Home Blog Page 319

Foundation emergency fund helps feed families

0

The Salt Spring Island Foundation’s COVID-19 Emergency Preparedness and Relief Fund continues to help meet essential community needs. 

Island Christmas hamper recipients with children were the beneficiaries of $5,000 in Country Grocer gift cards thanks to a foundation partnership with Salt Spring Community Services. 

The foundation points out in a press release that the COVID-19 pandemic has a long-range effect on everyone, but particularly on the most vulnerable people in the community.

“Young adults and families with children in B.C. were disproportionately affected and families with children were more likely to report worsening mental health burdens,” states the foundation.

“These grocery gift cards responded to a real need, helping to address the inequities of the pandemic and making the holidays brighter for families with children.”

A SPEAK web survey by the B.C. Centre for Disease Control, in which almost 400,000 British Columbians participated, indicated that young families are being seriously affected by the pandemic. This data can be found on the www.bccdc.ca webpage where one can find statistics relevant to Salt Spring.

The Salt Spring Island Foundation continues to accept donations to the COVID-19 Emergency Preparedness and Relief Fund. More information is available on the foundation’s www.ssifoundation.ca website or by calling Shannon Cowan at 250-537-8305.

Viewpoint: The tree felling conundrum

1

By FRANTS ATTORP

Trees. They are a key feature that sets this protected area apart from the surrounding urban sprawl.

And they contribute so much. They are integral to the hydrological cycle and home to myriad lifeforms. They filter out pollution, release oxygen and soak up enormous quantities of carbon dioxide, thereby helping slow climate change. And, just as importantly, they bring beauty and serenity to a world that has become hectic, fragmented and commodified. Collectively, they are part of a unique and fragile ecosystem known as the Coastal Douglas-fir zone.

When we bought our south-end home 10 years ago, we did so because of the trees and the privacy they afford. We cannot see any neighbours, and have backdoor access to many kilometres of hiking trails. We feel very fortunate.

As with all other rural properties, development of ours required plenty of tree clearing. Trees were felled for the house, outbuildings, a garden area, a driveway and a septic field. Of the six acres we own, approximately 20 per cent has been cleared, and we don’t even have a garage or secondary dwelling like many others.

Over the years, the forest has tried relentlessly to reclaim its territory, but I have a handsaw to keep the vegetation at bay. The choice is clear: fresh beans and tomatoes or encroachment by fast-growing trees and bushes. And that’s not to mention the remaining tall trees near the house that whip back and forth during windstorms. Yikes!

There are many other reasons trees are felled, such as for pasture, orchards or more light. Views are also popular. Wooded lots can sit on the market for ages, attracting little attention until some or all of the trees are removed. There may be a Darwinian explanation. Studies have shown that people from many different cultures prefer landscapes similar to the Pleistocene Savannah where they evolved — vistas featuring open spaces, copses of trees and water in the distance.

There is of course money in the trees themselves. Some cash-strapped people buy a property with the aim of selling the trees to help pay the mortgage. Developers, meanwhile, look for larger parcels with merchantable timber so they can sell the logs, subdivide, and then market the newly created lots. The infamous “strip and flip.”

So what can we conclude? First, the obvious: modern humans can be incredibly destructive. The Islands Trust, whose primary responsibility is to protect ecosystems, must therefore limit long-term growth as much as possible.

Secondly, with so much money at play, there will likely be significant resistance to more restrictive land use regulations. Rather than do battle with private landowners, the Trust, with limited enforcement capabilities, may pursue a variety of density deals that give landowners an economic incentive to protect forestland. Some swaps may be warranted, but overuse of this planning tool will violate our official community plan and erode the rural character of the island.

Lastly, the tree removal issue is complex and made more problematic because many expect the same development rights here as in unprotected areas. This settlers’ mentality impairs conservation efforts. To slow deforestation we need not just a change of policy but a change of heart.

Another virus lurks in Gulf Islands communities

4

By Jennifer Margison

After coming to Galiano Island 15 years ago, my husband and I quickly became aware of how divisive local issues could be on a small island. 

As part-time residents for some of those years, it was easier to avoid becoming involved or being impacted. But Galiano worked its magic spell on us and we made the decision to live here full time. We now have good friends and volunteer involvement in the community. Being surrounded by nature and growing some of our own food are comforts in this chaotic world.

