Sunday, March 8, 2026
March 8, 2026

In Response: Trust slashes newspaper notices while calling for public engagement

By DEBORAH CAMPBELL

Good journalism is sunlight. Bad politics hides in the dark.

Last week we learned — only because it was reported in the Driftwood, our award-winning newspaper of record — that to save a few thousand bucks from an $11-million budget, the Islands Trust will no longer require itself to publish some public notices in print. Our trustees now deem their own clogged website and American-owned Facebook to be all that’s needed. This on small islands where many residents were born before the internet, where others lack stable access and where the power is sometimes off for days.

Public notices are a cornerstone of democracy. They are meant to inform us about important meetings, development permits and rezoning applications. We also learned (again, only thanks to The Driftwood) that the Trust spends some $450,000 a year facilitating development permits, of which developers pay merely one tenth. Taxpayers cover 90 per cent. Why are residents subsidizing a development boom, especially in a protected area? Only independent local media are likely to tell us. This Trust Council chooses to make key decisions behind closed doors, most notoriously its September 2023 “in-camera” re-interpretation of the Islands Trust Act to “preserve and protect” such “unique amenities” as tourism, infrastructure, and anything else they might decide.

Abolishing the longstanding requirement to print public notices in the newspaper may not even be lawful. B.C. regulations for public notices state clearly that the means of publication should be “reliable” and “provide factual information.” Is Facebook, which we’re now being offered, reliable? Facebook has already made it clear it’s not in the business of providing factual information. In August 2023, the tech giant blocked access to news on Facebook and Instagram for users in Canada. More recently, soon after its CEO dined with Trump at Mar-a-Lago, it scrapped its fact-checking department.

We’re very lucky to have a newspaper here on the Gulf Islands, reporting not only on our healthcare, schools and politics, but on swim meets, cougar sightings, community arts, music and books. A recent investigation by journalism professor April Lindgren, published in The Walrus, tracked the loss of 529 local news outlets across Canada since 2008. In “Local News Is Dying. The Consequences Are Worse than You Think,” Lindgren found that rumours, paranoia and social divisiveness typically follow the death of a local paper, as people rely on hearsay and fight on social media. Residents are left less informed, less involved and less connected. Some politicians may prefer this, but it doesn’t make for healthy communities.

No doubt trustees will argue they will also be posting notices on the Islands Trust website. But provincial legislation says public notices should be “accessible” and “easily found.” Those who believe information on the Trust website is easily found have obviously never tried to find something there. Important information has even been known to disappear, such as the 14 hours of recorded Trust Council debate from the September 2024 meetings where trustees discussed the controversial new Trust Policy Statement (TPS) that will affect all islands.

The new TPS, and Salt Spring’s Official Community Plan revisions, are now beginning the community input stage — the only chance residents will get to have a say. It’s no secret that some trustees have been unhappy with Driftwood coverage of their activities. But starving our local paper while calling for “public engagement” looks like a cynical attack on the public’s right to know. It will only add to a growing mistrust of the sweeping changes being proposed. Mayne, Saturna, and North Pender have already jumped to the new “model” of abolishing print notices. Salt Spring hasn’t, for now. But the threat is there.

The writer is a Salt Spring resident and a journalism professor at the University of Victoria.

Sign up for our newsletter and stay informed

Receive news headlines every week with our free email newsletter.

Other stories you might like

Derelict docks pulled from Ganges Harbour

A flurry of work that swiftly removed several barely afloat docks from Ganges Harbour last week was a surprise to local elected officials, they...

Fire hall project on track but party delayed

Fire crews plan to be in place and ready to respond to emergencies from Salt Spring Island’s new fire hall starting May 1, according...

Salt Spring OCP consultants not continuing

The departure of consultants hired to help update Salt Spring’s official community plan (OCP) and land use bylaw (LUB) will not mark the end...

Flying 15 sailors ready for overseas adventures

Four Salt Spring Island Flying 15 (F15) sailors are heading to Hong Kong next week to compete in the Ladies Helm regatta, with a...

LEAVE A REPLY

Please enter your comment!
Please enter your name here

Weather

Salt Spring Island
clear sky
9.1 ° C
9.2 °
8.4 °
61 %
2.2kmh
0 %
Sun
9 °
Mon
9 °
Tue
4 °
Wed
7 °
Thu
5 °