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WALLIS, Jean Elizabeth (nee Fry)

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1926 ~ 2023.


Jean Elizabeth Wallis (nee Fry), born January 9, 1926 passed away quietly with family by her side on January 11, 2023 on Salt Spring Island. She was predeceased by her husband Arny in 2013, her son Joe in 2022, and her grandson Rob in 2004. Jean will be lovingly remembered by her daughters Lesley (Mike) and Colleen; daughter-in-law Cindy; grandchildren Jeannie (Craig), Helen (Darcy), Sheila (Cal), Joe, Jenny, Joanna, A.J. (Carina), Mike (Katie) and Stephanie; plus her 14 great-grandchildren. Jean is also survived by her 2 sisters-in-law Marjorie and Eleanor, many nieces, nephews and wonderful neighbours and friends.

Jean was the last living of 8 siblings. She was born and raised in Windsor, Ontario, plus one year in Ottawa. After serving in the Navy during the War in Montreal and Guelph, and then becoming an R.N., the spirit of adventure led Jean to the west coast. She worked in the O.R. in Comox, B.C. for a year before going to North Vancouver where she got her life-long dream job as an obstetrics nurse at Lions Gate Hospital. She met and married her true love, Arny, and spent many happy years working, raising her family and enjoying life in North Vancouver. The couple moved to Salt Spring Island in 1979 to finish off their working lives and then retire. Both enjoyed their road trips around B.C., and Jean spent many happy hours walking, swimming, reading, knitting, sewing, and pursuing many more hobbies that she was always discovering. Heartfelt thanks to Mom’s caregivers who she looked forward to seeing each day for the past year – you made it possible for her to stay in the home she loved. Many thanks to all the staff at Lady Minto Hospital who made Jean’s last days safe and comfortable, and also thanks to them and Hospice staff and volunteers for helping our family feel supported.

ELLIOTT, Norman Stephen

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1939 – 2022.

Norman Stephen Elliott was born on May 13, 1939 in Vancouver, BC. He passed away on December 14, 2022 on Salt Spring Island, BC of Alzheimer’s disease.

He was predeceased by his parents Thomas and Nellie (nee Bliss) Elliott and his son Stuart. He is survived by his son Stephen (Candace nee Brydon) and grandsons Samuel and Keil. He is also survived by his wife Diane (nee Wilkie) and his sister Janice Besharah and her daughters Nancy and Susan.

Norm grew up in the Dunbar neighbourhood of Vancouver. He attended Queen Elizabeth Elementary School and then Lord Byng Secondary School graduating in 1957. He also attended UBC and studied a very rewarding Sales and Marketing Program in which he was quite proud of.

His big break came when he joined Permasteel Engineering when he was 22 years old. He started in the heating department and eventually moved on to metal building construction sales. He travelled northern BC and the Yukon and was very successful. He eventually bought out the two owners of Permasteel and he thrived in the business.

Norm took up flying lessons when he was 27 years old and subsequently bought a small Cessna plane in partnership with a friend. He enjoyed flying as a hobby for the next few years.

He then took up sailing and purchased a C&C sailboat, took sailing lessons, and started racing locally out of RVYC. His crew of 5 entered the Victoria to Maui International Yacht Race in 1976.

He and his family discovered Salt Spring Island in 1981 through boating and eventually bought property, built a home and moved there part time.

Norm loved to travel. This passion took him to some exotic locales that were off the beaten path at the time. He loved to scuba dive in various places that had warm tropical water. He enjoyed helping people financially during these travels.

The family would like to thank the many compassionate people who helped care for Norm during his final couple of years.

A celebration of life will be held on Salt Spring Island in the spring.

DORWORTH, Charles Edwin

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May 1, 1937 – January 18, 2023.

At daybreak on January 18th, 2023, Dr. Charles Edwin Dorworth sailed forth over Duck Bay with his beloved birds, freed from his pain at last.

An avid birder, and part of Nina Raginski’s Water Bird Watch, Charles took great pleasure in recording the daily presence of bird life in the waters of Duck Bay.

Charles was also the proud warden at the North End Reserve of the Salt Spring Island conservancy, where for many years he took great pride in helping to protect the environment where he lived.

