Home Blog Page 359

Islands Trust reduces budget due to pandemic impacts

0

Trust-area property owners will get a break on their tax bills after Islands Trust Council decided to reduce the 2020/21 Trust budget in response to novel coronavirus pandemic impacts.

Council had approved a $8,338,613 operating budget at their last meeting in March, with $6,917,075 of that amount derived from property taxes from local Trust areas and $312,887 from Bowen Island Municipality property owners. On April 20, trustees agreed via teleconference to reduce the budget to $8.2 million, with $6,783,140 from local Trust area property taxes and $303,021 from BIM.

“The COVID-19 pandemic has created personal and financial challenges for many islanders,” said council chair Peter Luckham in an April 22 press release. “The world has changed dramatically since we first approved a 2020/21 budget in mid-March. Trustees wanted to help, so we held a special Trust Council meeting to discuss how we could reduce taxes. After debating options, Trust Council voted to approve a reduced budget that means an 8.1 per cent decrease in the tax requisition to Bowen Island Municipality and an average zero per cent general property tax increase for property owners in local Trust areas.”

The budget was amended by reducing meeting expenses, staff and trustee travel and training, and choosing to not hire a co-op student this year due to current work-at-home measures.

Trust staff have been working from home during the pandemic period. They continue to process development applications and referrals, manage the Islands Trust Conservancy’s protected areas and develop strategic plan projects.

Details of the approved 2020/21 budget are available on the Islands Trust website.

Trustees also voted Monday to cancel their June 2020 in-person meeting on Hornby Island.

“We look forward to meeting on Hornby Island at a later date when things stabilize and we have the ability to plan with confidence,” said Luckham. “During the interim, we are working to have electronic meetings open to the public.”

Local Trust Committees move to electronic meetings

0

Salt Spring Island Local Trust Area residents and property owners can attend the next local Trust committee meeting on Tuesday, April 28 from their homes, either by phone or with connection to the internet.

The LTC will conduct its business meeting starting at 9:30 a.m. via Zoom, the electronic video and audio conferencing system, in compliance with public health directives to limit public gatherings and maintain social distance.

However, provincial law still requires that a physical location be provided. The Islands Trust was not included in the Minister of Public Safety and Solicitor General’s order of March 26 allowing local governments to conduct electronic meetings without a location for the public to gather.

The Islands Trust’s Victoria office at 1627 Fort Street will serve as this location, although the organization hopes meeting attendees will stay home and attend the meeting electronically.

“As much as we would like to be doing business as usual, we can’t while we’re experiencing this current public health emergency,” said Peter Luckham, Islands Trust Council chair. “We asked the provincial government for an exemption to the physical location requirement, but to date, it has not been granted.”

The Victoria office provides sufficient space for social distancing, but Luckham said if too many people attend to meet social distancing requirements, the LTC meeting will be cancelled.  Members of the public can join the meeting from their homes by calling 1-855-703-8985 (toll free) or by logging into: https://islandstrust.zoom.us/s/67544312685. The webinar ID number is 675 4431 2685.

Members of the public are encouraged to subscribe to Salt Spring Island Local Trust Committee information and updates by going to the Islands Trust website.

The North Pender Island LTC wil also be conducting its next meeting electroncially with the public space provided in Victoria. Members of the public can access the April 23 sesion starting at 10 a.m. by calling 1-855-703-8985 or logging into https://islandstrust.zoom.us/s/67230101567.

Empathy prescribed for better crisis response

1

Spreading the message about how to limit COVID-19 has become a regular pastime for people across Canada as well as on Salt Spring, but some are feeling that community participation has gone too far.

From heated arguments on social media platforms to escalating tension in encounters between strangers, the societal cracks are beginning to widen. Several Salt Springers have reported feeling concerned about a growing “us versus them” mentality, whether that is expressed as islanders repelling outsiders or “covigilante” behaviour directed at fellow community members.

Dave Vollrath, a communications consultant with 30 years’ experience in the mental health and addictions fields, is one of the people who has been advocating community unity as well as personal responsibility. Concerns he was already ruminating on came to a personal head over the Easter long weekend; Vollrath’s son was verbally accosted by an intimidating-looking man who demanded to know who he was and what he was doing while he was in town to pick up take-out food.

