Migrante BC: 2019 City of Vancouver Award Winner for Excellence!
By Erie Maestro
Vancouver-Canada
August 28, 2019
The City of Vancouver awarded the 2019 City Award for Excellence for Diversity and Inclusion to Migrante BC, the grassroots organization that seeks to protect and promote the rights and welfare of Filipino migrants and immigrants. Erie Maestro, Christopher Sorio and Bert Monterona received the trophy on behalf of Migrante BC from the Vancouver City Mayor Stewart Kennedy and Councillor Melissa de Genova. The 2019 Award for the category of Diversity and Inclusion “celebrates the leadership of those who support inclusion, and advocate for communities to be free of racism and discrimination.”
At the Annual Awards of Excellence ceremony held at Roundhouse Community Centre last July 12, ten citizens and eight organizations were honoured at the by the City Mayor and the Vancouver City Council for different categories. The 2019 Award recipients were selected by the Vancouver City Council from over 50 nominee submissions.
The five Awards were for the categories of Accessible City, Civic Volunteer, Greenest City Leadership and Healthy City for All, and the Mayor’s Achievement Award. The winners came “from organizations making a difference in communities, tireless social leaders, and community groups building capacity, and enterprising youth and children.”
Sandra Singh, General Manager of Arts, Culture and Community Services introduced Migrante BC to the audience thus:
“Migrante BC was formed in 2009 as a grassroots organization to protect and promote the rights and welfare of Filipino migrants, immigrants, and refugees. It's developed further as a source of information, community organizer, cultural promoter, and advocate for ensuring that Vancouver is a safe and equitable place for all residents.
The organization provides a temporary shelter, peer counselling, and paralegal services for temporary foreign workers, students, and others who need a short-term safe space to stay. They organize community activities, workshops, and conferences, and have been integral with allied organizations in several high-profile human rights and migrant worker legal cases as well.
In addition to many of the supports Migrante BC offers, they have participated in academic research, been active in politics, and worked closely with other organizations to build Vancouver’s civic capacity within the immigrant community.
They've also developed “arts as therapy” programs and opportunities for the Filipino-Canadian community in Vancouver utilizing dance, visual arts, and other mediums to provide outlets for creative expression, cultural expansion, and socialization. Migrante BC has improved the quality of life for Vancouver residents through their sustained grassroots efforts addressing access to migrant rights, citizenship rights, social services, and their genuine desire to help make Vancouver better for everyone.”
Migrante BC shared the Diversity and Inclusion awards with Individual Award Winner Michele Nahanee, an indigenous changemaker fromSḵwx̱wú7mesh community Eslha7a, and with the individual Youth Award Winner Robyn Holmes, a Social Sciences student at Langara College. More information on the other awardees is available on the City of Vancouver website at vancouver.ca/your-government/awards-of-excellence.aspx