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Firefighters douse West Eagle Drive shed, RV

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Salt Spring Island Fire Rescue (SSIFR) personnel responded to reports of an outbuilding on fire in the 300 block of West Eagle Drive on Saturday afternoon.

“An RV and a nearby storage shed were consumed with flames that extended into the surrounding trees and ground cover,” reported SSIFR Capt. Warren Nuyens in a media release. “Crews were able to knock down and control the spread of the fire with handline attacks from two apparatus. Water was supplied to the scene using a tender shuttle operation that fire department members train on regularly. Fifteen firefighters were on scene with no reported injuries.”

The fire was called in by nearby Sun Eagle Drive resident John Cade, who heard bangs and other strange noises coming from the property and went to investigate. He said he could see flames coming from a shed.

Cade said neighbourhood residents are especially concerned about fire as the area is very rocky and dry, contains a lot of broom, has no fire hydrants and only one exit.

Nuyens said the cause of the fire had not been immediately determined.

SSIFR were called to the same property in November of 2021 when a cabin was destroyed by fire there.

BC Ferries adds webcams to Gulf Islands terminals, Crofton

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BC Ferries announced several new webcams have come online with live and near-live images of vehicle staging areas at terminals serving Salt Spring Island. 

Starting Thursday, May 9, among the 30 new cameras offering real-time views were those facing the Fulford Harbour, Long Harbour and Vesuvius Bay vehicle staging areas — and notably, there’s also one in Crofton, so islanders can finally see the line-up on Chaplin Street. 

“Our customers have told us that reliability is something they value in their ferry service,” said customer experience VP Melanie Lucia. “They have places to be and want to be able to plan their travel and plan their day.” 

New cameras are also in operation on Pender, Galiano, Mayne and Gabriola Island terminals. 

In addition to the new minor route cameras, visitors to the website can also now access current conditions information, the latest service notices and BC Ferries’ vessel tracker. Visit www.bcferries.com/current-conditions/

EDGE, John Steve

 Steve passed away on Salt Spring Island on April 28th, 2024.

He loved the island very much, and was never happier than at his house, tinkering away on his boat or truck, with Creedence Clearwater Revival blasting away. 

We swam together at his house for many years in “Edge Bay,” and August was always capped off with our annual swim to Idol Island. 

Steve loved his winter treks to the lovely town of Cuastecomates, Mexico. Daily swims, dinners with his many friends, and watching the sunset nightly were the simple joys he truly appreciated. 

He was beloved by all in the recovery community both in B.C. and Mexico and had just celebrated 14 years clean and sober. He was so grateful for the life afforded him as a sober man. 

He is survived by his brother Rob Edge, (and extended family), his former wife, Gwen Edwards, his daughter Sarah Jane Lynelle Rinas, and grandson Nathaniel, and his many many friends, including the Cuastecomates community, Hall and Elaine Theunisz, Peter Oosterweghel, Gord Mayrhofer, Paul Large, Dave French, Michel Jutras, Jennifer Davidson and Maureen Phelan. 

He will be missed by many, and loved by all, for years to come.

OGIFA hosts Mayan presenter

Salt Spring Island is lucky to be included as one of 18 stops on a B.C.-wide tour of a Mayan woman with deep experience in fighting for social and environmental justice in Guatemala.

On Tuesday, May 14 at noon at Salt Spring Island United Church, Salt Spring’s Ometepe Gulf Islands Friendship Association (OGIFA) will host a presentation by Neydi Juracán, national coordinator of Campesino Committee of the Highlands (known as the CCDA) on their Café Justicia fair-trade coffee program and their work for environmental justice.

Juracán is a Kakchiquel Maya from the village of Santa Cruz Quixaya. Prior to her election as national coordinator in 2023, she was the director of the CCDA’s Café Justicia program, coordinating the processing and export to Canada of coffee produced by CCDA farmers.

