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Viewpoint: Estuary at a crossroads

By Anne Gunn and Frants Attorp

Fulford estuary is a magical and treasured element of Salt Spring’s diverse and varied ecology, culture and history. It encompasses public and private land, which can be a strength if we focus on working together in partnerships to restore and rebuild.

Prior to the arrival of European settlers, the Coast Salish people enjoyed and harvested the richness of the estuary. A British Admiralty map from about 1907 reveals a large salt marsh at the head of Fulford Harbour. The former Fulford Inn was actually built on a site that used to be a lagoon.

The lagoon and marsh were natural features resilient to storm surges and changes in sea level, and would have been home to rich and diverse communities of marine life. Estuaries are known for their abundance of shrimp and tiny creatures, the essential food for salmon smolt preparing for their migration to the Pacific. Salmon, in turn, support otters, seals, eagles, ospreys, orcas and, yes, even us.

By the early 1900s, changes were underway. The Salt Spring Historical Society has a photo dating back to the turn of the 19th century showing a long wooden bridge spanning the mouth of Fulford Creek and the adjoining salt marsh. The bridge carried the road linking Fulford Harbour to the island’s interior.

For the past century, a series of hotels or inns have overlooked the estuary, serving tourists and locals alike. During this time, there were many changes: a road replaced the bridge, the lagoon was drained and the saltwater marsh contracted. Only a tiny patch of red-listed dune wildrye and beach pea remains. One salmon-bearing stream, although still classified as a riparian area, has been channelled into a ditch.

Going forward to the present day, we face a climate emergency and a pressing need for climate adaptability measures. Climate adaptability includes restoring features that are globally recognized as defences against storm surges, sea-level rise and biodiversity loss. In Fulford Harbour, we could progress toward climate adaptability by working collaboratively to restore the lagoon and part of the saltwater marsh.

Trustees could take a leadership role and foster a private-public partnership using existing societies, associations and land owners. Restoration and sustainable development would be a conspicuous feature to greet visitors to Salt Spring and show what can be achieved in terms of climate adaptability.

South-end residents have repeatedly voiced support for a restaurant as a community meeting place, and there is a growing groundswell to tackle our climate emergency. So why not look into restoring the shoreline and salmon-bearing creeks along with the lagoon and marsh while relocating the proposed motel and buildings to a smaller footprint on higher, flood-proof ground?

Private land and public concerns do not have to be a source of tension if we collaborate. Salt Spring Island has done it before!

Indigenous Ed Enhancement Agreement signed

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Educators, students, families and community members filled the Salt Spring Elementary School gym on Feb. 26 to witness and celebrate the signing of a new Indigenous Education Enhancement Agreement for the Gulf Islands School District.

The ceremony was led by Cowichan Tribes elder Tousilum and featured the Tzinquaw Dancers, with drumming by School District 64 educator Quentin Harris and a small group of students to open the event. Representatives from the collaborative process who were there to sign the document were district superintendent Scott Benwell, Indigenous education coordinator Shannon Johnston, Galiano Island trustee Shelley Lawson, and students Ava Myers and Caleb Wilson, who will be sitting on the Indigenous Advisory Council. They were all blanketed for the ceremony by the First Nations leaders in recognition of their involvement.

Other participating Indigenous students were Andrew Wilson, who recorded the ceremony and spoke as the male youth witness; Taylor Akerman, female youth witness; and Layla Anderson, Lily Lamb, Hudson Scheres and Laine Hogstead, who were ushers for the ceremony and were also blanketed by the elders before the ceremony. 

Speaking to the large community gathered, Johnston said there are 153 kids in the district who have identified their Aboriginal heritage, and the education enhancement agreement will ensure their education experience is positive.

“Our job as the people in SD64 is to take care and guide you to a place of respect,” said Johnston. “I’m so excited and I’m proud of this moment for our district.”

The Indigenous or Aboriginal Education Enhancement Agreement has been part of British Columbia’s education system for the past 20 years. The agreements have created the framework through which school districts act to improve educational shortcomings for Indigenous learners.

“Historically, British Columbia schools have not been successful in ensuring that Aboriginal students receive a quality education, one that allows these students to succeed in the larger provincial economy while maintaining ties to their culture,” the Ministry of Education explains on its website.

