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Viewpoint: Times are changing and opinions do matter

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By Bruce Cameron

Salt Spring Insights, an online research panel created in 2022 to enhance the quality of conversations taking place on Salt Spring, has concluded its first year.

The Salt Spring Insights online research panel is structured to represent Salt Spring residents by key demographics and region on the island. And it has proven very accurate at capturing the mood here.

A lot happened on Salt Spring in 2022: you told us you were happy, but have serious concerns about housing affordability; and you questioned the value you are receiving for the tax dollars you pay, and approved borrowing to build a new fire hall.

Here are some of the highlights revealed by Salt Spring Insights panelists.

The mood is upbeat but concerned

• Salt Spring Islanders are happy with their quality of life (87 per cent), but concerns include access to affordable housing, providing more services and facilities, building better road and ferry infrastructure, and the perennial issue of improving the governance structure. The doctor shortage, improved walking and cycling paths, and the need to build community spirit were also cited.

• Perceived value for tax dollars paid to different providers varies, with fire services rating the highest (62 per cent good value), while less than half of residents think they get good value for the taxes they pay for CRD transit or parks and recreation services. About four in 10 think the school board provides good value, while water services are rated most poorly in terms of taxpayer value.

The new fire hall was approved by 75 per cent of voters, exactly what we predicted

• Taxpayer approval was required to borrow the money necessary to build a new fire hall. Given the failed attempts to win approval in previous years, the campaign to seek approval in late June 2022 was closely watched. Salt Spring Insights correctly predicted that 75 per cent of voters would approve the project.

Despite uncertainty about the concept, a local community commission was approved

• Prior to the referendum in the fall of 2022, Salt Spring Insights asked participants whether they approve or disapprove of the CRD local community commission concept. Almost four in 10 approved of the idea, about one third were unsure and just under a third were opposed. Excluding those who were unsure, Salt Spring Insights revealed the idea would be passed, which it was, by 61 per cent.

Who says nothing ever changes on Salt Spring? A new fire hall, a new emergency department, Islands Trust issuance of a development permit for the Vortex project, creation of a new 75-acre public park on the northeast slope of Hwmet’utsum/Mt. Maxwell, passage of the LCC concept.

You can add your voice to the important conversations taking place in 2023 by signing up to become a Salt Spring Insights panelist at Saltspringinsights.com.

The writer is president of the strategic communications firm Return On Insight and co-founder of Salt Spring Island’s own consumer opinion panel, Salt Spring Insights.

Lisa Sigurgeirson creates ‘RisingUp from the ashes’ calendar

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After a fire took most of her belongings in 2021, it might not have surprised friends of Lisa Sigurgeirson — aka Lisa Maxx — that art would emerge from the ashes. 

But no one, Sigurgeirson included, expected the journey would evolve into hundreds of poems and thousands of photographs, daily creations that found their own community online, and ultimately inspired a new calendar.  

“RisingUp from the ashes” is Sigurgeirson’s effort to curate hundreds of daily dispatches into 12 pages she hopes will inspire and uplift. The musician, writer, photographer and accomplished parenting educator’s home was damaged in a morning of smoke and sirens two years ago this February; as she processed the event, she thought writing down her thoughts might be helpful. 

“I didn’t own a pen, or a piece of paper to my name,” she laughed. So she started writing her thoughts on her phone. Sigurgeirson is adamant that she wasn’t setting out to write poetry, but it started looking that way almost on its own. 

“Once I had written the first one, it wasn’t really a poem at that point. They were just kind of, I called them ‘poetic thoughts’; it was on the page, and it sort of looked like a poem.” 

Being on her phone — and being the sort of person who tended to share her feelings, she said — posting to Facebook seemed natural. The format invites photos with posts; Sigurgeirson said her daily walks in nature had been incredibly comforting, so she thought she should find ways to share that part as well. 

And that was the start of it.  

“So I posted it onto Facebook with a photograph,” said Sigurgeirson. “And then the next day I did the same thing. And then the next day, I did the same thing.” 

A poem a day. It felt like it was helping, both the routine and the act of creating something. Sigurgeirson promised herself if nothing else was accomplished each day, she would manage a poem and a photograph. It became a journey that lasted more than a year. Every single day, without fail, she would write and shoot a photo. 

