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Waterworks trustee candidate bios and voting process

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The North Salt Spring Waterworks District board of trustees election is taking place using a mail-in ballot this year due to COVID-19 precautions, with two candidates putting their name forward for one available seat.

NSSWD ratepayers should have received the ballot and return envelopes in the mail last week. Ballots are placed inside a security envelope and then the envelope that is returned to the waterworks. Ballots must be received at the NSSWD office by Tuesday, Sept. 8 at 4:30 p.m. People should note that a witness to a signature is needed for the process. For more information about the voting process and eligibility, see the www.northsaltspringwaterworks.ca website or phone the office at 250-537-9902.

Voting results will be announced at the NSSWD annual general meeting, which will be at Community Gospel Chapel on Wednesday, Sept. 9 at 6 p.m.

Candidates Gary Gagné and Garth Hendren have provided the following biographical information and their rationale for wanting to serve on the board.

GARY GAGNÉ

Gary Gagné has been a NSSWD board trustee since January of 2019.

He built his first home on Salt Spring Island in 1980, and is now a small-scale farmer and builder. He is a bilingual retired marine officer and has been a boat builder, sailor, navigator, Greenpeace captain and pilot.

Gagné has served on the board of directors for Island Pathways and several subcommittees: Partners Creating Pathways, Cycling Salt Spring and the newly formed Salish Sea Trail Network group; and for the past year has been a steering committee member for the Climate Action Plan 2.0 project and its Transportation Working Group. Other volunteer work has been in service to the environment, with four years spent in Clayoquot Sound as a forest protector, and in campaigning for Green party MP Elizabeth May; and in spiritual service with Open Gate Sangha. 

Regarding his decision to run for a second NSSWD trustee term, Gagné said he feels it is critical to protect the island’s invaluable water resources and feels strongly that all decision making concerning water be held on the island.

“I think our ratepayers would be well served by keeping this board intact as it is, as it has been for the last year and a half. I am not alone with this feeling. Our current chairperson, Michael McAllister, who has been on a lot of boards, says this is the best board he has ever served on. We are dedicated to serving our ratepayers as efficiently and respectfully as possible and with full transparency.”

GARTH HENDREN

Garth Hendren is a long-term Salt Spring resident and an educational consultant who has been active in the community for a number of years.

He is the former chair of the Salt Spring Public Library Association and was involved in planning for the new library. He was a school trustee and vice chair of the Gulf Islands School District, the island’s Capital Regional District director from 2008 to 2011, and a member of the Salt Spring Water Council during his tenure as CRD director.

Hendren has sat as a board member on five Salt Spring water districts and as a result says he is familiar with most of the problems facing the NSSWD and a variety of water issues, including those related to quality, infrastructure costs management and dealing with limited financial resources.

“If elected I look forward to helping NSSWD address the pressing issue of whether the district should move under the umbrella of the CRD. I am confident that I can help the district make the right decision.” 

• Editor’s note: Information provided to the Driftwood and the NSSWD by Hendren initially stated that he was a “founding” member of the water council, which was formed in 2004. Hendren was one of the first directors of the Salt Spring Island Water Council Society, which the water council became, in 2011.

Other NSSWD trustees whose terms are not yet up are Chris Dixon, Les Howell, Michael McAllister and Sandra Ungerson.

School restart plans made public

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Back-to-school plans for all of British Columbia’s 60 school districts were posted to district websites today, including the Gulf Islands.

Local families can find the SD64 Restart Plan and a more detailed operational plan the district’s website.

The B.C. Ministry of Education announced earlier this summer that a full return to in-class learning would be the goal in most cases. An update from the ministry on Wednesday adds the new information that districts have been given the flexibility to offer remote learning options in some cases as well, although the in-class model is preferred.

“There is no better place than in-class learning,” said Education Minister Rob Fleming. “With these plans now in place, parents can feel confident about sending their children back to school and assured that strict health and safety measures are in place to protect students and staff.”

Fleming has directed school districts to contact all families in their school communities to share their safety plans and to confirm if they are planning for their child to attend school classes in September, or if they need alternative learning options.