The CCDA is a national small farmer and rural workers’ movement that defends the lands, culture and labour rights of Mayan communities in Guatemala. More than 800 communities are active in the CCDA, and the group played a role in the five-month struggle to defend democracy in that country last fall.

Salt Spring became one of Juracán’s stops due to OGIFA chair Nedjo Rogers’ long friendship with Steve Stewart, coordinator of the BC CASA-Café Justicia. Stewart recently returned from taking a delegation of coffee roasters down to Guatemala, and OGIFA would similarly like to lead a trip to see the farming operations where OGIFA coffee comes from on Ometepe Island in Nicaragua.

Rogers said his group members were delighted when Jeremy Simons, grandson of two OGIFA cofounders Marg and Art Simons, came to a special OGIFA event held in February at the library. As Simons had spent some time in Nicaragua and was familiar with OGIFA through his grandparents’ activities, he is interested in leading a visit to Ometepe.

“So it’s super timely to have these much more seasoned kind of international partnership folks here to just pick their brains because they do regular solidarity delegations,” said Rogers. “I feel like we’ve got a lot to learn from them and I’m looking forward to those opportunities.”

Neydi’s B.C. speaking tour is co-sponsored by BC CASA-Café Justicia, CoDevelopment Canada and the BC Council for International Cooperation.

Maxwell park consultation underway

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Public engagement on one park’s management plan will ramp up on Salt Spring next week, and stakeholders are sharpening their focus on roads accessing both the island’s newest park, and its oldest.

Sharing a border with the 570-acre Mount Maxwell Provincial Park, the recently acquired 75-acre Mount Maxwell Community Park was purchased in 2023 for $850,000 — a discount from market value, Capital Regional District (CRD) officials have said, with just $250,000 of that coming from the CRD’s park land acquisition funds. 

An anonymous foundation’s $250,000 donation, along with another $100,000 from the Salt Spring Island Foundation’s Susan Bloom Fund, got the ball rolling; the remaining $350,000 was raised last year through a community fundraising effort involving a wide range of islanders — a sold-out dinner event at Foxglove Farm in September, for example, brought more than $150,000 in a single night.

And with First Nations consultation underway since January, according to a newly implemented project tracker for Salt Spring’s Local Community Commission (LCC), the CRD is now reaching out to neighbours, organizations, community groups and the broader community, sending a public invitation for an information session on May 15.

It’s the first establishment of a multi-use park on Salt Spring Island in 20 years, since Burgoyne Bay Provincial Park in 2004; Mount Maxwell Community Park organizers have long envisioned non-motorized trails for hiking, mountain biking, disc golf and horseback riding. And recognizing every new park’s popularity — and with concerns the newly opened trails might connect with unauthorized “social” mountain bike trails often accessed through the provincial park, where bikes are prohibited on trails — plans are for community park access via the seldom-used Seymour Heights Road from the east, instead of the rough, difficult-to-maintain Mount Maxwell Road to the west.

But correspondence from the Ministry of Transportation and Infrastructure (MoTI) indicates that with the CRD and BC Parks considering improvements at Seymour Heights, there is an open question as to whether upper Mount Maxwell Road should remain open to vehicles at all.

Highways in B.C. are classified A through F, and are maintained in that order, according to MoTI, and the last 200 or so metres at the top of Mount Maxwell Rd has a maintenance class of 8F. Roads classified under “F” might be maintained for summer traffic but have no need for winter access, or may not be maintained at all outside of periodic inspections. According to a MoTI response to inquiries from MLA Adam Olsen’s office — made responding to a constituent concern, according to staff — there has been some discussion on building a new parking lot prior to the steepest-slope “F” section of the rough Mount Maxwell Road, converting the remainder to a trail.

That may be a consideration largely due to costs. Repair work on Mount Maxwell Road is needed often, according to that MoTI correspondence, due to the steep grade and lack of drainage ditches. Establishing proper ditch works — in a steep, heavily treed area, with a narrow right-of-way and a lot of bedrock — would be expensive. A “fix” last year, using large, jagged aggregate hoped to lock into the grade more securely, involved $30,000 in spending — and lasted less than six months, MoTI said, before potholes and ruts returned.

