Home Blog Page 296

Salt Spring resort blaze challenges fire crews

2

Salt Spring Fire-Rescue crews battled a major blaze at a multi-storey structure at Mineral Springs Resort on North Beach Road on Monday night. 

Some 22 members responded to the 6:45 p.m. call that came on a day of record-breaking 40-degree C. heat on the island. 

All of the fire department’s eight fire trucks were required for the nine-hour operation, which involved shuttling more than 30,000 gallons of water from St. Mary Lake to the site. 

“Due to the distance from the fire hall, the building construction and the abnormal temperatures, fire growth was rapid, and the initial crew faced an entrenched working fire,” said Acting Fire Chief Jamie Holmes. “The four-storey building was compartmentalized and built down a slope, making access more difficult.” 

No one was inside the building when the fire was detected, and the blaze was prevented from spreading to the surrounding forest. No injuries were reported.

Holmes said the fire’s cause is under investigation and fire-rescue personnel will continue to monitor the site for hot spots. 

BURRIDGE, Anthony Malcolm

ANTHONY MALCOLM BURRIDGE

July 29, 1930 – June 29, 2021

Tony was a devoted husband to Betty for nearly seventy years; a father to three children: Wendy and her family: Tom, James and Susan; Kathy, with Thomas, Christel and Ron; and David with Sherri, Paul, Alana and Chelsea; and great-grandfather of 9, scattered across Alberta, Australia and Salt Spring Island. Ten years ago Tony and his twin sister Anne Ayre also met their half-brother John Clare in England – a relationship that has enriched their lives, as well as adding nieces and nephews in the UK to those spread across North America.

Tony was born in Vancouver, where he and Anne made friends with Betty and Bill Jenkins, who moved to Ottawa during the war. Tony contacted Bill when he went to Ottawa one university summer holidays, met Betty again – and that was that! He joined the University Air Training Plan while at U.B.C. in 1950, briefly flew DC3’s for CP Air, then joined the RCAF as a Flying Officer in 1954.

In 1956 the squadron was transferred to Marville, France to provide all weather defence for NATO; two years later Tony was transferred to an intelligence job at Air Defence Headquarters in Metz, France. He and Betty loved their time in France, using it to explore much of Europe and form lifelong friendships. After postings to Penhold, Alberta, NORAD Headquarters in Colorado Springs, Toronto and Nova Scotia, he retired in 1976. 

Although he loved flying, Tony was also a passionate sailor, perhaps stemming from his early childhood on a boat in Vancouver harbour. Later, in Colorado, he involved all the family in building a ten-metre sloop which was finished in the backyard in Scarborough, launched at Trenton, and for her maiden voyage, sailed down the St. Lawrence to Shediac, NB – complete with three children, two dogs and two guinea pigs. (The horse, who had also travelled from Colorado to Toronto, was trailered separately.) For three years home was an Annapolis Valley farm, where another four horses and a cat were added to the family. On transferring to Halifax, he and Betty, with son David, started building Takuli, a 13-metre cutter, to fulfill a lifelong ambition of ocean sailing. In 1977 the three of them, with another crew member, two dogs and a cat, set sail for the Caribbean, then through the Panama Canal, to the Galapagos Islands and across the Pacific to Hawaii before eventually arriving on Salt Spring.

While still living on the boat, they began building their house on Sunset Drive; Tony then went on to another career as a house builder, aided by the experience of renovating the many houses the family had lived in during his air force career. Eventually he sold Takuli, bought a smaller sailboat, and for Betty’s 80th birthday rebuilt a Nordic Tug to continue exploring the Gulf Islands.   

Tony was also a committed dog lover and was rarely without a dog in his life – from Rabiot, the French cart dog his rum-runner father rescued in Mexico, through many dachshunds to his last little Missy, who is providing Betty with great comfort now. However, to his children and grandchildren, his most noted dog was Freda’s great-great-great grandfather, the hero of many tales on long car trips and bedtime stories. 

Tony was an individual: courageous, loving, curious and innovative.  He will be fiercely missed.

Barbara Joan Knoblauch (nee MacLean)

Barbara Joan Knoblauch (nee MacLean)
1928-2021

Barbara was born on 21 September 1928 and passed peacefully on 30 June 2021 at Lady Minto Hospital at the age of 92. She was born in Fairview, Alberta to parents Howard A MacLean (deceased 1956) and Barbara C. MacLean (Potter) (deceased 1992).

She graduated in 1951 from Misericordia Hospital School of Nursing, Edmonton, Alberta and enjoyed Nursing across Canada – from Nova Scotia to Vancouver Island, B.C. working for D.V.A., Operating Room Nurse, Obstetrics and Geriatrics.

