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Creekside Rainforest campaign in ‘final stretch’

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Submitted by SSIC

Thanks to an outpouring of local support, Salt Spring Island Conservancy (SSIC) announced this week it is in the final stretch of fundraising, with $20,500 left to raise in its effort to acquire and protect 15.5 acres of rare lowland coastal temperate rainforest on Salt Spring, known as the Creekside Rainforest.

This last spring, SSIC launched a community fundraiser for the Creekside Rainforest. Thanks to the generosity of many donors — and a major grant SSIC applied for and received — the acquisition project now needs to gather just a fraction of its goal of $440,000. But organizers say SSIC, along with fundraising partner The Land Conservancy of BC, need to meet that goal by Oct. 13.

SSIC says the Creekside Rainforest is rich in biodiversity, and contains two ecological communities that are provincially classified as imperilled. The land is home to Western red cedar up to 250 years old, enormous bigleaf maples draped in moss and lichen, and numerous species associated with older rainforests, including many at risk. 

“The property’s deep ravine, higher than normal rainfall, and northerly aspect, combined with the continuous forest canopy, create an exceptionally cool and moist microclimate,” according to a press release from SSIC. “Island wildlife use this property as a corridor and water supply and, for species under stress from climate change, the Creekside Rainforest is a cool and moist refugium.” 

Cusheon Creek, one of the few salmon-bearing streams on the island, flows through the land. Salmonids, swimming upstream to their spawning and rearing habitat, benefit from the creek’s cool temperature, maintained by the tree canopy’s shade, according to SSIC.

Concerned neighbours initiated this conservation effort in fall 2021, with SSIC continuing and expanding these efforts over the past months. Upon completion of the project, SSIC says it will establish a nature reserve to ensure that the land is protected in perpetuity, with public access through planned hiking trails. To learn more about what makes the Creekside Rainforest unique, and help to protect it, visit saltspringconservancy.ca/creeksiderainforest or email info@saltspringconservancy.ca.

Dragons take gold at Guts and Glory event

By Donna Cochran

SPECIAL TO THE DRIFTWOOD 

Spirit Point Dragons teamed up with Fairway Gorge Maximus Power on Sept. 17 in their final festival of the season — the Guts and Glory Championships along Victoria’s Selkirk waterfront. 

The unique race formats saw Outrigger Canoe OC6 crews alternating heats with dragon boat teams. The distances were considered “sprints” for the OC6 teams while dragon boaters consider them as “distance,” i.e. gruelling!

The first race was a 1,000-metre “straight-shot” race from Point Hope Shipyards to the finish line at Halkett Island, requiring the teams to paddle a kilometre to reach the start line. The semi-final race was a 2,000-metre “oval” from the Halkett Island start line, under the Bay Bridge, lapping around two sets of buoys before returning to the Halkett Island finish line. Fortunately we were able to borrow a Fairway Gorge staff member, Derek Chow, who expertly steered the team through all the turns and avoided a collision with a rogue Victoria Harbour ferry that crossed over the race course right in front of us.

The championship final was a 1,000-metre “doublestart” with the first start at Halkett Island.  The race took the teams around both stanchions of Bay Bridge and back down the course with a hard stop at the 750-metre mark, followed by a held re-start for the final 250 metres. Spirit Point/Maximus was teamed up with their main competition, Snogard Dragons, in the consolation finals. From the staggered start of the race our team gained momentum and pulled away from Snogard at a steady pace. At the hard stop 750-m mark, we were well out in front and got a fast restart for the last 250-m sprint. With the loud encouragement from coach Mary Rowles, the team dumped everything it had left and crossed the finish line with a time of 6.55, beating out Snowgard’s time of 7.24. We came home with a gold medal and a real sense of pride that we were able to “go the distance.”

Spirit Point paddlers included Serena Mellen, Donna Cochran, Mary Lou Cuddy, Lesley Grott, Shirley Julien, Cora Platz, Melynda Okulitch, Wendy McEachern, Michael Pierce, Rob Huber, Andrew Okulitch, Wendy Anderson and Wendy’s son and last minute stand-in Jamie Anderson.  Maximus paddlers included Madhu Bannur, Ravishankar Gaddam, Mithun Somanathan Pillai, Ann-Marie Kelly, Ashish Malik and Jamie Polard.  

