Home Blog Page 289

GARNER, Mary-Ann

Mary-Ann Garner
Sept. 3, 1942 – Sept. 3, 2021
 
It is with great sadness that we announce the passing of Mary-Ann Garner on September 3, 2021, after a long battle with dementia.

Mary-Ann was born in Duncan, BC and was the only daughter of three children. She was predeceased by her brother, Jimmy, and is survived by her brother, Kenny. She leaves behind her children; Shona, Kara and Cameron as well as her beloved grand-daughter, Rachel.

Her passion for animals great and small led her to run a large farm on Galiano Island. She was best known for breeding and showing Arabian horses. She moved to Langley and continued the farm life. Eventually, Mary-Ann returned to Galiano in retirement.

Mary-Ann was best known for her big smile and her sense of humour. She will be greatly missed by her family and friends.

Her family would like to thank the wonderful staff at Hawthorne Seniors Care Community for their care of Mary-Ann.

In lieu of flowers, donations can be made to the Alzheimer Society of British Columbia, or any charity of your choice.

Ministerial order bans new dock applications in Gulf Islands

0

An order by the B.C. Ministry of Forests, Lands, Natural Resource Operations and Rural Development that went into effect Tuesday will prohibit new applications for private moorage within the southern Gulf Islands and the southeast shoreline of Vancouver Island for the next two years. 

The order by Forests Minister Katrine Conroy, signed on Monday, went into immediate effect the following day and covers the period from Aug. 24, 2021 to Aug. 23, 2023. 

According to the ministry’s rationale for the closure, private moorages can cause restricted access to foreshore and marine areas; increase turbidity from dock construction and increased boat traffic; increase contamination from dock materials such as treated timber and corrosion; increase shading to fish and fish habitat; and cause direct disturbance to marine resources such as kelp, eelgrass and clam beds.

“The cumulative impact of the proliferation of private moorage docks on southern Vancouver Island and the Gulf Islands has not been adequately characterized or measured. This has led to multi-year delays to decisions on private moorage applications,” the ministry states on its website. 

“The prohibition provides time to assess the cumulative impacts of existing and proposed private moorages on the southern Vancouver Island and Gulf Islands foreshore and marine environments, providing a pathway to decisions on private moorage applications currently in inventory and on new applications that may be accepted at the conclusion of the prohibition.”

The prohibition does not apply to applications for new private moorage where road access to an upland property does not exist, nor to applications to replace or assign an existing permission, lease, or licence for private moorage within the existing tenure boundary.

The Islands Trust has been considering a ban on new private docks within the entire Trust area as part of an update to its guiding policy statement. Draft amendments proposed by the Trust Programs Committee provoked considerable opposition from waterfront property owners and marine construction firms earlier this year. 

Find the ministerial order and a map of the prohibition zone here

Viewpoint: What are election candidates’ positions on protecting ancient forests?

0

By BRIAN SMALLSHAW

The federal election announced on Aug. 15 will be the climate change election, and as a citizen of British Columbia I would like to hear from all parties and their candidates in this riding about how the protection of the last of the ancient forests of coastal B.C. fits into their climate change plans.

We know that in addition to being places of majestic beauty, spiritual inspiration and remarkable biological diversity, ancient forests like the one at Fairy Creek are enormous carbon sinks. When they are cut, and especially when they are clearcut, a huge amount of carbon is released into the atmosphere; the resulting lumber continues to sequester carbon, but the waste that is left behind, the sawdust, the emissions from decay and burning amount to well over half of the carbon contained in the original forest. 

Even worse, after old-growth forests are clearcut the land loses much of its ability to retain moisture and the second-growth forests that follow are much more susceptible to forest fires, which when they occur are huge emitters of carbon, not to mention their disastrous impact on air quality.

In British Columbia active logging of old-growth forests continues, despite the fact that very little of the area containing the original bottomland giants has not been logged. How much actually remains is a subject of some debate, but even the most generous estimates have it at less than 10 per cent of what once existed. Yet they continue to be clearcut, in many cases because the First Nations on whose land they reside are in such a state of economic deprivation that they are forced to sell off their most valuable assets to survive.