Growing recognition of the problem led to a Memorandum of Understanding in 1999 stating that stakeholders would work with relevant groups to improve the situation. The signatories were the Chiefs Action Committee, the provincial Minister of Education, the federal Minister of Indian and Northern Affairs and the president of the BC Teachers Federation.

SD64 policy states it is dedicated to supporting the success of Indigenous learners in the school district, as well as promoting a deep awareness of Indigenous culture and history among all students. Two previous five-year enhancement agreements to further this mandate spanned 2006-11 and 2013-18.

As in previous exercises, development of a new document involved input and collaboration by district staff, Aboriginal families and elders and other community members. The new enhancement agreement has four goals: to foster and strengthen sense of belonging, knowledge of culture, community and success among its Indigenous students.

Johnston said achieving the final goal will mean “that every Indigenous learner, when they walk through our schools and when they start their path in life, they will be given every opportunity to know themselves, to be strong, to be capable, to succeed in whatever their dreams are.”

Part of the ceremony preceding the signing involved the welcoming of witnesses, an important traditional component. These representatives were asked to both legitimize the happenings and to share their feelings afterward.

Witness Rob Pingle, who chairs the Gulf Islands School District, said he was honoured to take part in the event. He echoed the importance of belonging and “the connections that we’re making between the cultures that were established on these lands millennia ago and the current people like myself that have come to these lands.”

“I feel blessed and honoured to help establish and enrich all learning that happens in this district,” Pingle added.

Cheryl Ruff, the Indigenous support teacher at Gulf Islands Secondary School, said when she was in school she didn’t have any supports that recognized her reality as an Indigenous learner.

“As an Indigenous mom with my own Indigenous daughter . . . I’m so proud of this role and I think we’re going to do beautiful and amazing things,” Ruff said. “It will give our Indigenous kids a new path of hope and courage and strength, and that’s so important to me.”

Mountain bike trails proposed

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Cycling Salt Spring is looking to bring the island up to speed with recreational amenities that many other communities enjoy in the form of trails where mountain biking is officially permitted.

Members of the Island Pathways committee attended the Salt Spring Parks and Recreation Commission meeting on Feb. 25 to make a pitch for staff time and resources to explore the idea. Sean Mulligan and John Wakefield proposed starting with one demonstration trail on Channel Ridge, but said any location that seemed feasible would be welcomed.

“There’s currently nowhere really where mountain biking exists on Salt Spring,” Mulligan said. “Which is interesting considering how big the industry is now across British Columbia and the world, really, as a popular sport, and there’s nowhere people can go to legitimately ride a mountain bike.”

Mulligan noted there are numerous sites on Vancouver Island where mountain bike trails are offered over public and private lands, including Mount Tzouhalem and Maple Mountain in the Cowichan area. Not having local trails is a drawback for islanders and visitors, and runs the risk that people will ride where they shouldn’t be in absence of proper facilities, Mulligan added.

“These might be spots we wouldn’t encourage mountain bikers to go,” Mulligan said. “Mount Maxwell obviously has a watershed and a park above; Mount Erskine — very popular with hikers, not a great place for bikers. Channel Ridge happens to be one spot that mountain bikers agree there is potential there.”

The area that Cycling Salt Spring is eyeing for development in fact already has a number of unofficial trails that riders have made over the past decades. Wakefield said if PARC could make those trails legitimate, Cycling Salt Spring could provide a volunteer base to help maintain them. The addition would benefit islanders from around middle school age all the way up to seniors, he said.

“It’s a great pursuit because it doesn’t take significant resources to develop the infrastructure, it’s an environmentally sustainable form of recreation, and we just want to set up a partnership with PARC to figure out a way of developing these facilities,” Wakefield said.

Commissioners voiced some concern about the difficulty of working with the Channel Ridge property owners, who are located in Vancouver, and asked about trail sharing between hikers and bikers. CRD director Gary Holman reported there is also an advisory group looking at the potential for mountain biking trails in CRD parks and suggested that Cycling Salt Spring connect with them.

“We’re also interested in discussing anywhere that might be more appropriate for a small network of trails,” Mulligan said.

The commission may consider the request more fully at a future meeting.