Lisa Sigurgeirson Maxx.

In the beginning, she said, they were about what she was experiencing in the moment — the trauma of losing so much in the fire loomed large. Sigurgeirson recalled an early poem about how it took two hours to make a cup of tea, because her brain wouldn’t hold firmly to the task. 

“It would get detoured,” she said, “And that’s a common, natural experience post-trauma. And I mostly would write them at night, at the end of my day.” 

The promise became a practice; as the days became weeks, Sigurgeirson said people began to reach out — online at first, and in person as she began to return to her routines on the island. They were, to her surprise, thanking her. 

“Once I started going out into the world again, a number of weeks — or even months — later, they were saying ‘thank you so much for your writing and for your photographs, I look for them every morning.’ And I’m like, wow. People were wanting, or needing to see and read these. Someone was counting on me, in a way.” 

Sigurgeirson said the poetry went through darker times; not every day can be filled with sunshine. And the daily missives would also intersect with moments of uplift, of resurging joy. But both are important, she said, because it’s a process, not a destination. Well-meaning people, she said, would accidentally minimize the trauma of the fire. She called it a “toxic positivity.” 

“Sometimes people would respond and say, ‘oh, at least you didn’t die’ or ‘at least you had insurance,’ ‘you get to pick new floor coverings’ and all that,” she said. “But when you’re in the throes of loss, it’s not time yet for these kinds of supposedly uplifting comments.” 

But the calendar, she said, was all about lifting spirits at a glance, whenever someone might need it — and even, she argued, when they might not. 

“People have been purchasing them to give to friends and family who are going through challenging or difficult times,” said Sigurgeirson. “But I also feel like they’re little reminders that we could all use; you don’t have to be going through a trauma or grief to want something beautiful.” 

After a few false starts with contractors and insurance, Sigurgeirson said her house was seeing improvements, she was indeed picking out flooring and there would be a return to the place she’d lost. But there was still work to be done. 

“It will be 22 months next week since the fire,” said Sigurgeirson, “and I’m not home yet.” 

Sigurgeirson invites anyone interested in ordering a calendar to follow her social media (Instagram @ lisa_sig_ or on Facebook “Lisa Sigurgeirson; writer”) or reach out via lisasigurgeirsonmaxx@gmail.com

Handel’s Messiah on tap at Fulford Hall

A Salt Spring holiday season tradition continues with the 11th Annual Bach on the Rock Messiah Sing Along set for this Sunday afternoon at Fulford Hall.

The island’s chamber orchestra and choir held its first Handel’s Messiah event in 2011 under then music director Jim Stubbs. It was quickly adopted by the community as part of beloved holiday festivities, and has continued each year except for 2020.

The Messiah will be directed by Bach on the Rock’s new artistic director Jean-Sébastien Lévesque, whose first concert in his position — Mozart and Cherubini Requiems on Nov. 19 at Fulford Hall — garnered a standing ovation and many enthusiastic comments.

The Dec. 18 Messiah, which begins at 2 p.m., gives attendees the opportunity to sing along with some of the piece’s choruses, but there is no expectation to do so. A shortened version of the original work will also be performed.

The concert features four exciting young vocal soloists either based from or with roots in Victoria: Celeste Lingas, soprano; Cassidy Stahr, mezzo-soprano; Adam Schmidt, tenor; Kyron Basu, baritone, each of them passionate about their musical activities.

Lingas spent many years performing in the Oxford Girls’ Choir, with director Richard Vendome. There she sang as both a chorister and soloist in productions of Purcell’s Dido and Aeneas, Handel’s Semele, and a variety of classical and contemporary choral works.

Stahr is in the touring Vancouver Island Chamber Choir and was a choral scholar at Christ Church Cathedral for five years. This past summer, she performed in Menotti’s The Consul (Secretary) and the musical Tuck Everlasting (Mae) with Opera NUOVA in Edmonton. In the chorus at Pacific Opera Victoria, she appeared in Don Giovanni and Carmen, and looks forward to The Birds in February. Studying with John MacMaster at McGill University, tenor Schmidt’s most recent activities have included singing Ottavio in Mozart’s Don Giovanni, Peter Quint in Britten’s The Turn of the Screw, Emilio in Handel’s Partenope, and he helped create the role of Claudio in James Garner’s new opera Much Ado, all in association with Opera McGill.

