~ Volume II, Issue #20 un By Karen Gram B.C. Bureau Chief Canadian University Press February 26, 1986. Expo 86 president Jimmy Pattison sits perched on a tall stoo. in front of ‘an angry crowd, angry because some of Vancouver’s poor people are facing evictions from their homes to make way.for Expo tourists with lots of money. A side door opens and several people pelt raw eggs at the stage. One smacks Pattison’s face and dribbles. slowly down his che. as he speaks. Another lands on his beautifully tailored suit jacket. Not far away a sign outside a nightelub reads ‘*Girls Girls Girls — Expo 86 visitors welcome.” If all the toilet paper Expo expects visitors to use during the fair wee one meter deep along the Trans Canada Highway, . it would stretch all the way from the B.C. Place stadium to Expo to Squamish 50 miles away. _ That’s how much shit Expo is bringing to Vancouver. According to Premier. Bill Bennett’s Social Credit govern- .ment, Expo 86 is supposed. to solve all of B.C. economic woes. Itadheres to ‘mega project logic’? so familiar to British Columbians and favoured by the Socreds. But many critics say that Socred logic is faulty and that Expo will be a waste of money, creating enor- mous social and economic pro- blems. Much has happened to Van- couver ‘since Bennett announced it would host the world fair. Not all of it is good: Construction workers put their jobs on the line in wild-cat strikes that didn’t shy away from vio- Tence to protect union jobs threatened by Socred legislation. In a confrontation that lasted several months, the construction workers fought an unsuccessful battle against the government, the press, and Expo 86. Some of the events have been ridiculous: like the American souvenir company which threaten- ed to sue the Feds for using the ‘Canada Pavillion logo on their HE G FE ire LVECUI Sat y 200-7 Pp Pee -*e d weerr-di si s@lea-n.d Expo is a big joke souvenirs. It seems Expo had sold those rights to the Yanke Or the changing guard at the top of Expo. corporation. Several - of Expo’s top managers have been regrettably “retired early”’. Expo did not take kindly to the press discovering the creative uses some of these executives had found for Expo money. Twenty-one major managerial changes have. taken place since the corporation’s formation. Much of Expo is hilarious. Take for example the giant hockey stick nestled between two bridges and pointing the. way to the Canada Pavillion, It’s bigger than you've ever seen. The biggest in the world, in fact. Canada’s great defence. They say it represents the great Canadian style. Do they mean slapstick? Or how about the Shinto wedding contest. All you have to do is write Expo exglaining why you want to be married by real Japanese Shinto priests on stage at Expo . Enclose a photo and you could be one of six lucky couples who win the honor of getting hitched in front of 15 million strangers. (If you look right, that is.) We have brilliant architecture. So brillant each wall is at a dif- ferent angle and rain pours in through every crack. Bring your umbrella. At Expo, civilians can fearlessly ride on a toy space shuttle, hastily rechristened after its namesake, the Challenger, became another casualty of America’s ‘‘omni- potent” technology. There would have been a fish- tank dance floor with hundreds of shimmering gold fish beneath the public’s dancing toes, but the fish got canned (mildly tainted) before the shock of high heels pounding on their faces left them flounder- ing. Another brave rescue by animal lovers everywhere. There’s more, Lots more. It’s so exciting, Vancouverites are } P But in the Ukrainian Hall in down Vancouver, hotel residents are angry. May Heginbotham is 87 years old and confined to her room with a painful leg condition. She has until March 19 to leave the room she has shared for the last three years with her 83-year old friend John Stefaniczan. Their hotel is being renovated in time for Expo. Fifty people must find other lodgings. At the Patricia, another resi- dent hotel, 50 more people just received eviction notices. Some of them havg lived there for 20 years. Now they have a week to move. One man, in desperation, jumped from his window to his death after hearing the news. Although the residents _ pay $220 per month, the hotel is * planning to charge tourists $65 per night for a single room during Expo, reveals'a survey conducted by the Downt 1 Eastside Resi- dents Association. DERA is a citizen’s action group which represents tne people who live the dildpi ated urban ghetto of the downtown eastside. The DERA survey shows at least 30 