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Farnworth and Olsen demonstrate collaboration

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Last Friday’s ASK Salt Spring session had more star power than usual, with Deputy Premier Mike Farnworth joining MLA Adam Olsen to meet with Salt Spring constituents.

Farnworth is also the Minister of Public Safety and Solicitor General, and his visit was presented as having a community safety/law enforcement focus. Olsen has also been an active member of the Special Committee on Reforming the Police Act.

“Part of the reason Minister Farnworth is here is because we reached out when the announcement for increased police resources was announced,” said Olsen. “There’s been kind of a chronic situation here on Salt Spring from a policing perspective.”

The main problem, he said, is that police are asked to take on more tasks outside of a policing realm due to stresses on the community’s social fabric.

Farnworth said he also met with members of the local RCMP detachment while on the island.

“I think one of the challenges that we often face is that you have policing, and you have mental health, and you have housing and you have poverty,” said Farnworth. “And they’ve been viewed as being separate silos that are operating independently of each other, and there’s a lack of recognition that there is a strong relationship between them.”

Defunding the police, which has been suggested by some critics of the current system, is not the answer, he said.

“It’s a question, in my view, of ensuring that . . . we take care of those people who have the challenges that they face, whether it’s poverty, whether it’s addiction, whether it’s homelessness, and ensuring those things are funded in a way so that, in essence, the police are not ending up being a frontline social worker, or mental health worker, which they are not trained to do.”

Another policing question was raised by community members who did not want to lose certain members of the RCMP detachment and asked if a change could be made to the regular four-year transfer rule.

Farnworth said he has heard that request from a number of communities in B.C. and would like to see it addressed.

“But that also means talking to my federal counterpart as well,” he said.

Questions from some of the 56 people attending at the Ganges Fire Hall session ventured well beyond the public safety and policing matters under Farnworth’s ministry purview. Pedestrian and cyclists’ safety, funding for the Island Coastal Economic Trust, ferry service and the lack of senior government infrastructure funds for improvement districts were among topics raised.

He promised to investigate a couple of issues, including the provincial government’s longstanding infrastructure funding policy that has made it impossible for the fire district and North Salt Spring Waterworks District to get provincial or federal government grant funding for major capital projects.

Olsen and Farnworth both stressed that all parties in the house work hard to make progress on important issues, and that well-publicized conflicts and controversies do not accurately reflect the relationships between MLAs, the three parties or the work that is done.

Olsen pointed to a controversy that erupted the previous day about a Langley cannabis company claiming it had the right to produce and sell cocaine via Health Canada permission, which caught the B.C. government off guard.

“This is where the format of Question Period and the theatre of Question Period really actually lets the public down just in terms of what goes on in the Legislative Assembly,” said Olsen, “because you can take a nuanced situation and make it something that perhaps it’s not and that’s what Minister Farnworth faced yesterday in the questioning and what it did was it drove a narrative that now has created confusion, and confusion doesn’t help us work our way through.”

Olsen stressed that all parties in the Legislature have supported safe supply, harm reduction and decriminalization measures when it comes to addressing toxic drug supply deaths.

“This is not a situation that the minister and his colleagues have to solve on their own,” he continued. “Or that the BC Liberals should be thinking that they need to solve on their own and that the [Greens] think they can solve on their own. This is actually a situation, when it comes to the dignity of British Columbians, where the party lines need to just go away . . . and we just need to be colleagues and friends and supporters of good work to keep people alive, in my opinion.”

Farnworth responded to a meeting attendee who said he felt politicians and governments could not be trusted, as witnessed by their acceptance and promotion of COVID-19 vaccines.

Farnworth was first elected MLA for his Port Coquitlam area in 1991, after serving on the Port Coquitlam City Council since 1983. He said he had worked with people across the political spectrum “and without exception, I think those people are all elected to work and to do the right thing; to do a job on behalf of the people of this province, whether you agree with them or disagree. I know that the people see Question Period, but behind the scenes there’s a lot of good work that takes place. And when it came to the pandemic, I was incredibly proud of how our legislature worked cooperatively in the best interests of the people of the province of British Columbia, and the decisions that we made based on medical science.”

He stressed that if there’s a solution to be found, “that’s what we are there to do.”

“Ninety per cent of the work is very collaborative,” agreed Olsen.

This Friday’s ASK Salt Spring meeting is at the usual Salt Spring Island Multi Space lobby venue. Capital Regional District (CRD) director Gary Holman is the guest, with this year’s CRD budget being the main topic of discussion. ASK Salt Spring is a volunteer initiative of the Salt Spring Community Alliance coordinated by Gayle Baker. Each week it features local or provincial politicians or reps from various public or community agencies who present updates and take questions from the public.