Basu has appeared with groups such as Fretwork, the Victoria Baroque Players, Victoria Philharmonic Choir and Victoria Children’s Choir. Recent engagements include the role of Christus in Bach’s St. Matthew Passion with the Victoria Philharmonic Choir and Schubert’s Mass in G with the Linden Singers. Basu is also a passionate teacher and a member of the voice faculties of the University of Victoria and the Victoria Conservatory of Music.

Some members of the Viva Chorale and Salt Spring Singers choirs will also join the Bach on the Rock choir.

Tickets are available through bachontherock.com or at the door.

Editorial: Share realistic housing deadlines

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Sometimes the up-close view of government functions can be downright frightening.

People interested in housing insecurity on Salt Spring Island have had a ringside seat in the past year as BC Housing took the lead on creating homes for people living temporarily in the Seabreeze Inne.

BC Housing hosted an online information meeting last Monday night, bringing neighbours and other community members up to speed on its Drake Road supportive housing project. The word “speed” may not be appropriate in referring to activity at the 5.5-acre site, as BC Housing development manager Kirsten Baillie described the various obstacles that had so far delayed progress. Those include considerations that go with a sensitive riparian area being identified on the land, plus stormwater management, site clearing and drinking water servicing.

But none of those issues should have been a surprise to BC Housing or the politicians giving their public support to the plan. That includes the person who is now B.C.’s premier, David Eby, who was housing minister when the Drake Road project was first announced.

Eby was the spokesperson in a Jan. 20, 2022 press release about a 28-unit housing project being built on Drake Road by BC Housing. Both at the time and in retrospect it was obviously issued to make it seem as if the Seabreeze Inne residents about to be displaced by the Lady Minto Hospital Foundation’s renovation of their newly purchased building would not be thrown out onto the street. The provincial government then boldly declared that Seabreeze residents would be living in the new Drake Road facility by late summer.

When it became apparent that timeline was not possible, Eby again stepped up at the end of June to state that the Seabreeze residents would be offered temporary residences at 154 Kings Lane on property owned by the Gulf Islands Seniors Residence Association. “Spring of 2023” was the predicted occupancy date for the Drake Road complex. And to be fair, the Kings Lane complex was put together quickly.

What is disconcerting is the disconnect between the government’s messaging and reality. The honesty from BC Housing personnel at last week’s meeting is appreciated. The “problem solved” press releases with a lack of tethering to reality are not. Our community, and especially the people directly affected by housing insecurity on the island, deserve better.

Stocking Stuffers for Seniors program seeks donations, volunteers

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A new charitable effort on Salt Spring Island is aimed at fulfilling a few holiday wishes for our senior population. 

“Stocking Stuffers for Seniors” is in full swing, according to Brad Hefferon and Sylvia Andress, who teamed up to launch the project. A list of island seniors with needs reached about 180 this week, they said, and the generosity of the community so far has been wonderful. 

“Most seniors live on a fixed income and cannot afford more than the necessities, such as food, toiletries and housing costs,” explains the project’s website. “These individuals may request certain items just like the rest of us. If they do not have loved ones who can purchase these items, they may never receive them.” 

Stocking Stuffers for Seniors has two ways participants can anonymously provide a gift to a needy senior. Organizers can match donors with a local senior, and provide them with a list of items that they have on their wishlist. Donors can then purchase the items on the list and drop them off at a designated time, where they will be wrapped and handed over to the senior who requested them.  

As a second option, donors can put cash towards the purchase of items, and one of the volunteers will procure the items on the list and wrap them prior to handing them over to the senior who requested them. Recommended spending, per senior, is $25 to $40, according to Hefferon. 

Participants should sign up at the website: www.bradhefferon.com/stocking-stuffers-for-seniors before Dec. 14; cash donations can be made any time until Dec. 21. For more information or to volunteer, call Andress at 250-537-7012 or Hefferon at 604-363-5639. 

PARC opts to spend more on Centennial Park upgrade to preserve federal grant

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Quick action taken last Tuesday at a special meeting of the Salt Spring Parks and Recreation Commission (PARC) may help the island hold on to more than half a million dollars in federal grant funding — but it comes at a cost, and prompted a discussion about how a park system with millions of dollars in assets — and zero debt — could fund projects in the future. 