In other business related to community sports and rec groups at the Feb. 25 meeting, PARC voted to renew its lease for the Fulford ball fields for one year and added the Salt Spring Pickleball Association as a stakeholder in Portlock Park reconfiguration planning.

The commission further approved requests from Graffiti Theatre to install temporary storage in Centennial Park during its Shakespeare performance season in July and from the local Royal Canadian Marine Search and Rescue unit to install a lifejacket loaner station for kids at Fernwood Dock.

Old Boys 3Ms Unable to Stick It to GH Gunners

By FRASER HOPE

DRIFTWOOD CONTRIBUTOR

Old Boys mingled at Fulford ferry terminal wondering if the malaise of the last several weeks had worn off and everything would just be tickety-boo for the game against Gordon Head Gunners at Tyndall Turf Field in Gordon Head.

Some wore black arm bands in memory of the end of Liverpool FC’s unbeaten streak and their chase to emulate Arsenal’s “Invincibles” of the 2003-04 season. Some suggested that Old Boys were more like the “Old Contemptibles” of the British Expeditionary Force of 1914, sitting on the bench and idly watching the world go by. All were wondering if we had enough “invincibles” or even “contemptibles” to field a full team for the game. Manager Graham Tweddle confidently confirmed a full roster with the possibility of a substitute to back up the full-strength team.  

There has been a suggestion that possibly the comfort and conviviality of travelling on the Queen of Cumberland while providing an excellent travel experience may have allowed the Old Boys to succumb and be unable to raise the intensity of the game come kick-off? This theory has some support as team tactics seem hardly ever to arise as a subject of any intensity in the comfort of the Old Boys Lounge kindly provided by the BC Ferry Corporation.

As is my want at Tyndall, I made a bee-line to the local bistro to fortify and console myself depending on the result with the local well-known sausage roll delicacies. Luckily a new batch had just come out of the oven and All Was Right With the World.  

Old Boys warmed up with the knowledge that Donny Brown had returned from vacation “Across the Border Line” (Ry Cooder 1987), but MVP of last week’s Match Mr. Ben Cooper, according to reliable sources, had gone like Mr. Smith to Washington to mingle with friends. Today’s man just became yesterday’s man. Where is team loyalty?

Full team kicked off under most unusual conditions for Tyndall, with a hint of sunshine and no howling gale sweeping down from Mount Douglas that usually makes playing, spectating and reporting a frigid experience. Old Boys started with a new attacking lineup, the 3Ms — Mike Smith Mike Davis and Mike McCormick — hoping to mine some golden goals!    

Buoyed by the warmth and light, Old Boys soon pressured the Gordon Hill defence and goal but found it difficult to supply the killer final touch. Both teams seemed to be infected by a virus that produced frenetic actions at both ends of the field.

I mused “This is not gonna last!” but the players found each other with uncharacteristic accuracy in their passing. Had the yoke of stress been lifted from the Old Boys? Would they now find the freedom to play as themselves without the doubts that had weighed down the performance of the last few weeks? The final result would be arbiter.

Time after time Old Boys worked the ball down field to find the final closing shot go past the posts, over the bar or into the goalkeeper’s arms. The power in the shots was obvious; the direction towards the net not so. In defence Tweddle seemed to have found  himself in serious trouble but executed what will become known as the “Tweddle Twirl,” calmly extricating himself to launch an attack upfield. Ooohs and aaahs could be heard from spectators around the stadium.

Caught somewhat flatfooted, Dennis Shaw gave away a professional foul that allowed his defence to regroup before the free kick could be taken. No flies on our Dennis! The 3Ms continued to all have shots on goal but no success. Mark Aston’s powerful grounder just found the keeper. Counter-attacks gave Gunners opportunities but Richard Steel in net handled all with aplomb. As the first half wound down, Steel had to make a finger tip flip over the bar to keep the scores level at 0-0. Stefan Cermak, with his speed and physicality, helped the defence mop up the few Gunner attacks. A final Old Boys shot over the bar brought the first half to an end. Chances, chances, chances — but no cigars!

Tweddle looked to change the momentum and opted for a new line up: “a sort of diamond thing!” which all knew meant little change from the tactics of the first half, but Shaw and Steel traded GK jerseys for the second half.