“He returned home quite in a state of anxiety. A couple of hours was spent talking about it and helping him calm down from this uncomfortable experience,” Vollrath said. “My son is a 22-year-old young man who can take care of himself, but it hit home.”

Vollrath fully embraces the messaging by the provincial health officer and other officials about staying home when possible and practising physical distancing, but he also observes Canadians have both personal rights and responsibilities. It’s not up to other community members to police their neighbours, he said.

Local government bylaw enforcement officers have been empowered to assist with physical distancing oversight, primarily through education. Don Brown, the Capital Regional District’s head of bylaw enforcement, reported that is already happening on Salt Spring with help from RCMP auxiliary officers. Action over the Easter long weekend included asking some cafes to remove seating that had been set up on outside patios and asking large groups in CRD parks to disperse.

“Let’s stay with the authority figures and trust them,” Vollrath said. “People know what to do. I want, at a deeper level, for our community to think about what motivates us to vigilantism and governance over what others’ perceived essentials are.”

Nonviolent communications facilitator Laura Dafoe said having a mindfulness practice in place can be helpful for moments like these, both to settle oneself and to facilitate empathy with where the other person is coming from. Nonviolent communication is built around recognizing what the other person might be feeling and needing to connect to a common humanity and enable people to hear each other.

“For the most part we have not grown up in a world where we learned to articulate that in a useful way and really hear each other,” Dafoe said. “We often think we need to be bold and state our opinions loudly and strongly. Sometimes we think we need to use anger to get our needs met. But that can put the other person on the defensive, and then there’s no conversation happening.”

Key words to remember, she said, are “stop … breathe … ask questions.”

Dafoe can recommend many resources that may help improve one’s ability to feel empathy and communicate better with others. The website takecareofyou.info can help people deal with fears by giving themselves self-care. The Charter of Compassion is another useful resource, and so is the Center for Nonviolent Communication’s 10 Steps to Peace.

“In times of crisis we need to be together more than ever. Division is not helpful,” Dafoe said.

As a member of Salt Spring’s restorative justice group, Dafoe has seen the results that can come through exercises such as peace circles, where people in conflict all have a chance to speak (respectfully) and be heard. She will be hosting a Zoom workshop on how to create peace circles on May 7 for the Star of the Sea Centre for Spiritual Living and Practice. Other free events the centre is hosting online in the coming weeks could also help. Poetry in a Time of Trial, taking place Tuesday, April 28 from 7 to 8:30 p.m., will bring together people interested in sharing and exploring what poetry may have to say, directly or indirectly, to the current pandemic. 

Vollrath also encourages community members to find ways to come together and foster social connections even though physical distancing remains the rule, and to avoid taking COVID concerns into confrontation.

“We can easily turn this onto one another, this sort of blame, and we want to avoid that at this time,” Vollrath said. “We stand a chance as an entire Earth population to come together to solve a problem, and when our focus is on something else we may not be doing our best on the other. So let’s focus on a common good in a positive way.”

The little library that could: The story of Salt Spring’s library

By Lavonne Leong

I have a confession to make: my family and I moved to Salt Spring because of the library. When we were first deciding where to put down roots in British Columbia, we visited lots of small towns. We had a good feeling about Salt Spring already, but when we saw the library, built to an environmental LEED gold standard, with its glass and light and books and art, and its legions of volunteers, we knew that this little community of 10,000 year-round residents had its priorities straight. It was like the soul of the island made manifest. 

So we decided to stay. 

I thought I was the only one, until I mentioned it to Karen Hudson, Salt Spring’s chief librarian, who has been with the library since 1999. 

Actually, says Hudson, “a lot of people do that.” That’s how special it is to have this kind of library for a community of this size. But how did it come to be? 

This year is the 60th anniversary of the library’s incorporation and it’s a good time to look at how we got here. Gorgeous public buildings don’t just appear. Even though the library itself is turning 60, the story of Salt Spring’s book-borrowing institutions goes back far into the 19th century. 

There have been small lending libraries on and off on Salt Spring since 1898. The first opened across from what is now The Fritz movie theatre, starting with about 60 books. In 1930, a second library opened in a storeroom at Mouat Bros. & Co. As with most lending libraries back then, it cost a small amount of money to rent a book. 