School District 64 administrators are working on how to incorporate the new direction and will have more information for families in the next few days. Families who have health concerns or other obstacles that might impact their children’s school attendance this September, but wish to stay connected with SD64, have been asked to contact their school principal to discuss possible solutions.

Detailed timetables and information on learning groups will be sent out to families by their individual schools.

From COVID-19 to COURAGE 2020

By SUE NEWMAN AND JAN SLAKOV

What can we learn from the pandemic? For starters, humans can adapt if we understand the need to act.

Our economies are human creations. It is possible, therefore, for us to recreate new models for our times. Canadian author and social activist, Naomi Klein, once explained that we must restructure them. She states: “We act as if there is no end to what is actually finite — fossil fuels and the atmospheric space to absorb their emissions. And we act as if there are strict and immovable limits to what is actually bountiful — the financial resources to build the kind of society we need. The task of our time is to turn this around: to challenge this false scarcity.”

Around the globe, governments are set to invest heavily to rebuild economies in the wake of the COVID crisis. This gives us an opportunity — to go from COVID-19 to COURAGE 2020.

In other words, we can finally address: Climate action, old-growth protection, upholding Indigenous rights, restructuring our economy, guaranteed access to basics and equity. Another world is possible!

So, how can B.C. contribute to such restructuring? How can we citizens help?

For environmental protection starters, we need:

– a moratorium on old-growth logging;

– to protect the Peace River valley, with its precious farmland, sacred indigenous sites and territories; instead of throwing money at Site-C dam construction, which the Globe and Mail is calling a “cash bonfire,” let’s use it to fund a just and green transition.

– to stop fracking. Fracking contaminates water and is linked to increased earthquake activity, which can destabilize dams.

For economic restructuring, we need to:

– start funding projects focussed on remediation, conservation and renewables. There are plenty of jobs in these sectors. Misinformation leads us to think otherwise.

– provide guaranteed livable incomes. The CERB program has shown us just how productive, inventive and collaborative citizens can be, giving back to their communities and re-circulating that income, invigorating their local economies. Fairer taxation and monetary reform have been shown to improve societal productivity and wellbeing.

As for the Site-C dam “boondoggle,” the B.C. Utilities Commission provided ample reason to cancel the project, including citing geotechnical problems; may we learn from this difficult lesson. B.C. residents are and will be subsidizing the project regardless of whether the government finally has the courage to pull the plug on it. The current B.C. government granted even more generous subsidies to the LNG (fracked gas) industry than the previous Liberal government offered. Without those subsidies, some of which benefit international companies with terrible human rights records, the industry would not be viable.

The more we know about such injustices, the more we can improve future decisions.

So, let’s:

– end the violation of Indigenous rights, which includes construction of the Coastal GasLink (CGL) pipeline through unceded Wet’suwet’en territory.

– better enforce environmental legislation.

– make sound, ethical decisions that take responsibility for past shameful debacles, for now and the future.

B.C.’s Guy Dauncey (the “practical utopian”) and economist Kate Raworth have plans for a just transition. We need to listen and remember that old ideas were once new, and that change requires courage.

Humans adapt! We listen! Returning to the old ways benefit only a few. The opportunity to shape just societies on a healthy planet is now!

Immediate action? Provide the political will for progressive change, one step at a time! Information on the danger and the opportunity this crisis presents is available on the https://courage-2020.wixsite.com/courage2020 site. Let’s make the Sept. 25 Global Day of Climate Action a real turning point for B.C.!

sources for information:

https://www.theglobeandmail.com/opinion/editorials/article-bcs-site-c-has-become-a-cash-bonfire-hard-decisions-are-ahead/

https://thenarwhal.ca/b-c-subsidies-to-fossil-fuel-industry-more-than-830-million-last-year/

https://battlefordsnow.com/2020/01/15/horgan-says-rule-of-law-applies-lng-pipeline-will-proceed-despite-protests-2/

https://www.policynote.ca/big-fracking-mess/

https://thepracticalutopian.ca/2020/01/05/climate-emergency-a-26-week-transition-program-for-canada/

and watch this beautiful video!