This is madness in a world where there are almost no ancient forests left, where people are clamouring for the spiritual rejuvenation from time spent in nature, and in a world that is literally on fire because of the climate change that has resulted from humanity’s carbon emissions. It is doubly mad when one considers the minimal cost of protecting these forests and the economic gains for everyone (except a few logging companies) that would result from their preservation. They are worth more standing.

So my question for the Greens, Liberals, Conservatives and NDP: If you form government after this election, what steps will you take to end all logging of ancient forests in coastal British Columbia, and Canada as a whole, and how will you ensure that the First Nations where these forests exist are economically advantaged by this ban?

The writer is a Salt Spring resident.

More funds needed for new emergency department campaign

0

Lady Minto Hospital Foundation members are thrilled with community response to the emergency department campaign so far, but need the donations to keep on flowing in order to meet their target. 

Some $1.3 million has been raised since the Strengthen Our Lifeline community fundraising campaign was launched on June 23, with $700,000 still required to meet the $2-million goal. 

LMHF executive director Roberta Martell said it’s been an incredible experience to go through the mail that comes in every day. 

“When you open the envelopes there can be $50, there can be $50,000; they can be lifelong donors, and lots of people are first-time donors, writing their stories about how important the emergency department has been to them and how it’s impacted their family, and they are giving what they can, whether it’s $50, $500 or $50,000. It’s impressive.”

Carol Biely, campaign committee chair, agrees that it’s “very humbling. It’s a wonderful feeling that we are doing something the community really really cares about to get us to this point so quickly. It really shows the commitment to the hospital and the love of the hospital in the community.”

The heartfelt stories accompanying many donations has been an unexpected facet of the campaign.

“It is really giving people an outlet for their gratitude and I think that is really important,” said Biely.

A number of donations have also been received from people in other communities who have been treated at Lady Minto Hospital. 

“It’s amazing to see the love not only from Salt Spring but from other communities,” said Martell. 

With all funds hopefully secured by Thanksgiving, the $10.4-million, 420-square-metre (4,500-square-foot) project will be put out to tender by mid-October. 

LMHF chair Dave Taylor said the detailed design process is now complete and everything is right on schedule. 

“I think our projection of shovels in the ground early in the new year is a good one,” he said. 

Construction time is an estimated 15 months. 

The foundation has committed to providing $7.4 million of the total cost, with the Capital Regional Housing District adding $3 million. 

The new department will double the number of acute and primary care patients that can be treated at one time, will have a mental health and substance use treatment room, medication area, dedicated triage desk, ambulance bay, accessible washrooms, decontamination site and a larger patient and family waiting area. 

Biely stresses how everyone wants to improve the working conditions for the much-valued hospital staff by providing the new facility. 

“I don’t know how they manage when they have two or three people on gurneys coming in,” she said. “And a lot of the stories I hear are about the need for privacy. The staff are so good and respectful about that but there is only so much they can do in that space. We need to support the staff.”  

People can donate online, via etransfer, with cheques sent by mail, do share donations or give cash. All donations over $20 receive tax receipts. 

The website for more details is ladymintofoundation.com and the office phone number is 250-538-4845.

Thermometer-image signs will be in place around the community to report on progress towards the $10.4-million goal. 

“We just want to say, ‘Help us over the top, everybody!” said Biely. 

Outdoor music in park concert series

Live musical performances will return to Centennial Park just in time for the end of summer thanks to a free concert series presented by Salt Spring Arts.

The Summer Outdoor Concert Series features back-to-back evenings of live music for two weekends, with shows running Thursday to Saturday, Aug. 26 to 28 and Sept. 9 to 11 from 6 to 8 p.m.

“There has never been a better time to support our music community, and here we get the chance to celebrate 15 local acts with six free concerts in the park,” Salt Spring Arts states in a press release. 

Salt Spring Arts previously hosted six evening concerts in Centennial Park In 2019. The series showcased touring B.C. musicians with local opening arts. This year’s concerts focus entirely on Salt Spring Island musicians and groups. 