Employed by the Federal Government as a Senior Scientist in Forestry, Charles spent his career travelling the world, sharing his knowledge and making many life-long friends.

Charles was a man who took great pleasure in life, always positive in his outlook and generous with his charitable donations and time for his family.

Gloria, his beloved wife offers gratitude to Jeremy and Fiona for their love and support of Charles, and to the Anglican church for their prayers in his final days.

Our family offers thanks to the doctors and nurses in the Acute Care Ward of Lady Minto Hospital for their care and support of Charles.

Please offer any donations in Charles’ memory to Lady Minto Hospital.

Lloyd Spiegel and Suzie Vinnick excited to perform at ArtSpring and visit the island

SUBMITTED BY ARTSPRING

As one of Australia’s top 50 greatest guitarists of all time, according to Australian Guitar Magazine, blues artist Lloyd Spiegel has been touring since age 11, has 10 albums to his name, and decades of experience on the road touring Europe, the United States and New Zealand.

Somewhere he’s never been? Salt Spring Island. Or British Columbia, for that matter. So it was with great excitement he joined Canadian blues icon Suzie Vinnick to set out on their colourful tour of our own West Coast outback. In addition to Salt Spring, tour stops include Bowen Island, Hornby, Nanaimo, Victoria and more, before heading out to Ontario.

“I’ve been to Canada before and was struck by the themes of kindness, stunning views, and of course, comedy,” Spiegel smiles. “Naturally, I Google places I’m headed to, and when I saw Salt Spring Island, I had one of those moments where I felt so blessed to do what I do. It just looks so beautiful. That, and I know Harry Manx lives there!”

For Juno-nominated Vinnick, she played the Tree House Cafe years ago, but has since gone on to win 10 Maple Blues Awards, one Canadian Folk Music Award and twice won the International Songwriting Competition – Blues Category. She is thrilled to be back.

This marks the first time the duo has worked together, although plans were in the works since pre-pandemic days because of their mutual respect. While they play their own sets, audiences can expect a rollicking jam together by the end of the show.

“Musically, Lloyd and I are both blues-based but appreciate and work other styles into our music,” said Vinnick. “For me, I’m known for folk and blues, but I incorporate a little jazz, a little rock, a little country to shake things up.”

Spiegel agreed. “One of the most common things I hear from people is ‘I’m not into blues, but I love your music.’ I always take that to mean some people have preconceived ideas of what blues music is and that my show challenged and changed that idea. I love breaking stereotypes.”

Both artists are serious about their influences and inspirations. With parents who were blues lovers, Spiegel was just nine when he started going to blues jams and by 13 was touring Australia.

“I was invited to meet Brownie McGhee in California when I was 16. He was my all-time blues hero so I was on the first possible flight out.”

Before long, Spiegel would grow up to support the likes of Ray Charles, Bob Dylan and Etta James, as well as developing his own commanding voice and sound.

With her sultry voice, sassy style, and impressive guitar and bass chops, Vinnick is circumspect when asked about playing blues as a woman.

“There have been many female artists performing blues over the years – Bessie Smith, Koko Taylor, Bonnie Raitt and more,” said Vinnick. “In my early days, I tended to see more male performers but in these past few years, many more young women are embracing singing, playing, and writing blues and other styles of music.”

Another signature approach the duo shares is their love of bringing storytelling, humour and a playfulness to their performances. Spiegel enjoys telling quirky stories of being on the road, and with the people he has met so far in Canada, he promises his stories have just gotten even funnier.

“I could do a whole show of what Canadians in one province say about Canadians in another province.”

Saskatoon-born Vinnick knows all too well. She also likes to keep things loose, lively and impromptu.

“I may perform Save Me for Later, the Lonnie Mack song Oreo Cookie Blues, a heart-felt ballad like Drift Away, or the rollicking I Need a Cowboy,” she winked. “You never know.”

What also is not known is if Australian’s guitar legend will get his wish.

“I hope Mr. Manx reads this, and that he feels like coming for a jam!”

After their show on Sunday, Jan. 22 at 7:30 p.m. at ArtSpring, Vinnick and Spiegel will be back at ArtSpring on Monday at 3 p.m. to host a free musicians’ workshop for the community.