A heartfelt “paddles up!” to manager Barry Green, who kept us on time all day (and all year) and to our coach, Mary Rowles, for her many years devoted to the team. Rowles paddled for the OC6 Fairway Gorge Performance Mixed team that day so was seen hopping from one boat to another. 

The new season starts in the spring and new paddlers are always welcome. Contact Mary Rowles at onthewater181@gmail.com

Nobody Asked Me, But: A brief guide to the care of your misunderstood yellowjacket

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By this time of the year, as the season changes from summer to autumn, you’ve just about had it up the wazoo with wasps. I know, I know, they have their purpose too. They are Mother Nature’s way of cleaning up the environment by getting rid of all the dead, decaying, decomposing, and rotting organisms left littering our biosphere. Why, I ask, can’t they just leave us alone and go find some other planet to clean up?

As most of us know, the actual purpose that wasps have in this world is to annoy and harass us. We have quite a few varieties of wasps sharing our air space, including mud wasps and hover wasps to name a couple, but the one we love to hate is the heinous yellowjacket.

Although not as fear inducing as some flying insects found in other parts of the globe, such as the murder hornet or the tarantula wasp (which preys upon and eats tarantula spiders), these bad boys have made a habit of ruining the last remaining days of good weather. 

Why are yellowjacket wasps so badly behaved as the summer draws to a close? It all has to do with their life cycle. There comes a point when the queen stops laying the eggs she has been producing to increase the size of the hive. She also stops releasing pheromone, the chemical which the lowly worker wasps are hooked on and which causes them to work overtime to bring food back to the hive. 

In essence, they are forced to go “cold turkey” into involuntary obsolescence. If that’s not bad enough, the adult wasps are no longer able to digest the solid proteins they have been gathering to share with the larvae in the hives. As a result, the only substance that keeps them from starving to death are sugary liquids such as, you guessed it, that mug of beer you thought you were chugalugging on your own.

What’s a poor yellowjacket to do? Suddenly he’s unemployed, cut off from real food, disowned by his queen mother, and forced to find some semblance of meaning to his aimless existence. Naturally, he turns to drink. Wouldn’t you?

Think of the yellowjacket as a bored teenager on steroids who is packed chockfull with copious amounts of attitude. If he could, he would turn his antennae around on his head and wear them backwards like a ball cap. 

Basically, your dinner table is his mall and your beverage is his skate park. You may think that the beer in your mug or bottle belongs to you but he will bet you a mouthful of stinger that you are wrong and that he can invite himself to an all-you-can-sip free-for-all smorgasbord that is the best party happening since the last rave swarming at this summer’s Burning Wasp Festival.

And it should come as no surprise that word of a patio barbecue gets around in no time flat. 

Yellowjackets are particularly adept at social media, especially WaspBook and In-sting-gram. It just takes one little post by a single vagabond scout, and the party is on! Before you can say “bzzzz”, the air is full of thousands of followers and your barbecue has gone viral.

Unlike bees, who have little barbs at the end of their stingers, and therefore can only sting you once before they have their stingers torn off their bodies, thereby killing themselves, wasps can inject their venom into you over and over again, and still live to brag about their exploits once they’ve returned to the hive. Even the venom that wasps employ is different than the ones used by bees. 

The culprit for yellowjackets is a combination of antigen 5 and hyaluronidases. Together, these noxious chemicals can induce allergic reactions which may include pain, redness, swelling, itchiness, and, in the worst cases, difficulty breathing. In the most severe conditions, wasp venom which enters the bloodstream can cause anaphylactic shock which may result in death for the critically allergic. 

Obviously, these wasps are not exactly the types you would want to take home to meet the parents.

So, now that you’re intimate with the inner workings of the yellowjacket wasp, you probably want to know how to get rid of them or at least increase the chances that they go do their dirty work over at your neighbour’s place. 

Swiping at them with one or both of your hands rarely does much more than aggravate them to the point that they are ready to engage in battle with any bare skin you dare to expose. 

The South Africans have a saying that when you wave at a wasp, you are actually giving it the signal that you are inviting it to come closer. Fly swatters increase your chances of knocking a wasp out of the air, but you are just as likely to do damage to friends nearby you, especially if you accidentally swipe a wasp into somebody’s open mouth. 

Electronic wasp zappers that electrocute the little suckers with their electric grids have become the latest craze, but almost every male I know (including me) has first felt obligated to test out the strength of the shock by intentionally painfully zapping themselves. For some odd reason, females do not seem to possess this same macho gene.

