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Betty
Krawczyk
Mayoral Candidate
Your environmental
activism at the Eagleridge Bluffs—and your subsequent
imprisonment—got you noticed in 2006. But where
are your activist roots? When
I was nine years old, back in 1930s Louisiana, my father
saved a black man from drowning. Other men were watching
and wouldn’t help. My father lit into them, saying,
“God made him, too. And God is watching you.”
I still remember that. Then in 1961, I split with the
Baptist church over integration. In 1964, I refused
to pay income tax because of Vietnam. And that’s
partly why I came to British Columbia—my son was
being drafted.
How many times
have you been arrested?
Eight. I’ve been an activist all my life. My anti-war
work even threatened my husband’s security clearance—he
was working at NASA. But my first arrest was in Canada,
out at Clayoquot Sound.
What was your
time at Alouette prison like?
It’s a very sad place. But also hopeful. I found
unexpected kindness—from the inmates and the staff.
The program director there would take the prisoners
outside the prison walls on walks and bike rides. But
they can no longer do that.
About 1,500
people wrote letters to you while you were in jail.
What did they want to tell you?
They agreed we mustn’t back down when defending
the environment. It was heartening to receive letters
from other countries, and all ages. Whole classes of
children wrote.
Someone spray-painted
“Free Betty” on the Olympic clock. Was that
okay by you?
These hard-line people in the government complain about
the defacement of public property. But these are the
same people who are robbing us blind of real public
property. Our forests. Our water. Our civil liberties.
So at 80, you’re
running for mayor yourself. What would you do if elected
this November?
The first thing I’d do as mayor is legalize pot.
And I would make a good mayor because—unlike men,
who can’t pull over and ask for directions—I
can say, “What do you know about this?”
And I’d be focused on three things: public health
care, public education, and public energy—saving
our water, our environment.
Are those all
issues within the mayor’s purview? People
say that dealing with these problems isn’t the
mayor’s job. Well, it is. When I know something
is wrong, I cannot ignore it.
What do you
think of Mayor Sam Sullivan?
I think he’s an extremely mediocre person. His
idea of a civil city is a joke. There is more homelessness,
more drug addiction, since he came on. And he talks
about EcoDensity but won’t make Shaughnessy or
Kerrisdale denser.
You grew up
in the American South, which prides itself on its civility.
Plus you’ve raised eight children and helped out
with eight grandkids. What’s your idea of a civil
society? A
civil society is egalitarian. You can’t be civil
if there’s such a disparity between the best-
and worst-off. It should be a mandate to respect the
working people. And minimum wage is an outrage.
What do you
think your chances are in this election? I’m
a winner already. I was conceived. Those odds are one
in a million. They make all other odds look pretty good,
don’t you think?—Michael Harris
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