The Great Realization, or Hindsight’s 2020

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Nw5KQMXDiM4

Cottages abandons TUP application for special events proposal

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Platform Properties has withdrawn a temporary use permit application that would have allowed development of a structure for concerts and other events at The Cottages resort on Bullock Lake.

The Salt Spring Local Trust Committee was expecting to review the application at their next meeting, having voted in June to defer consideration until September. They had also recommended the applicant work with the community to bridge ongoing concerns about noise, traffic and the potential impact to the water table in the area. 

Platform’s head of development and acquisitions, Andrew Sinclair, chose not to go into the company’s reasons for the withdrawal.

“Our intention was to assist the PitchFork Social — a valued community event — bring it onto the property and bring the broader community onto the property, and obviously it didn’t come to pass,” Sinclair said.

Planning staff had recommended issuing the temporary use permit with a number of modifiers in place that would have addressed some community concerns. The most recent draft limited amplified music to 12 nights per year, limited noise to 60 decibels at the property line, had concerts end by 10 p.m. and required operators to bring in water and portable toilets.

The decision not to continue with the application has been upsetting for PitchFork Social producer David Youngson, whose concert series was to have been the primary user of the new space. Youngson feels the permit’s proposed guidelines would have been more than sufficient to meet any neighbourhood concerns, but he also feels Platform Properties had no choice but to bow out.

“It’s very frustrating. You can do every single thing they ask and it still doesn’t matter because a few people don’t want it,” Youngson said, adding he feels those concerns were misplaced and stemmed from bias against the previous owners of The Cottages development. In contrast, he counted close to 200 letters received in support of PitchFork Social and the proposed move.

For more on this story, see the Aug. 26, 2020 issue of the Gulf Islands Driftwood newspaper, or subscribe online.

Stolen Salt Spring boat ends up on Gabriola

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Salt Spring RCMP have identified a potential suspect in the theft of a boat stolen from Ganges Harbour that turned up in Descanso Bay on Gabriola Island last week.

Corp. Matthew Crist of the Salt Spring RCMP detachment said that with the assistance of another detachment they had identified a suspect  who is not a resident of Salt Spring Island. That person had not been arrested as of Monday.

“Our investigation is ongoing, however, we hope to compile the evidence necessary to recommend a charge against the suspect,” Crist said.

Salt Spring RCMP received a report of the missing and possibly stolen vessel on the morning of Aug. 17. The 5.5-metre (18-foot) Grady-White sports boat had been moored in Ganges Harbour off a property located on Rourke Road. The owner believed the theft likely occurred sometime between 10 p.m. on Aug. 16 and 7 a.m. on Aug. 17.

“We were later notified by the RCMP on Gabriola that the vessel in question had been recovered after running aground,” Crist said. “No arrests have yet been made and our file is still under investigation in conjunction with the Gabriola RCMP.”

Several Gabriola residents witnessed the boat come in and crash against a reef in Gabriola’s Descanso Bay. Doug and Diana Walkey managed to provide police with a photo of a suspect, who waded out of the bay around 9:45 a.m. and refused offers of help.

The boat suffered significant damage. It was determined to be the boat stolen from Salt Spring after forensic identification testing by RCMP in Nanaimo.

Crist said anyone who has knowledge of the suspect or the incident should call their local detachment.

Greenwoods garden bench raffle underway

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The popular Greenwoods Foundation garden bench fundraiser is taking place again this year, even if the Salt Spring Fall Fair — where so many tickets are sold — is not happening due to COVID-19.

Luke Hart-Weller has been making his magnificent benches for the Greenwoods Fall Fair Raffle since 2014.

This year’s bench is not quite completed but will be on display in Island Savings in September.

Tickets are available through the Greenwoods Foundation website; at Island Savings from Sept. 1 to 21; and Country Grocer on Sept. 1, 8 and 15.

Other person-to-person ticket sale locations will be advertised as they are set.

The draw date for a winner is Tuesday, Sept. 22.

Raffle funds are being raised for the care and comfort of the residents of both Greenwoods and Braehaven.

Viral video dancer makes visit to Salt Spring

Salt Spring Island played host to a social media sensation earlier this month when the Yukon’s Gurdeep Pandher visited the island while vacationing in British Columbia.