At issue was a $561,748 grant from Pacific Economic Development Canada (PEDC), meant to bolster a project revitalizing the Centennial Park Plaza — specifically removing and replacing the park’s concrete and brick pavers, improving drainage, lighting and some landscaping. In order to keep the funding, the project would need to be completed by March 31, 2023. Adding to the time crunch, any construction in the plaza would have to be out of the way before the Saturday market opens in mid-April to avoid disrupting that keystone resource.  

But only one contractor submitted a bid for the work. And while that bidder was confident they could complete a winter construction project in the few months remaining — and agreed to financial penalties that would accrue each day over the allotted time — the bid came in at a higher cost than what was projected back in August, just under $1 million. 

To keep the federal funding intact, the budget shortfall of just over $300,000 will be met — re-allocated from the Community Works Fund (CWF) per a motion passed with approval from a majority of PARC members and the support of Capital Regional District (CRD) director Gary Holman.  

CWF funding is made up of federal gas tax monies, allocated based on population to local governments in B.C. The CRD receives funds for each electoral area — Juan de Fuca, Salt Spring and the Southern Gulf Islands — and distributes those dollars on a per-capita basis for eligible investment categories. As the decision-maker for that funding, Holman said he would work with staff to find economies in other programs — and, hopefully, within the bid of the Centennial Park project itself — but he maintained that the future local community commission (LCC) should eventually be making decisions like this as a group, rather than leaving it up to a single director. 

“I can’t let $561,000 in grant funding go,” said Holman. “But whatever the Community Works contribution is, I’ll be looking for adjustments elsewhere. There have been increases in Community Works allocations to a whole number of other services, so staff and I need to go through the whole list of services and find some savings.” 

Holman had championed the LCC during his most recent campaign for re-election; both he and the referendum creating an LCC gained voter approval in October.  

“Community works [distribution] is not delegated to the LCC,” continued Holman. “So, it comes down — again — to one person, which is problematic. Hopefully, over time, we can change that.” 

Several commission members expressed concerns over how much other projects might suffer with fewer dollars from the CWF. CRD senior manager Karla Campbell pointed out that it wouldn’t be current projects, but future ones, which might be partially or mostly funded from reserves, but would need grant monies to show as fully funded.  

“Those future projects that may be at risk [of reduced Community Works funding] would be subject to grant funding anyway, in your capital plan,” said Campbell. “So they weren’t guaranteed to be funded unless there was a grant that you got awarded. That’s what would be at risk.” 

With a $2.9-million loan for the Rainbow Road Pool completely paid off as of last year, said Holman, the commission had a strong financial position that might be leveraged into additional borrowing going forward — should the future LCC and voters approve. 

“Parks and Rec has tens of millions [of dollars] in assets,” said Holman, “and zero debt. The commission has been basically paying cash, whether it be a requisition, reserves, or Community Works.”  

It’s good news, according to Holman, but perhaps not sustainable, particularly as construction costs continue to rise.  

“It’s putting us between a rock and a hard place,” he said. “Every time we go for a bid, we’re getting a rather nasty shock coming back.” 

Given the financial burden — and the potential for conflict with the Saturday market opening date should construction face delays — PARC staff also will ask PEDC if they would agree to extend their deadline to November 2023.  

Flu vaccine clinic for children on Salt Spring this week

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Salt Spring Island children ages six months to 11 years old will be able to receive flu shots on a walk-in, no-appointment-necessary basis this week, as part of an immunization “blitz” announced by the provincial government in the wake of the deaths of six children and youth after contracting influenza in British Columbia. 

Provincial health officer Dr. Bonnie Henry announced the effort on Thursday, Dec. 8, adding that the government would now be providing regular weekly updates on flu-related deaths. 

Drop-in clinics are spinning up throughout the province, and in every health region. Clinic hours on Salt Spring will be from 1 p.m. until about 3:45 p.m. each day this week until Thursday, Dec. 15, according to Island Health, who added that parents who come in with children and also needed a flu shot would be accommodated. No appointment is needed. 

“This is an unusual season with unusual characteristics, including an early and intense surge in cases,” said Henry, adding that death associated with influenza in previously healthy children is a “tragic, but rare” event, and especially so in school-age children and teens. 

