Lisa Helps, former Mayor of the City of Victoria, shares how shifting paradigms is possible when local governments are ‘radically open-minded’.
Last month at the Communities Ending Poverty national Summit for Strength, Lisa Helps delivered a powerful keynote on “Leverage Points, Convening and Economic Reconciliation as Poverty Reduction.” Lisa showed how the City of Victoria opened doors to build trust and relationships with local Indigenous peoples and used ordinary municipal tools in an extraordinary way to share wealth and provide direct economic benefit to the Lekwungan peoples, on whose territories the City of Victoria resides.
As Mayor of Victoria, Lisa knew that a significant shift in paradigms and systems was necessary to undertake meaningful reconciliation. She turned to the wisdom of Donella Meadows for key leverage points for paradigm shifts, knowing that rules, behaviours, structures, goals, mindsets, and assumptions needed to change; and ultimately, they needed to remain ‘radically open-minded’.
Lisa also took to heart the words of Peter Block, who wrote that in systems change, leaders are held to three tasks:
This framework set the stage for change.
Above and beyond all else, Lisa knew that reconciliation action needed to be Indigenous-led and directed. Building relationships and trust took time but was necessary to establish foundations for action.
For example:
Convening – Foremost was the ability to convene and create space for conversations. Lisa emphasized that local governments should “never underestimate the power of convening”. The first piece they had to understand was that the context of how people gather needed to shift. They discovered that the unit of governance for the Lekwungen peoples was the family. This transformed a ‘task force’ into a ‘family’ into which local government staff, elected officials and Indigenous representatives were invited. Mayor Helps became the ‘head of the family’. They began by sharing meals and stories, and over the course of the next five years, undertook the work.
Lisa highlighted that while local governments were equipped with many tools and had everything they needed to address systems change for reconciliation, they were required to use these tools in a different way.
For example:
Land use planning – When the City embarked on developing the Burnside Gorge Neighbourhood Plan, they knew that the Equimalt Nation was in the process of negotiations to reclaim land in part of the area. So, during the planning process, instead of imposing their idea of what should go in that part of the neighbourhood, the City intentionally labeled the Indigenous land under negotiation a ‘special area’. This meant that when the Indigenous Nation finally got the land back into their hands, they had full control and the ability to do with it as they pleased, representing both autonomy and huge economic opportunity. This process was Indigenous-led and informed.The actions above exemplified honouring ways that the communities with which we all work operate. Lisa emphasized how time spent at the beginning building trust and relationships can speed things up down the road, and how important it was to re-think ‘government’ as ‘family’. It was possible to bring deep love and connection to the work, with powerful, impactful results.
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