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Chinatown Post office
The city is making progress (though less than promised) on more childcare in Vancouver, while councillors say the next election will go more smoothly
Good morning,
You’ll notice that we’ve been publishing a few stories more regularly from journalist Julie Chadwick.
One of the missions here at the Lookout is to try and bring in more stories from different writers. Too often, journalism publications just publish the same old stories about the same issues. It’s not good for readers and it’s not good for cities. You’ll be seeing stories from Julie more often in 2026.
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WEATHER
Monday: 12 🌡️ 6 | 🌧️
Tuesday: 7 🌡️ 5 | 🌧️
Wednesday: 7 🌡️ 4 | 🌧️/❄️
CHINATOWN
The fight over the fate of a shuttered Canada Post office in Chinatown isn’t over just yet

Outside of the Chinatown post office. Nate Lewis/Vancity Lookout
Story by Julie Chadwick. Read the story online here.
On Wednesday, Vancouver city council voted unanimously in favour of a motion from Councillor Pete Fry to express formal support for the continued operation of a post office in Chinatown following its Nov. 12 closure by Canada Post.
The motion also calls on Mayor Ken Sim to write letters to key players in Canada Post and the federal government, and to explore the option of using city-owned space to reopen another location in the area.
“I live in the neighbourhood, so I've been aware that there's been a pretty active campaign led by young Chinatown activists who highlighted this imminent closure, and then when it did close, what the impacts were,” Fry told Vancity Lookout.
After the post office closed, which was the one Fry used, he noticed that he missed a package delivery. It was then redirected to an outlet on Commercial Drive, about 3.5 kilometres away. That wasn’t much of an issue for him as “an able-bodied guy,” but he realized that for an elderly Chinatown resident, that would represent a major barrier.
“I recognized that that particular postal outlet served a very vulnerable population. A lot of older people who didn't speak English,” he said. “Lots of people who need to get mail to receive benefit checks and stuff like that. They don't do electronic banking. They have limited access to technology. A lot of folks living in SRO-type housing don't really have the benefit of, necessarily, a safe place to leave mail or packages. And so there's a variety of very specific needs.”