MoTI told MLA Olsen’s office the idea of closing the upper section to vehicle traffic would be supported by some stakeholders in the area, including BC Parks — who MoTI said had not yet been involved in discussions — and the North Salt Spring Waterworks District (NSSWD), which maintains significant water supply in nearby Maxwell Lake that is often in jeopardy of being fouled by road runoff. 

NSSWD has partnered with Transition Salt Spring in extensive efforts to improve the Maxwell Lake watershed’s health over the last several years, and officials confirmed the district’s position that closing the upper section would likely support that work. Apart from roadway runoff, NSSWD has struggled with trespassers both contaminating the water and starting dangerous fires near the fragile watershed during hot weather.

“Every summer there seems to be more and more tourists, and that’s more and more traffic through the watershed illegally,” said NSSWD’s Tammy Lannan. “We put up fencing, but they’re just going right around it.”

But essentially closing the viewpoint to everyone but hikers may not be universally supported. Much of the current popularity of Mount Maxwell Provincial Park lies in its hikers-only trail system; but back in 1938, the park was “originally established for its distinctive landmark viewing point” at the summit of Baynes Peak, according to BC Parks.

And there are public safety concerns; in a recent letter to MoTI, Salt Spring Island Search and Rescue (SSISAR) asked the ministry to look at solutions to improve Mount Maxwell Road to the top, as its deterioration over the past several years has led to a “detrimental effect in emergency response.” 

Just last month, SSISAR responded to a park visitor injured near the viewpoint, and road conditions forced an ambulance staging area to be established — roughly where MoTI correspondence indicated an interest in building a parking lot, should the uphill roadway be closed to vehicle traffic — to support an extended stretcher transport, delaying both response and evacuation time.

Salt Spring’s CRD director Gary Holman said while the public safety argument to improve Mount Maxwell Road was compelling, there could be consequences either way.

“Human access tends to increase the risk of fire, so there might be an argument in that direction,” said Holman. “But we need to get all the stakeholders in the same room and talk through the issue, because that’s how you move things forward.”

Meanwhile, as engagement for management plans for the Mount Maxwell Community Park continues, the CRD has said it would review all feedback and present findings back to engaged Indigenous communities for review prior to crafting a preliminary plan. Under the Local Community Commission, Salt Spring’s Parks, Arts, Recreation and Culture department is responsible for providing and maintaining community parks and trails.

The LCC next meets at 5 p.m. Thursday, May 9; the CRD’s public information session for the community park is at 6:30 p.m. Wednesday, May 15. Both meetings will be held at the Salt Spring Island Multi Space (SIMS). 

For more information visit getinvolved.crd.bc.ca/mount-maxwell.

Pot shop claim dismissed

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A B.C. Supreme Court justice has dismissed a lawsuit brought against Salt Spring’s Local Trust Committee (LTC), finding it did not act unreasonably in denying a new cannabis retailer its application. 

Canna Northwest Enterprise Inc., who sought the LTC’s approval for its application to the Liquor and Cannabis Regulation Branch (LCRB), had hoped to open a retail store at 109 McPhillips Ave. in Ganges. The LTC denied that application in June, and Canna petitioned the court in November to declare the LTC’s denial as unreasonable and a breach of “procedural fairness and natural justice.”   

Canna had alleged trustees made their decision to refuse its application based upon concerns about “competition and market saturation” after receiving public comment and correspondence from representatives and supporters of local cannabis shop Harvest Moon — rather than, as the official resolution states, “due to proximity to schools, the library and a public park.” 

The lawsuit had noted, among other concerns, the large number of resident signatures Canna had collected on a petition in favour of their application, compared to a smaller amount of correspondence against, calling it “coordinated.”  

But Justice Anthony Saunders wrote in his April 29 decision that while trustees made what he agreed was a “political decision,” there was no excess of jurisdiction. Trustees, he wrote, were free to exercise their discretion in a matter of political concern, and did so within the framework of existing legislation. 

