Bruce Eriksen
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Bruce Eriksen (March 22, 1928 – March 16, 1997) was an artist, social activist and founder of Vancouver's Downtown Eastside Residents Association (DERA). Eriksen and DERA are recognised for materially improving the lives of residents in the Downtown Eastside (DTES).
[edit] Childhood and youth
Bruce Eriksen was born in Winnipeg, Manitoba, a child of an immigrant Danish couple. When he was five years old, he and two brothers were sent away to Knowles School for Boys, an orphanage, after the death of his mother. He ran away from the school at the age of twelve, and rode the freight trains to the West Coast, arriving in the DTES at age 14. By age sixteen he boarded a grain freight ship bound for Shanghai. Upon his return to BC, he logged in the Franklin River and Port Alberni regions. During World War II, Eriksen worked in a shipyard in Vancouver, and became a member of the Seafarers' International Union of Canada. He eventually became an ironworker until a serious back injury forced him to take more sedentary work.
[edit] Advocacy
In 1973, city planner Peter Davies decided what was needed to address some of the area's health and social problems (high rates of tuberculosis and other communicable diseases related to poverty) was a democratic organization. He enlisted the support of Eriksen, Jean Swanson and Libby Davies and DERA was born. DERA's mandate was to build a democratic voice within the neighbourhood and bring pride and self-esteem to the people of the community. The organization required its members to be residents of the DTES. The first order of business was to name the area, which for many years had been known only as Skid Road. DERA gave it the name the Downtown Eastside.
The contributions of DERA and Bruce Eriksen to the people of the DTES include the passing of a bylaw requiring hotels and rooming houses to have sprinkler systems, strong efforts in respect to rezoning, in order to protect affordable housing in the Downtown Eastside, and establishing the Carnegie Community Centre. Another accomplishment was the lighting of neighbourhood lanes and alleyways at night to prevent robberies, sexual assaults and beatings.
Davies describes Eriksen's advocacy of the sprinkler bylaw: "Neither the province nor the city made it mandatory for Single Room Occupancy (SRO) hotels to have sprinkler systems. Approximately 25 people died every year, 40 in 1973. DERA worked hard to have the bylaw changed. The struggle was ignored by the city and fought against by the landlords who threatened to close permanently if they were required to put sprinkler systems in. The fire deaths of five people in the Commercial Hotel on Cambie Street allowed Bruce Eriksen to corner the mayor at the site of the burning building in front of the media and demand he bring in sprinkler laws to stop the unnecessary deaths. This incident led to the passing of the (Vancouver) Fire Sprinkler Bylaw, responsible for the saving of many lives."
[edit] Politics
In 1980 Bruce was elected to Vancouver City Council as a member of COPE, and he served in that capacity for six consecutive times, finally retiring in 1993.
[edit] Personal life
He was the common law spouse of fellow city councillor Libby Davies, who later became a NDP MP for Vancouver East. They had one child together. Bruce Eriksen died on March 16, 1997, after a year-long fight with cancer.
[edit] Legacy
Bruce Eriksen Place, a social housing project, was named for him in the 1990s. Inscribed over the doors of the building are the words "Hope, Integrity, Courage and Respect", in tribute to Erikson and his contribution to the community he loved. The Tipping Point is a musical radio drama and stage play by Bob Sarti, with songs and music by Bob Sarti and Earle Peach. It features Bruce Eriksen as a character and describes the origins of DERA.