A tactic that some people swear by is blowing air into a brown paper bag and hanging it in an area you want clear of wasps. The theory here is that the bag will be mistaken for an actual wasp nest and dissuade real wasps from locating their hive nearby. 

Most yellowjackets get a tremendous chuckle when they fly by these air-filled phonies and have actually learned to use them as signposts to tell them that food is near.

A very popular commercial product available in hardware stores is the wasp trap. There are quite a few models, disposable or refillable, but essentially they attract wasps into a chamber where they either drown in a watery liquid or perish from exhaustion because they can’t find a way back out. Although these traps work brilliantly, no matter how many yellowjacket corpses pile up in the trap, you will find that there are just as many wasps still pestering you as there were before you set it up.

Nobody asked me, but I can’t help but feel a little sorry for those remaining yellowjackets as they crawl and buzz around aimlessly in a drunken stupor from over-imbibing in the fermenting windfall apples strewn along the orchard ground. 

Their zombie-like behaviour reminds me of the blank look in the eyes of the sheep at the Fall Fair before the border collies arrive on the scene to give their lives direction and purpose. But luckily, soon it will all be over for another year. The poor, desperate wasps will die off, and I can get back to the serious business of testing on myself how much punch those zappers really pack.

NIELSON, Sherril (Sheri) Lynn (nee Blunden)

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Sherril (Sheri) Lynn Nielson (nee Blunden)
June 28, 1954 ~ July 14, 2022

With great sorrow we announce the unexpected passing of Sheri Nielson of a heart attack on July 14. Sheri was born in Calgary, Alberta, but after spending some time in Manitoba and the Fraser Valley (with many adventures along the way), she settled on Salt Spring Island in 1986. Sheri quickly fell in love with the Island and its community, serving in the early years as an RCMP reserve officer and working as a paramedic first responder on the Island for many years.

One of Sheri’s many talents was her ability to manifest whatever she envisioned and make it reality. Sheri was an avid gardener and foodie. She became involved in the Food Safety industry and developed a passion for researching all aspects of the industry and helping others to learn about safe practices of food handing and preparation from farm to plate. Along side this, Sheri became a certified Farm Auditor and On Farm Food Safety Advisor, helping farmers across BC and the USA to meet and maintain the standards for certification.

Sheri was a tireless worker and dreamer. Her vision was to build a sustainable food system and school with a science-based approach where she could teach others how to grow, harvest and preserve their own food. Along with her partner, Dudley, she had begun the realization of that dream on Salt Spring Island.

Sheri’s life was governed by her sense of justice, and she was a strong ally for family, friends, and farmers alike. She was everybody’s mother, everybody’s teacher, everybody’s advocate, and she did it all with passion. She had the ability to listen without judgment and lead without being overbearing; she seldom told you what do, but would guide you to discover the answers for yourself.

Sheri is survived by her long-time partner Dudley Nielson, her son Jasper Nielson, her brothers Danny and Joe Blunden, her sisters Vicki Wearmouth, Lori Haywood, Karli Blunden, and numerous extended family and friends.

At Sheri’s request, there will be no memorial service.

*Due to Sheri’s unexpected and untimely death, a GoFundMe account has been set up to help the family with her estate during this difficult time. Your support would be greatly appreciated. https://gofund.me/10c635ba

COOKE, Doreen

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Doreen Cooke
July 9, 1930 ~ Sept. 14, 2022

On September 14th, with the same intention and grace she gave to all things, Doreen waived goodbye. Over her 92 years, she cultivated a love of gardening, good design, great books, fine music, intelligent conversation and a wicked sense of humour. Doreen loved deeply her husband George, her brothers and their families and the many friendships made, on Salt Spring and afar.

Doreen wished to thank Dr. Gummeson, and all the nurses and caregivers who provided care and kindness. Her heartfelt thanks to Dr. Slakov who walked with her in her last hours.

Ram Dass says that we are ultimately walking each other home. Auntie Doreen, thank you for letting us walk with you.

Salt Spring school board candidates introduced

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Salt Spring Island has six individuals vying for three seats on the Gulf Islands School Board this year: Anna Szul, George Sipos, Jenny McClean, Nancy Macdonald, Rob Pingle and Tisha Boulter. The candidates provided a 200-word biography and statement about why they are running for school board. McClean is also running for an Islands Trust position.