Editorial: Collaborative government approach is effective

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Islanders who attended Friday’s ASK Salt Spring session would have seen and heard something a little out of the ordinary when it comes to the political realm.

For one thing, the two provincial MLAs who attended do not sit on the same side of the B.C. Legislature. Mike Farnworth, who is B.C.’s Public Safety Minister and Solicitor General (as well as Deputy Premier) in an NDP majority government, came to the island on the suggestion of local Green MLA Adam Olsen. Anyone who pays attention to provincial politics or attends Olsen’s ASK appearances will know that Olsen holds the government’s feet to the fire with the best of them. Yet Olsen and Farnworth obviously share a profound mutual respect, which came through in the ASK Salt Spring gathering attended by more than 50 people at the Ganges Fire Hall.

They also talked about the positive strides taken by all parties to craft new legislation lately, and that the reality of governance at the provincial level contrasts with the acrimony that comes through in Question Period (QP), which is often the only part of the political process the public sees. Olsen estimated that 90 per cent of the work done by provincial government MLAs is “collaborative.”

Farnworth and Olsen were not the only ones who made that kind of observation last week. CHEK News political correspondent Rob Shaw posted a Twitter thread about the work of several specific NDP, Green and Liberal MLAs, describing “some of the positive impressive work” he was seeing, “instead of just the QP controversy criticism stuff all the time.”

Institutions of a civil society, such as democratically elected governments, have been taking a beating in recent years through toxic online discourse and the actions it instigates. The visit by Olsen and Farnworth and the legislative progress they work together to achieve shows the system does work when quality people are elected.

Olsen will also be holding a series of community meetings on all Gulf Islands and in North Saanich as part of his program called The Public Circle from March 10 to 18, where more questions will be welcomed. Dates, times and places can be found at saanichnorthandtheislands.com/events.

BC Hydro applies to BCUC for time-of-use rate 

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BC Hydro has applied to energy regulators for permission to introduce a new residential electricity rate seemingly aimed squarely at electric vehicle (EV) drivers. 

The new time-of-use rate is called “optional” by the utility in its letter and proposal to regulators at the B.C. Utilities Commission (BCUC). The proposal calls for creating a new “add on” rate which leaves existing rates largely in place, but adds an overlaying structure where electricity costs more (or less) during specific times of day. The overlay would essentially add a five-cent discount for each kWh of electricity consumed between 11 p.m. and 7 a.m. — what BC Hydro calls its “Overnight period” — and an additional 5-cent upcharge for each kWh of electricity consumed between 4 p.m. and 9 p.m. — the so-called “On-Peak period” for energy use. 

Customers opting into the program would see no discounts or additional charges the rest of the day, according to chief regulatory officer Chris Sandve, who sent the letter and proposal Feb. 27.  

BC Hydro said customers under this optional rate could choose to shift their energy-intensive activities — like charging their EV, or running their dishwasher or dryer — to off-peak hours and see significant savings. Customers with an electric vehicle, according to the utility, “could save an average of $40 and up to $250 per year by enrolling in this rate and charging their electric vehicle during overnight hours.” 

There’s no set timeline for how soon the proposal might be approved, but Sandve requested the BCUC act by April 1, 2024. BC Hydro also said it was exploring other rate choices for its customers and will submit additional proposals to the commission for review and approval in the future. 

To read the entire proposal visit the website: www.bchydro.com/content/dam/BCHydro/customer-portal/documents/corporate/regulatory-planning-documents/regulatory-filings/time-of-use/Exhibit-B-1-Optional-Residential-TOU-Rate-Application-20230227.pdf 

PRING, Macie (nee Margaret Anne Harman)

January 31, 1941 ~ February 27, 2023

Our beautiful mother is finally at peace after a 10-year journey through Alzheimer’s. She was such a beautiful light in this world and will always be remembered for her kindness, compassion, unconditional acceptance of all and her immense love for art, music, animals, and nature. A heartfelt thank you to everyone who supported and cared for her during this time, especially to every one of the incredible caregivers and support staff at Greenwoods.

Macie was born in Kent, England, and served in the British Airforce for 12 years, from 1954 to 1968. She lived in England, Singapore, Northern Ireland, and emigrated to Canada in 1970. Macie was a a resident of Salt Spring Island since 1980. She was very active in the community, through a gymnastics club she started, her various art endeavors, her singing in multiple choirs, and her work at the community center to help others. She will be missed.