“They appear to have done what would have been expected of them as elected officials: they heard their constituents’ concerns, and acted on them as they saw fit,” wrote Saunders. “That decision is deserving of the highest level of deference.” 

In addition, Saunders noted while there were more signatures on the petition in favour of the application than emails opposed, there was no legal requirement for trustees to follow the wishes of the majority. 

“If there are to be consequences to the LTC having given effect to what may have been a minority view, that will have to be expressed through the ballot box,” wrote Saunders, “not through this court second-guessing their decision.” 

Editorial: Empowered to decide

A recent B.C. Supreme Court decision that upheld the right of a local government to refuse approval of a cannabis shop is worth paying attention to. 

The case involved Canna Northwest Enterprise Inc. petitioning the court because the Salt Spring Local Trust Committee (LTC) did not provide approval needed for the Liquor and Cannabis Regulation Branch to issue a licence for a retail store in the complex at 109 McPhillips Ave. at a June 22, 2023 meeting. Canna had alleged that the LTC made its decision because some community members expressed concerns about the impact of competition on the existing Harvest Moon shop. Concerns about oversaturation of the market were expressed by people affiliated with the competition, and others, both in writing and at the public meeting in June of 2023. But opposition was also expressed based on location by other community members, including a quite pointed statement from a Salt Spring Public Library representative about “vandalism, partying, littering and noise” experienced when a previous cannabis retailer existed in the same spot. The LTC resolution denied the application based on its location, which is said was “not appropriate due to the proximity to schools, the library and a public park.” 

The Canna group submitted a 90-signature petition supporting their application and in the court case suggested that should be given more weight than the smaller number of people opposed. But Justice Anthony Saunders concluded the LTC was not bound by the views of a majority, that its decision was justifiable and met the case law standards of “reasonableness.” He went further in bolstering the rights of elected officials to account for public opinion but not be beholden to it.

These days there is a misunderstanding that democracy works when vociferous complaints — or a court petition — results in a change of policy or decision. But as Justice Saunders points out in his recent judgement, the ultimate accountability arises at election times, when people can express their displeasure with an elected official’s conduct and decision-making in the previous term. Trustees and their counterparts should obviously consider public opinion in between elections, but should not be paralyzed by it when it comes to doing the job they were tasked to do. 

Letter: Rough road to park an asset

It was with a lot of emotion and sizable trepidation that I read the cover story of last week’s Driftwood, headlined “Rough road slows down responders.”

The road up to Mount Maxwell Provincial Park is such a gem on this island. Yes, it’s a rough road but at least the park has a road going right to the top. That is so rare and unique in this part of the world.

It is true that the road condition limits the quantity of vehicles, increases the need for quality and experienced drivers and thus reduces the volume of traffic putting pressure on the park’s infrastructure.  

I am not the only one that thinks it has a positive impact overall. We often take sunset picnic dinners up to the viewpoint with folks that could never walk up there. In fact, it was the last thing I did with my mother before she passed.

To lose public road access up to that viewpoint would be a tragedy for locals and visitors.

The bluffs and rock walls that surround Baynes Peak (aka Mount Maxwell) have been used as a respected rock climbing area for decades. A group of hardworking, skilled and dedicated climbers has done a brilliant job of creating an impressive array of sport climbing routes for all skill levels. It’s a real asset to our island. As far as adventure sports go, sport rock climbing is one of the safest, statistically.

It has been so incredible to share this activity with my two teenage sons. It has completely changed their attitude and those of their friends about Salt Spring Island as a place that has “nothing for the youth to do.” Now they are engaged and passionate about aspects of the island.

There likely isn’t a parent alive that doesn’t wish their children to be more connected to place and nature. Putting down their technology devices (even temporarily) and using their physical bodies also has profound and positive long-lasting effects. Sport climbing builds strength of mind and skill. It is celebrated by the young and the old, males and females alike. This should be promoted, not prohibited. It’s an amazing way to connect with yourself. 

