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Liv Wade releases new album

When Liv Wade drives home, she doesn’t spend hours stuck in traffic. Her commute is actually one of the better parts of her day.

That commute is the basis for the song Cranberry Lane, the first single off her new album entitled A Piece of Paradise that came out on Dec. 20. Salt Springers will recognize some of the imagery from Cranberry Lane, including a description of a farmhouse next to the road and “the open spaces watching . . . with room to breathe.”

Wade, who lives on a farm up in the Cranberry Valley, said that the appreciation for the small and beautiful things in life is one of the major themes of her new album.

“I think that the album is about really appreciating those things around us and what we do have personally,” she said. “When you’re used to something all the time it’s easy to maybe not appreciate it the same way . . . When I drive home I look around at this beautiful place I live . . . I come home feeling liberated by looking around at the natural world, compared to being stuck in traffic in the city, or being stressed or having to get somewhere at a particular time.”

Wade released her first album in 2011, and has been recording music ever since. A Piece of Paradise is a step away from her last release, 2017’s Resilience. Though the album is meant to showcase the better things in life, Wade touches on some darker places in some of the new tracks. Her song Hard Days was inspired by the struggle against the Dakota Access Pipeline by First Nations people from the Standing Rock Reservation in North Dakota.

“I was thinking about the Dakota Access Pipeline protest and how mainly Indigenous people are at the forefront of this. Obviously there are lots of allies who have come forward, but that song in particular is where I try to put not outright political statements, but an underlying theme of ‘Hey, water is what we need and we have people out there fighting for our rights to drink clean water,’” she said.

Wade is Metis, and her music has a connection to Indigenous rights and issues in Canada and elsewhere in the world. Hard Days’ inspiration is one example of that. She explained that while there are a lot of small things that we can turn to and appreciate to make our lives better, we also have to fight for those things that we love.

“I think of situations up in Northern Canada in small Indigenous communities that don’t have water as a basic human right. Going back to [where I live and] Cranberry Lane, I get fresh, clean drinking water every day,” she said. “There’s a huge contrast in that.”

Wade also touches on LGBTQ rights and issues in her music. The final track on the album, Fragile, is meant as a call to youth who are dealing with accepting their sexuality and comes from Wade’s own experience with that.

“I think about there being suicides in the northern parts of Canada with the young people who happen to be somewhere on the LGBTQ Two Spirit spectrum. They are young people taking their own lives because they don’t feel like they have a place in the world or that they have those role models to look up to,” she said.

Wade is planning shows for 2020 all over the province, including some on Salt Spring that are yet to be announced.

Piece of Paradise is available to download on Apple Music, and to stream on Spotify.

For more on this story, see the Dec. 25, 2019 issue of the Gulf Islands Driftwood newspaper, or subscribe online.

SSI Foundation announces fall 2019 grants

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The Salt Spring Island Foundation has announced the disbursement of over $108,000 in fall foundation grants for island charities. The grants support many essential programs and services, with a particular focus on children and youth, health and wellness, and capacity building for local non-profit organizations. The foundation thanks the many generous donors who make these grants possible.

BC SPCA, Salt Spring Island – $5,000 for the “Snip for Dogs” program, to provide spaying and neutering for dogs owned by low-income households and individuals without housing.

Big Brothers Big Sisters – $1,500 to provide supplies for 15 students for one year for the In-School Mentoring program. This grant is supported by funds from the Unger Family Fund for Children and their Mothers and Senior Women in Need.

Capital Regional District

• Salt Spring Island Electoral Area Emergency Program: $6,000 for an on-island, two-day Justice Institute of BC-certified course, on the subject of Emergency Operations Centre Essentials, for 24 first responders.

• PARC: $5,685 for a community event coordinator for the Earth Day event, two film evenings and the Lantern Festival.

Fulford Harbour Childcare Society (TreeFrog Daycare) –$1,500 for a raised garden bed that will support the instruction of many important early learning concepts while children experience gardening and growing food.

Greenwoods Eldercare Society – $10,000 toward an IT infrastructure upgrade project to enhance the use of electronic information for resident care planning and record-keeping, communication with families, and core business systems such as shared calendars and HR scheduling. The upgrade will also enable accreditation and telehealth capability.    

