Peter Meiszner

Peter Meiszner is a Canadian politician and journalist who was elected to Vancouver City Council in the 2022 Vancouver municipal election.[1] He is a member of ABC Vancouver.[2]

Peter Meiszner
Vancouver City Councillor
Assumed office
November 7, 2022
Personal details
Born
Peter David Meiszner

(1983-01-09) January 9, 1983
Nanaimo, British Columbia, Canada
Political partyABC Vancouver
Residence(s)Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada

Early life and career

Originally from Nanaimo, British Columbia, Meiszner moved to Vancouver in 2002 after facing difficulty with his family when he came out as gay.[3] He studied broadcast journalism at the British Columbia Institute of Technology,[3] and worked as a television journalist for Global BC before leaving to join the University of British Columbia as a senior digital strategist and communications manager.[2]

Prior to his election, Meiszner was also the publisher of urbanYVR, a website focused on housing and urban development issues in the Lower Mainland.[2] During this time, he served as vice-chair of the Gastown Historic Area Planning Committee.

Vancouver municipal politics

Upon assuming office as a Vancouver city councillor, he was appointed as an alternate representative to the Metro Vancouver Regional District board and as a member of the Housing and Electoral Area ‘A’ committees. Meiszner also serves on the board of the Vancouver Public Library, Vancouver Civic Theatres and EasyPark.

As a Yaletown resident, Meiszner expressed repeated concerns over the presence of the Thomus Donaghy Overdose Prevention Site (OPS) in that neighbourhood, which replaced a mobile overdose prevention unit across the street at Emery Barnes Park. In April 2023, Meiszner called for the OPS to be shut down, but said he would not support a closure without an assured new location. In June 2023, however, Meiszner and the City of Vancouver announced that the Yaletown OPS would close with no immediate relocation plans.[4]

Meiszner was involved in a joint effort between the ABC-led city council and park board to turn non-recirculating decorative water fountains on again, after they had previously been disabled due to concerns about water waste. On approval of the initiative, city staff were directed to turn the fountains off if Metro Vancouver moved to Stage 2 water restrictions.[5]

References


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