC Greens
Develop a clean jobs program focused on enhancing BC's natural assets, tree planting, conservation, remediating environmental liabilities, as well as climate adaptation and improving community resilience to climate change.
— From The BC Greens' Plan for a More Equitable and Sustainable BC.
Tech & Innovation
Promesse de BC Greens
Tourism
Promesse de BC Greens
Work with the federal government to establish a repayable loan program for the hospitality sector and for tourism operators that exceed the criteria for the small tourism operator grant program.
— From The BC Greens' Plan for a More Equitable and Sustainable BC.
Wages
Promesse de BC Greens
Work week
Promesse de BC Greens
Mental Health, Drugs, & Addiction
Mental health support
Promesse de BC Greens
Invest to build an affordable and accessible mental healthcare system where cost is not a barrier to seeking help.
Allocate $1.0 billion over a four-year cycle to address mental health care within the medical services plan. Funding should be provided for a comprehensive suite of initiatives including:
- Establishing accessible mental health treatment options for all those struggling with anxiety or depression.
- Early intervention, youth mental health initiatives, integrated primary care specific to youth and mental health enabling families to easily navigate resources in a supportive environment.
- Community based options for responding to those who need mental healthcare and their families such as Clubhouse International.
- Enhanced counselling outreach services to work with the homeless community.
Allocate $200 million per year to invest in facilities to provide mental healthcare services and community-based centres for mental health and rehabilitation; and, accelerate capital plans for construction of tertiary care facilities and detoxification beds. Protect operating funding for facilities.
Develop and implement a Loneliness Strategy.
Conduct a public information campaign to increase awareness and provide information on where to get help.
— From The BC Greens' Plan for a More Equitable and Sustainable BC.
Overdoses
Promesse de BC Greens
Policing of drugs
Promesse de BC Greens
Safe supply
Promesse de BC Greens
Resource Extraction & Export
Forestry
Promesse de BC Greens
Reform forestry management in BC so that it serves the long-term needs of local communities and supports a truly sustainable industry, where community and ecosystem values are the primary focus of management.
Take back control of our forests from major corporations, ensuring forestry is meeting the needs of local communities. Our forests are a public resource that belongs to the people of BC, and we need to start managing them that way. To achieve this goal the BC Greens would:
Reinstate government authority in decision-making at provincial and local levels, beginning with enhancing the authority of district managers to refuse or amend permits.
Begin a process of tenure reform to redistribute tenures from a few major companies and grow the proportion of tenures held by First Nations and community forests.
Establish a forester general position, an officer of the legislature who is non-partisan and reports to the House annually.
Establish a Chief Scientist as a counterpart to the Chief Forester to ensure multiple values are adequately incorporated into timber supply analysis.
Enhance capacity in FLNRO and establish more community based Ministry of Forests staff, to support the sustainable management of local forest resources and provide well-paying community jobs.
— From _The BC Greens' Plan for a More Equitable and Sustainable BC_.
Shift the management framework through reforming legislation, away from an exclusive focus on timber supply to managing for all the values that our forests hold.
Adopt a wider variety of logging practices, including selective logging and longer stand rotations.
Undertake landscape-level ecosystem-based planning, reforestation and restoration in partnership with local communities and First Nations.
Protect communities from wildfires and flooding through landscape level ecologically-centered, forest management and fuel treatment projects.
Restore government capacity to ensure forest stewardship, monitoring and enforcement, and enhance funding for forest inventory research and primary research.
— From _The BC Greens' Plan for a More Equitable and Sustainable BC_.
Immediately move to fully implement the recommendations of the old growth review panel in partnership with First Nations. This includes:
- An immediate end to the logging of old growth forests in high risk ecosystems across the province.
- Enacting legislation that establishes conservation of ecosystem health and biodiversity of BC's forests as an overarching priority.
Establish funding mechanisms to support the preservation of our old growth forests.
— From The BC Greens' Plan for a More Equitable and Sustainable BC.
Ensure that small producers have access to fibre and incentive value-added product innovation, including non-traditional uses of wood fibre including bio fuels, and productive uses of residual fibre.
Apply the carbon tax to slash-pile burning to reduce carbon emissions form our forestry sector and ensure that we use residual materials.
Put an end to raw log exports.
Ensure the benefits of B.C. resource flow to local communities by directly sharing more resource revenues with local First Nations, municipalities, and regional districts.
Better support (sic) forestry workers and communities, including through expanding investments into retraining and support finding new job opportunities.
Investigate opportunities to diversify milling and secondary manufacturing to better use existing timber.
Promote more sustainable development of forest resources, including investing in tourism opportunities and low-carbon economies.
— From _The BC Greens' Plan for a More Equitable and Sustainable BC_.
Fracking
Promesse de BC Greens
Government support for workers
Promesse de BC Greens
Transit & Transportation
BC Ferries
Promesse de BC Greens
Emissions
Promesse de BC Greens
Infrastructure
Promesse de BC Greens
Transit service
Promesse de BC Greens
Work with local governments to establish a vision for sustainable transportation in an era of expanded population grown on the South Island, including through:
- A regional transportation strategy;
- Establishing a regional governance body to overcome fractured decision-making and deliver integrated planning for the growing region;
- Investing in support expansion of public transit options to help people move around more easily;
- Building frequent and affordable public transportation links between cities, such as between Cowichan and the CRD.
Prioritize investment in transit service coming out of COVID-19 to support economic recovery, improve livability of communities, and reduce GHG emissions.
Ensure that the projected long-term losses facing TransLink, BC Transit and BC Ferries are dealt with so that service levels are maintained, allowing ridership to quickly bounce back through the economic recover period.
