Downtown Eastside 40-year history reveals decades of organizing, activism and ‘resilience’: ex-MP Davies

A headshot of Libby Davies against a window looking out over Vancouver.
Former Vancouver-East Member of Parliament Libby Davies. Photo courtesy of Libby Davies.
Laurence Gatinel - CFRO - VancouverBC | 10-12-2020
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By David P. Ball
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Libby Davies, author of the memoir 'Outside In' and upcoming fiction book, talks about the 40th anniversary of saving the Carnegie Centre as a Downtown Eastside (DTES) "community hub"

The DTES has for decades been a site not only of poverty and struggle, but also "resilience" and successful community organizing, says Davies. And the former Vancouver-East Member of Parliament hopes the community can remember to celebrate and honour the successes and victories over the years as the struggle continues.

That's particularly true as demands for reforms and solutions to the neighbourhoods multiple crises gain urgency during the COVID-19 pandemic, and a growing number of media reports focusing on violence, desperation and injustice.

Former MP Davies talked about decades of organizing history marking the 40th anniversary of how the community rallied to save the Carnegie Centre from closure, turning it into a vibrant neighbourhood hub to this day. Davies was an early organizer with the now-defunct DTES Residents Association (DERA), which was shuttered following financial scandals in the 2000s, while some of its operations resurfacing as the Portland Hotel Society.

Davies shared some of the history of organization in the DTES with The Pulse on CFRO, about her upcoming book and crediting the decades of activism and leadership shown by groups such as the Vancouver Area Network of Drug Users and the Women's Memorial March Committee, among many others.