I value our local social media for the information about local doings or its ability to generate help for people when they need it: picking up a prescription in town, finding items you need without having to leave the island, getting help when sick or injured or in cases of wind and snow storms. Island people really step up in those situations.

However, I want to comment on what I see as another insidious virus besides COVID-19 gaining a foothold on Galiano and perhaps in other island communities, one that I think is impacting and infecting our civil discourse, our ability to hold different opinions and to communicate those views without making it about the person rather than the issue. I am speaking of how I see our local social media increasingly be used in a way to shame, blame and shun, to divide the community and to stifle exploring divergent views.

I have recently experienced this personally because I am known to hold a particular point of view on a current issue. I became the subject of derogatory and false accusations on a local Facebook site, Galiano X. Other people joined in by “liking” or otherwise supporting these posts. 

I have attempted to address these posts directly with the writers. My messages were either not responded to or my requests to meet were refused. It appears easy to slander someone online but not to do so face to face. I consider it the most cowardly form of communication.

It is tempting to explain or defend oneself on the same media platform. But this only generates more attacks. I am not normally a fearful person, but reading insulting comments or lies about oneself on social media in a small community is a deeply disturbing experience. I know of others who in witnessing such behaviour or in being the subject of such attacks themselves are now afraid to voice their views. They are intimidated into silence to protect themselves and their reputations. 

I contacted the Galiano X administrator to discuss his responsibility to prevent use of this site to personally disparage people. Facebook does have a “bullying and harassment policy” for its pages and groups, prohibiting posts targeting private individuals “with negative character or ability claims.” I feel my complaint was met with indifference and the only action taken of which I am aware was to delete me as a member of the site. 

Is this really the kind of community in which we want to live? Is this the behaviour we want to model for our young people? Have we learned nothing by what has gone on south of our border, where falsehoods and insults have taken the place of reasonable discussion and debate? 

We all hold different views on many things. Through inquiry, through talking to one another rather than invoking mob mentality, rushing to judgment based on little or false information and seeing the other as the enemy, we can find out why we disagree, perhaps learn things we did not know before and maybe even find common ground.

Editor’s note: The Galiano X Facebook page administrator told the Driftwood he had a long phone discussion and other communications with the writer, deleted an offending comment from the page and takes his administrator role seriously.  

Editorial: Stop the eroding roads

0

When it comes to the state of roads on Salt Spring Island, Walker’s Hook Road has been the ultimate problem child for decades.

Several winters have seen the seashore-side bank eroded and road users’ safety compromised. Years ago residents and local government officials pressed the transportation ministry to give Walker’s Hook Road a proper fix, but only Band-aids were applied. Then when the 600 and 700 blocks of the road seriously gave way in January of 2018, a presumably long-term repair was undertaken and completed over a lengthy period. That required a road closure and subsequent detour in place for much of the year, along with re-routing of Salt Spring Transit bus service. The latest section to let go in recent heavy rains is just a bit further south of the section repaired in 2018. 

Once again the call has gone out for a permanent fix to the woes of this latest eroding section of Walker Hook Road. Saanich North and the Islands MLA Adam Olsen said Gulf Islands road conditions have definitely been flagged as an issue needing attention and he has reached out to new Transportation Minister Rob Fleming for a meeting. 

Except for the Walker’s Hook slip and slide, Salt Spring roads appeared to hold up remarkably well following successive days of rain in recent weeks. Better ditch and culvert maintenance by the island’s road contractor could be one factor in that outcome.  

But with climate-change forecasts indicating that Gulf Islands winters will become rainier as the years go on, and with certain problem areas screaming for attention, it will take more than routine preventative measures to keep island roads intact.

In 2018 the Ministry of Transportation and Infrastructure directed long-overdue resources to the 600 and 700 blocks of Walker’s Hook Road. A similar assessment and rehabilitation effort needs to take place for the rest of the road before someone is injured or killed after the next inevitable deluge.  

Erskine trail acquisition deadline looming

0

The Salt Spring Island Trail and Nature Club is rallying community support to complete  fundraising for “the missing link” trail connection on Mount Erskine. 

The BC Parks Foundation is hosting the campaign to raise $244,000 to acquire a part of the trail between Toynbee Road and the peak where it runs through private property. Around $60,000 is still needed to complete the purchase before the Feb. 10 deadline.

The Trail and Nature Club says this section represents a crucial link in an almost six-kilometre trail from Collins Road to Toynbee Road.