Survived by: Bridie Robson, daughter, Langley, B.C.; Tracey Horrocks, daughter, Victoria, B.C.; Sean Pring, son, Abbotsford, B.C.; Ethan Robson, grandson, Langley, B.C.; Nicholas Robson, grandson, Vancouver, B.C.; Jeremy Horrocks, grandson, Victoria, B.C.; Tyler Robson, grandson, Langley, B.C., Jessica Horrocks, granddaughter, Victoria, B.C.; Chloe Pring, granddaughter, Chilliwack, B.C.; Isaac

Pring, grandson, Chilliwack, B.C.; Nevaeh Sampson, granddaughter, Langley, B.C.; Sky Afriyae, a great-grandson, Victoria, B.C. Predeceased by Karl J.Pring, son; Barry R. Pring, ex-husband, Michael Harman, brother, Ethel Harman, mother.

A service will be held on March 18, 2023, at 12:30 pm at the Salt Spring Island United Church, officiated by Reverend Faye Greer. Reception at the church following the service. Please feel free to wear colors, as Macie loved them.

CRD seeks more input on pedestrian, bicycle network 

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Salt Spring Island’s walkers — and wheelers — are needed for the next phase of the Capital Regional District (CRD) Active Transportation Network Plan (ATNP) development. 

A new survey has gone online at getinvolved.crd.bc.ca/ssi-active-transportation-network to help guide the next phase of planning, to help select and prioritize network and infrastructure improvements. 

Active transportation refers to human-powered forms of travel, from walking and wheelchair travel to biking and skateboarding, fully or part-way to and from a destination or bus stop. The ATNP will focus on both walkability in Ganges as well as active transportation connectivity island-wide, according to the CRD, in an effort to develop options to improve safety, accessibility and convenience.  

The first two phases of the process finished in December 2022, producing a pair of reports — the Baseline Conditions Report and the Engagement Summary. The former includes a technical assessment of Salt Spring’s existing road, cycling, and pedestrian networks; it consists of a summary of barriers to active transportation, and identifies some opportunities for improvement. The second report highlights information collected from community engagement efforts to date, including a community consultation held at an Ideas Fair during the Saturday Market last August, the first online survey that recently ended, an interactive mapping activity, an ASK Salt Spring Event, and a meeting with the Salt Spring Island Transportation Commission. 

Results of the current survey, which is open until just before midnight March 24, will be used to inform the final plan, expected to be completed in 2023. When complete, Salt Spring Island’s ATNP will identify a small number of priority projects which will inform the budget and planning work for funding applications; the ATNP will build upon the 2013 SSI Pedestrian and Cycling Master Plan, and will be informed by learnings from the Ganges Village Area Plan process. 

MOWBRAY, Catherine Louise

1925~2023

The Mowbray brothers are sad to record the death of, but joyfully proud to describe the adventurous life of, their beloved mother Catherine Louise Mowbray (née Johnston), on January 31, 2023, at the age of 97. Kay, as she was known to dear friends around the world, was born on 12 August 1925, in Toronto, Ontario, and grew up in the town of Lucknow, where by her teen years she fell in love with a handsome boy named John Mowbray, whom she later married. Country girl makes good: Kay graduated from the nursing program at the University of Toronto, while John became a doctor.

In the 1940s, 50s and early 60s, the couple lived in Ontario and rural Saskatchewan, then Saskatoon, producing three boys before embarking on their greatest adventure: life overseas. They moved to Kabul, Afghanistan in 1964, where John worked for CARE-Medico, a medical education nonprofit. Just getting to Kabul in 1964 involved transit through Toronto, New York, London, Frankfurt, Vienna, Istanbul, and Beirut. “We cannot seem to organize enough to avoid chaotic departures,” Kay wrote on the first page of her amusing and insightful diary, though she noted about air travel that “meals are excellent but too frequent.” Shortly after arriving in Kabul there was an earthquake. This at a time when Afghan women were able to throw off their veils and attend university, a fact recorded a few pages later.

Later, Kay and John lived in Indonesia, and again Afghanistan, and then Tunisia, before moving to BC (first Cranbrook, then Salt Spring, where they lived for more than 25 years). Kay worked as a nurse and English teacher and was a frequent volunteer and fundraiser, both abroad and in Canada, with interests in human rights, hospice care, and peace. Travel, often with kid or kids in tow, was a particular passion: throughout Southeast Asia, to Communist China (in 1965!); to India and Pakistan, to Nepal and Russia and Europe and Lebanon and North Africa. In 1965 Kay and John drove a feeble Volkswagen station wagon from Kabul to Liverpool, took the car onto the Empress of Canada ocean liner, which was bound for Montreal, and drove from Montreal to Saskatoon. No air conditioning, no iPads, and three kids in the backseat the whole way. 