ANNA SZUL 

A single mom of two kids in elementary school, Anna Szul moved to the island four years ago and immediately felt embraced and supported by the community. She has worked for Salt Spring Arts for over a year, a continuation of her arts education and non-profit sector experience in Vancouver and Edmonton. During COVID, she was grateful for the support of IWAV and is happy to have a permanent home in the newly opened phase three of Croftonbrook. 

Szul believes arts are integral to the development of children. She coordinates the Artists in the Class program between Salt Spring Arts and School District 64 and has built good relationships with the teachers in our schools through that program. This past spring she organized the youth exhibit during the Spring Art Show where students explored their identity as well as the heritage of Mahon Hall.

Szul says her non-profit experience has given her a solid understanding of the need to be wise about spending to maintain a balanced budget, while her arts background has fostered a healthy dose of thinking outside the box. 

“I want to continue to grow with this fantastic community and believe I can provide a unique perspective to the questions raised at the board table.”

GEORGE SIPOS

George Sipos is best known on Salt Spring as the former executive director of ArtSpring. Since his retirement, he has been active in the community as treasurer of both the Salt Spring Forum and Transition Salt Spring. 

Prior to his arrival on the island in 2006 he lived in Prince George for 25 years where he taught adult basic education at the community college, owned an independent bookstore and was general manager of the Prince George Symphony. Over the years, he has served on many boards, including the Board of Governors of the College of New Caledonia, the BC Library Foundation, the Canadian Booksellers Association, the Prince George Home Services Society and a good number of others. 

As for why seek election as a school trustee now, there are two main reasons. Some 40-plus years of diverse experience in education, business and organizational governance are bound sooner or later to want to come together in a “big, complex, worthwhile challenge.” A more personal reason is having a fine grandson who has just started Grade 1 at Salt Spring Elementary. Suddenly, the health and future evolution of our local schools seem especially compelling. 

“Offering voters my accumulated experience and judgement that can help the district’s governance along seems a good commitment toward that end,” he said.

NANCY MACDONALD

Nancy Macdonald has had a long history in education as a French Immersion teacher and later as GISS principal from 1998 to 2006. 

The Saanich District was next and she was assistant superintendent and superintendent there until 2014. Then, she served a term as trustee in School District 64.  

“As an educator I understand the realities, the funding and the challenges facing districts. Ask anyone who has worked with me before: they will tell you that my focus was on improving student success and creating a strong overall culture. As a trustee I was actively involved in creating the strategic plan, bringing school principals to board meetings to showcase their schools and advocating for school reconfiguration discussions long before the process finally began.”

Macdonald said she will use her experience to ask questions about how education dollars are being spent and to ask about how students are doing, given the pandemic.

“I come in with an open mind, no axe to grind, just an eye on the kids, their safety, their health and their learning. I bring a calm demeanor to the table but, as always, high expectations. You can trust me to be fair and hard working.

“My three children loved school here on Salt Spring. Now my grandson is at Fulford.  This is for him.”

ROB PINGLE 

Rob Pingle moved to Salt Spring Island when his oldest daughter was beginning Kindergarten at Salt Spring Elementary (SSE). He spent much time at the school with his youngest, as that was also the first year of the ELF program. 

He volunteered to run the toy library for Salt Spring Community Services and also became chairperson for the SSE PAC. Within a year, Pingle was working as the coordinator of the Saturday Market  in the Park and had taken a vacant position on the school board. 

“When I joined the board, I was the only new member and felt fortunate for the guidance and leadership of members who had served for over 20 years. It was a great learning experience,” he said.

For the past 14 years, Pingle has been a dedicated school board trustee while raising his daughters, hosting international students and working in the community. He helped coordinate the BC School Fruit & Vegetable Nutritional Program in SSE and successfully encouraged other schools in the district to participate. He has actively participated on district committees and was board chair while the district worked through the reconfiguration process.

Pingle said he hopes the community will continue to value his perspective as the longest-serving board member running, and as someone who has continually been involved in the community through his work with the Capital Regional District and Islands Trust, as well as his volunteering.

TISHA BOULTER 

Tisha Boulter says she fell in love with Salt Spring in 1997 when she worked as the head cook for Camp Narnia, and then moved back here permanently in 2001. She is now a small business operator, a hobby ceramic artist and a community volunteer. 