The second half saw Old Boys move the ball better using the “diamond thing,” but the chances that came were all spurned. Frustration was mounting on the field and in the press box.

Old Boys retreated in defence and were under pressure for about 10 minutes and a scramble in defence allowed Gunners to poke the ball into the net for a lead.

The floodlights came on but provided only light but no significant boost of energy. Mike Berndt turned up as a second half substitute and went into action with little warm up or any idea of the team tactics. A rainbow arched over Tyndall but no “pot of goals” could be discerned at either end.

I was suddenly livened up by a mobile phone cacophony of sound — “Pa Pa Pa Power” (by Dead Man’s Bones 2009) — which boded ill for a future result for the Old Boys. Girding their loins, the players launched attack after attack in the last 15 minutes of the game and the Gunners keeper chanced his luck one too many times. Previously the keeper had made clearances straight to the Old Boy strikers that offered golden opportunities, but surprise had turned into more chances spurned.

Then a badly timed clearance came to Cermak, who instantaneously fed McCormick with an opportunity to show his Italian ancestry by performing a looping Panenka, worthy of Pirlo, over the head of the backwards-scrambling goalkeeper to tie the game at 1-1.

With the bit between the teeth the Old Boys strived for the winner and on the stroke of the final 90 minutes McCormick wheeled away, celebrating the winner only to see it cannon off the post, cross over, come off the other post and be scrambled away. VAR indicated no goal, so the score remained 1-1.

Post-game locker room analysis focused on the many, many chances that went begging in both halves and how lucky that the Old Boys salvaged a draw in the end despite the possession and goal chances they spurned. As usual, by the time the Queen of Cumberland disembarked at Fulford all was mellow and the Old Boys had actually won the game, despite any reporting to the contrary. Everyone had awarded themselves the 1914 Star to go with the many medals and ribbons of Old Boys campaigns.

Old Boys move on to the final stage of stages of football grief — acceptance — when they try to get on track at GISS field against Vantreights 48s this Sunday morning, March 9 at 10:30 a.m.

GILES, Virginia C.

Virginia C. Giles
Aug 21, 1940 – Feb 20, 2020

Virginia died peacefully in her home on Salt Spring Island on February 20, after a full and adventurous life. Born in Windsor, Ontario to parents Virginia and Gordon Grant, Virginia attended Oak Bay Beach High, where she made many lifelong friends.

Virginia went on to study French literature at UBC, where she met the love of her life Jack, whom she married in 1964 after a whirlwind four-week courtship. Virginia and Jack had a long, happy marriage in houses full of friends, laughter, pets and love on Laurier Ave, Point Grey Rd. and finally Salt Spring Island, which had also been a special place from her childhood.

Virginia began her career as a social worker, later worked for the BC Parole board, but discovered her true calling when she co-founded Avalon Women’s Recovery Society. Since 1989 Avalon has provided treatment, support and care to thousands of women, and for her work Virginia was awarded the Order of British Columbia in 2000. Virginia had a great talent for bringing people together, and ‘drawing them out’ in listening and thoughtful rapport, and wherever she went she was the centre of activity.

She was a renown storyteller and host, a lively and literate wit, and was described aptly by friends as a true force of nature. Virginia had many strong passions, including tennis, opera, reading, animals, puzzles and the Canucks (though the last more love-hate.) She enjoyed scanning the obituaries, in later years looking for herself. Her passions brought her around the world as she was an avid traveler, and she often said she regarded the Metropolitan Opera as her spiritual home. From backpacking around Europe in college to cruising the Yangtze, there was scarcely a corner of the globe she hadn’t visited – with a great relish for people and history, and a linguist’s curiosity.

Virginia is survived by her sons Graham (Cristina), David (Tanya) and Peter, and her grandchildren Lucas, Spencer, Oscar, Julián, Malcolm and Sara. She is also survived by her brothers John and Peter (Paula), and their children, Amanda, Andrew and Molly.

We all will miss her terribly, but take comfort knowing that her greatest passion was her love for her family, a love we continue to carry. Celebrations of Virginia’s life will be held in her Salt Spring home on March 19th at 1pm, and then at Avalon Vancouver Centre on March 20th at 4pm. In lieu of flowers please consider a donation to Avalon Recovery Society.