Pandher has brightened days for countless people throughout the COVID pandemic. His viral videos posted to Twitter, Instagram and other platforms contrast the colourful sights and sounds of traditional bhangra dance with stunning natural backdrops. Scenes of dance outside his lakeside cabin near Whitehorse have recently been supplemented with the sweeping sands of Long Beach, Tofino, the small historic Sikh community of Paldi near Duncan, and Salt Spring’s Ganges Harbour.

“It was just beautiful over there,” Pandher told the Driftwood after returning home to the Yukon. “[The trip] was one of the highlights of my lifetime, I will say that.”

Pandher said he was not intending to do a performance tour during his vacation on and around Vancouver Island, but that’s what he essentially wound up doing as local government officials, the media and other groups caught wind that he was in the area. He was invited to dance at the B.C. Legislature and got many of the MLAs involved, along with Premier John Horgan. In other stops he danced with RCMP officers and healthcare workers.

Salt Spring’s spot on the Vancouver Island tour came about through a connection Pandher had with Jean Wilkinson. Although a few islanders have also enrolled in his online lessons, he didn’t meet anyone besides Wilkinson during his visit out of respect for the community and pandemic times. He was surprised to find the island was much bigger and much more populated than he’d been expecting, and was pleased to discover Salt Spring’s vibrant arts community.

“Even when I was dancing on the shore it was great. There were some folks there and and they really enjoyed watching and it was awesome,” Pandher said. “Those mini interactions were great, and I really liked the vibe and the size of the island.”

As Pandher explains on his website, bhangra was originally the dance of Punjabi farmers. The men danced to celebrate their wheat harvest and on festival days but also after accomplishing more regular farming chores. Recently bhangra has expanded its reach with women also participating. The dance form is common at all sorts of events and settings, from weddings to Bollywood movies to exercise classes.

“Despite its evolution, bhangra has succeeded in maintaining its core elements. It remains the dance of joy, the dance of happiness, the dance of good health, and the dance of productivity,” Pandher’s web article states.

Pandher learned bhangra in childhood in the Punjab and followed up with additional lessons as a youth. A Canadian resident since 2006 and a citizen since 2011, he is now focused on teaching the dance format and performing, all the while spreading a message of inclusion, multiculturalism and love.

As his website states, he stands with those who experience marginalization, repression and violence because of the colour of their skin and feels there is urgency to build cross-cultural bridges and understanding.

This message has become especially meaningful over the past year, when people have needed every source of positivity they can find.

“After the pandemic that has been actually a very important part of what I’m doing,” Pandher said.

He explained the viral response started organically, when he started posting videos from the Yukon. Many viewers commented to thank him for creating a few moments of joy or giving them a mental break.

“People were sending such wonderful positive feedback about my work and that really inspired me to do more,” Pandher said “Whatever I’m doing is helping people and spreading positivity, because we are in stressful times.”

He is especially happy to have received messages from healthcare workers and people working in other critical areas who have felt relief from their days after watching his videos.

“That felt good and reminded me of the importance of what I’m doing, even though I  didn’t plan to go that way. I’ve heard from people all over the country and it’s motivated me a lot,” Pandher said.

It’s difficult to say what might take place in the world in the next year, but Pandher said his B.C. experience has opened his eyes to the possibility for future tours to spread happiness throughout the province and across Canada.

“It was not a planned tour but it inspired me a lot to do more of what I’ve been doing,” he said. “I couldn’t visit so many places — if I went everywhere I was invited I would have to spend a month, or more than that.”

Editorial: Above and beyond volunteers are priceless

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People wanting some inspiration to make a difference in the world need not look far these days.

Two recent projects underway on Salt Spring have made great strides due to the volunteer efforts of a few individuals and those who wholeheartedly support them.