During the 17 years her children have been attending school she has been an active executive parent advisory council member of five different schools. For the last four years she has served as a school trustee, with two of those years elected as board chair. 

During her term on the school board, Boulter has chaired the finance, audit and facilities committees, co-chaired the district anti-racism working group, attended provincial council meetings on behalf of SD64, sat on the climate action working group and currently attends three monthly parent meetings. 

Boulter acknowledges her privilege to have a seat at the board table and has been proud to build good working relationships with her colleagues, staff, parents and community members. 

“I would be grateful to be elected for another four-year term to continue contributing to the stability of a healthy school community and so that the youth in the Gulf Islands have the best opportunities to feel belonging and experience success,” she said.

JENNY MCCLEAN  

Jenny McClean was born on Salt Spring Island and has raised her children here. She says she has attended Islands Trust meetings since 2008 and is very well informed on Salt Spring’s political processes. 

“I am very familiar with the schools in S.D. 64 as I was born and raised on Salt Spring Island and I attended my schooling here. I have raised six children, four have graduated from Gulf Islands Secondary School and two are in Gulf Islands Secondary School. My children have attended Salt Spring Elementary, Fulford Elementary, Salt Spring Island Middle School, Phoenix Secondary and Gulf Islands Secondary.

“I first felt excited about the idea of running for the position of trustee many years ago while I was attending a school board meeting on Pender Island. I noted that Pender Elementary was green and connected to the food cycle. The students harvested food and cooked that food in a cob oven that had been built on the school grounds, and they had solar panels on the roof of the school. Since that time, the schools on Salt Spring have began to use solar and have developed nature programs. I am interested in the greening of the schools.

“I am also interested in the situation we are in with the school that housed strong programs for the middle school age group becoming a community space managed by the CRD. I am interested in the future of that and what can be done to make up for the loss of that school from the children who enjoyed it.

“I have a lot of experience with school systems and have attended school board meetings in the past and I understand the obligations entailed with the trustee position.”

Seabreeze services downgraded

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Some services at the Seabreeze Inne have been shut off, at least two residents are seeking regulatory orders, and the provincial agency tasked to administer supported housing there is no longer paying rent.

Work crews last week disconnected internet, cable and telephone services at the Seabreeze, as well as part of a laundry facility.

A late Friday response from BC Housing said the agency was not involved in that decision, and was characterized as being inaccurate by Lady Minto Hospital Foundation (LMHF) executive director Roberta Martell. LMHF finalized purchase of the property earlier this year, with the intent of renovating it — once vacant — to provide housing for hospital staff.

While several Seabreeze residents said on Thursday they felt intimidated and threatened by the service disconnections, which were performed by contractors hired by LMHF, Martell said they were done to reduce its ongoing costs — and in coordination with BC Housing.

“Negotiations coordinating the transition of all people, goods and services to Kings Lane have been happening for months with BC Housing,” said Martell, adding that LMHF’s understanding was that BC Housing would be in direct communication with Seabreeze residents this week to expedite a move out.

“As part of the coordinated transition, BC Housing has told us they will be on site Tuesday to meet with the occupants and explain the need for them to move to Kings Lane by Friday. They have let us know there will be moving trucks and teams on site all week.”

For its part, BC Housing declined to comment on whether the service shutoff was part of a transition process. In a statement directing questions regarding the disconnection of “some non-essential services at their property” to LMHF, BC Housing said on Friday housing and services will be available at the temporary modular homes it recently completed at 154 Kings Lane. Those units have been characterized as an “interim solution” to the needs of Seabreeze residents by the agency, who entered into a nine-month lease there in June with landowners Gulf Islands Seniors Residence Association (GISRA).

“We have 20 new temporary homes with support services, including laundry and internet, ready for people to move into at 154 Kings Lane,” said BC Housing Friday. “We continue to encourage people to move to this new, safe housing.”

But at least two people living at the Seabreeze believe they are not part of any agreements with BC Housing, and have made applications for dispute resolution to B.C.’s Residential Tenancy Branch. Vancouver-based lawyer Julia Riddle, who said they are representing multiple clients, confirmed those applications have been filed, naming LMHF as landlord.

They are seeking orders, according to Riddle, “confirming that the Residential Tenancy Act applies to their tenancies at the Seabreeze.” That hearing is set to come before an arbitrator in December.