The Salt Spring Island Public Library began as a different kind of model, a public lending library, to celebrate British Columbia’s centennial in 1958. Spearheaded by Mary Hawkins, the project moved the library to a larger area of the Mouat Bros. building and opened with 1,300 books and $7.68 in funds. Two years later, the Salt Spring Island Public Library Association was incorporated, gathering a collection of more than 5,000 books by 1963. 

The following year, having outgrown the Mouat Bros. building, the library found its present location on McPhillips Avenue, in an old boat-building shed. Though it was renovated several times (for a while, the library had the distinction of being the only one in British Columbia with a bathtub), the location never lost its nautical, slightly ramshackle, character. 

“You’d walk across the floor with a book cart and there were soft spots on the floor,” recalls Hudson, of the library’s old digs. “We were afraid of [the floor] falling in, because of the weight of the book carts.” 

The library thrived, says Hudson, with lively book circulation and programs for kids and teens nearly overflowing from the basement. But she also recalls that the library suffered from the side effects of being housed in an old building that needed more upkeep than it got: rats and mice nibbled through the internet and phone cables, causing user outages and costly damage. Black mould sprang up in the basement, where the archives were. But “when the otters moved into the basement, that’s when it got bad,” says Hudson. 

Discussions about funding a new library on the same site started in 2002, but raising the resources required was a daunting task for such a small population. The Friends of the Library community group incorporated in 2005, raising nearly $250,000, commissioning architectural drawings from Chang Holovsky Architects, Inc., and purchasing the property next door to the boat shed. The library was “shovel-ready,” and a land referendum had passed by a majority in 2007, but a new building would cost millions.  

Hudson says the community really aligned, not just behind the idea of a new library but behind the work to be done to get there, in 2008. A winter storm hit the island, piling up snow on the old boat-building shed until “the roof collapsed onto the Fiction-A section,” says Hudson. “At that point, the bookshelves were holding the roof up. So we lost our Margaret Atwoods, and we realized we needed a new building.” 

In September 2009, the library received a federal-provincial infrastructure grant of $4.55 million — contingent on 30 per cent community funding being provided. Two months later, a community referendum to fund the remaining $2.75 million passed by 78 per cent. The library’s collections were moved to a temporary location on Jackson Avenue, and ground was broken on the new library on July 28, 2011.  

The new library, the one you can stand in today, opened 17 months later on Dec. 20, 2012, just in time for Christmas. There’s no bathtub, but it features meeting and program rooms, a mezzanine for volunteers, a space for the Salt Spring Archives and an expansive children’s section that’s nearly the size of the entire old library. 

That’s by design, says Hudson.

“We have so many children on the island, and we want[ed] to keep families on the island.” 

The current kids and teens’ section has room not only for books but for story time and train sets, comfy reading chairs and tables, a play area, computers, and a dedicated meeting room that teens can use for free. 

“It’s more than a library here,” says Hudson. “It’s a community centre.” 

Last year, the library presented 698 programs, with a total attendee headcount of 14,738. That’s enough programming for a community three to five times its size, says Hudson, made possible by partnerships with community organizations who create and present the content, while the library provides the space and the advertising. 

By way of illustration, Hudson pops open the program calendar on her computer: every day is packed with colour-coded entries, a literal rainbow of community group meetings, poetry, art, language and film events, game nights, talks and symposia.

All of that is possible because of Salt Spring’s unusual staffing structure; it’s one of just three non-union libraries in B.C., and it runs largely on love  — on its volunteers. When the library first opened, two volunteers — one for check-in, and one for check-out — did 100 per cent of the work. The library didn’t have a single staffer until 2004, when it hired a part-timer. Today, the library has 4.5 paid staff and about 150 volunteers. The oldest Hudson can think of is 85; the youngest is in middle school.

“If you compare us to other libraries that serve midrange populations, you’ll see it’s incredibly different from the norm,” says Julia Wagner, who is Salt Spring’s newest staff librarian. “You could say we’re definitely punching above our weight.” 

“I’ve never seen volunteers like the volunteers here,” continues Wagner. 

There are book menders and bookbinders, cataloguers, shelvers and circulation desk workers, but there are also landscape gardeners and indoor plant waterers, display designers and book deliverers, book club facilitators, refreshment refillers, volunteer trainers and program managers. 