BC Ferries names Nicolas Jimenez as new president and CEO

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B.C. Ferries has hired its next president and chief executive officer.

Nicolas Jimenez, who is currently the president and CEO of the Insurance Corporation of B.C., was selected following an international executive search.

“Nicolas Jimenez is the right leader at the right time for BC Ferries,” said BC Ferries board chair Joy MacPhail. “He is a change leader with a proven track record of success. He is customer focused with a deep commitment to financial accountability and rate affordability.”

BC Ferries said in a Jan. 17 press release that “Jimenez is a strong, strategic leader who led structural reforms at ICBC in recent years, returning the auto insurer to financial health and delivering more affordable insurance to customers.”

He has a Master’s Degree in Public Administration from both Harvard University and the University of Victoria as well as a Bachelor’s Degree in Political Science from Wilfrid Laurier University. Over the last 20 years, Mr. Jimenez has held a number of senior roles at ICBC, taking over as president and CEO five years ago.

Jimenez’ compensation will conform with the B.C. Ferry Authority’s Executive Compensation Plan. “Nicolas is a thoughtful, strategic leader who is committed to enhancing safety, reliability and affordability,” said MacPhail. “BC Ferries is facing a series of challenges including staffing shortages, service interruptions and fleet revitalization. Nicolas Jimenez is no stranger to big challenges and I know he will bring fresh ideas, innovative solutions and a renewed focus on the customer experience.”

Jimenez takes the role effective March 6.

“The board offers its sincere gratitude to interim CEO Jill Sharland, who stepped into the role in July,” states the corporation. “Ms. Sharland will return to her previous executive position as vice president and chief financial officer at BC Ferries.”

Sharland was named interim CEO in July 2022 after Mark Collins was let go from the position he held since 2017.

School district, CUPE local partner to help fund EA certification 

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Hopeful educational assistants (EAs) willing to learn on the job have a new pathway to certification, thanks to a coordinated initiative between the school district and the CUPE local. 

In a cost-sharing plan detailed at the latest Gulf Islands Board of Education meeting last Wednesday, the expense of EA training and certification will be evenly split between the applicant, the Gulf Islands School District and CUPE Local 788 — up to $2,000 reimbursement from the district and from the CUPE local, according to associate superintendent D’Arcy Deacon. 

“One of the items that continues to be a challenge is recruitment and retention for support staff, in particular educational assistants,” said Deacon. “I think we have been very successful in our recruitment strategies on a local basis to find individuals who are a great fit for the role — albeit not always qualified, but open and willing to learn and grow.” 

The program is open to all members of CUPE Local 788 — an employee of the school district — so the pathway for anyone interested who is not currently a member would be to apply for casual educational assistant work, and go through that application and interview process, said Deacon. 

“We have folks who are in this position, who range from ‘I’ve never done it, I’m not sure I want to’ to ‘I just need a couple more courses’,” said Deacon.  

Uncertified individuals are typically brought into the district categorized as Paraprofessional-3, Deacon added, at which level they aren’t eligible to hold a continuing position; full certification brings them to the Paraprofessional-4 level. 

“That comes with the stability of knowing that employment exists year over year,” said Deacon. 

Interested employees should contact Deacon at ddeacon@sd64.org or CUPE president Angela Thomas at pres788@sd64.org for more information. 

Islanders’ housing experience stories being collected

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The Southern Gulf Islands Community Resource Centre (SGICRC) continues to collect stories of islanders’ housing experiences — and there is still time for additional community input, according to organizers. 

SGICRC launched an online effort late last year as part of the Housing NOW Project. The organization provides island residents with resources, referrals, information and support for employment, education, social purposes and well-being. Housing NOW focuses on finding immediate solutions to both the short and long-term housing shortage in the Southern Gulf Islands. 

The Housing NOW team has been tasked by the Southern Gulf Islands Community Economic Sustainability Commission with data collection of home and property owners — as well as the collective Gulf Islands’ population — with the intention of creating a better picture of housing opportunities available, needs of the average individual and family, and the community’s viewpoint on what needs to be accomplished, and how. 

The survey asks questions about living situations — including things like what amenities are present or needed in housing and in the broader community — and should take about five minutes to complete. All information provided will remain confidential. 