hotels in the area are planning renovations that could displace more than 1,000 people. There are no rent controls to stop the hotels. The © . ed vern- ment did away with the controls. When asked for his help to lobby the government for tem- porary rent controls during Expo, Pattison humbly claimed his sphere of influence is limited to the Expo grounds. However, he said he would be opposed to the evictions if the tenants have no- where else to go. (Jimmy is such a good Christian, Fundamentalist actually.) Expo began as a humble trans- portation fair to celebrate Van- couver’s 100th birthday. It was supposed to cost $79 million. Now it’s an $800 million monster with a $400 million deficit. But the Socreds aren’t con- cerned. because they claim the losses will be recouped through a lottery they’ve established (our dreams will pay for the govern- ment’s gamble) and through the influx of tourist dollars. Jimmy Pattison says we should have expected the deficit. In an interview with the Vancouver Sun, Pattison said there is no way to hold a world class fair for 5:1/2 months and “‘recap . : all the costs."’ There’s not much dis- agreement on that point. Chuck Blackorby is an econo- mist at the University of British Columbia. As a member of a left- wing political think tank, The Pacific Group for Policy Alter- natives, he has studied past world fairs for the economic value. “It is not possible to go through all the post World War II fairs and find one that profited,’* said Blackorby. New York, Spokane, Montreal, New Orleans, Tokyo, all closed with deficits, he says. Blackorby argues that world expositions just aren’t efficient means to rescue a failing economy. And as a job creation scheme, it’s pretty ineffectual, the econo- mists say. Richard Allen, B.C. Central Credit Union chief economist, predicts a two. per cent decrease in the unemployment rate during the fair. ‘‘But where do the workers go in October?” he said. Larry Kuehn, chair of the Pacific Group, said employment rates during the New Orleans fair rose by two percentage points but then returned to pre-Expo figures right afterward. The same is ex- pected for Vancouver. The jobs at the fair are mainly low-skilled, low pay and non- union. Employees are guaranteed no more than four hours work each day (but must be prepared to work 16) at $4 per hour. The jobs only last 5 1/2 months and applicants are asked their opinions on unions before being hired. “Is that an efficient way to create jobs?”” asks Blackorby. “I doubt it.”’ It’s not an efficient way to improve tourism either, says Blackorby. He says Expo will steal business away from the rest of the province. “During the Los Angeles Olympics, business at Disneyland, _Martha’s Vineyard, and other southern California attractions Blackorby says families on limited budgets will be forced to choose where to vacation in B.C. instead of spending money in a number of tourist centres. Black» » also doubts Van- couver will benefit from an in- crease in tourism in the future. “Ever. heard of anyone going to San Antonio (Texas) or Spokane (Washington)?”” For something that is supposed to do so much for this province, Expo sure has a lot of side effects, says Steven Leary, a vocal Expo critic and DERA worker. A major one is traffic. The theme of Expo is tran- portation and communication, yet the Expo 86 committee has not conducted any traffic studies, says Leary. “The traffic planning is nil. Now there are estimates that they will be 11,000 parking spaces short. We’! expe’ > hour rush-hours, which mans emer- gency vehicles won’t be able to get through the neighbourhood.”* The shiny new showcase of ad- vanced transportation technology — the skytrain will do little to overcome the traffic problems, says Leary. He doesn’t believe the system, which can move 8,000 people per hour, can possibly cope with the hundred thousand the Expo committee expects each day. The first casualty is Create a Real Available Beach (CRAB), a waterfront park which was finally created after residents occupied the area in tents for an entire summer. The city is building a gigantic 1500-car. parking lot, right next to the little park, for Expo visitors. Expo just doesn’t make sense as an economic renewal plan says Blackorby and his colleages. They would rather see the money spent upgrading social services, on re- forestation or salmon enhance- ment, projects they think have more effective long-term benefits Expo was never intended to solve “economic problems says Wendy Frost, founder of People First 86, an anti Expo group. was down by 30 to 40 per cent.” Continued on page two