And at the heart of the library, there’s the collection: the books, the movies, the music — more than 63,000 individual items — beneath soaring ceilings that will bear the weight of almost any winter storm.

Note: The library is currently closed to visitors, but there are many digital resources available to people with library cards.

COVID response and recovery plan takes shape

By COVID-19 Business and Farm Emergency Response and Recovery Task Force

If there is one thing that has become clear in the first weeks of the COVID-19 crisis, it’s the generosity of Salt Springers coming together to help. 

While we are in the middle of a health crisis that is devastating the lives of many, another crisis is unfolding whose impact will be felt for years to come. And that’s the impact of this crisis on Salt Spring’s farms and businesses – many of which have had to completely transform, scale back, or, alas, suspend operations. The early signs of the toll this is taking are coming in, and it’s sad to say that there may well be empty storefronts, studios and fallow fields once this is over.  

In response to this crisis, the volunteer-run COVID-19 Business and Farm Emergency Response and Recovery Task Force took shape in March to support growers, restaurateurs, merchants, artisans and others through an economic crisis the scale of which we have never witnessed – all the while, developing ways to enhance food security and resilience on our island home. 

The task force formed out of recognition that unless we acted quickly, Salt Spring would lose critical economic and agricultural infrastructure that takes years to build, but only months to lose.  

One month in, our united efforts have resulted in the launch of several initiatives, all driven by the need to protect jobs and our island economy. 

Now we are urging our community to come out and support the new Essential Services Tuesday Market, to shop through the market’s new online portal, to get to know our farmers through the weekly profiles developed in partnership with the Driftwood, to spread the word about the new online COVID-19 info hub at opportunitysaltspring.ca with its resources for islanders, and to fully support our upcoming “buy local” campaign.  

The work we’ve been able to do in collaboration with scores of resourceful islanders is testimony to the bootstrap character of a community used to having to figure things out without enough outside help. 

Collectively, our everyday choices will determine how much we can minimize community suffering as a result of this crisis. Instead of buying through Amazon or big box stores online, we can contact our local businesses to find out what they have right now for pick up or delivery. Instead of picking up that head of California romaine, we can choose fresh leafy greens grown by local farmers right here at home. All of our efforts together will make a difference to how our island looks after COVID-19 fades. 

In the weeks to come, we commit to updating our fellow islanders on more new initiatives designed to help our farms and businesses get through this crisis, and to letting you know how you, too, can help enrich and sustain our wonderful community. 

Be well, be safe. 

Members of the task force are: Laura Patrick, Salt Spring Island trustee; Tony Beck, Agricultural Alliance; Anne Macey, Abattoir Society and Island Natural Growers; Jessica Harkema, executive director, Salt Spring Chamber of Commerce; Jeremy Milsom, director, Chamber of Commerce; Rob Pingle, co-ordinator, Salt Spring Community Market Society; Francine Carlin, Salt Spring Community Economic Development Commission chair; Tine Rossing, Task Force food security co-lead; Elizabeth Zook, task force food security co-lead; and Bryan Young, task force communications lead.

Viewpoint: Avoid risky behaviour

0

BY DAVID RAPPORT

In this pandemic crisis, there are a lot of unknowns: How long will it last? Will we develop herd immunity? Will the virus take a summer break? Will there be a second wave? We don’t have the answers yet. What we do know is that this novel pathogen, SARS-CoV-2, is readily spread from person to person, causing the potentially deadly disease known as COVID-19. It follows that the main way to break transmission is to keep enough physical distance — the recommended two meters or 6.5 feet — between each other, creating a barrier that the virus is unlikely to leap. The critical point here is that this distance is to be maintained not just sometimes or selectively, but at all times, with the only exception being the people you live with. That is the B.C. Ministry of Health guideline. And the need is now greater than ever to follow that guideline.

Most people on the island are careful to practise this physical distancing, in efforts to break the chain of transmission. But whenever anyone breaches the guideline, the success of everyone’s efforts is put at risk — and so is our collective health. On the island there are half a dozen or so hubs where we still converge to attend to basic needs: grocery stores, pharmacies, the hospital, hardware stores. At this time, these are also hubs for transmission of SARS-CoV-2 by people who host the virus but are asymptomatic, and thus are capable of spreading it unknowingly.