The Salt Spring Laundromat project has been spearheaded by a small but fiercely determined membership of the Wagon Wheel Housing Society. As the society’s name implies, it was formed to advocate for a particular kind of housing project. But when Cherie Geauvreau, Jewel Eldstrom and others saw no one taking up the cause to replace the laundromat that closed down in early 2016, they added that to their project roster. A few hiccups like COVID-19 have created some extra obstacles for the team, but with space secured and equipment paid for, the dream gets closer every day. An open house and silent art auction at the 162 Fulford-Ganges Rd. location from 2 to 4 p.m. daily until Sunday this week invites people to drop in and see how they can offer support.

Similarly applying passion to a cause and achieving great results is south-ender Brenda Guiled. She led creation of the Friends of Ruckle Park Heritage Society some years ago and the whole island and its many visitors are benefitting as a result. New interpretive signage is in the works for the well-loved park, along with renovations to the oldest Ruckle farmhouse, which will see it become an interpretive centre. Lotus Ruckle’s spring flower garden will also be recreated nearby. Guiled is also publishing a 60-page booklet about the Ruckle family.

In explaining her motivation for enhancing knowledge of local history, Guiled says she admired the “spirit of sharing” that the Ruckle family practised and exemplified, both in the way they lived and in donating their land for public benefit.   

Guiled told the Driftwood: “At its roots, Salt Spring Island was a very accepting, tolerant, make-do, help each other kind of community, and I hope we can continue that.”

Guiled is right, and we also hope that those community characteristics are maintained and strengthened in the challenging times to come.

Viewpoint: Is the Trust dream dead?

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By FRANTS ATTORP

Is it time to give up on the Gulf Islands dream and encourage the Islands Trust to secure as much green space as possible before it’s too late? There is a strong case to be made for this, at least on Salt Spring.

As the debate over housing and development unfolds, there are repeated assertions by trustees and others that the Trust can meet both its environmental and social goals and create an island paradise where humans live in harmony with nature. This suggests we can have our cake and eat it too.

There is no question the current housing situation needs attention. Workers and others of modest means need a decent place to live, and there are also valid concerns about gentrification.

But let’s not fool ourselves by thinking the housing crisis will go away anytime soon. With burgeoning urban centres all around it’s only a matter of time before the pot boils over again . . . and again. At what point will words like “rural” and “unique environment” lose their meaning?

Three things are absent from recent housing discussions: acceptance that we live in a protected area; acknowledgement that people pressure is ongoing; and support for enforcement, without which there can be no protected area. There are plenty of ideas for creating new densities, but none for limiting growth in the long term.

Nothing better demonstrates the helplessness of the Islands Trust than Standing Resolution SS-2017-168, which instructs bylaw enforcement officers to act “only if there is more than one unlawful dwelling on a lot.” And then there’s the STVR fiasco and proposed Bylaw 471 which would allow the widespread use of temporary use permits and further undermine our official community plan.

While I understand the Trust has many balls to juggle, I have lost hope there will be a strong commitment to enforcing bylaws and holding the line on densities once the current situation is addressed. Nature has no voice, but humans clamour like hell when their basic needs or financial aspirations are not met. It’s the way of the world.

I and some others have done our best to speak up for rural values and the environment, but it has come at a cost: We have been called selfish, privileged NIMBYs who like to argue. Is it any wonder that, despite broad support for the Trust’s original vision, so few are willing to stick their necks out?

There are many ways to secure green space: by transferring densities, placing covenants on private property, and using other tools at the Trust’s disposal.

The big advantages will be to finally give more of the island the protection it deserves, and provide increased access to the public. Additionally, Salt Spring’s failed attempt at density control can serve as a warning to other islands about the near hopelessness of administering an area with competing interests and protective legislation that is open to interpretation.

There is no indication the current trajectory is about to change. As the rural dream fades, it is ironic and tragic that our best chance for keeping most of Salt Spring green may be to adopt an urban planning model.

Looking for light at the end of the pandemic tunnel

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It may be a matter of a few months, a year, or maybe even longer, but sooner or later we are going to have to come to grips with living in the “new normal.”

Even though we can’t really know for certain, we believe that the COVID-19 pandemic threat will fizzle out eventually, and life will revert to some kind of semblance of order. Hypothetically, what might this new normal look like?