The family moved to Salt Spring Island in 1962, where she worked for Dr. Robert Dixon as his nurse/receptionist. It was a much smaller community at that time. She and the children moved to Pouce Coupe in 1971, where she worked as a nurse, and then they returned to Salt Spring in 1973 to live, with her commuting to work at the Saanich Peninsula Hospital for many years (working 12 hours shifts traveling to and fro after each shift). Between 1985 and 1991 she worked as Matron of St. Charles Manor Retirement Home in Victoria. These were some of her happiest nursing days caring for the patients.

Barbara loved her family and having the children bring their friends home (always welcoming them in at any time, day or night). She enjoyed the sunshine, travel, history and archeology.

Barbara is survived by children Joan Ingrid, Greg (Wendy), Dan, grandchildren Eric (Ashley) and Scott, along with her great-grandson Wyatt.

We would like to thank all the Home Support Staff who helped care for mom in her home, the doctors, nurses and all hospital staff who cared for her in her final days. In lieu of flowers please consider a donation to the Lady Minto Hospital, or a charity of your choice. No service as per Barbara’s request.

FOLLIET, Edythe Mildred

Edythe Mildred Folliet
Our dear mother passed away in her sleep in the early hours of 
June 30, 2021.

Edy, as she was known to all, was 88 years old and lived a very full and interesting life. Mom was a wife and mother, a singer, a song writer and an amazing baker to name but a few of her talents. She was fiercely independent and faced many challenges in her life. Her stoic approach to life’s unexpected turns made her a role model, second to none. Possessing the kindest of souls, an indomitable spirit and the ability to laugh every day, she left an indelible stamp on the lives of all who knew her.

Edythe Mildred Folliet is survived by her children, Janis Woode, Wendy Dallian and Victor Wasend, her siblings Hazel and Mae and three grand children, Andrew, Michael and Ellis.

A special thank you to Dr Ian Gummeson and all the staff at Greenwood’s for the kind and gentle care you showed Mom over the years.

We all love you Mom. Truly, you will be missed.

A celebration of life will be held at a later date.

More BC Ferries terminals to get free Wi-Fi

0

Gulf Islands ferry terminals are among those to benefit from better Wi-Fi service in the near future. 

Thanks to a contribution of up to $1.5 million from the provincial government’s Connecting British Columbia program to BC Ferries, terminals at Vesuvius Bay, Sturdies Bay, Long Harbour, Otter Bay and Lyall Harbour will have free Wi-Fi capability sometime before the end of October.  

“The addition of free Wi-Fi for BC Ferries’ customers at some of the smaller, more remote terminals is important for those who might not otherwise have cell service,” said Rob Fleming, Minister of Transportation and Infrastructure, in a June 25 press release. “It gives travellers an opportunity to connect before their voyage and brings this Wi-Fi service in line with what people receive at many of the larger terminals along the coast.”

Salt Spring Island Ferry Advisory Committee chair Harold Swierenga said, “Providing enhanced access to the internet at the terminals will be a major benefit to ferry passengers, particularly during peak season sailings. Access to the BC Ferries’ website and internet while at the terminal can be of particular assistance to visitors unfamiliar with the routes and schedules.”

Other terminals benefiting from the upgrade are Denman Island (west side), Buckley Bay, Heriot Bay, Whaletown, Descanso Bay, Alert Bay, Bella Bella, Port Hardy and Nanaimo Harbour.

When complete, the project will see 21 of BC Ferries’ 47 terminals able to provide free Wi-Fi service.  

Salt Spring RCMP looking for owner of unique hybrid bike

0

Salt Spring RCMP are looking for assistance from the public after storing a bike for almost a month.

On May 25 a concerned citizen contacted the Salt Spring RCMP stating that they had found the abandoned bike near Mouat Park.

This is a pretty unique and expensive bike, someone must be missing it,” said Salt Spring RCMP detachment commander Sgt. Clive Seabrook. “We’re hoping by asking the public for help and putting out the picture, someone will come to the detachment and claim it.”

Investigators have been in contact with the manufacturer of the bike, and have the serial number from it in an effort to locate the owner.

Anyone who knows who this bike belongs to, or is the rightful owner, should contact the Salt Spring RCMP at 250-537-5555.

Safety tips offered for extreme heat ahead

0

Community organizations on Salt Spring are urging everyone to stay safe and keep cool during the extreme heat wave predicted to start on Friday. 