I know about this subject as I was the one injured and needing to be rescued by Salt Spring Island Search and Rescue  members on April 7. Thank you to each and every person that was involved. I am healing well and have a profound new appreciation for my mobility. The professionalism, skill and teamwork demonstrated by the paramedics and SAR team was outstanding.

I can appreciate your desire to streamline systems, increase efficiencies and strive for perfection. But from my point of view, as a patient, everything about the rescue went perfectly. No system was deficient; nothing needed to be better. Heck, I broke myself deep in the woods. I was very impressed by the rescue. It was an extremely rare event that led to my accident in the park.

However, if the public road access to Mount Maxwell Provincial Park is terminated or the mysterious new prohibition on rock climbing in the park is enforced due to this rescue or the continued dialogue that surrounds this issue, I would be absolutely devastated. Gosh, could I live with that stigma or would I be “voted off the island?!”

I certainly hope not. I have so many sunsets picnics to enjoy and climbing routes to explore in the most amazing spot on the island.

CHARLES GROOMS, 

Salt Spring

Local poets give voice to Ian Thomas artwork

BY Kirsten Bolton

For ArtSpring 

More than 100 art enthusiasts and well-wishers came out for the opening reception and welcome address by long-time Salt Spring artist Ian Thomas for his month-long exhibition at ArtSpring, entitled Ian Thomas: Past and Present. Approaching his 90th birthday, Thomas says this will be his last public statement on his life and work as an artist. 

Curated by Margaret Day and Stefanie Denz, the “Past” is a retrospective of key moments drawn from a lifetime of art-making on a grand scale through the mediums of painting, sculptural collage and installations that capture a deep exploration of the human condition. 

The “Present” is a new series, Poets and Their Poetry, in which Thomas pays tribute to 36 writers close to his heart, including six published poets from Salt Spring, with intimate watercolour works that combine textual fragments with portraiture.

To bring these works to life, a special Evening of Poetry event is being hosted Wednesday, May 15 at ArtSpring from 7 to 9 p.m., emceed by award-winning poet Murray Reiss. Six local poets will read selections from eight of Thomas’ favourite writers and reflect on how that poet may have lived, the text itself, and how it connects to the one of 36 framed portraits in the gallery.

From presenting the works of world-famous poets Osip Mandelstam, Pablo Neruda, Dylan Thomas, Anne Carson, Gerard Manley Hopkins and Federico Garcia Lorca to Salt Spring’s own Phyllis Webb and Brian Brett, the evening promises to be a rich literary and art fusion experience.

Thomas traces the genesis of this project back to his early adolescence in the British seaside town of Brighton where he’d take the bus to the promenade and wander down narrow lanes lined with tiny shops. As he remembers, on shelves outside the second-hand bookstores sat damaged books priced just right for his pocket money. 

“What struck me more than anything were the battered volumes of poetry and the golden letters of the poets’ names,” Thomas said, “That was the beginning of my love for poetry.” 

Once retired from a long art and teaching career, Thomas began reading Salt Spring poets. “As I read them, I began to love what they had to say and how they said it — the direct, straightforward emotional truth of their lives,” he explains. “As I read more, I realized they all touched on truths that enriched my own life. They play such a large part in my heart.”  

Six well-known Salt Spring poets — Diana Hayes, Sandi Johnson, Shirley Graham, Brian Day, Mona Fertig and Murray Reiss — will read the selections. 

The exhibition runs through May 26 daily from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Thomas will host Sunday walkabouts on May 12 and May 19 at 2 p.m. A portion of the sales from this work will go to the Island Fund for Ukraine, an initiative spearheaded by Victoria Olchowecki, which to date has raised over $100,000.

Laying a path

Photo by MARCIA JANSEN

Ten young men and two facilitators of The Circle Education’s Pass it On program help finish the outline of the new community labyrinth being created at the undeveloped  portion of the Anglican Church cemetery and expected to open to the public this summer.