EHRING, George Michael

George Michael Ehring
December 13, 1949 – February 27, 2020

George died suddenly last week in Anguilla, where he had gone to spend the winter months reading, thinking and writing while staying very warm. He’s finally getting some sleep.

Born in the United States, George was an anti-Vietnam war protester and brought his commitment to social justice with him when he arrived to complete a graduate degree in medieval history at the University of Toronto.

He continued his political activism in the Ontario New Democratic Party, always urging the Party to shift left. He took his values to his work as staff at the Ontario Legislature in the NDP caucus, and on the staff of the Canadian Auto Workers Union when it was one of the most socially progressive unions in the country.

George was remarkable for the breadth of his knowledge, his pointed analysis and his intellectual curiosity. He would be the first to tell you that what he didn’t know about baseball wasn’t worth knowing. He played oboe once at Carnegie Hall when a teenager, and he transferred his passion for classical music to the Salt Spring residents who crowded his classical music appreciation classes.

George was a man of strong opinions and perceptive analysis and was a bit of a contrarian but he also had a big sense of humour and a large laugh to go with it.
He loved cooking for friends, telling stories and jokes and could tell the same one many times over. His friends received many articles and emails on the latest political outrage or curiosity, all with his unique commentary.

George was a writer and columnist, he co-authored a book on the Ontario NDP and a novel about the American Negro Baseball Leagues (as they were then called) and was working on a second novel.

On Salt Spring, George continued his public service and developed a strong environmental commitment. He made many friends and some critics, during his two terms on the Islands Trust. He served for 6 years on the board of ArtSpring and 3 years as a director of the Salt Spring Island Farmland Trust. His longtime support for climate action and water management policies was well known.

George was an intensely private person. He was very generous with his friends and with many community organizations, but he was deliberately quiet about the extent of his donations of time and money.

George leaves behind his brother, Chris Ehring (Kinnet), his sister, Liz Brook (Nancy Perman), his partner of 22 years, Katharine Atkins, and her daughter, Lauren (Shasta Coffey and their child, Ash). He also leaves many friends across Canada, an unfinished manuscript and a hoard of anecdotes.

There will be a wake in the near future with much storytelling. Donations in his memory can be made to Salt Spring Island Conservancy or to ArtSpring.

Eye for image revealed by Bateman

ArtSpring is expanding its community outreach this month by hosting a rare visual arts show in addition to its usual performance calendar. The choice of photographer Birgit Freybe Bateman for the exercise is a good one, with more than 50 of her large photo prints transforming the gallery into museum-worthy space.

The works in the Mindful Vision show were in fact sourced from a previous exhibition by the Russian Museum in St. Petersburg in 2010. Although viewers may recognize one or two images, the ArtSpring show is the first time this collection has been seen together in Canada. It is an excellent opportunity to immerse oneself in one artist’s creative oeuvre, and a fine one at that.

Bateman has a distinct way of seeing the world and translating that vision into her expression. Her work is characterized by strong formal aspects and composition. Patterning and repetition is often a focus, whether that is found in nature or in man-made environments and objects. She often takes a close-up view, excluding any distraction from what her eye singles out as of interest.

Although she has the benefit of being able to travel around the world and with no doubt very good equipment, Bateman’s eye is such that she could probably produce equally remarkable images from her closer surroundings using just a phone. The trick is seeing the world in a particular way.

Her love of pattern can therefore just as easily focus on a vertical grouping of braided ships’ hawsers as on a set of columns at St. Peter’s Basilica in Rome. Line and texture can be revealed in crushed grasses made ragged with hoarfrost or in a flowing bunch of bright yellow extension cords seen backstage.

Silver Bowl with Poppies is a good example of what Bateman can accomplish just by looking. The view is so close to be almost abstracted; the reflective silver bowl at the centre captures the light from windows across the room. Feathery poppy blossoms drape over the top of the frame like billows of red silk, with a fringe of fallen petals at the base completing the framing.