Environment Canada has issued a warning indicating that regions in B.C. including Vancouver Island and the Gulf Islands are expected to see temperatures around 10 degrees higher than normal. The forecast has the mercury hitting 29 degrees Celsius on Friday and as high as 33 on Saturday and Sunday. Temperatures are predicted to remain in the high 20s through Tuesday. 

The Salt Spring Emergency Program is reminding people to stay hydrated and take other precautions.

“We encourage everyone to enjoy the weather in a safe way; remember to drink lots of water, apply sunscreen and stay out of the sun as required,” said program coordinator Charles Nash.

Nash also advises checking out Vancouver Coastal Health’s information on how to beat the heat online.

People are not the only ones who will be suffering during the heat wave and the BC SPCA is asking people to take special care when it comes to pets in cars. 

BC SPCA communications manager Lorie Chortyk reports, “Last year, the BC SPCA responded to more than 800 calls about animals in distress in hot cars. The temperature in a parked car, even in the shade with windows partially open, can rapidly reach a level that can seriously harm or even kill a pet.”

Because dogs have no sweat glands, they can only cool themselves by panting and by releasing heat through their paws.

“Dogs cannot withstand high temperatures for long periods, particularly older pets and brachycephalic breeds such as pugs, bulldogs, Boston terriers and others with compressed faces,” Chortyk said.

Salt Spring BC SPCA branch manager Jerry Lewandowski reminds people that his staff cannot break into locked cars to rescue at-risk pets and it is illegal for any member of the public to do so.

Anyone who sees a pet that may be in danger they should notify the RCMP or the SPCA call centre at 1-855-622-7722. Concerned people can also note the license plate and ask local business owners to page the driver. 

Pets that show signs of heat stroke should be moved immediately to a cool, shady place, wetted with cool water and fanned to promote evaporation. Ice should not be applied. Pets can drink some cool water and should be examined by a veterinarian.

Salt Spring emergency room appeal launched

0

Salt Spring residents are being asked to contribute to a new emergency department for the island’s hospital, as the Lady Minto Hospital Foundation kicks off a dedicated “Strengthen Our Lifeline” fundraising drive this week.

Plans to replace the current emergency room (ER) space have been underway for several years. While Island Health would not commit to capital funding for the project, when $3 million in Capital Regional Hospital District funds were secured last October, the LMHF decided to raise and contribute the remaining funds.

As of today, the 240-square-metre (4,500-square-foot) facility comes with a $10.4-million price tag. The LMHF is committed to providing $7.4 million of that total and still needs to raise $2 million from the broader community.

“We are asking the community at large to please get behind this and put us over the top so we can build the new ER, which we firmly believe will ultimately be of benefit to every single person on this island,” LMHF chair Dave Taylor told the Driftwood last week.

Anybody who has been in or around the current emergency department will know that the 63-year-old space is woefully inadequate, primarily due to its small size and configuration.
Carol Biely is a LMHF board member who is thrilled to be chairing the fundraising campaign committee for such an important project.

“Who hasn’t been in there and come away with three comments . . . ‘Oh boy, didn’t have much privacy in there! Second, how on earth do those wonderful staff work in that cramped space? How do they do it day after day?’ And then recently, of course, ‘How are they really coping with infection control issues’ because it is so small.’”

Taylor said the new ER plan was developed after consultation with hospital and Island Health staff, and the facility should be able to serve the island’s population for the next several decades.

“It is a really good plan,” he said. “It deals with the infection control problem in an effective way. It provides space for the medical team and their equipment — safely. That is a real issue when you have an emergency trauma case: Just getting the equipment and the team around the patient to triage them and stabilize them and get them over to Victoria [if needed].”

The new emergency department will have a triage desk and waiting room, and the nursing station will have better sight lines so staff can keep an eye on all patient bays.

“There is a dedicated room for mental health and substance use treatment, which is at the front end of the issues we face on this island,” Taylor added.

In addition to contributing more than $1.4 million of LMHF reserve funds, fundraising team members have been working intensely for the past six months, directly contacting individuals and organizations deemed to be supportive. Among the $4 million in pledges gathered to date are two $1-million donations from individuals who wish to remain anonymous at this point.

Biely said the foundation is delighted with the level of support shown so far. 

“It just speaks to this wonderful community that really believes in this hospital. It has given us the confidence to move forward on this community campaign.” 

The LMHF team is also pleased that the Salt Spring Island Foundation has made a major contribution with $100,000 from the Shaw Family Community Fund. 

“We believe this contribution honours the legacy of the Shaw family, an island farming family that resolutely supported our community,” said SSIF chair Brian Lawson. “The Lady Minto Hospital and emergency department are an essential and important service for our island community and one with significant benefit for all, now and into the future.”