“The missing link also contains some terrific viewpoints surrounded by majestic trees that make excellent picnic spots.”

Trail and Nature Club president Charles Kahn noted in an online appeal: “I regularly count more than a dozen cars parked at the end of Trustees Trail, and many others access the trails from Collins and Toynbee Roads. If each of you who use these trails were to donate even $25, we’d easily reach our goal of buying the land, and you’d get a tax receipt too.”

Donations can be made through the BC Parks Foundation website at bcparksfoundation.ca/projects/enhance/mount-erskine-park/.

Oceanside bank slides at Walker’s Hook Road

0

Another piece of Salt Spring’s northern shoreline slipped into the ocean Tuesday afternoon following several days of heavy rains and during a storm event.

Caution tape has been placed along the roadside across from 560 Walker’s Hook Road. Neighbours say the slide that took out much of the high bank just beyond the road surface happened around 1 p.m. on Jan. 5. A mature maple tree that was at the top of the bank was taken down along with masses of earth and water, and for now remains standing upright at the waterline below.

The Ministry of Transportation and Infrastructure is looking into the issue and is expected to provide information on a response plan in the coming days.

The last major slide in that area took out three sections of Walker’s Hook Road after heavy rains in January 2018. The road was closed to traffic for nine months while repairs took place.

Tuesday’s storm caused some wind damage to the island as well as heavy rain. Around 1,000 Salt Spring customers in the north end were without power for part of the afternoon, and Sunset Drive was closed due to a tree that fell across the road near Duck Creek Park. Other nearby outages put 4,450 households across the southern Gulf Islands in the dark, along with 1,750 customers in North Saanich.

Channelling resources essential in order to avert catastrophe

0

By JAN SLAKOV

2020: a year people are eager to leave behind, as visions of overcoming the pandemic dance in our heads.

This year also came with the fires, extinctions and refugee crises of our worsening climate crisis.

Like most people, I prefer not to dwell on such thoughts. 

But a few lines by a young man I knew as a child sober me up: “We have overshot our capacity to reduce CO2 naturally . . . The next decade will be hard, but not as hard as the 2030s.” 

He wrote a book, Dancing After the Music Stops, inviting “people to dance on the upper deck of the Titanic as it sinks.” There’s a place for such a reaction, but let’s save what can yet be saved. It’s not just the climate, but the creeping fascism; yes, it’s awful, but the resistance is so beautiful!

I recently re-connected with Bob Thomson, who won the Canadian Journalists for Free Expression Integrity Award of 2013, after he leaked statements by the Canadian ambassador to Chile regarding the Pinochet coup, 40 years earlier. His actions were a kind of “catalyst” that helped many others welcome Chilean refugees in the wake of the coup. In accepting the award he saluted whistle-blowers of our time, people like Chelsea Manning, Julian Assange or Edward Snowden, who risk their lives and reputations to bring us hidden facts, alternative voices, different interpretations. He thanked the people who helped him, who confirmed with hugs or praise, that he had done the right thing. 

Immediately I remembered reading about a transformative hug: Lynne Quarmby describes how, when she was arrested in 2012 for blocking a coal train, “some in the crowd were jeering . . . and instead of standing tall . . . I hung my head. [Then] a woman broke from the crowd . . . She was crying and the policeman who was escorting me allowed her to approach; she gave me a hug and whispered, ‘Thank you, thank you.’”

This vignette gives us insight into how we can all make a difference, as citizens, as police, in whatever capacity we find ourselves. The destructive construction of the TMX pipeline has been put on hold for a time after a worker was killed and another seriously injured. A grove of cottonwoods is still standing, although a YouTube video called the “Highest Treehouse in the World?” and shared by science enthusiast Kurtis Baute has been removed. 

They aren’t giving up, though, and neither should we. The idea that such talented, dedicated people face persecution and arrest, not just by the RCMP, but by private CN and BNSF railway police, is hard to take. A good number of activists and civic leaders, including authors Heather Menzies, Helen Forsey, Elizabeth May and Salt Spring’s Bill and May Henderson of Chilliwack fame, have signed an open letter inviting police to speak out in favour of upholding international law, of refusing to be part of ongoing ecocide.

Imagine what would be possible if we all channelled our resources and gifts towards averting a Titanic catastrophe. Bob Thomson did that, becoming the founder of a fair trade organization called TransFair, now a “slowcialist or heretic in the church of growth.”

