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Reimagining Salt Spring: forward for the better, not “back to normal”

BY SALT SPRING SOLUTIONS

This is an offering to our Salt Spring Island community in these troubled times where crisis and opportunity form the double faces of our current situation — as a community, as society, as a planet.

In order to get through this to some kind of better normal, we all need to raise big questions. We need to talk about what’s hard to talk about. That’s what we are trying to do here. In doing so, we might upset some of you. We can’t get this all right but we want to start the conversation. This is coming from a place of care and concern about the world we live in. And of hope for the one we could co-create. 

What if we don’t go “back to normal” on Salt Spring Island?

Normal was nurses and teachers without stable housing. Normal was tons of visitors travelling by CO2 emitting planes, ferries and cars to go for a hike and have a nice dinner. Normal was watching the Sysco food trucks drive off the ferry and past fallow farmland every single day. Normal was locals avoiding Ganges all summer because of the traffic congestion on an island vulnerably reliant on visitors. Normal was complaining about trash and crime instead of tackling the poverty, mental health, addiction and housing issues in our community.

Normal was having no time to hear birdsong. Normal was plastic takeout containers and Amazon packaging. Normal was helplessly watching the orca sink to extinction. Normal was allowing people to blast mountainsides and kill forests to build dream homes. Normal was under-paying people for the jobs it turns out we needed most.

Normal was seeing a thousand bright possibilities for how our community could actually be fade beneath the mucky layers of regulations, bureaucracy, busyness and bickering.

Instead of going back, let’s imagine a better way forward.

What if the Salt Spring Saturday Market was geared to Salt Springers and a food market didn’t need to be a tourist attraction because every community had at least one? 

What if community-driven investment were the norm for islanders with money? What if these same islanders dumped all of our obscure investments fuelling dark futures in the global casinos, and put that money to work right here, building a better Salt Spring? What if that first investment was a sold-out series of community bonds to fund the development of new mixed rental housing for our elders and families close to Ganges village? 

What if instead of hassling residents on liveaboards for dumping sewage into the harbour, we worked together to bring this type of housing out of the shadows? What if, at the same time, we stopped people from clearing large tracts of Douglas-firs for pretty views from glass houses?   

What if we stopped burning wood waste? What if instead of squandering that capital into thin air, we sent it to a new community-owned facility to chip and compost right here on Salt Spring — the loamy dividends shared with island growers and gardeners? 

What if governments enabled rather than stifled the innovation we so desperately need right now? What if they said “No, not that . . . but how about this instead?”

What if our emergency neighbourhood PODs all came alive to build community gardens as a hedge against fragile supply chains threading the planet? What if that resulted not only in heaps of delicious fresh food but in new local supply chains — between the hands and hearts of neighbours?

What if we worked to restore our forests by culling deer to heal the understory, conserve water and promote fire resilience? What if we also helped rebuild the clam gardens all over our island, with the Tsawout, Cowichan and Penalakut communities?

What if we stopped building big houses with empty rooms and made it easier to build small ones instead?

What if instead of watering rhododendrons and flushing toilets with precious water from our lakes and streams, we used water captured from our winter skies?

What if our children spent more time with our elders?

What if we cut each other’s hair?

We have a chance at a new economy on this island and everywhere. Normal wasn’t working. What if we made a new relocalized, caring, green economy central to how we live beyond the COVID crisis? Sure, let’s clean up those orphan wells in Alberta, as the federal government has pledged. But instead of making more mess, let’s build something better there, and here.

Crisis. Opportunity. Two faces on the same coin.   

Let’s take some time to rescue the good things out of the wreckage. But above all else, let’s not lose the opportunity to re-imagine.

It’s time.

The above was written by Salt Spring Solutions members Elizabeth FitzZaland, Bryan Young, Jason Mogus, Darlene Gage and Rhonan Heitzmann.

Gulf Islands Alliance lobbies Trust over logging

BY SUSAN YATES

I am writing on behalf of the Gulf Islands Alliance, a grassroots, non-profit group with members throughout the Islands Trust Area. Our mandate is to support the Islands Trust in its efforts to preserve and protect the Trust Area. Having seen the awful photographs of recent clear-cut logging on Salt Spring in the May 6 issue of the Driftwood, we want to express our horror at this continued desecration.