Inside of the Chinatown post office. Nate Lewis/Vancity Lookout
In an emailed statement, Canada Post’s public relations manager Phil Legault said that “both the business owners and Canada Post mutually agreed to close this location.”
The owners, who took over operation of the Main Street business in 2022, declined to comment, but a person with inside knowledge of the situation who asked not to be named told Vancity Lookout that the current owners are still on the hook for all liabilities and costs, such as rent on the closed business, which adds up to approximately $10,000 per month.
The closure comes as Canada Post faces record financial losses and cuts to service. In September, government transformation minister Joël Lightbound authorized changes to letter delivery standards, an end to door-to-door delivery service and a conversion to community mailboxes, and the lifting of a moratorium on the closure of rural post offices.
On Wednesday, local letter carrier and Canada Union of Postal Workers coordinator Jamie McCurrach told city council that Canada Post was also trying to remove protections against closure for three other Vancouver post offices during the union’s current round of negotiations.
These include an outlet in the Bentall Centre, one at 495 West Georgia and one in a heritage building at 2405 Pine Street.
McCurrach also expressed concern that the move to community mailboxes would shift the burden of paying for snow removal and vandalism onto the city, and that many of those mailbox locations are chosen without regard for appropriate street lighting or wheelchair accessible curbs.
Alex Bernstein, a letter carrier on Vancouver’s North Shore and a CUPW organizing director, told Wednesday’s meeting that he believes the shuttering of retail postal outlets like the one in Chinatown is a strategic move by Canada Post to systemically gut the company before selling it off to privatize interests.
“Right now, this public service that everybody uses is just being eroded in front of our eyes, and we see no greater example of it than the closing of the Chinatown post office,” Bernstein told Vancity Lookout.
“I think it's demonstrative that it is this neighbourhood, it's a neighbourhood full of people of colour. It's a neighbourhood full of the economically downtrodden. It's all the more egregious that that's happening there, but it's not just this post office. This is just a high-profile, highly visible one that happens to have great advocates on its behalf that are fighting for it. The reality is that it's now happening across the country, and it's happening across the country with the stamp of the federal government that says, ‘we don't need this. Canadians don't need this.’”
A petition to support the post office circulated by the Save Chinatown YVR group gathered more than 1,200 signatures so far. It’s part of a broader campaign to draw attention to what the group describes as ongoing gentrification in the area.
“We're seeing a degradation of public services, public space, essential services for Chinatown and the Downtown Eastside, while government policies and real estate development pressures are increasingly gentrifying the neighbourhood,” said resident and Save Chinatown YVR lead Melody Ma. “What we're seeing is almost like a redlining of services in the Downtown Eastside and Chinatown.”
In mid-November a controversial condo project next to Chinatown Memorial Square was approved by the city’s development permit board. Critics like Ma are worried it will drive up property and rent prices, displace seniors and low-income residents from the area and overshadow the public space built to memorialize Chinese veterans and railway workers.
Last week, hundreds of residents registered to speak at public hearings hosted by the city on a proposed massive rezoning of the Downtown Eastside’s Oppenheimer District, and the next meeting is scheduled for Dec. 16.
Ma says there are also city-recommended redevelopment plans in the works that will impact Chinatown and Chinese-owned businesses in the area like the Ovaltine Cafe, which houses an SRO on the floors above the business.
“The City of Vancouver on one hand is like, ‘we want to uplift Chinatown, we want to prioritize the heritage.’ And they had this apology to Chinese folks several years ago. And then on the other hand, it's like the people, the buildings, the community — its cultural and social life — is disposable,” said Ma.
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Comment Corner
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THE VANCOUVER NUMBER
4:13
The sun set yesterday at this time. This is the last day of the year with the earliest possible sunset, though sunrises will continue to get shorter until Dec. 21.
THE AGENDA
⁉️ So why did the Canucks part ways with captain Quinn Hughes? Late in November, he informed the team that he did not plan to re-sign with them, nor would his agent commit to re-signing for a team that traded him. That meant most teams weren’t interested in trading for him. The end result? A trade for defenceman Zeev Buium, forward Marco Rossi and Lian Ohgrren, along with a first-round pick in the next draft. Read more. [Sportsnet]
🔺 Emergency shelters will be open until Dec. 16 due to an extreme alert for rainfall. Read more.
👍️ The VanTech synthetic turf field, which underwent repairs, is once again open. Read more.
🏢 City council approved sweeping changes to provide developers with more relief in a challenging housing market. Developers will contribute less to public art, see a temporary 20 per cent reduction to development fees and higher rent ceilings for apartments that were initially planned to be below market rentals. Read more. [Globe and Mail]
🗳️ OneBC, the upstart right-wing party that broke away from the Conservative Party of BC, have removed Vancouver Quilchena MLA Dallas Brodie as their leader. There’s never a dull moment in BC politics. Read more. [CTV]
❌ EllisDon Corp. and Newway Concrete Forming will need to pay fines totally $1.3 million after WorkSafe BC investigations into multiple crane incidents, including one that caused a death last year. Read more. [CTV]
🏒 While the Canucks lost Quinn Hughes, the team did win 2-1 against the New Jersey Devils yesterday with new player Zeev Buium netting a goal and an assist.
EVENT GUIDE
Holiday Splash at Vancouver Aquarium | Vancouver Aquarium, 845 Avison Way | Now–Jan. 4, various times | Aquarium transformed into a festive winter wonderland with lights, décor and photo opportunities | Tickets $40+
Winter Wine Social – A Cozy After-Work Tasting & Connection Night | Brioche Ristorante & Wine Bar, 103 Columbia St. | Dec. 17, 6:30–9 pm | Free self-guided wine tasting and social evening with community vibes and optional food pairings | Free
Christmas with Chor Leoni | St. Andrew’s Wesley United Church, 1022 Nelson St. | Dec. 18–20, various times | Annual holiday concert blending folk favourites, ancient chants, modern classics and world premieres | Tickets $22+
Elf in Concert | Orpheum Theatre, 601 Smithe St. | Dec. 19–20, 7 pm | Live symphony performs John Debney’s score alongside a screening of Elf | Tickets $49+
Sonder Run Club | Kitsilano Beach Park, near The Boathouse Restaurant | Jan. 14, 5:30–6:30 pm | Monthly inclusive run club | Free
The Unreliable Narrator: Writing in the Digital Age | SFU Goldcorp Centre for the Arts, 149 W Hastings St. | Feb. 5, 5–7 pm | Artist talk exploring storytelling, deception and narrative power in the digital age | Free
Holiday Shop at The Polygon Gallery | The Polygon Gallery, 101 Carrie Cates Ct. | Until Jan. 4, 10 am–5 pm; Thu until 9 pm | Seasonal gallery shop featuring unique artist-made gifts and weekly interactive activities for visitors | Free
Little Women – Arts Club Theatre Company | Granville Island Stage, 1585 Johnston St. | Now–Jan. 4, various times | Fresh, inventive stage adaptation of Alcott’s classic following the March sisters’ coming-of-age journey | Tickets from $29
Submit your event and it could appear here and reach 30,000+ Vancouver locals.
CITY HALL
Meet the non-profit leaders vying for mayor

Vancouver’s next election is more than ten months away, but the race for mayor is already heating up. Amanda Burrows and William Azaroff, two local non-profit leaders without political experience, are the most recent hopefuls to throw their hats into the proverbial ring.
Burrows and Azaroff are competing to be the mayoral candidate for OneCity Vancouver, a left-of-centre municipal party founded in 2014 by COPE’s former leadership.
“I am running to bring the heart back to Vancouver,” Burrows said at a launch event earlier this week at a jam-packed restaurant on Fraser Street in Sunset. A city with heart looks like lower rents and costs, investment in shared spaces for arts and culture and recreation, and public safety rooted in care rather than criminalization, Burrows said, outlining her top three priorities.
NEW VANCOUVER JOBS
Discover your new dream job in Vancouver:
Communications advisor at BC Treaty Commission
Manager, strategy and operations at Colliers
Director of policy and strategic initiatives at Law Society of BC
Project manager, PMO at PNE
COMMUNITY HIGHLIGHTS
There’s a new Italian restaurant opening up at 151 E 8th Ave., with an official start date of Dec. 17. [Vancouver is Awesome]
There’s a new Korean donut shop that just opened on Fraser Street. [Noms]
Speaking of pastries, here’s a great list of places to check out. [Straight]
VANCOUVER NEWS QUIZ
When did the postal office close in Chinatown? |
PHOTO OF THE DAY

Here’s a shot from Cypress Mountain. If you’re a skier (and I am indeed one), it’s been a tough December.
What did you think of today's newsletter? |
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The Downtown Eastside Community Land Trust is buying the building to preserve it as deeply affordable housing and childcare space.
Vancouver hits the gas on FIFA preparations

With most group stage games set and its training venue nearly complete, the city is starting to fine-tune its plans for the massive tournament that's now six months away.
With food insecurity on the rise, Vancouver food groups innovate to fill the gap

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