One thing for certain is it will not be identical to the life we put on “pause” late last winter when the pandemic first came into focus. Since then, we’ve gone through social distancing, bumping elbows, Zoom conferences, quarantine internet concerts, working from home dressed in pyjama tops and sweat pants, facial masks, washing our hands dozens of times a day (while singing “Happy Birthday” double that many times), and banging pots and pans as we belt out opera arias from our balconies.

It’s becoming difficult to remember what life was like before COVID-19. I have a granddaughter who just turned two and probably has no recall of any physical display of affection from me other than virtual hugs and blown kisses. Yes, once upon a time we lived in a world without regular reports from Dr. Bonnie Henry and Health Minister Adrian Dix. A world without the latest daily COVID body counts, statistical modelling forecasts and dire warnings if we don’t “flatten the curve.”

That world may well be gone forever. When the post COVID-19 future arrives, although we will probably still be pulling our pants on one leg at a time, we can expect some major changes in our lifestyles. Does anybody really know whether the economy will rebound to the point where almost every employable worker is assured of a job? Will there be opportunities for enterprising risk-takers to hitch their wagons to their dreams and thereby develop businesses that will create livelihoods for themselves and others they will employ?

The answer to these questions, we hope, is “yes,” but only if our social order allows itself to adapt to the inevitable changes the new normal will demand. Take airplanes and air travel for instance. The days of booking a flight online and showing up at the airport an hour before your departure with your overstuffed hand luggage in tow are over. It will take a long time before the flying public regains confidence that it will reach its destination safely and without contracting a potentially fatal disease. Until and if that time does come, we can be sure that delays caused by the overregulating of health and security precautions will make us want to revert back to the days of yore when a good horse and buggy would get us to where we were heading more safely and reliably than a jetliner.

Meanwhile, the airline industry, which has been losing money hand over fist during the pandemic, will need to offer its clientele a few perks to win them back over. No, we’re not talking about free face masks in designer patterns and colours and an unlimited supply of hand sanitizer. Instead, how about including hot meals, seat selections, headphones and increased legroom in the price of a ticket without nickel and diming passengers for every convenience that was offered at no extra cost not that long ago. And while they’re at it, how about not shoehorning in as many passengers as can possibly be squeezed into these narrow sardine cans they are using as airplanes. And one more thing: reintroducing those complimentary packages of salty roasted nuts and the hot, moist cloth towelettes handed out by the flight attendants after meals would certainly go a long way to winning back the flying public.

Shopping for groceries at the supermarket is in for a change with the arrival of the new normal, but it is highly unlikely it will revert to the “hug everyone you’ve ever known and exchange life stories” in aisle 7B while trying to figure out if 400 grams of roasted coffee beans at $13.99 is a better deal than 454 grams at $14.99. It may no longer be necessary to line up two metres apart on the way in, have our shopping carts sanitized every three aisles, and then line up again a soccer field away from the nearest cashier till on the way out, but we shouldn’t expect our shopping experience to be as fast and pleasurable as a cakewalk down easy street. There may be more than 50 customers allowed in the store at any one time but all of them will have chosen to shop on the same day and at the same time and will all be looking to buy the exact same items on sale as you.

Education is another area that will need adaptation and re-evaluation once the pandemic threat has been averted. After increasing the physical space between students in school classrooms, and reducing the number of students teachers might interact with in order to cut down the possibility of social infection, it will be impossible for school administrations to double down classrooms and economize their budgets by packing students into their educational institutions. Mind you, the flip side of the argument is that governments will find that they can really cut costs by emptying schools altogether. The new normal will see the curriculum for each primary and secondary grade, as well college and university programs, delivered via online platforms. The jury is still out on whether electronic distance learning is superior to the old model of hands-on, face-to-face interaction. Only time will tell whether a move in that direction will prove to be a blessing or a curse.

Nobody asked me, but there is light at the end of the pandemic tunnel in which we’re stuck. Maybe it will take a miracle vaccine or perhaps the entire human race will suddenly develop the herd immunity that will give this demon virus the knockout blow. No matter how this nightmare ends, at some point we will find ourselves waking up to the dawn of a new morning. And when we do, we will embrace the new normal and finally wash our hands clean of COVID-19.