Kirsten Reite Architecture of Vancouver, which specializes in designing healthcare facilities, is the contracted architectural firm. The project is currently at the detailed design phase, and should go to tender this fall. Once all approvals are received, actual construction is expected to take 15 months. A May 2023 opening is the goal. 

Biely and Taylor are confident the expansion can be completed for $10.4 million, despite the current climate of rising constructions costs, with $2.7 million of the total consisting of three significant contingencies. (As well, $400,000 has already been added to last year’s estimate due to rising lumber and other material costs.)

People who want to donate to the campaign can visit the website ladymintofoundation.com/lifeline or respond to the brochure that should be in island mailboxes this week.

The foundation hopes the $2 million needed can be secured by Thanksgiving and encourages everyone to contribute what they can. 

“We want everybody to feel it is their project, because it is their hospital and everybody cares about it,” said Biely.  

Islands Trust policy update alarms islanders

0

Residents of many communities in the Islands Trust Area have become concerned about a project to update the Trust Policy Statement, but officials say any changes that have been proposed are far from the “done deal” some people have proclaimed.

Salt Spring trustee Laura Patrick said Friday she had received many phone calls and emails from people who were upset Islands Trust Council is scheduled to consider first reading of a new draft policy statement without the public being invited to comment on it first.

“It is the right way to go forward,” Patrick said regarding first reading. “It’s going to be fair and transparent and out there, and this is the way to do it. Let’s get a proper draft on the table, and then let’s get feedback on it.”

Patrick also faced questions about the issue from a crowd of about 50 residents at Friday’s ASK Salt Spring session in the United Church meadow who felt the Trust was trying to push through major changes without proper public consultation.

Patrick noted the Trust’s programs committee has produced an evolving document under the “Islands 2050” project, with two sets of amendments to date in order to present an initial version for Trust Council’s consideration. At least two different versions of the draft have been circulating through social media since the programs committee’s last meeting on June 15 and neither one is correct, she said.

Patrick said there are parts of the proposed amendments she doesn’t agree with herself, but she is committed to the sequence of events. Many more amendments and editing can be expected before the statement gets to second reading, and even after that.

“I’m not blessing the policy — I’m blessing the process,” Patrick said.

People who are concerned that massive changes are coming without any chance to stop them have listed several key issues of concern. Top of mind for some is a proposed amendment that would prohibit new private docks through the entire Trust area, along with seawalls and other hard surfaces at the shoreline. Changes to definitions about agriculture and forestry as valuable traditional activities have also been flagged. Due to new areas of focus on reconciliation and climate change, draft language proposes that small-scale sustainable agriculture that increases local food security be prioritized. Maintaining tree cover as a priority has also been added to one draft.

John Money, a Saturna resident who formerly served as an islands trustee for 21 years, has written to several provincial ministries to protest what he terms to be a “heavy handed” policy statement and “an abuse of power” that would negate a local Trust committee’s ability to meet their community’s unique situations. Money said the process should be paused until town hall meetings can be conducted in person.

“A major policy review that dictates to every community and their official community plans should be taken out to each and every community, to as many local meetings as it takes for residents to understand and come to some kind of consensus,” Money wrote. “For the Islands Trust to expect the residents of all the communities in the Trust area to go onto the Islands Trust website to find the huge number of changes being done with no consultation is unrealistic, undemocratic and very poor thinking; I would go so far as to say that a very limited number of residents even know that this is happening.”

The Islands Trust issued a statement Friday assuring constituents the project is still in its early phase and that plenty of opportunities for input will be offered. The first formal opportunity will be a town hall session taking place on Zoom from 7 to 9 p.m. on July 7. The event runs the evening before Islands Trust Council considers first reading of the draft policy statement amendments.

“This is typically the stage where people get more deeply interested and comment on specific proposed policies,” Trust Council chair Peter Luckham observed in the statement. “We invite everyone to read the document cover to cover to get a complete understanding about what is being proposed, the rationale and the commitment to reconciliation.”

Luckham said people will have at least three months after first reading to provide feedback by email or letter, and there will also be a survey open for several weeks. Information about the draft bylaw will be provided on the Islands Trust website and at online open houses.

“All feedback will be considered as we work towards a revised version for second reading,” Luckham said.

More information, including the Islands 2050 project timeline, can be found at islandstrust.bc.ca.

Salt Spring Arts Council strives to include Indigenous voices

Salt Spring and the southern Gulf Islands are known for their thriving artistic communities, but visitors may often be left wondering where the work by local Indigenous artists resides.