Nature scenes propose a different perspective from the usual, as well. In Curve of Cranes, taken in Rajasthan, India, Bateman completely fills the frame with a portion of a large flock of cranes feeding on the ground. The view emphasizes the patterns created by curved bodies, necks and wings, celebrating this natural phenomena as much as the particular species. Cruising Crabeater Seals, taken in Antarctica, contrasts gleaming white seal bodies heading on a horizontal line left with the dark water’s rippled surface. The water is nearly black with bright highlights of reflected light on each mini wavelet. As much texture is delineated as if sculpted in kiln-fired glass.

Photographs that include humans are less common; when they appear they often reveal a sense of gentle humour, as if to say we are small beings in the bigger picture, after all. Figures are secondary to their environment while still carrying a sense of individual character, such as a group of school children in Bhutan. Looking like tiny monks with their close-cropped heads and dark maroon uniforms, the children are dwarfed by a giant tree that spreads its branches across the entire background, and by the distant view of steep mountain sides dissected by rice terraces glimpsed behind that.

Yellow Plastic Chairs is a lovely composition that contrasts the ancient stone arches and columns of St. Marco’s Square in Venice with scores of empty chairs and tables lined up and waiting for the tourist day to begin. The scene is lifted beyond its formal aspects with inclusion of an older waiter in white jacket and bowtie captured at the edge of the seating.

Bateman’s formalism does not reduce the human to just another part of the pattern, however. There is a good deal of warmth in her images as well. To Market – Girl with Chickens has many interesting components. First of all there’s the cheeky-looking little girls at the heart of the image, who is looking up at the camera. The brightly dressed girl and her cargo of red chickens  — being towed in an open trailer behind a pushed bicycle — provide colourful contrast to the surrounding scene, a tight shot of dark bicycle frames over a dusty flagstone street. There is also pleasing formal contrast between the bicycles’ rigid angles and large wheels, and the softer organic forms they surround.

Mindful Vision continues at ArtSpring daily from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. to Sunday, March 8. Bateman will give an artist’s talk this Friday, Feb. 28 from 12 noon to 1p.m.

Salt Spring Film festival unfolds this weekend

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SUBMITTED BY SS FILM FESTIVAL

Award-winning documentaries from around the world and filmmakers from across Canada will be featured at this weekend’s 21st annual Salt Spring Film Festival.

“This year’s selection of films is particularly strong,” says festival president Therin Gower. “In addition to hard-hitting documentaries on hot-button issues, we have an unusual number of really celebratory films which will have audiences cheering.”

The much-anticipated annual event kicks off at Gulf Islands Secondary School with an Opening Gala Dinner prepared by Farm’s Gate Food & Catering at 5:30 p.m. on Friday, Feb. 28, followed by the award-winning film The Biggest Little Farm at 7 p.m. The challenges of restoring biodiversity to depleted farmland are vividly brought to life in this charming crowd-pleaser, which has won multiple audience awards and was shortlisted for the Oscars.

The Saturday-Sunday slate of 50 films is preceded by a public workshop on the polarizing effects of the internet, featuring Toronto filmmakers Patricia Marcoccia and Maziar Ghaderi, whose controversial film The Rise of Jordan Peterson screens twice at the festival, despite having been barred from several theatres in other parts of the country for fear of backlash. Moderated by local filmmaker Ian MacKenzie, the workshop is from 2 to 5 p.m. on Friday, Feb. 28 at the Salt Spring Public Library.

National Film Board producer Selwyn Jacob returns to the festival to present a powerful collection of short Canadian films on the theme of transformation and re-birth, including Haida filmmaker Christopher Auchter’s Now Is the Time (Waaydanaa), which was a surprise hit at the recent Sundance Film Festival.

Gulf Islands Secondary School is transformed into a seven-screen multiplex for the festival, with the dance studio and six classrooms re-named after local geography. Local nonprofits and community groups will set up display tables in the common area in an interactive social justice bazaar.

Festival passes can be purchased either at the door or in advance from the ArtSpring box office. With the exception of the opening gala, tickets aren’t sold to individual films. Instead, passes are available at the door, which is cash-only, for various segments of the weekend. Subsidized passes are available courtesy of the Royal Canadian Legion.

Festival-goers are encouraged to bring their own portable mugs, water bottles and seat cushions; otherwise cushions can be rented from the Grandmothers to Grandmothers group for a donation to the Stephen Lewis Foundation.