For 18 months GIA has been lobbying the Islands Trust to do anything it can, working with the Ministry of Forests, Lands, Natural Resource Operations and Rural Development, to stop this kind of logging in the Trust Area. We have attended three recent Trust Council meetings (going back to March 2019) asking the same thing, each time with more urgency. Here is the latest version of our plea, presented at the March 2020 Trust Council meeting on Salt Spring:

The Gulf Islands Alliance, in its continued efforts to support the legislated mandate of the Islands Trust, is aware that the recent spate of clear-cutting forests for timber sales is a serious threat to the Trust mandate, environment, and citizens’ support for the Islands Trust.

We therefore present to you the following:

• Whereas Trust Council declared a climate emergency in March of this year, and

• Whereas climate change mitigation is emphasized in Council’s support of the Coastal Douglas-fir Toolkit, and

• Whereas two imperatives for climate change mitigation are to reduce CO2 emissions and to protect and restore carbon sinks, and

• Whereas the primary mandate of the Islands Trust is to preserve and protect the natural environment, and

• Whereas tree cover and forests in the Islands Trust Area have, with respect to climate change mitigation, an ecological value far greater than the economic value of timber sales:

We request Trust Council to ask the appropriate ministry to regulate logging in the Trust Area in a manner that supports the Islands Trust Policy and mandate, or to grant the Islands Trust the regulatory tools needed to control forestry activities in the Trust Area.

At the end of the March 2020 Trust Council meeting on Salt Spring, the Trust Executive Committee was directed by council to “follow up with FLNRORD around forest management.” This was a much weaker statement than what GIA has been asking for, but perhaps better than nothing. To date the policy analyst for the Trust has sent four email requests but no meeting has yet been scheduled between FLNRORD and the Trust.

And now, we respectfully submit this letter to the Gulf Islands Driftwood, in support of all those who must bear witness to such senseless destruction in the midst of a climate crisis and in a place that is supposed to have measures of protection for the environment.

With thanks to my fellow GIA members on Pender, Salt Spring, Denman and Gabriola.

The writer is a Gabriola Island GIA member.

Editorial: Time to support each other

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Judging by the empty streets in Ganges on the long weekend, it appears potential visitors heeded the province’s strong directives to not travel for non-essential reasons.

For the most part, British Columbians and Gulf Islanders have been cooperative in following the guidelines designed to minimize the spread of COVID-19. B.C. has fared well as a result when compared to other jurisdictions and the Island Health region has been especially successful.

As of May 15, only one active case of COVID-19 was confirmed in the Island Health area, which includes all of Vancouver Island and the Gulf Islands. Some 17,820 tests had been administered, with 126 cases confirmed from that number. Province wide there were 499 active cases (from a total of 2,407) and 118,335 tests. 

The province’s move to “restart” B.C. reflects the success of its measures, as well as its understanding that money needs to start flowing through the economy again. It has outlined how restaurants, retail outlets and other businesses can safely reopen to achieve at least a partial semblance of normalcy. Many Salt Spring restaurants had been open to takeout and/or delivery through the first two months of the crisis. With the ability to expand their services, islanders will hopefully make a point of enjoying a safe sit-down meal or continuing to use takeout options.

Salt Spring Island residents have clearly continued to shop through the pandemic period, with Canada Post reporting “Christmas-level” volumes of parcels being delivered here. With local retail and other service outlets now able to open, it is time to shift our predilection for shopping to benefit friends and neighbours who rely on our patronage to survive. Those who still prefer to not shop in person can use online options to benefit locals, including an Island Comeback gift certificate program set up by the Rural Islands Economic Partnership, or the Localline.ca Salt Spring Community Market farm and food outlet.

Some level of tourism in coming months should also be expected, manageable and considered necessary to ensure island residents have the services they are accustomed to in the future and for business operators to survive. Not every business will make it through the current crisis. Let’s do all we can to minimize those losses, while following the sensible guidelines set out by health authorities.

Invasive Plant Drop-off Days set

By JANE PETCH

Special to the Driftwood

Islanders are asked to help reduce the threat of fire on Salt Spring Island by cutting Scotch broom and gorse and bringing it to upcoming Invasive Plant Drop-off events.

The first one is set for the Fulford fire hall on Saturday, May 23. The second is on Sunday, June 7 at the Central fire hall. Material will be accepted between 10 a.m. and 3 p.m. on both days.

Broom and gorse are a real fire hazard, especially in these hot dry summers. They are covered in flammable oils; they outcompete native vegetation and spread; and they are both fire accelerators. A corridor of broom and gorse means a fire corridor that is extremely difficult for firefighters to control.

People should cut broom in bloom before the summer drought, as close to the ground as possible. If the plant is over the thickness of a pencil, do not pull the broom as pulling disturbs the soil, exposes seeds already in the soil to light, and encourages a forest of little seedlings.