The Salt Spring Arts Council (SSAC) has been asking itself the same question for a number of years, and what it could do to redress historic wrongs with continuing modern-day ramifications. With support from a multiculturalism grant from the Province of B.C., the council initiated a pilot project this year that hopes to address both points. It extends Artcraft’s usual artist criteria to include Indigenous regional artists for whom the southern Gulf Islands are traditional territory. 

The 2021 summer art show and sale, which opened on June 11, includes works by printmaker and storyteller Eliot White-Hill, carvers Doug LaFortune, Perry LaFortune and Bear Cat Sam, potter Faye Oakes, and visual artists Chazz Elliot and Charles Elliot.

Two key collaborators the arts council engaged for this work are Rose Spahan, an artist and curator from Tsartlip First Nation who has 30 years experience showcasing Indigenous art, and Sarah Jim, an emerging artist from the Tseycum village. 

“Salt Spring and the southern Gulf Islands were the ancestral territory of the SENĆOŦEN and Hul’q’umi’num’ speaking peoples. We went there as our summer homes. That was common back then, and right now it isn’t common with Salt Spring. It’s a missing link,” Spahan told the Driftwood. 

“There are a lot of artists on Salt Spring that aren’t Indigenous,” she added. “This inclusion [in Artcraft] is so important, to hear our voices and share stories, and it’s important to bridge the gap.” 

The arts council has recognized the history of colonialism on the southern Gulf Islands means Indigenous peoples were removed from their ancestral lands. Artcraft manager Sarah Hyams said there are just a few Indigenous artists living on the islands today, which is why the show’s participation guidelines needed to be expanded. 

To research how to best include Indigenous artists, Hyams and SSAC executive director Yael Wand consulted with local MLA Adam Olsen, who is a member of Tsartlip First Nation, and with Salt Spring-based Ojibwe beader Krysta Furiosa of Only Child Handicrafts. Ellie Langford Parks, who coordinated the Indigenous Arts & Craft Market on Salt Spring in 2019, was another local resource. 

Following on that beginning, Hyams made efforts to contact every First Nation with ties to the southern Gulf Islands, and every artist listed on the WSÁNEC Leadership Council website, which is how she got in touch with Spahan and Jim. 

“I was concerned about doing a good job and setting the tone as best I could as a settler, but having Indigenous jurors and working in consultation with them felt really good,” Hyams said. 

Spahan was recently guest curator for the Reconciliation exhibition at Prince George’s Two Rivers Gallery, among other projects. She worked to encourage Indigenous artists to submit to Artcraft and was named senior Indigenous juror. Jim came on board as junior Indigenous juror and offered suggestions for removing participation barriers. She shared her passion for the proper acknowledgment of Coast Salish art. 

“Salt Spring is located on traditional Coast Salish territory. The art is informed by this place and the culture and teachings are based around the natural laws of these lands and waters,” Jim said. “Many Salish artists were sleeping after colonization, so it’s important to showcase the resurgence of Coast Salish art practices because the art is representative of who we are and what we believe. The resurgence of this art practice is to be celebrated.”

Acting on suggestions from Spahan and Jim, the arts council worked to remove the 35 per cent sales commission for participating Indigenous artists this year, and waived the usual membership fee. They discovered some other barriers for participating related to artists living off-island at the same time COVID restricted travel, so the arts council allowed photo submissions for jurying for the first time. Hyams said there were additional issues for some older, less tech-savvy artists, so she offered to complete their application forms if need be. 

Hyams noted the high-quality artists working in both traditional and more contemporary formats that have joined Artcraft this year. Doug LaFortune’s carving can be seen at the University of British Columbia and The Butchart Gardens, as one example. 

“That’s the level of work we have,” Hyams said. 

All of those involved hope the pilot will turn into a continuing project. The arts council is seeking funds to create a position for Spahan, who is hoping to bring in more female artists in the future as one goal. Wand said there are other ways to shift regular practises to decolonize art institutions, as well, such as the simple step of extending the participation requirements.  

“I think we really have to change the way we do things to make these things possible,” Wand said. “There is probably lots more that we can do to make things more accessible.”

Artcraft is open daily at Mahon Hall from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. with COVID safety protocols in place. 

In related news, the arts council is also working with the Salt Spring Public Library to bring Indigenous art to the island, together with School District 64, the Stqeeye’ Learning Society and MLA Olsen. A call for Indigenous youth artists (ages 13 to 19) to work on a mural project at the library in August has been extended. Applicants are asked to submit a short biography and three to five samples of recent work to khudson@saltspringlibrary.com by end of day on June 30.