 

Viewpoint: Legal Does Not Mean Just

By JAN SLAKOV

On Twitter someone asked, if it’s OK to block rail lines, isn’t it OK then to block abortion services?

Let’s see: First, like many others who felt heartbroken when people who have gone to extraordinary lengths to protect their territory were arrested, I’m no fan of blockades. But, given the context of these blockades, it would be very wrong to use violence to bring them down.

Canadian law stipulates that women have the right to seek abortions. It also recognizes that Indigenous people have rights. Indeed, although First Nations were not allowed to hire lawyers from 1927 to 1951, in 1997, the Wet’suwet’en and Gitxsan hereditary leadership obtained a court ruling that they never surrendered title to their ancestral lands. An open letter signed by numerous Canadian lawyers explains: “The fact that band councils have signed benefit agreements with Coastal GasLink cannot justify the erasure of Indigenous law or negate the Crown’s obligation to meet with the Hereditary Chiefs.”

It’s especially shocking that the B.C. government would adopt UNDRIP legislation and then support RCMP and Coastal GasLink invasion of Wet’suwet’en territory without free, prior, informed consent. Journalist Dirk Meissner explained that Premier John Horgan said the declaration didn’t apply to the Coastal GasLink project.

Of course, legal does not necessarily mean just. (For instance, although it was legal for RCMP to forcibly take indigenous children from their families in an effort to “kill the Indian in the child”, it was clearly wrong.)

Determining what is right requires honest information, adherence to core principles and dialogue; allowing “might” to determine what is “right” undermines our humanity and ultimately our future.

Is it right to flout Indigenous rights (and Canada’s efforts towards reconciliation) in order to allow a climate-disrupting mega-project, owned largely by foreign companies, including three state-owned companies, to proceed? And we know this project would not be viable without substantial government subsidies.

The ecological consequences of fracking and using vast amounts of electricity to make LNG are devastating.

In January I spoke with a senior employee of a mainstream media outlet. They seemed to think my Wet’suwet’en solidarity walk from Swartz Bay to the legislature was of little consequence; like who would even see my signs? But they recognized I’m not the only one losing sleep over the mess we’re in. We were discussing Indigenous resistance when the employee suggested “they” would save us. I was shocked; tears rolled down my cheeks. Only afterwards could I see how the idea that this media outlet would continue to spread misinformation about the crisis we face, while relying on “them” to save us, when “they” have suffered through genocidal conditions, was a bit much for me.

Even as major investors back away from fossil-fuel projects, many politicians speak as if divestment were a cardinal sin. But clinging to devastating industries, especially when other ways to meet basic needs are readily available, makes about as much sense as continuing to pay church indulgences, when unscrupulous church officials were using them as a cash cow.

There is good news. The Teck mine is off the table, divestment is gaining traction, people are flying less (and buying offsets). Still, to quote Adrienne Rich: “So much has been destroyed/ I have to cast my lot with those who [. . .] reconstitute the world.”

Local boys make mark at tourney

Salt Spring Island Middle School’s Grade 8 boys basketball team won the mid-island championship tournament earlier this month.

The boys won all three games at the event hosted by Duncan Christian School, including the final game against Frances Kelsey by a 43-25 score. SIMS athletic director Tom Langdon credited the team’s coaching by Rowan Hughes and the efforts of the athletes.

“Every player contributed throughout the season,” he said.

The boys were undefeated in the regular season.

“They have grown a lot and definitely have a bright future ahead of them at the high school,” said Langdon.

Meanwhile, the Gulf Islands Secondary School senior boys Scorpions finished their season in a tie for fifth place at the Vancouver Island AA championships on Saturday, Feb. 22. After winning their first game of the tourney over St. Andrew’s by an 86-58 score, GISS fell to Lambrick Park by 86-59 on Friday.

Facing Pacific Christian on Saturday, GISS lost any chance to get to the provincial championships with a 69-62 loss and finished in a tie for fifth place. Player of the game honours for GISS at the tournament went to Matthew Schure, Aaron Moise and Gavin Donaldson. Schure also made the second all-star team.

Tourney hosts Brentwood College became island champions after beating Lambrick Park 75-73 in the final.

One week earlier, the Scorpions finished second behind Brentwood at the north island championships held at Kwalikum Secondary School.