Covenant House Sleep Out: Champions Edition

Add a Comment by Kristy Hayter

The #CHVCatchUp is a monthly series featuring the latest updates and news from Covenant House Vancouver. Miss604 is proud to be the Official Blog Partner of CHV.

Covenant House Sleep Out: Champions Edition

Join a powerful community of business leaders and public figures and give up your bed for one night to support young people facing homelessness. Sign up to sleep out or make a donation and be part of the movement to help change the lives of youth staying in our Crisis Program.

Covenant House Sleepout Champions Edition 2022

What is Sleep Out: Champions Edition?

Sleep Out: Champions Edition is a fundraising initiative for anyone who would like to actively support vulnerable youth. On Thursday, February 17, 2022, people across the Lower Mainland and beyond will give up their beds for one night, to raise funds that will help support youth who are staying in our Crisis Program.

Why is Sleep Out: Champions Edition Important?

Funds raised during Sleep Out: Champions Edition will go to support the mental health and addictions programs at CHV. Many of the youth living on the streets of Vancouver experience mental health concerns that are often left undiagnosed, including post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD), depression, schizophrenia, bipolar disorder, and borderline personality disorder. Often these youth cope by turning to substance use.

Covenant House Vancouver offers these youth an opportunity to address any counselling and psychiatric needs. Our Registered Clinical Counsellors work from an attachment theory lens, which recognizes that a safe and trusting relationship is a basic biological human need, much like the food, clothing, and shelter that we provide.

Who Can Get Involved?

Anyone can be a champion. Join a powerful community of business leaders and public figures and give up your bed for one night to support young people facing homelessness. Sign up now and start fundraising for this virtual event.

Sleep Out: Champions Edition happens Thursday, February 17, 2022!

If sleeping out is not possible, please consider showing your support by donating to Sleep Out: Champions Edition today.

CH-SleepOut-Respect-Hope

Since 1997, Covenant House Vancouver has been providing love and hope to youth experiencing homelessness. They are the premiere service provider of residential and outreach services for homeless and at-risk youth ages 16 to 24 in Vancouver. Follow Covenant House on FacebookTwitter, and Instagram for more info.

How to Join the Betty White Challenge in Vancouver

Comments 3 by Rebecca Bollwitt

Want to join in on the Betty White Challenge in Vancouver but don’t know how? Here’s what it’s all about:

How to Join the Betty White Challenge in BC
#BettyWhiteChallenge graphic started circulating on social media January 2, 2022

On December 31st, television legend and icon Betty White passed away just a few weeks shy of becoming a centenarian. Famous for her role as Rose Nylund in The Golden Girls (and so many other credits with Hot In Cleveland, The Mary Tyler Moore Show) White held the Guinness World Record as the longest television career by a female entertainer, spanning 80 years. A defender of diversity and inclusion, she was known for her kindness, humour, and philanthropy.

She famously loved animals and posts on social media began circulating in the New Year with ideas on how to honour the trailblazer on her 100th birthday. This launched the Betty White Challenge.

How to Join the Betty White Challenge in Vancouver

The challenge: Inspired by White’s long history of animal activism and outreach, donate what you can (recommended $5) to a local animal rescue or shelter of your choice on her birthday, January 17th.

Here in BC, there are many worthy causes:

White was involved with many nonprofit organizations for decades and was the 2009 recipient of the Jane Goodall Institute Global Leadership Award for Lifetime Achievement.

Because of her ongoing interest in wildlife conservation and education, White served on the board of trustees at the nonprofit Greater Los Angeles Zoo Association (GLAZA) since 1974, but was involved as a volunteer since the Los Angeles Zoo & Botanical Gardens opened in 1966.

White had also been extremely active with Morris Animal Foundation, a nonprofit that invests in science to advance animal health. She served for 50 years as a Trustee, Trustee Emeritus and President Emeritus, and personally sponsored more than 30 health studies that improved health for dogs, cats, horses and wildlife, according to Tiffany Grunert, president and CEO of Morris Animal Foundation.

In 2010, the organization created the Betty White Wildlife Rapid Response Fund with a gift from Betty following the Deepwater Horizon oil spill, an ecological disaster in the Gulf of Mexico. The fund supported studies on the spill’s impact on bottlenose dolphins.

Source: TODAY

You can read more about her lifelong work as an animal advocate in her 2012 book: Betty & Friends.

1922 A Hundred Years Ago in Vancouver

Add a Comment by Rebecca Bollwitt

A hundred years ago in Vancouver, the year 1922 was rung in with a change on the roadways. On January 1st, motor vehicles went from driving on the left to driving on the right hand side of the street. While the Vancouver Archives doesn’t have any photos of that, I have put together a collection of images created one hundred years ago (as I have done for the last eight years):

1922 A Hundred Years Ago in Vancouver

Starting off with a really cool panorama, that actually measures 19 x 105 cm! You can click the caption to view the full image on your screen and zoom in from Burrard and Nelson.