For more information about SGICRC, visit www.sgicommunityresources.ca. To participate in the survey, visit linktr.ee/sgihousing.

Thirteen recommended actions to provide basic medical services

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The following was sent to B.C. Health Minister Adrian Dix and filed with the Driftwood for publication.

By Curt Firestone 

The problems at Salt Spring’s Lady Minto Hospital are synonymous with the systemic problems throughout the British Columbia health-care system. In a very piecemeal approach, you and the Premier have started to resolve the crisis, yet there is a long way to go. The public has yet to see the comprehensive B.C. plan to resolve our health-care crisis. There does not seem to be any plan for rapid resolution of the huge shortage of primary care providers, including family doctors.

This is a recommended list of actions that are necessary if we are going to insure that the million B.C. residents without a doctor are going to get the basic level of medical services that a modern health-care system delivers in other first-world countries.

1. Drop the barriers for Canadians to practising medicine when they have obtained their medical education and training in other countries. This starts with the creation of a list of those countries where medical education is equal to the best medical education provided in Canada. If a doctor is licensed to practise medicine in any of the U.S.A. states and has received a medical degree from an accredited school of medicine, completed a recognized internship and/or specialty training, then that person should automatically be given a licence to practise in British Columbia.

2. Provide moving expenses to doctors for relocation to B.C. with the condition of multi-year B.C. residency and medical practice as the repayment for the moving expenses.

3. The B.C. government recruitment program is very fragmented and poorly implemented. Sophisticated, modern-day family doctor and nursing recruitment programs must be quickly implemented.

4. End the multi-year delay in approving the Ministry of Health’s Community Health Centre Plan, thereby enabling communities to create non-profit community health centres. Provide implementation funding to communities. The province should provide operational funding for family doctors/primary care providers through one of its medical service payment programs.

5. Rapidly approve all the pending applications for primary care networks and assist with funding their implementation.

6. Instead of increasing the doctor shortage by pulling family doctors out of their outpatient offices, it is time for Island Health to hire emergency/urgent care medical staff for the new emergency department being built with community funds at Lady Minto Hospital.

7. Island Health operates six Victoria area and one Nanaimo urgent care/primary care centre. They are plagued with staffing and administrative problems. They must convert to primary care centres with the family doctors carrying a full caseload of patients. Currently urgent care is offered at Lady Minto Hospital and it rightly belongs at each emergency medical location.

8. Facilitate group medical practices that demonstrate economies of scale. These will be attractive to new family doctors who do not have the resources or the desire to establish or purchase a private practice.

9. Fund housing for new family doctors and nurse practitioners where housing is either unavailable or unaffordable for the newly graduated.

10. Nurses and nurse practitioners take a huge burden off current family doctors, allowing them to spend more time with patients. Doctors must integrate nurses into their practices. The province must fiscally support nurses in all multi-doctor office settings.

11. Expand the medical and nursing education programs in the province to meet the current and future needs based on population criteria.

12. Laboratory and radiology services are not meeting current needs and therefore family and specialist doctors are not able to do their work in a timely fashion, which has physical and mental impacts on the health-care system. The ministry must quickly fund and staff laboratory/radiology programs in accordance with population needs.

13. It is long overdue that the Ministry of Health releases a health-care crisis resolution plan to its citizens. Secrecy is a deterrent and fails to recognize that we pay for our health-care services through our taxes.

The writer is a Salt Spring Island health-care advocate.

Call Jane leads up to annual island film festival

By Steve Martindale

Salt Spring Film Festival

The Salt Spring Film Festival will be back at Gulf Islands Secondary School from March 3 to 5 for the first time in three years, featuring 40 new documentaries from around the world, a number of which will be presented by the filmmakers themselves.

The return to the film festival’s usual location, after a hiatus during the pandemic in which smaller film series were held at Fulford Hall and ArtSpring, means that the popular Social Justice Bazaar will also be returning to highlight the work of local nonprofits and community organizations who set up display tables in the festival’s central hub throughout the weekend.

The festival has traditionally featured films on a range of social justice issues, and this year will be no exception, as the soon-to-be-announced program line-up includes a number of engaging documentaries on Indigenous resurgence, environmental concerns and LGBTQ+ resilience, gripping exposés on international political intrigue and economic upheaval, and celebratory explorations of visual arts, modern dance and music legends.