Think about it: nearly all of us (except for hermits) belong to interlocking clusters — family, friends, co-workers, and so on. Each individual in each of these clusters has contact with individuals in other clusters. Ultimately, the network of linked clusters expands to encompass virtually the entire island. If we all gave ourselves exemptions on maintaining physical distancing, we would have the perfect storm, should anyone on the island harbour the virus. 

Fortunately not everyone is so foolhardy as to breach the physical distancing guideline. That provides some breaks in the transmission chain. But to really curb the spread, every one of us should serve as a “circuit breaker,” by rigorously practising physical distancing. Let’s not forget that, while you may be willing to take the personal risk of coming too close to others and potentially getting infected, by so doing you are also putting others at risk of getting infected, in case you are an asymptomatic carrier.

I suggested to one of our grocery stores some practical measures that would keep people apart, even though the aisles are too narrow for people to safely pass one another. Alas, they have been unwilling to implement one-way aisles, arguing that it would inconvenience customers to have to wait for those ahead of them to make their selections. That may be inconvenient indeed. But is this not a time to put up with a few minutes of extra wait for the potential of saving lives? In our caring community, surely that would be a very small price to pay.

David J. Rapport has been a consultant to Vietnam on pandemic planning and an advisor to several UN agencies, including WHO, on the avian influenza pandemic of 2006-07.

TYLER, Nancy L.

Nancy L. Tyler
1938 – 2020

Nancy died on April 1st, 2020, in her own home, surrounded by loving family and friends. She will be profoundly missed for the warmth and company she offered to others over the years.

Born 1938 in Brunswick Maine, where she spent her youth, she later attended the University of Pennsylvania, earning a Bachelor of Science and a Certificate of Physiotherapy. There she met her husband to be, Albert V. Tyler. They married and moved to Canada in 1960, where she pursued a career in physiotherapy. Over the course of the next nine years, while living in Toronto (ON) and St. Andrews (NB), she had three children, Ellen, Jeanne and Paul and worked part time as a physiotherapist.

Leaving the East, she and her husband fulfilled a lifelong dream to live on the West Coast, moving to Oregon in 1974.  In the 1980s, while living in Oregon, Nancy returned to full time work to become an accomplished Physiotherapist, working at King’s Road Physical Therapy and Linn County Home Health Agency. Nancy and Albert, throughout their lives, continued to seek new adventures, eventually landing in Nanaimo on Vancouver Island in 1981. There she practiced physiotherapy at Dufferin Place, the Nanaimo Regional General Hospital’s Long Term Care facility, and Langley Lodge Intermediate Care facility. In 1992 they moved to Fairbanks, Alaska where she worked at the Fairbanks Memorial Hospital.  Over the years she continued her professional training by studying both traditional and non-traditional methods such as the Feldenkrais Method and Therapeutic touch.  In 2000, she returned to British Columbia to retire on Salt Spring Island.

Nancy was an active member of her community, had a keen literary interest, and enjoyed the outdoors. She played the piano and taught both of her daughters to play as well, and music always played in the house. On Saltspring Island, she joined the trail and nature club, knitting and book clubs, took guitar lessons, and continued her 20 plus year practice of Tai Chi.  She also enjoyed time with her husband traveling and exploring places she’d never seen, such as Italy and Scotland. After her husband died in 2005, Nancy revealed an inner strength that amazed everyone who knew her. Even after a diagnosis of Parkinson’s Disease in 2009, she lived independently and continued with traveling and interests for another eleven years.

Throughout her life Nancy maintained her Maine independent spirit, making her own choices about her life.  Known by her family as “the healer,” her children frequently relied on her to treat their own various physical aches and pains, as well as emotional ones. She was an exceptional listener, with remarkable insight into others, and always provided combination of positive encouragement and sound advice. She will be remembered as a welcoming host with whom people felt comfortable to be themselves. Her irreplaceable presence will be profoundly missed and always felt, by both her family and her community. Nancy made the world a better place than she found it.

Nancy Tyler is survived by her daughter Ellen and husband Halfdan; daughter Jeanne and husband Patrick, son Paul and wife Jacquie, and her grandchildren Mikael, Hildur, Aidan and Sophia, her sisters Dawn, Dorothy and Cathy and her sister-in-law Roberta.

