provancouver.ca/raza_mirza www.provancouver.ca/raza_mirza
Share this profile
Housing is the number one issue for families and businesses in Vancouver. Our teachers, nurses, and emergency responders cannot afford to live in the city anymore. Our artists are leaving. We cannot address mental health issues properly when patients don’t have a safe place to sleep. While there are global trends involved, the gap between income and the cost of housing can be eased when all three levels of government make it a top priority.
For the past 20 years, Vancouver’s solution to our housing crisis has been simply to build more condos. This supply-side policy will never work because of the infinite demand from the global investment market. Today 75% of new households rent, yet we keep building luxury condos for speculators. Only purpose-built rental housing and co-ops will meet our needs.
We can no longer afford large private spaces and backyards because we want and need housing with density that is more respectful of our natural environment. The city needs to build more accessible public spaces for all to enjoy. We must add to our stock of beautiful parks, recreation facilities, and community centres, to give people room to stay healthy, grow together and build strong communities.
Businesses and entrepreneurs are struggling due to high costs and are not able to attract and retain staff. We need to reduce businesses costs and make our city both affordable and liveable. When residents work in their local community, they have more money and time to spend at the vibrant local businesses that help make Vancouver special.
Misc. topics
Affordable Housing
Raza Mirza's promise
Arts and Culture
Raza Mirza's promise
Public Transit
Raza Mirza's promise
Recycling
Raza Mirza's promise
Traffic
Raza Mirza's promise
Biography
Raza Mirza, 33, has worked as a Research and Development Manager at a Vancouver based tech company, which helps governments and Fortune 500 companies use technology for compliance with policies, and prevention of fraud and corruption.
He spent his early career working for companies like Microsoft, Electronic Arts and Amazon, and understand the importance of and challenges in growing the tech industries in Vancouver. It was when Raza joined Change.org, a company with a mission to “empower people everywhere to create the change they want to seeâ€, that he realized the contribution he could make to impact the direction of housing policy.
Raza started his fight for a right to stable family housing with Generation Squeeze, raising awareness about challenges young people face, after his wife and he welcomed their first daughter.
â€Being a parent changed my priorities. Stable housing and a safe park, a school where teachers are less worried about their own living situation and having a family doctor took place of personal goals.â€
Volunteering for Dogwood, Raza worked to raise awareness about the importance of voting, and campaigned to ban big money in politics and the need for a corruption inquiry in British Columbia.
As a spokesperson, and Director of Government Relations, for Housing Action for Local Taxpayers (HALT) he also pushed the government to address speculation and foreign capital in the Vancouver housing market.
Raza has been the Secretary for the Standing Committee for Economy and Environment (SCOEE) for BC New Democratic Party (BC NDP) and a member of Non Partisan Association (NPA); he has volunteered for Vancouver Greens, and discussed policy resolution with Conservative Party of Canada local EDA.
Raza's ability to work across party lines makes him uniquely qualified to unite people to stand together for Vancouver.
“People often ask me if I’m politically left leaning or right leaning, and I tell them I only look forward, because you can only learn from past, work hard today, and that is how you change the future.â€
After having lived in Yaletown, Coal Harbour and Kitsilano; Raza, a father of two, now rents a home in Marpole with his wife, a psychologist turned social support worker for people with special needs. His semi-retired parents also live with them to help offset the high cost of childcare that most young Vancouver families face today.
“On October 20th, my daughter would have lived in her fifth home before her fourth birthday. This lack of stable family housing has become a problem for too many young families to look the other way.â€
On October 20, 2018, elect me and your ProVancouver team to work for your families.
provancouver.ca/raza_mirza www.provancouver.ca/raza_mirza