Ensure no disruption in future expansion due do the pandemic.
Work with local and regional governments to redesign the transit funding model and establish an equitable, stable long-term funding model for transit.
- This review would include consideration of mobility pricing.
Develop climate and sustainability criteria, including consideration of cumulative impacts, that will be applied to all future capital projects including transportation infrastructure investments.
— From The BC Greens' Plan for a More Equitable and Sustainable BC.
Enjeux divers
Local government funding
Promesse de BC Greens
Citizens Assemblies
Promesse de Maayan Kreitzman
The BC Green Party (GP) strives for participatory democracy, “in which all citizens have the right to express their views, and are able to directly participate in the environmental, economic, social and political decisions which affect their lives.” Participation is a broad concept, however. What kind of participation do we actually require in order to effectively address complex issues such as climate justice? How can we move beyond the bare minimum level of participation, which is voting once every few years?
While there are many models of public consultation, the normal public sector approach to engagement relies heavily on polling, town halls, and the collection of public opinion. We seem to believe that the most widely held opinions should carry the day, as is the case with electoral outcomes, and that public opinion is what constitutes a government’s public mandate. This approach has several weaknesses.
For one, public opinion is routinely and easily manipulated by vested interests, including corporations, lobby groups, intelligence agencies and foreign powers, political parties and governments, through marketing and campaigning techniques, including the use of the data and meta-data we generate every day on the internet.
In addition, perceptions of public opinion can become distorted because of loud minorities or special interest groups, making it difficult for governments to make complex decisions. And just because an opinion is (or appears to be) widely held does not mean it is the correct course of political action. A brief recollection of historical injustices such as slavery and eugenics should be enough to make that clear.
Of course, these drawbacks do not mean that we need to go without public opinion altogether. There must be a place for citizens to express opinions and air their concerns, placing them on the agenda. Once issues are on the agenda, however, how should we proceed to make decisions? Can we counterbalance these weaknesses, along with the alienation and resentment that is engendered by simple majority rule, by incorporating other democratic tools?
The answer is a resounding Yes! When public opinion is supplemented with the use of civic lotteries (to select random yet representative groups of ordinary citizens), regular people are able to participate in professionally facilitated processes of deliberation which result in public judgment. When public judgement effectively guides public policy, we call this deliberative democracy.
Planing for Rising Sea Level
Promesse de Maayan Kreitzman
False Creek & sea levels rising: what’re the risks?
False Creek is an important part of the city with green space and Science World, but a lot of it used to be a saltwater lagoon - it’s mostly built on infill.
It was important to the Coast Salish peoples of the area for many activities, none of which can take palace anymore because of a hard seawall urban development
BC’s outdated modeling says we’re likely to reach 1m of sea level rise by 2100, but the most recent science says it’s closer to 2065. This means we are under-preparing for a potentially very damaging event, economically, environmentally, and culturally
It is clear that higher sea levels in the future will erode beaches, damage or destroy buildings and infrastructure in low-lying coastal areas, and permanently inundate some locations.
The new St. Paul’s Hospital is planned for False Creek Flats - a vulnerable location. This is not a good idea for obvious reasons.
Water always finds its way, and we need smart ways to deal with it. That means that if you protect one area with hard infrastructure, water will go somewhere else. We have plenty of strategies at our disposal to adapt to sea level rise, but we need better coordination between the province and municipalities so coastal communities have strong planning, sufficient funding for flood management, and access to expertise and data.
We will probably need to gradually retreat and move out of some areas, while we protect others that are important to us. This means densifying at-risk parts of False Creek with new construction is probably a bad idea.
Gradual retreat paired with engineered natural coastal ecosystems are key strategies, and will prevent sudden disasters. This is humbling, and so deeply different from the conquering-subduing-developing-defending mentality.
Biographie
Dr. Maayan Kreitzman is a sustainability scientist whose research focuses on the environmental, agronomic, and social dimensions of perennial crops and perennial agricultural landscapes. Maayan is also a coordinator and spokesperson with Extinction Rebellion Vancouver, where she organizes direct actions to raise awareness about the climate and ecological crisis. As a scientist, Maayan understands that this planetary emergency is so dangerous that we must do everything we can to prevent it, including risking our personal freedom with peaceful civil disobedience and arrest to oppose legally-sanctioned ecocide.
Maayan holds a PhD from the Institute for Resources, Environment and Sustainability at UBC. She also obtained a BSc. in Biology from UBC and MSc. in Genetics from the Hebrew University of Jerusalem, and completed a cycle with the SFU Semester in Dialogue program. She worked at the BC Cancer Agency’s Genome Sciences Centre as a bioinformatician before returning to UBC for her PhD.
Maayan has written in various publications and co-hosted the podcast UBC Insiders On Air, for which she and her co-host won the National Campus and Community Radio Association’s top award for a current affairs program in 2016. During her PhD, she served on her department’s student society and on the graduate student society for two years each.
Maayan was born in Vancouver in 1986 and has lived here nearly all her life. She is a former member of the Israeli Green Party’s Jerusalem chapter where she was an active organizer, and a founding member of the Jerusalem Bar Kayma food co-op.
Raison de la candidature
I'm running in this election not only to win, but more importantly, to tell the truth - about the severity of the climate and ecological crisis we face, about its devastating implications, about the grief that I feel as a young woman, and about the love and rage that push me to act radically for my fellow humans and all life. The BC Green party is the only party that can handle these truths, and push courageously for the magnitude of change and the solutions we need.
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