An excellent video at broombusters.org shows how to remove broom, (and how Qualicum Beach became 99 per cent broom free).

Remove gorse any way you can, at any time, and be prepared to follow up in subsequent years. One way to get rid of gorse is to cut it below the root ball which can be quite deep. If nothing else, cut off the flowers.

The Invasive Plant Drop-Off, also for other invasive alien weeds like holly and spurge laurel, is brought to you by the Salt Spring Fire Department and the Native Plant Stewardship Group with Transition Salt Spring. Donations are gratefully accepted to cover chipping costs.

Please, no rocks or soil on the plant roots to protect the chipper, and no giant hogweed.

Fresh, green broom can be taken to Eco-Reality Co-op, for the goats. Call ahead to 250-653-2024.

COVID-19 distancing procedures will be in place at the fire hall to protect both volunteers and people who bring in their cut plants. 

For more information, please call me at 250-537-0880.

Lady Minto Hospital Medical Staff Association Message for May 14

Dear Salt Springers,

Again, we thank you for your excellent efforts to flatten the COVID-19 curve in weeks past. It is because of your dedication to our community’s health that we can begin to relax a few of the restrictions.

At this time, we still need to adhere to some important guidelines to minimize the risk of a secondary outbreak. If we continue on this good path, we will be able to relax things further in June and July. Please: This long weekend, make smart choices. Stay close to home so we can keep our communities safe.

• Stay informed, be prepared and follow public health advice

• Practice good hygiene 

• Frequent hand washing

• Avoid touching face

• Cough into your sleeve

• Disinfect frequently touched surfaces

• Stay at home and away from others if you’re feeling ill

• Don’t go to school or work sick

• Maintain physical distancing outside your household 

• No handshaking or hugging

• Small numbers of contacts

• Keep a safe distance

• Clean your home and workspace more often

• Consider using non-medical masks when physical distancing isn’t possible, such as on transit and while shopping.

For more information on how the province is beginning to relax restrictions, visit https://www2.gov.bc.ca/gov/content/safety/emergency-preparedness-response-recovery/covid-19-provincial-support/bc-restart-plan

You can download a copy of the BC Restart Plan here.

Remember to regularly check your local news listings to stay informed. Local lab and X-ray services as well as physician office appointments will become more available in the coming weeks. The LMH Medical Staff Association will post updates on an as-need basis. 

Snowbirds set to honour Captain Kevin Hagen

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Editor’s note: A crash by one of the Snowbirds team planes on Sunday, May 17 in Kamloops has changed flyover plans referred to in this story.

 

The Royal Canadian Air Force’s Snowbirds team will visit the skies of Salt Spring Island sometime on Monday in honour of Capt. Kevin Hagen, who died in a helicopter crash in the Ionian Sea on April 29.

Hagen’s mother Lynn Steiner and stepfather Bill live on Salt Spring, and the planes will fly over their Canvasback Place residence, and then on to the Mount Douglas area where Kevin’s father Steffen Hagen and his family live.

“Kevin was a courageous, very loyal and loving son and brother,” said Steiner on Monday. “He had a beautiful smile and infectious laugh and we miss him greatly.”

Kevin Hagen had spent a lot of time on Salt Spring since his mother moved to the island 12 years ago and loved it here, she said.

Hagen’s dream was to become a pilot, and he earned his single-engine and glider’s licences by the age of 16. He was born in Nanaimo, and attended school in Qualicum, on Quadra Island and in Victoria, graduating from Lambrick Park Secondary School in 2007.

He was an 848 Royal Roads Royal Canadian Air Cadet Squadron member and joined the Royal Canadian Air Force after graduation. Hagen graduated with distinction from the Royal Military College of Canada in Kingston, Ont. in 2011, and then did his pilot’s training at the Canadian Forces’ flight training school in Portage La Prairie, Man., emerging with top honours. One year later he was a full-fledged RCAF captain based at CFB Shearwater in Halifax. He trained on Sea King helicopters and flew those until the Cyclones replaced them in 2018. 

“He was also involved [with another pilot] in bringing the first Cyclone helicopter across the country from Halifax to Victoria,” said Steiner.

Hagen had been part of the flight team on previous deployments with the Royal Canadian Navy.

The family’s sense of loss is increased by the fact that Hagen had just been posted to Victoria after years of being based in Halifax and would have been moving there soon.

“He was the family rock,” Steiner added.

Hagen was on a Sikorsky CH-148 Cyclone helicopter that was close to landing on the HMCS Fredericton frigate during a NATO training mission off the coast of Greece when it crashed at 8:52 a.m. on April 29.