The legal filing highlights a central dispute: not everyone at the Seabreeze agrees they are clients of BC Housing, while LMHF’s position is that BC Housing is its only tenant — as it has been leasing the entire building since the foundation took possession.

The Provincial Rental Housing Corporation — the property-holding entity administered by BC Housing — entered a short-term lease with the hospital foundation in February, and renewed that lease at the end of June as the term was about to expire.

At the time, then-Attorney General and Minister Responsible for Housing David Eby thanked LMHF for “generously extending the lease at the Seabreeze Inne, providing people with a safe roof over their heads.”

Terms of the lease and that extension permitted BC Housing, as the hospital foundation’s tenant, use of Seabreeze rooms to provide services — including housing — to individuals living there, in exchange for rent paid from BC Housing to LMHF.

But that lease ended on July 15, without a request for renewal, according to LMHF. BC Housing has not remitted rent for August or September. LMHF said despite this, the foundation had continued to cover costs for telephone, internet and cable services while residents remained. With the disconnection of those services, LMHF continues to cover costs of still-connected water and hydro.

Regardless of the outcome of disputes with the Residential Tenancy Branch, those at the Seabreeze face an uncertain future. Like all such laws, those protecting the rights of tenants cannot be circumvented or negotiated away by contract; but at whose expense those protections are implemented might be.

In negotiating the June extension of the lease, the Provincial Rental Housing Corporation agreed to indemnify the hospital foundation against any claims arising from residents pursuant to the Residential Tenancy Act. The lease amendment, reviewed by Driftwood staff, specifies BC Housing’s obligations would include indemnifying LMHF against claims made by residents who were present at the Seabreeze prior to Feb. 20 — when the original lease took effect.

BC Housing acknowledged they were aware of the Residential Tenancy Board filings, but declined to comment on residential tenancy laws, or the application of the Residential Tenancy Act with respect to the individuals residing at the Seabreeze, letting stand a Sept. 9 statement reiterating their commitment to the Kings Lane property.

“Everyone staying at the Seabreeze Inne has been offered a home at Kings Lane,” according to BC Housing, “and will be able to stay there until construction at the new Drake Road supportive housing building is complete.”

The 161 Drake Road project is a planned 28-unit purpose-built permanent supportive housing endeavour, to be built on land owned by the Capital Regional District. The project is described by a BC Housing factsheet as being in a “pre-development” stage.

GISRA has indicated openness to renewal of the Kings Lane lease with BC Housing beyond March 2023, if its own plans for the land — construction of a new seniors’ housing development — have not commenced by that time.

DAISSI shares bright spots, challenges

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Like many not-for-profit groups, DAISSI — Diverse and Inclusive Salt Spring Island — is in “soft restart” mode following the effects of the pandemic, which saw group activities either stop, shift to Zoom or to outdoor events with limited numbers. 

The popular Pride parade and week of Pride activities has not occurred since 2019, and the group had already started shifting away from that format before COVID-19. 

But DAISSI will have a big presence in this Saturday’s Community Procession — part of On The Rise: An Arts Festival Navigating Climate Grief and Action — and is hosting the final event in the month-long festival, the Pride On The Rise Dance at the Farmers’ Institute on Saturday, Oct. 1. (See separate story.) 

DAISSI president Juli Mallett and treasurer/volunteer coordinator Jean Burgess sat down with the Driftwood last week to talk about the highlights and challenges for DAISSI in the past year, and what they hope to see going forward. 

Perhaps the most exciting part of the last year was a high level of youth engagement, which saw DAISSI respond to requests from youth and parents to provide help with specific issues and to help facilitate events. Those included the 2022 youth Pride event at the high school and a pop-up dance at Beaver Point Hall. 

Burgess said, “One of the trans parents came to me [after the dance] and said, ‘What can I do to help DAISSI?  This is the first time I’ve been in a safe space since I moved onto the island with my partner and kids.’”

Youth also organized a picnic in Centennial Park and have an event planned for the last Thursday of this month at the Core Inn. 

Then there were the young people who were part of a DAISSI contingent in the Victoria Pride Parade in June, who ended up riding in the back of Burgess’ old truck. It was the first Pride parade for several of them, said Burgess, and the experience was transformative. 

“The DAISSI banner was being carried in front of the truck, and the crowd recognized Salt Spring. And they saw the trans placard being held up in the truck, and they saw it was youth and there was this uproar of applause and cheering.” 

