Vancouver Sun

Racist documents enrage woman

2020 vow to delete offensive wording from land titles still not carried out

- LORI CULBERT

A West Vancouver woman says she was infuriated to find racist language still exists on her home ownership documents, two years after the district vowed to take action to strike out these “discrimina­ting covenants.”

“I was very angry. I wanted to get the awareness out that this is still happening,” said Michele Tung.

“My goal is to get rid of these covenants, because I don't want to have to tell my children's children that I didn't do anything about it.”

Even though these offensive clauses were made unenforcea­ble in 1978, they are upsetting when they are still part of official documents attached to residents' homes.

Tung's covenant, created in 1955 for her land in the British Properties, said people of “African or Asiatic” descent could not reside there — unless they were servants.

Tung 's friend Stembile Chibebe, who is of African descent, does not have this offensive clause in the documents for her West Vancouver home, but would like to see the wording removed from all land titles before her two school-aged children are old enough to buy property.

“You wonder why we are keeping this language? This should have been taken off a long time ago,” Chibebe said.

Tung created a petition, signed so far by about 800 people, asking for these covenants to be removed.

She discovered the racist language after she said West Vancouver staff asked her subcontrac­tor for a copy of a restrictiv­e covenant that is notated on the front of her land title document, alongside three right-of-way notices.

Providing the covenant was necessary, her subcontrac­tor was told, to avoid delay in getting an additional permit for a house she and her husband are building.

The Land Title and Survey Authority (LTSA) in New Westminste­r holds these documents.

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