Of the six reported influenza-associated deaths among children and youth, Henry said, two were between the ages of 15 and 19, three were between five and nine, and one was younger than five years old. 

The Salt Spring Health Unit is located at 160 Fulford-Ganges Rd. For information, call 250-538-4708.  For more information about the flu, call the Flu Hotline at 250-544-7676, ext. 27545 or visit the immunizebc.ca/influenza website.

Poultry restrictions lifted 

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Salt Spring’s poultry community breathed a sigh of relief this week, as Canada’s lead agency on the avian flu influenza response lifted restrictions on movement of birds. 

With the issuance of a revocation order Friday evening, Dec. 9, the Canadian Food Inspection Agency (CFIA), which had declared a large portion of the island to be a Primary Control Zone (PCZ) following discovery of the H5N1 highly pathogenic avian influenza in birds here last month, signalled an end to restrictions. The security zone boundary had followed a roughly 10-kilometre diameter circle, centred on Ganges — effectively most of Salt Spring Island north of Fulford. Movement controls per the Health of Animals Act had required special permits to move “birds, their products and by-products, as well as things exposed to birds” into, out of, within, or through the PCZ. 

According to Inspection Canada, avian influenza viruses — such as the H5N1 virus present in Asia — may, on rare occasions, cause disease in humans; transmission to humans occurs through close contact with infected birds or heavily contaminated environments. 

BC Nurses’ Union urges support for Lady Minto Hospital staff with Tuesday rally

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By Carly Koeppen and Leanne Robertson-Weeds,

BC Nurses’ Union Regional Council Members, South Island Region

There is a nurse staffing crisis at Lady Minto Hospital where on any given day, the nurses who work there are left to do their job with fewer than half the number of required staff. This means the daily reality is having to work unsupported and understaffed, while managing soaring patient demands in unsafe conditions. It’s not unusual for nurses to have to reach out to their colleagues to help cover shifts and many are distressed not knowing if there will be a nurse available to care for their patients when their shift ends.

These dire working conditions are behind the overwhelming strain and moral distress our nurses face as they work to provide safe patient care.

The residents of Salt Spring Island deserve better. The nurses of Lady Minto Hospital deserve better.

We are calling on the government to invest in the province’s health-care system, so that hospitals like Lady Minto and communities like Salt Spring Island aren’t left to manage the health-care crisis alone. This means coming up with strategies to recruit and retain enough nurses to provide quality care to British Columbians.

The BC Nurses’ Union will be on site at Lady Minto Hospital to support its members on Tuesday, Dec. 13 from 11 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. Everyone can take action to support nurses by going to HelpBCNurses.ca and emailing your MLA to demand change.

BERG, Gordon Martin

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July 22, 1943 – November 3, 2022.


It is with tremendous sadness that we announce the passing of Gordon Martin Berg on November 3, 2022 at the age of 79. Martin, beloved father and brother, passed away peacefully with family by his side. He will be deeply missed by his daughter, Deanna, brother, Allan (Elaine), sisters, Connie and Ann, as well as niece, nephews, and good friends. He is predeceased by his parents, Elsa and Conrad, and brother, Walter.


Martin was born and raised in North Vancouver. As a young boy, he shared his amazing voice with others by singing in the church choir. He joined the navy and was honoured for having the best kit in his division. After the navy, Martin worked for Canada Post and then for BC Transit. It was as a transit operator that his outgoing, friendly and humorous personality was able to really shine. He greeted each passenger with a smile and enjoyed getting to know the regulars. BC Transit was very fond of Martin because of his outstanding record of safe driving throughout his entire career.


Martin and his ex-wife, Judy, raised their daughter, Deanna, in Burnaby. He was always happy to remind Deanna of funny moments such as the time the baby diaper was no match for her explosive poop. Martin was Deanna’s number one fan, always attending her various games, races, and regattas, no matter the weather. When Deanna started a small business, Martin asked for a stack of business cards and proudly handed them out to people.


Martin vacationed on Salt Spring Island for many years with family and friends, and decided to move there after retirement. He loved crab fishing on the water and especially loved the delicious dinner that followed. He enjoyed island life and the many friends that he made on Salt Spring. Martin eventually moved back to North Vancouver where he cherished being able to regularly get together with family.
A Celebration of Life is being planned for a later date.