Here’s to a future we can embrace, full of transformative hugs and learning together how to be good ancestors. 

The writer is a Salt Spring resident and frequent contributor to the Driftwood’s opinion pages.

Viewpoint: Let’s support The Fritz movie theatre

0

By CHRIS RIDEOUT

When I was a kid growing up in the east end of Toronto, movies were a part of my life more than school, sports or family. 

In those days, it seemed like there were movie theatres everywhere, from the plain suburban ones near my house to the splendid opera-style grand palaces downtown. I used to wonder at them as I rode the streetcars to the YMCA on Saturday mornings — an excursion planned by my parents to get me out of the house.

It also seemed that the neon-encrusted movie halls were beckoning me with the huge signs outside promising air–conditioning: “It’s COOL inside!” This would have been a treat in the Toronto summers. These grand theatres looked like real theatres inside, with proscenium arches, opera-style boxes and golden glittering fixtures.

I had a small allowance from my Dad and I was able to save some quarters from my part-time job as a pin-boy at the local bowling alley. I wonder how many of your readers remember pin-boys? I gladly spent my 25 cents on an afternoon in the Birchmount theatre on Kingston Road. I drove by there during a recent visit to Toronto; it’s all condos now.

For young boys, and a little later, boys and girls, the Saturday movies were a feast.  Cowboy movies, cliff-hanging serials, romantic movies with too much kissing and movies with lots of shooting. And popcorn everywhere. When we had had enough on-screen kissing we threw our flattened popcorn boxes at the screen to the frantic shouts of the manager to stop. 

Many changes were there: first time I laughed out loud, first time I was really scared and the first time I dared to put my arm around the girl I had asked to the movies. Since the bowling-alley had gone electronic, I paid both our ways with my paper-route money. My arm locked up painfully and sometimes it still hurts . . . in more ways than one.

It turned out that my professional career involved the critical investigation into literature and the forms of narrative, so it was only a small jump from books to movies. After all, they are really the same thing; both dealing with stories. Some books and some movies don’t have stories but often that is the story.

So it was with sadness that I feared that moving to Salt Spring would surely mean no more digital first-run movies. I thought perhaps there might be a 16mm projector or an old 35mm, but since there were no more new big-budget 35mm films being shot, I just resigned myself to leaving digital behind forever.

Then I heard, or read, about The Fritz. It seemed that a digital projector had been purchased in 2013 and first-run movies were shown. Too good to be true, I thought, but no, it was true. Joy unlimited!

The whole point of this nostalgic ramble is to say thank you to The Fritz owner Dave Paul and applaud his courage and patience in keeping The Fritz going in these perilous times.  

I urge everyone to help him out in any way: buy some popcorn, drinks or just send him a couple of bucks. Everyone needs a new movie now and then. 

I hope The Fritz never goes on the fritz.

Editor’s note: Fritz fan Rachel Jacobson and others are inviting people to support The Fritz directly by sending an etransfer to: thefritz@hotmail.ca or a cheque to: SSI Movie Theatre, c/o 190 Quarry Drive, Salt Spring Island, B.C., V8K 1J2. She notes that this is an initiative of herself and other islanders. Fritz owner Dave Paul has not asked anyone to do this. The theatre is also offering concession nights with popcorn, pop and more available for purchase on Friday and Saturday nights from 6 to 8 p.m.

Salt Spring Commons welcomes first tenants

1

The week leading up to New Year’s Day was a busy one for 12 island families who moved into homes at the new Salt Spring Commons housing development.

Salt Spring Commons is designed as long-term rental housing in two- and three- bedroom townhomes, with a mix of rental formulas based on income eligibility. The first 12 rental units represent completion of Phase 1 of the project. Phase 2 occupancy of an additional 12 family units is expected for May. The development is owned and operated by Salt Spring Island Community Services (SSICS).

Born-and-raised Salt Springer Taylor Booth is one of the people who celebrated the new year with a move. He is thrilled to have a home for his baby daughter and fiancée.

“I think this is what Salt Spring has been lacking really quite severely over the past number of years,” Booth said. “Over the years I have seen countless families have to move off the island because there’s nothing they can find here for housing.”

Salt Spring Community Services agrees that “many families with ‘good paying jobs’ are living in substandard housing, being forced to move frequently or even seasonally, or deciding to move off island permanently.”