The Salt Spring youth became more confident as the procession continued, even inviting peers from the crowd to come over to the truck to share high-fives.

Unfortunately, it was a negative incident that prompted DAISSI to be advocating for youth in the first place: a Pride flag was burned at Gulf Islands Secondary School (GISS) during a youth Pride event there in 2021. Mallett said that obviously caused significant anxiety for some GISS students, and did lead to productive discussions in the past school year, especially thanks to Ryan Massey (who as of August is the new GISS principal). That led to DAISSI reps being invited to talk to staff about gender transition and pronoun issues, for example.

“There’s this real mix of things that are really easy to change,” Mallett said. “And there’s people who are really interested in responding to that positively. But then there’s basic things that we’re having a harder time moving on, that we are continuing to be asked to be involved in advocating for.”

One of those issues is getting gender neutral washrooms in place at GISS. At present there is only a single gender-neutral stall, which is not enough to serve students who need it. 

“We’ve heard some pretty disturbing stories,” said Mallett. “There’s one trans youth I’ve spoken with on the island a fair amount who says, ‘I get bullied and beat up if I go into the girls room; I get bullied and beat up if I go into the boys room, and I just want to be able to use the washroom. I just want to be able to pee somewhere.’” 

While the school board and administration have stated a desire to provide additional gender-neutral washrooms at GISS, it has not happened yet. 

Lack of gender-neutral washrooms in the wider community, as well as harassment of trans individuals, is another issue, especially for those who are housing insecure. 

DAISSI heard that the level of harassment trans people face on the streets every day meant that in some cases they stopped the transitioning process or left the community “because they simply felt so unsafe,” said Mallett.

Burgess and Mallett note that transgender people are taking the brunt of a blacklash against increased visibility in recent years, with people in QAnon conspiracy circles and elsewhere falsely accusing them of being pedophiles and grooming heterosexual children to become trans. B.C. school districts, including SD64, have been pressured by these same circles to back away from trans-inclusive education, and some local election candidates in B.C. are running with strong anti-trans and anti-equal rights messages.

“It’s very distressing,” said Burgess, “and it’s kind of a flashback for me because that’s what I was told when I was 17, that people were ‘grooming’ me to become a lesbian. It’s absurd but that’s always a familiar story. And then if people pick up on that story through misinformation, or just ill will, it becomes harmful as well as distressing.” 

Burgess and Mallett stress the importance of standing up to the misinformation, discrimination against and harassment of trans individuals in the community.

“It feels like they’re trying to establish a beachhead, or an outpost to build from, and it’s like in the U.S., where we see these things around women’s rights and trans rights,” said Mallett. “There is this gradual eroding of rights, and as they go for the next group on the list, you can’t be complacent.”

Burgess said the loss of volunteers due to the pandemic has meant DAISSI must work on coalition building with other groups, as is being done with Transition Salt Spring, Salt Spring Arts and Graffiti Theatre to offer the Pride On The Rise Dance on Oct. 1. 

The challenges of being an all-volunteer organization have become more apparent in the past year, said Burgess and Mallett, as they are called upon to respond to immediate community needs without paid staff. For example, DAISSI will get people asking “What can we do about somebody who’s spreading transphobic memes on a Facebook group?” But beyond continuing to educate the community, the society isn’t resourced enough to take specific action. 

“There has to be a community that’s prepared to say, ‘we can’t let this happen.’ And so we’re sort of exploring what it would take to do that,” said Mallett. 

She said offering something like active bystander training to help people feel comfortable intervening safely when they witness harassment or violence is definitely desired by DAISSI, but would require funding and access to expertise the group does not currently have.

Similarly, DAISSI would like to do more for older 2SLGBTQAI+ community members with the challenges of aging, as many do not have the support of family members when they need it the most.  

In terms of reaching that segment of the island, the pandemic created an opportunity for online connection that has been positive, plus offering small intimate events often more suited to elders, observed Mallett, and showed that DAISSI can adapt to changing circumstances.

Continued adaptation and collaboration with others will be a focus for DAISSI in coming years. 

“It can’t be anymore that we do things in our silos for groups that are of a special interest,” said Mallett. “It has to be that we recognize our interdependence and the intersections of our needs, and support each other to create spaces in which our needs can be met, and to create events that are sustainable and that are not dependent on having the most access to resources.”