Due to the present health crisis, her memorial will be postponed until such a time people can gather to celebrate her life.
Donations in her name can be made to Parkinson’s Canada (https://www.parkinson.ca), The Salt Spring Conservancy  (https://saltspringconservancy.ca) or The Writer’s Trust of Canada (https://www.writerstrust.com).

From her list of favourite songs, Morning has Broken by
Cat Stevens:

Mine is the sunlight
Mine is the morning
Born of the one light Eden saw play
Praise with elation, praise every morning
God’s recreation of the new day

Morning has broken like the first morning
Blackbird has spoken like the first bird
Praise for the singing
Praise for the morning
Praise for them springing fresh from the world

DRZYMALA, Gene

Gene Drzymala
June 4, 1940 – April 25, 2020

Born in Przewoloka Poland, Gene lived a life full of self determination and the pursuit of freedom.  Coming to Ottawa at an early age, Gene had to adjust to a new language and way of life. He did just this, earning his pilots license and transversing across Canada with the mother of his three children, Emily Drzymala. Later on, as he was braving the Canadian Frontier in the Yukon he met his beloved Sharon with whom he was with for 40 years. The latter half of his life was spent with her, in perfect tandem as they alternated between summers farming and boating with other interpid adventures along the way. Gene took great pride in being part of the boating community and Salt Spring Island Sailing Club. He and Sharon provided love and hospitality for each other, their family, friends and communities.

Gene will be remembered for his stories, good nature, mile wide smile and love that swept to his friends and family. He passed away peacefully with a smile on his face as his dear Sharon “Dovie” welcomed him to heaven. When asked if he was a ‘believer’ he answered ‘just in case” with a smile.

Gene was very proud of and survived by his three children Mitchell (Carrie), Julie (Cindy), Suzanne (John), his 8 grandchildren Lydia, Hannah, Sephira, Merlin, Bowen, Harper, Riley and Cash and his great grand child Norah.

Service information will be provided at a later date.

Star of the Sea hosts Earth Day celebration on Zoom

Earth Day festivities won’t be happening at Centennial Park this year, but people can still celebrate the world’s 50th anniversary event. 
 
An online ceremony of reverence for Earth hosted by Star of the Sea will take place Wednesday, April 22 on Zoom from 3 to 5 p.m.
 
“As we continue to practice physical distance to prevent the spread of Covid-19, Zoom Room gatherings have become a valuable way to connect and share,” the coordinators state. “You are invited to join and create a mandala to the Earth with elements from nature. We will offer prayers of gratitude for this precious planet we share, be inspired by sacred Earth poetry, and celebrate our collaborative relationship with Earth.”

 

The event is open to ages five to 105. Pre-registration is required to receive the Zoom link. Register at staroftheseassi@gmail.com and bring a friend, too. Further instructions and handouts will be available to all who register.

Medical staff association says efforts must continue

By Lady Minto Hospital Medical Staff Association

Our efforts are working to flatten the curve, but international experience shows we cannot let up those efforts without putting many people at risk. Lately, we’ve been looking to the south where people are protesting these guidelines and demanding that the economy be restarted. What we really see are people with a complete disregard for those at risk, particularly for workers who literally put their lives at risk daily to care and provide for others. Most of the population remains susceptible to this virus and so we must proceed cautiously as we attempt to reduce some of the restrictions on our daily life. More testing will allow us to track and contain cases and this will be made available very soon. We will post instructions regarding access to testing in the coming days.

Many people have been asking about the use of masks. Cloth masks protect others from the wearer’s droplets. As more and more information becomes available about people without symptoms shedding the virus, a cloth mask is advisable if you will be in a situation where you are unable to maintain the appropriate distance of two meters. Remember that masks are only one part of the transmission reduction strategy and hand washing is vitally important. Please see this detailed FAQ on masks for more information: https://t.co/cEZJ8IAwhA?ssr=true

Once again we want to thank all members of our community for their support. This is not only for all the well wishes, pot banging, and treats sent to Lady Minto, but also for following the guidelines and staying home. Thank you for helping to keep everyone in the community safe!

Finally, please remember that your family doctor is open for business. Call them or book online if you need an appointment.