“The negative impacts this has on our community’s schools, economy and overall social wellness are widely known and discussed,” the organization states. 

Booth’s daughter was born in June of last year, and he found out the very next month that his landlord needed to sell the property along with the small cottage his family had been renting. 

“It was a little bit stressful because we didn’t have anywhere else to go. We didn’t have any leads,” said Booth, who owns Bean Drinkin Cafe in Ganges Alley.

Fortunately, someone told him about the Salt Spring Commons project and his partner jumped right on the application process, which took a few months to go through. 

Having become a successful applicant, the family now has a brand new home in a community of other families. Booth said so far he’s met seven or eight of the other tenants who have kids of all ages, from toddler to teen. 

Taylor Booth celebrates moving into new affordable rental housing with his family.

“It’s really nice to have it all coming together,” Booth said.

In addition to the new construction that means the units are safe and clean, Booth said he appreciates the fact that the Bishops Walk location is close to town and of course that the rent is affordable, “which is impossible to find on this island.”

The two-hectare (five-acre) property is within the Ganges village area, close to local schools and adjacent to an established pedestrian trail leading to town and Mouat Park. The complex includes a common house with a community room for post-pandemic tenant meetings, events and parties, as well as shared commercial laundry facilities, supplemental to those provided in each townhouse unit. A courtyard and common grassy area gives kids a safe place to play outside.

Thanks to the generosity of the Powell Street Foundation, a principal funder, the project also boasts having a state-of-the-art solar project with grid-tied solar powering electric vehicle charging stations, landscape lighting and shared laundry. A separate system is expected to supply about 30 per cent of the domestic energy needs for the residents with each unit fitted with an array to offset power consumption. 

SSICS is still accepting some rental applications for Phase 2 units as submitted through the BC Housing Registry. People should visit bchousing.org and the Housing Listings page to start the application process.

The provincial government provided $2.4 million towards the project, with additional funds and support provided by SSICS, the Capital Regional District and the Islands Trust. 

Salt Spring home values jump by 6.4%

0

The average Salt Spring home value increased by more than six per cent over the past year, reflecting strong interest from buyers for properties located right across the Vancouver Island region.

Numbers released by BC Assessment on Jan. 4 are linked to market values as of July 1, 2020. The trend shows an uptick in sales over the previous year, when the market had relatively stabilized. 

“Home values across Vancouver Island have appreciated this year due to strong demand combined with limited inventory for sale,” assessor Tina Ireland explained in a news statement. “For most communities, the assessed values of single-family homes are up moderately about five to 10 per cent.”

The average-valued single-family home on Salt Spring is now provisionally set at $681,074, an increase of 6.4 per cent compared to last year’s $640,401 valuation. Waterfront homes on Salt Spring became even more desirable, with values jumping 12.6 per cent from an average $892,497 in 2020 to $1,004,594. 

One waterfront Salt Spring property that is normally on the list of the 100 highest valued properties in the Vancouver Island area was well up in the rankings again this year: at $7.99 million, 466 Scott Point Rd. is now the 22nd most valuable property in the island region. Also making the top 100 list is 3015 Southey Point Rd., coming in at number 82 with a valuation of $5.59 million. 

The average assessed value of single-family homes on the other southern Gulf Islands increased by eight per cent this year, or from $376,478 to $406,597. Waterfront homes on Galiano, Mayne, Pender and Saturna islands showed a more modest increase in value than on Salt Spring, going from an average assessed value of $644,903 to $693,388.

Homeowners can expect to receive their notice of valuation in the mail as early as this week. They can also use the online tool at bcassessment.ca to see their assessment immediately and compare the valuation with other nearby properties. 

“Property owners can find a lot of valuable information on our website, including answers to many assessment-related questions, but those who feel that their property assessment does not reflect market value as of July 1, 2020 or see incorrect information on their notice should contact BC Assessment as indicated on their notice as soon as possible in January,” Ireland said.

If there is still concern after speaking to an appraiser, property owners can submit a notice of complaint up until Feb. 1 to schedule an independent review by a property assessment review panel. Review panels are independent of BC Assessment and are appointed annually by the provincial government. They typically meet between Feb. 1 and March 15 to hear formal complaints.

Property owners are reminded that an increase in assessed value does not automatically translate into an increase in property taxes, however. Only those homes whose value dips or jumps up beyond the average change in the community will see their tax rate change beyond the budget increases that local governments have set.