The Summer Outdoor Concert Series presents a diverse collection of musical acts, showcasing genres from punk rock to traditional bluegrass and more. This coming weekend’s concerts will feature local acts Élisa & Blair, Sharon Bailey (Thursday), Hownd and The Buck Dodgers Stringband (Friday) and S.K. Wellington and The Myrtle Sisters on Saturday. 

The September weekend event will include more live local music, including a special Nashville-style writers’ round hosted by Valdy on Sept. 10. 

“We all know how difficult this past year has been for all of us, especially the arts community,” the Salt Spring Arts Council states. 

“These events are designed to support a broad array of entirely local talent, bringing Salt Spring together in a central location — from families to seniors, tourists and everyone in between.”

All concerts are free with donations collected to support the presentation of the series. Audience members are encouraged to bring blankets, lawn chairs and snacks to enjoy a full evening out.

To see the complete schedule, visit www.ssartscouncil.com

Nobody Asked Me But: Buzzwords unpack a lack of linguistic imagination

2

Here are the first couple of lines of a song written approximately a century ago: “Pack up all my cares and woes, here I go, singing low, bye bye blackbird.” 

Compare these lyrics to those of another song that has about the same vintage: “Pack up your troubles in your old kit bag and smile, smile, smile.”

What do both these songs have in common? Obviously, they both refer to the act of packing away negative feelings and concerns in order to allow a more hopeful and optimistic state of mind to appear.

So much for the act of packing. After the hundred years or so since these tunes were popular, we find that nobody packs anymore. The buzzword making the rounds today is “unpack.” I guess you can still unpack your suitcase or groceries, but the word is used mainly to describe what you do with thoughts, fears, feelings, emotions, frustrations and grief.

“Unpack” has replaced words we once used, such as analyze or examine, to describe the process of breaking down concepts into their component parts in order to better understand them. In fact, it’s a rarity today to hear an interview with any kind of authority on anything without having the word “unpack” pop up.

That’s not to say that unpacking is a spanking new digital creation. No, even William Shakespeare, back in the 16th century, had his protagonist, Hamlet, proclaim “unpack my heart with words” as he attempted to deal with his malaise of inaction. So even though the word has been around for a long time, it’s the overuse of the word and its “buzzwordiness” that irks this listener.

Another buzzword making the rounds recently is “journey.” Nobody ever takes a trip anymore. No, a simple walk down to the corner 7-Eleven for a litre of milk is now described as a mystical, life-altering journey of self-discovery. Coffee and a donut at Tim Hortons is a mind-expanding journey towards actualization of your identity. Even your morning stumble through the kitchen to check for leftovers in the refrigerator is now a door-opening journey to reconcile past experiences.

Don’t get me wrong. I understand that new words and expressions come into use while others become archaic and fall into the language waste basket. Currently, there are approximately half a million words in the English language, although I remember when I was a teen that I could get by on a couple of dozen monosyllabic words and a few grunts.

Some words explode on the scene, splash themselves into every conversation, and then exit stage left almost as quickly. When was the last time you heard “groovy?” Or “grok?” Have you recently had the occasion to feel “uptight?” How good does something have to be before you describe it as “outasight?” While once pervading every other nook and cranny of our language, expressions such as “I can dig it” and “weapons of mass destruction” are now only heard as the butts of jokes.

Other overworked expressions seem to find a way of sticking around no matter how tired and hackneyed they get. At the end of the day, when will people stop using “at the end of the day” instead of simply saying “finally?” What’s wrong with saying “now” instead of “at this point in time?” Can we please stop saying “moving forward” and acknowledge the fact that forward is the only direction that time knows how to move?

When it comes to overworked clichés, especially here on Salt Spring, “wellness” takes the proverbial cake. If I hear that term used instead of health one more time, I’m going to have to realign somebody’s chakras. Another buzz-phrase that gets my goat is “think outside the box.” Hey, if you so appreciate the art of originality, how come you can’t come up with another expression that means to think unconventionally?

