Vancouver Sun

Vancouver gets a lot greener

- CHERYL CHAN chchan@postmedia.com twitter.com/cherylchan

Vancouver just got a whole lot greener.

After Saturday’s election, the Green party has emerged as a political force in the city, gaining new seats on council and the park board, and potentiall­y holding the balance of power in council chambers.

On Sunday, Adriane Carr, who sat through two lonely terms as the sole Green councillor, welcomed the coming reinforcem­ents, including Pete Fry and former park board commission­er Michael Wiebe.

“It was a really great night for the Greens,” said Carr.

“It was very humbling, and we are very honoured to have the public place that trust in us.”

Voters elected nine out of 10 candidates fielded by the Green party, just one seat short of the more-establishe­d NPA, which won 10 seats across council and the two boards.

The Green party added seats on the park board, with newcomers Dave Demers and Camil Dumont joining Stuart Mackinnon. It retained the same number of seats on the school board, with incumbents Janet Fraser — the city ’s top vote-getter with more than 75,000 — and Estrellita Gonzalez joined by Lois Chan-Pedley.

The Green party holds three votes in council, with the NPA holding the majority with five, COPE and OneCity represente­d by one councillor each, and one vote going to mayor-elect Kennedy Stewart, an independen­t.

Carr said her party believes in a “more collaborat­ive style of politics,” and will be able to work with all the other parties, especially on issues where they have policies that overlap. For example, the Greens agree with the NPA on the need for a city-wide plan, but also share the same concerns with COPE and OneCity over the precarious situation facing renters in Vancouver.

Strikingly, seven of the nine Greens elected received the highest number of votes in all — a sign of the party’s growing popularity among voters.

Part of the appeal is because of the Green’s stance on climate change, something a large number of voters expressed concern about on the campaign trail, said Carr.

But it was also because the public knew the Greens aren’t “wedded” to the developmen­t industry.

And perhaps more importantl­y, voters like that the Greens have stood above hyper-partisan bickering that has sometimes marred previous councils and park and school boards, said Carr.

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