Starting next week, the film festival will also present three award-winning films on Wednesdays at ArtSpring in the ongoing Best of the Fests film series, which began in November and December with two sold-out music documentaries on Leonard Cohen and Buffy Sainte-Marie.

Elizabeth Banks and Sigourney Weaver lead an all-star cast in Phyllis Nagy’s Call Jane, a crowd-pleasing and timely historical drama on the underground abortion movement of the 1960s, which screens at ArtSpring at 7:30 p.m. on Wed., Jan. 25.

In the role of her career, Banks portrays Joy, a conservative housewife in 1968 Chicago facing an unexpected health crisis who seeks out a clandestine network of women known as The Janes, who help women terminate unwanted pregnancies at a time in America when abortion is in most cases illegal. Joy’s determination to safely resolve her own predicament leads her to risk everything in order to provide other women with the options she herself had been denied.

This surprisingly entertaining drama about a very serious subject was nominated for Best Film at both the Berlin International Film Festival and the Beijing International Film Festival, where Sigourney Weaver was awarded the prize for Best Supporting Actress.

The Best of the Fests film series continues on Wednesday, Feb. 1 with The Blue Caftan, Maryam Touzani’s richly erotic and deeply moving Moroccan drama about a master tailor caught in a taboo love triangle, which has won awards at multiple festivals and has been shortlisted for the Oscar for Best International Feature Film.

Vancouver filmmaker Kat Jayme will be in attendance on Feb. 8 to present her wildly entertaining documentary The Grizzlie Truth, which won an Audience Award at the Vancouver International Film Festival, in which she doggedly investigates the scandalous 2001 relocation of the Vancouver Grizzlies to Memphis.

Don’t miss these three one-night-only screenings at ArtSpring. Tickets are $13 each and available online at artspring.ca, or at the ArtSpring Box Office from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m., Tuesday through Friday (either in person or by phone at 250-537-2102).

Salt Spring library shares top book picks for 2022

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Book borrowers on Salt Spring Island were entranced by art design, engaged by mysteries and enthralled by historical fiction in 2022, judging by the library’s list of most-circulated titles. 

Salt Spring Island Public Library information technician Sophia vom Bauer Jackson said the full lists for the year were broken down into several categories, and represented the books — and graphic novels — that were in and out the doors most often.  

In adult fiction, Claire Keegan’s 2021 debut novel Small Things Like These topped the list, followed by Amor Towles’ 1950’s Nebraska-set adventure The Lincoln Highway: A Novel. Rounding out the top three was Louise Erdrich’s The Sentence. 

Nonfiction readers picked the first volume of Jim Gilbert’s Learning by designing: Pacific Northwest Coast Native Indian Art, along with biologist Merlin Sheldrake’s book on the world from a fungal perspective, Entangled Life. Number three in 2022 was fitness expert Oonagh Duncan’s bestselling self-helper Healthy as f*ck. 

Mystery fans checked out The Benefit of Hindsight most often last year, the 10th Simon Serrailler crime novel by Susan Hill, followed by Martin Walker’s The Coldest Case and Susan Juby’s Mindful of Murder. The graphic novel list was, perhaps unsurprisingly, dominated by Neil Gaiman, whose Dream Country, The Doll’s House and Sandman books took the top three.   

Young adult nonfiction was fully invaded by Dungeons & Dragons sourcebooks, with Strixhaven: a Curriculum of Chaos, Tasha’s Cauldron of Everything and the Dungeon Master’s Guide taking top spots. Angeline Boulley’s Firekeeper’s Daughter, Karen M. McManus’ One of Us is Lying, and Neal Shusterman’s Scythe held the top three in YA fiction.  

The youngest readers — and those reading to them — checked out Gary Weitzman’s cat training guide Pounce! and Mary Pope Osborne’s Dinosaurs Before Dark most often under children’s nonfiction and fiction, and the top children’s picture book was Alison Farrell’s lyrical journey through the natural world, The Hike. 

Follow each month’s Top Reads at Salt Spring Library; here are the full Top 25’s in each category.