Let’s look at the word “grow.” I like to garden. I spend much of my time growing carrots and beans. It takes sunshine, water and good soil nutrients to get an excellent harvest. I have no idea what it takes to grow the economy, grow your business, or grow the community. Yet, politicians spend half their campaign speeches extolling the virtues of all these abstract nebulae they promise to grow.

Lately, an expression that has elbowed its way to the front of the buzzword line is “the new normal.” Ostensibly, this expression implies that some novel behaviour or phenomenon has replaced another previously accepted one and is now looked upon as normal. For instance, wearing a mask when entering a bank may be considered the new normal, whereas a decade ago it would have got you a sentence of 10 to 15 years with time off for good behaviour.

Some words make it into the English language by piggybacking on words that are already accepted. For instance, “indigenous” is a term used to describe something or someone native to or belonging naturally to a specific place or locale. Because some people tend to think they will appear more intelligent if they use words containing more syllables, words as “indigenousness” and “indigenousity” have wormed their way into our lexicon. It’s only a matter of time before we start hearing “indigenousityness” bandied about.

I can only guess at the meanings of some other recent terms that are banging at the door to get into the English language. “Bouncebackability” could be a measure of the quality of a basketball or possibly the resilience of someone who has received a hundred consecutive job application rejections. 

When it comes to “eco-bling,” your guess is as good as mine. 

Nobody asked me, but my most recently hated buzzword expression is “good question” or “that’s a great question.” It is usually used by people who have been asked a question for which they have no answer. It is employed as a stalling tactic in the hope that in the second or two it takes to utter this phrase, something will come along to save them from the inevitable embarrassment that is about to become evident. Something like a gigantic asteroid unpacking itself into planet Earth. At which point, all of these irritations of mine become absolutely moot. Unpack that thought into your eco-bling.

Trans youth offered support in community

0

BY THE DAISSI BOARD

We on the board of Diverse and Inclusive Salt Spring Island, our island’s LGBTQ2SIA+ community organization, wish to publicly respond to discussions going on across our island about some very public incidents which have been deeply disturbing for those of us who are trans, and our allies, within the queer community and beyond it.  

We have no desire to repeat and address in a detailed way the deeply upsetting content, nor to make this about calling out individual people, when the more troubling fact is that incidents of transphobia are all-too-widespread on Salt Spring, and insidious transphobic beliefs are present in all parts of our community.

We must have a zero tolerance policy for transphobia. In saying that, we are all painfully familiar with the inevitable responses, with hand-wringing concern about free speech and the honest debate of ideas. There are, indeed, interesting conversations to be had about gender and the construction of biological sex, but they do not begin with the assertion of a fixed hierarchy, unscientific statements about the nature of human biology, and sentimental appeals for a return to the way things used to be — and, in fact, never really were.

Those whose gender and sexual biology varies from the norm have always been present in society, and throughout the natural world, but our existence is routinely denied, minimized or pathologized.  What is different now from the world some of us grew up in is that the attempts to suppress our existence and limit our behaviour to uphold a false reality are failing. We are, all of us, confronted with new possibilities for what gender, sex and sexuality might mean, and the possibility that things could have been different all along. This is destabilizing, and can feel rightly unsettling, but that calls for us to develop and learn, not to retreat into what we were raised to believe, and to condemn those who stir up cognitive dissonance for us about the truths we thought we knew.

Too often we see our children and youth being named as a cause for concern and caution, even as those who claim to be speaking to protect them put them in harm’s way, deny their lived experience, and seek to work against their self-exploration, self-expression and liberation — and even against their safety in our community. Demanding that younger generations constrain their existence so that we can maintain our illusions about the world is unacceptable, and when this is done in a way that makes children vulnerable, subjects them to bullying or makes them feel unsafe when around adults in positions of leadership in our community, that is destructive. It is destructive for those children, and it diminishes those adults who are deprived of the opportunity to learn from those who are growing up in a world full of more possibility than many of us ever dreamt possible.

