Vancouver city councillor wants city signage to reflect region's diversity - Action News
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British Columbia

Vancouver city councillor wants city signage to reflect region's diversity

A new motion in city council plans to change the way Vancouver names streets, public plazas and certain buildings.

Place names should reflect a broader concept of history, Councillor Andrea Reimer says

In 2016, Lilian To Way became the first street in the city to be named after a Chinese-Canadian. (CBC)

Vancouver Councillor Andrea Reimer is introducing a new motion before city council today to better reflect the diversity of the city through place names.

Her motion prioritizes naming currently unnamed city assets like streets, lanes, plazas, and some buildings to better reflect the city's ethnic, religious and gender diversity.

It also specifically recognizes Indigenous contributions to the city and directs staff to create specific guidelines to guide place naming that recognizes both Indigenous and settler history.

Schools, parks and libraries are named through a separate process.

'Advancing reconciliation'

Reimer's motion is part of Canada's 150th anniversary celebrations and Vancouver's commitment to "significantly advance reconciliation."

"If you look at it, in a very short window of time literally a few decades people came onto this land, erased all the place names on this land," she said.

Reimer pointed out the city has lagged behind when it comes to recognizing the contributions of women, minorities, and Indigenous communities.

Vancouver Mayor Gregor Robertson (far left), SUCCESS board chair Grace Wong and a member of Lilian To's family, reveal the first street in Vancouver named after a Chinese-Canadian on July 22, 2016. (CBC)

Vancouver only unveiled its first street named after a Chinese-Canadian last year, despite the over 100 year history of the Chinese community in the city.

"The impact of that is felt by many different cultures who came here who don't feel visible. Most profoundly is hearing from the First Nations what it's like to become invisible in your own country."

Symbols have an impact

Khelsilem, a SFU lecturer in the Squamish dialect, said the motion was "wonderful."

He says recognizing Indigenous history through signage is a significant acknowledgement of the people who used the land before colonization.

For instance, he says the way the Squamish language has been used in highway signs on the Sea-to-Sky highway is a good example of how to make the presence of Indigenous people in that region felt.

Khelsilem says the way the Squamish language is featured prominently in highway signs on the Sea to Sky Highway is a great example of reintroducing Indigenous place names. (University of British Columbia)

Making Indigenous place names a normal occurrence could foster reconciliation for future generations, he added.

"Symbols do have an impact on our communities," he said.

"What I'm thinking of is 50 or 100 years down the road where the communities of Vancouver have adapted into their vernacular ... The same way that many people can say Nanaimoand Coquitlamand Tsaswassenwhich are all Indigenous words."

Sensitive process

Reimer said she understood the process of naming is a sensitive one and expects the issue will be an emotional one.

While the motion refers to unnamed city assets, it will also determine whether if ever specific names should be replaced.

"People do get invested in the names of things," Reimer said.

"Attaching a name to a physical asset is more permanent than we are as the human beings who represented those names ... [but] I want to live in a city where that history isn't erased and is made visible again."

With files from the CBC'sOn The Coast and The Early Edition


To hear the full interview listen to audio labelledVancouver city councillor wants city signage to reflect region's Indigenous history and Andrea Reimer on new naming motion