Also on board were Capt. Brenden Ian MacDonald, Capt. Maxime Miron-Morin, Sub-Lt. Matthew Pyke, Master Cpl. Matthew Cousins and Sub-Lt. Abbigail Cowbrough. Only the remains of Cowbrough and MacDonald have so far been recovered.

The time of the Snowbirds flyover has not yet been determined but will be added to this story when it is known. (The family was originally advised it would be sometime on Friday, May 15, but Monday the 18th is now a more likely date, although the time has yet to be confirmed.) The Snowbirds are a military aerobatics team based in Saskatchewan.

At the family’s request, in lieu of flowers, the Royal Roads Royal Canadian Air Cadet Squadron is accepting donations to create a memorial flying scholarship in Hagen’s name. Etransfers can be made to: 848scholarship@gmail.com with a password of Hagen, cheques can be mailed to 848 Royal Rds RCACs, PO Box 28091, RPO Westshore, Victoria, B.C., V9B 6KB, or people can contact Paisley Pelletier at 250-893-0744.

“We thank everyone in advance for their contributions in recognizing this inspiring and valued alumnus of our squadron,” the organization states on its Facebook page.

Gulf Islands School District prepares to offer limited in-class learning

The Gulf Islands School District is making preparations to offer some in-class learning in the first week of June as directed by the BC Restart Plan.

As district superintendent Scott Benwell reported at the May 13 school board meeting, the re-entry program will begin with the main focus on students in kindergarten through Grade 5. He expects they will split their time to around 50 per cent in the classroom and 50 per cent of learning continuing to take place at home.

Benwell said in-class learning will be offered to a lesser degree to students in grades six through 12, who will have the opportunity to be at school for perhaps 25 per cent of their time. He added that parents will be given the choice of whether or not to send their kids back into physical facilities.

“It is solely at the discretion of families and wherever they find their comfort zone,” Benwell said.

He added that district administrators are still waiting for more information from the Ministry of Education on the exact “what and when,” and are hoping to hear that before the end of this week. The new stage could begin either June 1 or sometime during the first week of June.

“We will have a couple of weeks to make sure we have operations ready to go,” Benwell said.

Staff will be working with WorkSafeBC and unions, as well as responding to provincial guidelines, to make sure health and safety is secured for staff and students going back into facilities and using school buses. Additional input will need to come from Transport Canada regarding the district’s marine transportation service.

District secretary-treasurer Jesse Guy explained safety precautions to prevent spread of COVID-19 will combine environmental measures such as use of outdoor space, erecting physical barriers and enhanced cleaning activities. Administrative strategies will include things like staggering schedules and continuing virtual learning opportunities. People will also be asked to focus on personal responsibility for their own health and that of others, by keeping good hygiene and staying away from schools when not feeling well.

Provincial health orders may include more specific protocols.

“We’re gradually moving and planning but we’re not there in all areas yet,” Guy said.

To help with planning, the school district will be sending out a survey to all families next week to get information about who wants to send students to school.

CRD Opens Outdoor Recreation Facilities

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Some of Salt Spring’s key outdoor recreation facilities will reopen on Thursday, May 14.

The Capital Regional District announced today that the outdoor tennis courts and multi-sport court at Portlock Park, the bike park in Mouat Park and the Kanaka Road Skate Park are among several outdoor facilities in the CRD that will be reopened. Facilities were directed to close due to COVID-19 concerns on March 17.

“Signage will be posted at each facility reminding users to observe health and safety precautions and follow best practices for physical distancing,” explains a CRD press release. “These measures will help to ensure a safe outdoor recreation space for all. Users are expected to continue to adhere to public health guidelines of maintaining two metres of physical distance, no sharing of equipment, practising good hand hygiene, and staying home if sick.”

The CRD says that following the announcement of the provincial government’s Restart Plan for B.C., its staff have been working diligently to revise programs and services to follow provincial health guidelines. Information about further reopening of the recreation facilities will be available at a later date.

Registration for summer camps and programs is currently open only for Panorama Recreation camps and programs.

Salt Spring PARC information is available at www.crd.bc.ca/SSIParc.

Public divided over potential for music at Bullock Lake resort

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An item left languishing on the Salt Spring Local Trust Committee agenda after the last public meeting was cancelled in March has garnered considerable community attention. Over 50 pieces of correspondence have been received so far regarding a temporary use permit application to allow entertainment events at The Cottages resort, with PitchFork Social concerts especially in mind.