The pandemic has frayed all of our nerves, and stretched our resources thin, but if we are the community we claim to be, we will work to be kinder and gentler with our youth, and to give less airtime to reactionary, hateful views which deny the lived experience of our trans and queer population, young and old. 

There is so much to be learned here, and DAISSI is interested in facilitated conversations where all members of the community can have opportunities to have deep conversations about challenging realities. There are very real discussions to be had about how our ideas about social gender and biological sex have been shaped by colonialism, by our political systems and by patriarchy.

We want to provide a forum for those conversations — which are not conversations about whether trans people should be “allowed” to transition, or to exist in public, or any of the other absurd and hateful conversations that mask themselves as intellectual discourse, but are nothing more than hate. We want to experience our collective awakening to the wideness and the wildness of the natural world, and to have the opportunity to listen to the voices of our youth who are experiencing and creating a new world. It is a gift to glimpse the wonder of the world as it really is, and not as we imagine it to be, and it is invigorating to see the future through the eyes of those who will make it. We hope that once the post-pandemic normal emerges, you will join us for some conversations and talks in which we can all share a deeper experience of the bigger picture.

Until then, and always, we want trans individuals across the island, of all ages but particularly our youth, to know that there are many of us who are committed to walking this journey together. We do it clumsily at times, but we make efforts to do our best, and we begin always from a place of honouring, respecting, and loving one another, and our lived experience. If you feel alone, you are not. If you fear that the world is turning against you, and that those who work for your extermination are winning, it is not so, and we will not let it be so. Hateful speech may make a lot of noise, and it always bears more heat than light, but the truth of your existence, of our existence, will not be erased.

And to our trans youth especially, know that we stand with you. We are committed to the transformation of our community, and we will have your back as you speak and live your truth. Tell us what you need from us, and know that we will continue to work to transform this community, and to reject transphobia in all its guises as it so often — too often — appears in our community.

May we walk together into a better world than the one we have known.

DAISSI board members are Jean Burgess, Karen Cunningham, Juli Mallett, Shellyse Szakac and Bill Turner.

Local all-candidates meeting set for Sept. 7

2

The Salt Spring Forum has organized a virtual all-candidates debate for the federal election in the Saanich-Gulf Islands riding. 

The event will take place on Tuesday, Sept. 7 at 7 p.m. with the Zoom link available on the www.saltspringforum.com website closer to the date. 

Forum manager Richard Steel said the organization has decided to allow only parties with sitting MPs in the House to participate. The candidates are incumbent Elizabeth May (Green), Sherri Moore-Arbour (Liberal), David Busch (Conservative) and Sabina Singh (NDP).

As of Aug. 24, other declared candidates are David Hilderman for the People’s Party of Canada and Dock Currie for the Communist Party of Canada. 

Singh, Busch and May ran in the last election held in October of 2019, and May won the seat with 49.09 per cent of the popular vote.

Voting eligibility and methods, and poll location dates and details will be available at elections.ca. Advance poll locations, dates and times will also be on voting cards sent in the mail to all registered voters. 

When parliament was dissolved, the Liberals had 155 seats, the Conservatives 119, the Bloc Quebecois 32, the NDP 24 and the Greens two. Five MPs were independents and one seat was vacant.

Scooter driver injured in Crash

0

Lower Ganges Road was closed to traffic between Atkins and Booth Canal roads for over an hour on Friday afternoon while island emergency service providers attended to a crash that sent one driver to hospital off-island.

According to Salt Spring RCMP,  the crash involved a female moped driver travelling north toward Central who crossed the centre line into oncoming traffic and then collided with a pick-up truck that was travelling south. 

“The rider of the moped was visiting Salt Spring Island with her family from Alberta. She was airlifted to Victoria with serious but non-life-threatening injuries,” said RCMP Sgt. Clive Seabrook.

Salt Spring Fire Rescue Capt. Mitchell Sherrin reported the fire department was called out around 1:30 p.m. Members assisted at the crash site and with traffic control, while another team prepared Portlock Park as a landing site for the air ambulance.