Panoramic View of Downtown Vancouver from Burrard & Nelson.  Vancouver Archives # PAN P60. Click for full panoramic image.
Panoramic View of Downtown Vancouver from Burrard & Nelson in 1922. Vancouver Archives # PAN P60. Click for full panoramic image.
Continue reading this post ⟩⟩

Vancouver Winter Pride 2022

Add a Comment by Rebecca Bollwitt

The first annual Vancouver Winter Pride Festival aims to gather the 2SLGBTQAI+ community, while honouring Black History Month and Lunar New year as existing celebrations in February. There will be a selection of ticketed spotlight events combined with movie screenings, drag, a game night, free music, and even a Pride Parade down Grouse Mountain!

Vancouver Winter Pride 2022

Vancouver Winter Pride 2022

When: February 19–27, 2022
Where: Various venues
Tickets: Will be available starting February 1, 2022

Confirmed events so far:

Chosen Family Day
Monday, February 21, 2022

This year, Vancouver Pride Society, Last Door Recovery Society and VMF Winter Arts are teaming up to put on a free event that celebrates Chosen Families.  Bring your loved ones to the VMF Winter Arts Hub for an afternoon of Drag Storytime, drag performances including a kids activity space with free face painting and balloon art. Witness the Chosen Family lived experience panel, where they will share their stories of recovery from mental health issues, addiction and gender-based violence, and sexual orientation discrimination. View interactive art exhibits, and the Recovery Day Overdose Memorial Tree and make your Family Day worthwhile.

Unicorn Ball
Sunday, February 20, 2022

Vancouver Pride Society’s annual winter fundraiser returns! Unicorns are invited to prance the night away at the Imperial in support of the VPS Community Bursary Program which enables VPS to empower local queer and trans serving organizations. The 2022 Unicorn Ball is the unconventional 19+  dance party you do not want to miss.

Pride Snow Day at Grouse
Thursday, February 24, 2022

Pride Snow Day at Grouse Mountain will be a fantastic day of fun in the snow atop The Peak of Vancouver. Parade down the mountain with your friends, and stay for the Snowshoe Fondue tour. 

Winter Pride invites the community to safely thrive with their chosen families and bring warmth to the coldest time of the year. Subscribe to the Vancouver Pride Society’s newsletter for updates, news, and event information.

VMF Winter Arts – Vancouver Mural Festival

Add a Comment by Rebecca Bollwitt

VMF Winter Arts from the Vancouver Mural Festival will transform Downtown Vancouver into a free, open-air gallery of art and live experiences to brighten our city and connect communities February 11 to 27, 2022.

Vancouver Mural Festival Winter Arts

VMF Winter Arts

Following the success of our inaugural Augmented Reality (AR) event VMF is excited to bring an even bigger festival to the city in 2022. 

On top of 12 brand new AR by international and local artists, they’re adding light installations across downtown, and transforming šxʷƛ̓ənəq Xwtl’e7énḵ Square, Vancouver Art Gallery plaza, into the Winter Arts Hub—a licensed, all-ages, outdoor, covered and heated venue with art, drinks, food, and free live performances.

Enjoy drag shows, Public Disco, CircusWest performances, live music, dance and more at the Winter Arts Hub which will be open Wednesday to Sunday 10:00am to 4:00pm.

Vancouver Mural Festival Winter Arts

Look for installations and activations at Science World, BC Place/ Terry Fox Plaza, Yaletown, Vancouver Public Library Square, Winter Arts Hub šxʷƛ̓ənəq Xwtl’e7énḵ Square, Park Place Plaza, Bentall Centre, and Canada Place.

Additional programming by VMF partners: 

  • Guided Walking Tours by DeTours, presented by Herschel Supply.
  • Live/Online Talk Series at Vancouver Public Library presented by Electronic Arts.
  • Blanketing the City: Lighting the Way featuring Debra Sparrow. 
  • Illuminate Yaletown presented by the Yaletown BIA. 
  • Pixel Moments interactive AR mural in support of St. Paul’s Foundation to raise awareness and funds for mental health resources. 
  • Cirque du Soleil Alegría sneak peek plus special live performances by CircusWest.
  • Winter Arts Pride closing night at the Hub presented by Vancouver Pride Society. 
  • Public Disco party at the Hub every Saturday. 

Supporting communities is an integral part of VMF. Throughout the year, they collaborate with various groups to empower and spark change. They recently partnered with Rogers to expand support for Indigenous artists through the creation of a new artist program. They also launched Un-Leased, which examines the opportunities and barriers around using vacant retail spaces for temporary artist studios. The pilot project (Phase 2) is starting soon.

For more information, follow the Vancouver Mural Festival on Facebook.

Related: Vancouver Mural Festival Launches 60 New Murals, 40 Live Shows and More