Parade and Mateada Convergence rise up for climate action

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SUBMITTED BY TRANSITION SS 

Salt Springers will see a creative expression of climate grief and action with a ‘community procession’ through Ganges on Saturday, Sept. 24 at 1 p.m.

Part of the On The Rise Climate Action Arts Festival, the procession is a chance for groups and individuals to express their own responses to climate change by joining the procession or coming down to watch it wend its way through the downtown. It will end up in the parking lot between the Mateada, Barb’s Buns and Transitions Thrift Store for the Mateada Convergence, a family-friendly afternoon and evening concert and community celebration, free and open to all.

Community members and groups are all welcome to join the procession with any type of costume, signage, puppets, art or performance that describes their feelings about climate change at this time. Participants are encouraged to be super creative and use anything at their disposal to express themselves about the losses, the hope, the opportunities, the solutions and the resilience of Salt Spring to the increasing impacts of climate change. Contingents from community groups are particularly welcome.

To join in on the procession, meet at Mahon Hall at 12:30 p.m. on Sept. 24 to muster for a 40-minute procession through the town. There will be support systems in place to ensure a safe and fun experience for both viewers and participants. For more information, contact info@transitionsaltspring.com.

The On The Rise Festival is a co-creation of Transition Salt Spring, Graffiti Theatre and Salt Spring Arts.

Fowl shine at Fall Fair

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It was our third try to hold the American Poultry Association (APA) B.C. provincial show and it was well worth the wait!  

The Sept. 10 Salt Spring Island show was held at the busy Salt Spring Fall Fair and welcomed 183 birds, 17 adult exhibitors and 18 junior exhibitors. With thousands of people through the gate, the poultry show was a highlight for all exhibitors, showing off 27 breeds of poultry, including chickens, ducks, geese and turkeys. 

Clayton Botkin was our APA judge and offered the chance for feedback and learning to our junior exhibitors and volunteers. As many of our club members are new to APA shows, this was a huge benefit for everyone involved.

Last year’s winner, Izzy Nowell, showed up with a new flock of bantam Rhode Island Reds (RIR) and again took the championship with an excellent cockerel hatched this spring. He was a clear winner and had Nowell taking open grand champion (CH) and junior champion. Her cockerel won CH bantam, CH single comb clean legged (SCCL) and CH RIR. Another cockerel took reserve bantam and JR reserve (RES) champion (RES.SCCL). Nowell is excited to bring her group of RIR to the Canadian national show in October and hopes to do Salt Spring Island proud.

Reserve champion was Ramona Trombley’s bantam call drake. Trombley joined us from Cowichan and we were thrilled to welcome her for the day to the island. The call took champion waterfowl, with Salt Springer Elsie Born’s Toulouse gander having reserve waterfowl. 

Champion large fowl was given to Ted Baker’s Rhode Island Red hen (CH American) and reserve large fowl went to a pretty black australorp pullet (CH English) from Ali Yildizalp.  

With only one turkey in the show, Anezka Sikora’s bourbon red was a clear winner. At seven years of age, he still knew how to show off and gobbled away all weekend, bringing in the fans.

Champion continental was given to to Born’s Maran hen (reserve to Julie Nowell’s salmon Faverolle hen), champion Mediterranean to Baker’s black leghorn pullet (reserve to Tilly Buck’s light brown leghorn hen) and champion all other standard breeds to Rainie Bevilacqua’s silver phoenix pullet (reserve to Julie Nowell, silver phoenix cock). 

Champion SCCL and reserve went to two of Izzy Nowell’s bantam RIR cockerels and champion rose comb clean legged to Ramona Trombley’s partridge wyandotte pullets. Champion feather legged went to junior Heidi Magnus Fischer’s lovely little Belgian bearded d’uccle pullet (reserve to Dorothy Copeland’s Belgian bearded d’uccle cockerel). 

We had a small waterfowl showing, with only nine entries. Junior large fowl went to Oliver Thring and his australorp pullet, and reserve junior large fowl to Buck and her light brown leghorn hen. We had no junior waterfowl entries this year. 

We had 10 pet class birds entered with Robin Magnus Fischer taking champion with a beautiful RIR bantam pullet in excellent condition, and Bryn Pyper bringing in reserve.

The poultry club was excited to be able to share such a diverse and exciting range of poultry to the island this year.