Pubdate: Sun, 19 Dec 2004 Source: Province, The (CN BC) Copyright: 2004 The Province Contact: http://www.canada.com/vancouver/theprovince/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/476 Author: Jon Ferry, The Province Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/people/Larry+Campbell (Larry Campbell) MAYOR CAMPBELL'S STRATEGY IS THREE PILLARS SHORT Looks Like This Problem Will Be Left To His Namesake For months now, the main storyline in B.C. politics has consisted of the tale of the two Campbells -- the one effective but unpopular, the other his polar opposite. Indeed, I got used to thinking media darling Larry Campbell was a cert for a second term as Vancouver mayor, if only because he seemed to be having so much fun. But lately, I'm not so sure Larry will be such a shoo-in. The reason? I think he's been spending too much time fiddling with his friends while Rome is burning -- or at least having its homes broken into. The Hastings Street heroin-injection site hasn't proved the panacea it was cracked up to be. Property crime is sky-high. And the city that once boasted of its safe, clean streets is fast gaining a global reputation as a centre for mayhem, misery and crystal meth. Not that this appears to bother Larry, as he divides his time between devising how he can have his COPE cake and eat it, too -- and lashing out at those rash enough to challenge his divine right to rule any darned way he pleases. To be fair to Larry, the position of chief Vancouver ribbon-cutter is no longer as significant as it once was. Most of the important decisions are made at the regional or provincial level by less charismatic folks -- like the other Campbell, Premier Gordon, and TransLink boss Doug McCallum, the business-like Surrey mayor. And the fact is, during the recent RAV gabfest, Larry seemed to expend more energy being mean to the mayors of Burnaby and Pitt Meadows than making meaningful contributions to the marathon debate. He's also become increasingly dismissive of those city ratepayers who, like teacher Patti Milsom, are disgusted at what drug crime is doing to their neighbourhoods. These folks, let's face it, are not rushing to join the Friends of Larry Campbell. They're too busy bolting the doors of their houses and picking up the shards of their shattered car window glass. Mother-of-two Milsom told me Friday she voted for Larry in the last election. Now she's considering running against him. Milsom is one of a number of south Granville residents who've become disenchanted with the bullying ex-cop and his blase attitude toward drug crime. "We've got seniors who are so anxious and upset they're afraid to leave their homes," Milsom said. Instead of lending a sympathetic ear to their concerns, Larry has been berating Milsom for her threatened tax revolt, writing her off as a whiny, west-side matron. But it's the laddish Larry who is all wet. Milsom understands drug addicts at least as well as he thinks he does -- if only because she's taught their children. "I did vote for him . . . I supported him because I thought he was a visionary. I thought we had a Burt Lancaster type rising from the ashes. But we don't," she noted. No, we don't. And Milsom is as unimpressed as I am with how the much-hyped "four-pillar" approach to addiction is being implemented. "I only see the one pillar, and that's the drug-enabling pillar," she said. The other pillars, it's clear, Larry's leaving to the other Campbell, the effective one whom no one loves. - --- MAP posted-by: Derek