Kay was beloved by family and friends for her entertaining, her Christmas decorating, her baking, her early and passionate feminist convictions, her skills at bridge, her snazzy hats, and her infinite capacity for kindness. Until no longer able, she was a devoted writer of old-timey paper letters. The yearly display of holiday cards and letters from around the world spoke to the connections she maintained. Visitors came from as far as Singapore for the celebration of the couple’s 50th anniversary at the Beaver Point Hall. Kay’s home was filled with art and objects from around the world, reflecting a love of Ming ceramics, batik fabrics, Afghan rugs, Balinese and Indian metalwork, Pakistani furniture, and Inuit art. She is survived by her three sons, John, Paul, and Scott, and three grandchildren, Michael, Emily and Rosa. Special thanks to Sandy and staff at Heritage Place in Ganges and to the staff at Mount St. Mary’s Hospital in Victoria for an abundance of kind and respectful care during the final years of Kay’s life.

CRD director’s report: final budget numbers released

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By GARY HOLMAN

Electoral area director for Salt Spring Island

The Capital Regional District (CRD) Board votes on its final 2023 budget on March 15. The proposed final 2023 CRD/CRHD (Capital Region Hospital District) requisition is $7.64 million, a 5.6 per cent increase over 2022, excluding taxes and fees paid by area-specific CRD water and waste treatment facilities on Salt Spring Island.

The provisional requisition increase for the CRD and CRHD, summarized in my Driftwood article of Sept. 14, 2022, was 3.5 per cent, similar to the average yearly increase during the past four-year term. The main contributing factors were, and still are:

• full-year costs to PARC of leasing/operating the Salt Spring Island Multi Space (middle school)

• COVID-related impacts on swimming pool and other PARC fees, as well as transit ridership and fares

• continued library staffing increase as volunteer numbers decline

• higher costs of liquid waste trucking/disposal.

Historically high inflation (currently about six per cent) significantly increased cost pressures. Negotiated CRD staff wage and salary increases were more than double assumed in the provisional budget. The one-time and ongoing cost of the voter-approved Local Community Commission (LCC) elections (to be held May 27) alone accounts for a 1.5 per cent tax increase). BC Transit maintenance fees for our newer buses coming this April will be higher, which added to the cost and requisition pressures for the final budget. Salt Spring will also contribute modestly to a new (voter-approved) geese management service and increased funding for the Aboriginal Homelessness Coalition.

Offsetting these cost increases somewhat has been the reduced cost of the fire dispatch service, now provided by Saanich. The requisition for Salt Spring’s community economic development service was reduced by deferring hiring of a full-time coordinator, while still allowing funding for special projects and community organizations engaged in food security and beautification of Ganges. The requisition for the grant in aid service, which incurred surpluses in 2021 and 2022, was reduced somewhat. Devolution of Saturday Market management to a local non-profit group and related requisition increases, anticipated in the provisional budget, was delayed due to uncertainties regarding post-Covid vendor participation.

Special provincial government funding has mitigated COVID-related transit and PARC revenue impacts, but is now almost fully allocated. While transit and PARC revenues are recovering, COVID impacts still linger.

The ”average” Salt Spring residence was assessed at $1.1 million in 2023, almost a 13 per cent increase over 2022. Assessed values on Salt Spring increased at roughly the same rate as for CRD as a whole, meaning that unlike in 2022, our share of the costs of region-wide services remains the same, with no related requisition impact.

The 2023 CRD requisition per “average” residential property of $97 per month (versus $92 per month in 2022), in addition to fees for some services, funds a range of regional, sub-regional and local services and amenities, such as: affordable housing, health facilities, regional and local parks, climate action, building inspection, recreation facilities, our library, the arts, grants in aid, liquid waste, residential recycling, public transit, pedestrian/cycling infrastructure, emergency planning and tele-communications, fire dispatch, community economic development, livestock injury compensation and Fernwood dock.

As in most municipalities, commercial and industrial tax rates are higher (typically much higher than in unincorporated electoral areas) than for residential properties.