The seasonal Americana and roots music series took place at Fulford Hall last summer, but for various reasons producer David Youngson is seeking a return to the environment previously enjoyed at Bullock Lake Farm. Youngson is hoping to recreate the semi-open concert space and outdoor social experience just across the water at The Cottages, on the foundations of the lodge that burned down before it was ever completed back in 2007.

The TUP would allow the new venue and space for food trucks.

“I love Fulford Hall. It’s just not right for what we were trying to put out,” Youngson told the Driftwood. “It’s good in the winter but it’s hot in the summer, and it’s kind of the difference between a community hall on the highway and a barn on an organic farm.”

After the Agricultural Land Commission denied the non-farm use at Bullock Lake Farm, the PitchFork organizers explored moving to other venues, including the Salt Spring Farmers’ Institute grounds and ArtSpring. Youngson said the Farmers’ Institute board of directors voted against it. ArtSpring was more willing to make accommodations but the logistics for holding outdoor concerts were more complicated there.

“We’ve kind of looked everywhere we could have looked,” Youngson said.

Members of the public appear to be divided on the application. Many islanders look forward to having PitchFork Social return to a more central location and one with more outdoor potential. People who live near The Cottages are more apt to be opposed, citing concerns about sound, traffic and water use, with potentially much greater use than just PitchFork Social events.

Local Trust planner Geordie Gordon recommended issuing the TUP in a March staff report, with some conditions included to reduce negative impacts on neighbours.

“The proposed permit is slightly more limiting than the CRD Noise Suppression Bylaw, and a limit of 60 decibels at property lines is intended to limit any noise spilling over property boundaries. Sixty decibels is consistent with normal conversation or background music,” Gordon explains in his staff report.

The staff report also recommends limiting events to nights when there is no school in session the following morning, and ending all concerts by 10 p.m. Youngson believes his concerts won’t carry much noise anyway, and notes the proposed site is protected by cement walls on three sides and isn’t close to the water side of the property.

“We’re not bringing in Metallica. That’s not what we’re doing,” he commented. “We’re just trying to do something good and put it somewhere that would make it really good.”

Cedar Lane Water System ratepayers are especially concerned about any additional impact to their shared aquifer. In consideration, the draft TUP requires portable toilets are used and that food trucks bring their own potable water.

The staff report notes traffic will increase, but all parking could be accommodated on the property.

Ideally, Youngson hopes to resume his series in the new space in the summer of 2021, but it’s still unknown when the province will permit gatherings of more than 49 people and what will happen with COVID-19 transmission. In any event, Youngson would like the Salt Spring LTC to hold off from considering the TUP until it can hold public meetings again.

“Everyone deserves to be heard, whether for or against, and live meetings are better. It’s a far more democratic process,” Youngson said.

Pandemic Postcard Project creates record of the times

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Salt Spring Literacy has launched a local edition of The Pandemic Postcard Project.

Initiated by Literacy Alberni, the project fosters community connection and legacy-keeping through storytelling and sharing.

“We’re inviting everyone in our community — as individuals or as families, partners, roommates, work teams, etc. — to share their stories, thoughts, struggles, successes, lessons learned, blessings given or received, and resolutions made during this moment in history . . . on postcards,” SSL states in a press release.

Submissions must fit on a 5X7-inch postcard. They can use text, artwork, photos or a combination of elements. Postcards can be picked up and dropped off at Country Grocer and Apple Photo, or templates can be printed at home and glued onto tagboard or a piece of cereal box.

Suggested ideas for content include:

• A poem or story;

• A photo of your memories – people, places, adventures;

• A recipe;

• Screen captures of meaningful conversations & chats;

• Expressing of thoughts or feelings through art or words;

• A page from a journal;

• Kids could draw the best and worst parts of their experiences in the past weeks;

• Sharing the things that you miss the most, or the things that you don’t.

Some postcards will be shared through social media and some will form part of a display at the Salt Spring Public Library. All postcards will be donated to the Salt Spring Archives for posterity.

A copy of the collection will also be sent to the archives in Port Alberni for their project and some of the cards will be selected for a book to be published by Literacy Alberni.

People should include their first name, age (optional), and island/town of residence. Postcards can be mailed to the address pre-printed on the postcard, dropped in the Pandemic Postcard box at Country Grocer or Apple Photo; or digital/scanned or text-only submissions could be emailed to SSL executive director Stella Weinert at sweinert@saltspringliteracy.org, who can also provide more information, if needed.

“We encourage those with young learners in their family to practise their literacy skills through a hands-on creation,” said Weinert.

Postcards can also be dropped off to teachers for class-project use by contacting Weinert.