Pubdate: Mon, 05 Jan 2004 Source: Edmonton Journal (CN AB) Copyright: 2004 The Edmonton Journal Contact: http://www.canada.com/edmonton/edmontonjournal/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/134 Author: Duncan Thorne ED LABOUCANE A DRIVING FORCE IN EFFORTS TO RECLAIM INNER CITY FROM DRUG BARONS EDMONTON - TV star Dakota House knew Ed Laboucane as a stepfather who inspired him to work hard at his acting career. But most people knew Mr. Laboucane as a force dedicated to bringing sweeping change to Canada's inner cities. "He did a lot of work for communities," House said Sunday. Mr. Laboucane, who died in hospital Dec. 28 at age 63 while awaiting a lung transplant, was the driving force in the 1990s to close down drug houses and promote the renovation of decaying slum properties in the inner city. "I had a lot of respect for the man," House said. "He was a trooper." House, best known for his role as TeeVee Tenia in the North of 60 show and related television movies, said Mr. Laboucane clung to life through Christmas in the hope of seeing his grandchildren open his presents. "Unfortunately, he couldn't make it home but we had him on the speaker phone," House said. Mr. Laboucane had a long history of community activism in Edmonton, Winnipeg and Toronto. His biggest impact locally was in the 1990s when he rallied residents to shut down drug houses in the neighbourhoods of Boyle Street and McCauley. The drug houses had become common in the inner city, often doubling as "trick pads" for prostitutes and their clients. Individual residents would sometimes complain, but little was done. Mr. Laboucane, hired as a grassroots community organizer, launched a door-knocking blitz and called a public meeting. Police and officials who attended had to endure a grilling about what they were going to do about the problem. The issue became increasingly heated over the following weeks and Mr. Laboucane called a second meeting. "At the same time we were meeting, the police were raiding a drug house that we had targeted," he recalled in 1999, when ill health forced him to retire at 59 as staff director of the residents' Community Action Project. "There was so much continual publicity and pressure that it was an embarrassment to the whole city of Edmonton." Over an eight-month stretch, police, working with city departments and community leaders, shut down 24 drug houses, including the notorious Twin Fortresses, adjacent houses near 95th Street and 103rd Avenue. In raiding the two houses, police needed acetylene torches, battering rams and steel-cutting saws to break through. Mr. Laboucane, originally from Spruce Lake in northern Saskatchewan, had a Metis father and what he termed a "socialist mother." He once spoke of how, by the time he was 10, he was steeped in Metis history and was aware of social issues. He got a job as a drill-blaster, but moved to Toronto in the late 1960s and got involved in social projects. He later landed work in Winnipeg, heading a pilot project for social underdogs that included helping them file for tax rebates. He headed another Winnipeg project in the mid-1970s that made news by helping inner-city residents demand better city services and decent housing. Under continuous pressure, authorities fined slum landlords and forced them to demolish derelict housing or fix it up. When he moved to Edmonton, Mr. Laboucane went into construction but eventually found himself drawn back to agencies with a record of helping others. "That's what being a community organizer is really about," he said in 1999. "Helping people recognize that they can make a difference, that they can control the destiny of their own community." Inner-city resident Anna Bubel, who hired Mr. Laboucane in the early 1990s as a community organizer, praised him after his retirement as someone who didn't create an "us-versus-them dynamic" except when it came to people abusing power. "He was hypnotic when he was working to help the community," his wife, Noreen, said Sunday. "He was the greatest." She and family members are inviting friends and relatives to pay respects today at 4:30 p.m. at Sacred Heart Church of the First Peoples, 10821 96th St. A Christian burial mass is Tuesday at 10 a.m. at the same church. - --- MAP posted-by: Josh