It should also be noted that Salt Spring has benefited greatly in the past term from over $30 million in grants and funding commitments directly from the CRD, or flowing through CRD from senior governments, including:

• $3.74 million from Capital Region Hospital District for the new Lady Minto emergency department

• $300,000 in PARC funding, in addition to staff-negotiated donations from the landowner and Salt Spring Island Foundation to acquire the Mount Maxwell community park

• CRD Regional Housing funding for the Croftonbrook project

• continued CRD funding to support free residential recycling

• over $2 million in senior government infrastructure funding for a new CRD Maliview sewage treatment plant and Salt Spring’s first large scale composting facility

• BC Housing’s commitment to fully fund the capital and operating costs of 28 units of supported housing on CRD’s Drake Road property

• $3.6 million in federal gas tax funding for local infrastructure projects, including affordable housing and our new fire hall

• Ministry of Transportation funding for the repaving of Ganges hill with widened shoulder bike lanes, plus $490,000 for the Booth Canal-Central pathway

• almost $2 million from the province to PARC for shared recreation/daycare space at the Rainbow Road swimming pool, Centennial Park upgrades and the Bishops Walk pathway

• $72,000 in new provincial funding to help replace swimming pool heat pumps and also support continuation of Transition Salt Spring’s many climate action initiatives.

Note that in the future, the Local Community Commission (which includes the CRD director) will be making budget decisions for 11 local CRD services (including those now overseen by four island-wide commissions), and advising the director on three additional local services.

I will be presenting the final CRD budget proposal in the March 10 ASK Salt Spring session at SIMS from 11 a.m. to 1 p.m. As always, please contact me at directorssi@crd.bc.ca with any questions or comments.

Cabinet minister Mike Farnworth writes about visit to Salt Spring

As Minister of Public Safety and Solicitor General, I have the honour of meeting British Columbians and learning about what matters most to them.

There is nothing I love more than visiting communities to hear first-hand about your concerns and opportunities you see. This week I’ll be visiting Salt Spring Island, territory of the Coast Salish peoples. This beautiful island boasts world-class art galleries, wineries and craft breweries, but it isn’t immune to issues troubling other B.C. communities.

Across our province, people are having conversations about public safety. I’m visiting Salt Spring to learn more about how my government can make this island’s communities stronger and safer.

In addition to addressing public safety, we are committed to supporting the hospitality and legal cannabis industries through practical measures as we rebound from the pandemic. For example, we have extended temporary patio licences allowing British Columbians to enjoy our world-class food and beverages while enjoying the scenic patio views and we continue to look for ways to support growth of the legal cannabis market while providing safe and accessible options for British Columbians

With the recent introduction of a licence for farm-gate sales and the public engagement on cannabis-consumption spaces, understanding public opinion on cannabis-related hospitality and agri-tourism activities is a practical next step. The feedback in this report will play an important role in the development of provincial policies.

We’re committed to supporting growth of a strong, diverse hospitality and legal cannabis industry alongside Indigenous partners, stakeholders and British Columbians.

We are taking action to build safe, healthy communities for everyone. To hear more and to share your perspectives, please join me at the ASK Salt Spring meeting at the Ganges Fire Hall (105 Lower Ganges Rd.) on Friday, March 3 at 11 a.m. 

Mike Farnworth,

B.C. Minister of Public Safety and Solicitor General

KING, Hubert Wylam

The King family is very sad to announce the passing of Hubert Wylam King on Sunday evening, February 12th in Victoria, B.C. He was an internationally renowned research scientist. He taught Metal Physics and Material Engineering at Imperial College, London, Dalhousie University, the Technical University of Nova Scotia, University of Western Ontario, University of Victoria, B.C. finally retiring at the age of 85. He was an active member All Saints by-the-Sea Anglican Church and the Salt Spring Island community in general.

Some of his hobbies included reading, bowling, hiking with the Trail and Nature Club, world travel, and he enjoyed tackling any kind of home renovations. A loving husband and father, he leaves behind Ann, his wife of 65 years of marriage, four children of whom he was very proud – Wendy (Marco), Kathy (Roald), Richard (Isabelle) and Andrew (Sarah); also eleven grandchildren and four great grandchildren.

In lieu of flowers donations may be made to the Anglican parish of Salt Spring Island.

BYRON, Barry Austin

Sadly, we announce the passing of our youngest brother, Barry Austin Byron. After suffering a stroke, Barry passed away peacefully on Saturday February 11, with his brothers Darrel and Ian by his side. Barry was born and raised on Salt Spring Island. Several years after graduation, he moved to Alberta, where he made a life for himself. He was predeceased by his parents Terry and Marjorie Byron, and his sister, Darlene. He is survived by his siblings Darrel, Ken, Barb, Linda, Ian, Michael, Teresa, and Vicky, many cousins, nieces and nephews and numerous friends. Barry lived life to the fullest. And he loved entertaining with his guitar and singing country music. There will be a gathering to celebrate Barry’s life at a future date.