Portlock Park was used as the landing area because the helipad at Lady Minto Hospital is under renovation until at least until Aug. 30, Sherrin explained. 

In addition to Salt Spring Fire Rescue and RCMP, BC Ambulance paramedics and personnel from road maintenance contractor Emcon Services were also on scene. 

In other police news this week, RCMP are recommending charges against a Salt Spring man who brandished a replica handgun in Ganges on Thursday.

Seabrook said RCMP received a report of two men arguing on the Centennial Wharf on Aug. 19. Witnesses reported seeing one of the men retrieve what appeared to be a handgun and point it at the other man.

“Thanks to a witness who quickly called 911 and provided a detailed description of the suspect, Salt Spring RCMP located the male suspect a short distance from the dock,” Seabrook reported. “The suspect was taken into custody without incident; neither of the two males were injured.” 

The suspect was searched and a replica pellet handgun was seized. Charges of uttering threats and possession of a weapon for a dangerous purpose are being recommended. The suspect is due to appear in Ganges Provincial Court on Nov. 19.

For more fire news, see the Aug. 25, 2021 issue of the Driftwood newspaper or subscribe online.

Housing solution no easy fix, says trustee Grove

0

The dire need for housing of all sorts formed a major theme of discussion at Friday’s ASK Salt Spring event, where Islands Trust trustee Peter Grove was guest speaker.

Subbing in for regular Trust representative Laura Patrick, Grove said in his opening address that he realized housing was a top concern for islanders and that it’s a concern for the Salt Spring Local Trust Committee as well. However, he warned that any solutions will not be quick ones. 

“It’s not going to be an easy fix, and anybody that’s telling you it’s an easy fix is misleading you,” Grove said. “I’m not sure what it’s going to take but this problem is not going to go away, in my view.”

Grove’s opinion is that Salt Spring is one of the most desirable places to live in all of Canada for someone looking for a rural setting. 

“And I worry that the more homes get built, the more people who will come, so I don’t know what the answer is,” he said. 

Grove also observed that communities up and down Vancouver Island, as well as Vancouver and Victoria, have similar problems to Salt Spring with very little housing stock, what there is being over-priced, and homeless populations growing. The Islands Trust is limited in how it can help through land-use decisions, he said, so it’s up to other local governments like the Capital Regional District to work with BC Housing to create new housing units.

Grove agreed there is more the Salt Spring Local Trust Committee could do. The LTC has assembled a housing task force from local citizens to work on the issue, but Grove said the members are finding it won’t be as easy as they thought to make big changes. 

“I worry about false expectations … there have been false expectations out there about what can be done and I worry about that,” he said. “There are definitely things that can be done to alleviate and improve the situation, but it’s not going to be a fix-all.”

The immediate effects of the housing crisis were brought into sharp focus by one of the meeting participants who identified himself just as Ryan, and asked why local governments were not taking creative steps to deal with the immediate problem.

“My concern is you’re worried about building houses and everything — I’m homeless here. I work hard and I don’t have a place to live. Why don’t you think about alternatives, because there are a lot of people here,” he said.

The man suggested establishing a legal encampment with portable toilets and a screening process for working residents, which would serve a different population than the groups that hang around and party in Centennial Park, he suggested. 

“That’s an easy alternative to help a lot of the problem, because there are a lot of people that work hard, and they’re bushwhacking,” he said.

ASK Salt Spring moderator Gayle Baker noted the Capital Regional District had been hoping to include something like that on property it owns and has slated for affordable housing on Drake Road. She said BC Housing, which would potentially fund that housing project, would not allow an encampment on the same property. 

Grove suggested an encampment could be possible on another property, depending on where it was located and the zoning.

Other participants speaking on Friday suggested the housing task force members are getting frustrated by the process and because they aren’t permitted to meet outside of the official structure. Grove explained that due process must be followed, including advertising public meetings and having minutes kept.

“Transparency is what we’re all about. It’s ponderous and it’s frustrating, but it’s what we have to work with and we have to do the best we can with it, but I am very hopeful for that committee,” Grove said.