Gulf Islands Early Learning Society – $10,000 toward replacing the aging roof of the Salt Spring Early Learning Centre.   

I-SEA (Institute for Sustainability Education and Action) Youth – $2,500 for a local version of a Canada-wide initiative, My Clothes My World — Fashion Takes Action, consisting of six sessions examining the environmental impact of clothing.

Island Pathways – $7,200 for the Trees for Pathways and Schools 2020 project, which will result in the planting of 40 trees on the Kanaka Pathways and Salt Spring Island Elementary School grounds. This grant is supported by the Jacqueline Booth Memorial Fund.

Salt Spring Farmers’ Heritage Foundation – $5,000 for building supplies for an extension to an existing shed that protects antique farm equipment.

Salt Spring Film Festival Society – $2,500 for speakers, sound boards and cables to upgrade the Film Festival sound system.

Salt Spring Forum – $1,000 for sound equipment and set-up for the Youth Speaker Series.

Salt Spring Island Community Services – $6,240 for an internet upgrade to support current and emerging program requirements, remediate the present weak site connectivity and provide the capacity to improve security systems.

Salt Spring Island Public Library – $8,762 to support the Indigenous Mural Project, a large outdoor map depicting First Nations communities on Salt Spring. The project highlights Indigenous culture and peoples, with young artists from local First Nations participating in the creation of the mural on the outside of the library building.

School District #64

• Fulford School: $6,500 to install a catchment system and solar-powered water pump for rainwater harvesting for the community garden.

• Salt Spring Middle School: $1,800 to purchase a lighting board and dimmer for school stage lighting and install DMX or audio wiring.

• Salt Spring Elementary and Fernwood Elementary schools: $4,000 to purchase three risers to share between the schools for the music program. This grant is supported by funds from the Unger Family Fund for Children and their Mothers and Senior Women in Need.

• GISS Robotics Team: $4,717 to purchase additional equipment to enable competition and to provide funds both to observe and enter competition.

• GISS: $1,000 for a stipend to a health educator for Grades 10 and 12 sexual health education. 

• Salt Spring Middle School PAC: $16,000 to purchase five carts of student Chromebooks with a long-term view of adopting a healthier use of technology, including minimizing the off-task use of electronic devices.

Special Olympics BC – $1,244 for uniforms for the Salt Spring Island Special Olympics team, including shorts, swimsuits and jackets.

Visit the website at ssifoundation.ca, or call 250-537-8305 to see how the foundation can help Salt Spring charities.

Viewpoint: Emergency comms vital

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By BRIAN WOLFE-MILNER

I am writing on behalf of the Salt Spring Island Amateur Radio Society to support the application by the Gulf Islands Community Radio Society for their community radio licence. Our organization believes this will be an important piece of infrastructure for the Salt Spring Island.

We are able to receive some Vancouver Island and Vancouver radio stations but they have little content specific to Salt Spring Island.  A community radio station would fill this need. The community station that operated here in the past was listened to and enjoyed by many islanders.

Last December, during the day, Salt Spring Island experienced a wind storm with hurricane force winds. A lot of damage was done to buildings, hydro, telephone, internet and cable lines,  the roads and  landscape. Fortunately there were no fatalities on the island but many vehicles were destroyed. The storm raged over a period of about seven hours and in the aftermath many roads were inaccessible, we suffered  island wide power outages and poor communications. The power outages and road closures continued for several days and with poor communications  it was very difficult to keep the population informed. Fortunately the cellular network was still working although it was said they were frequently at full capacity, dropping calls and refusing to connect new callers.

I attended debriefs of the event and the most common observation was that people did not know what was happening. For example, school buses were not running, so school children could not leave the school and some parents were frantic not knowing what was happening with their children. Other people were unable to get home because they were not able to find out which roads were passable.

If we had had a community radio station that coordinated with our Emergency Operations Centre,  a constant flow of information could have been broadcast to most of the population of Salt Spring Island both in their vehicles and at home.

Our society believes that if only for emergency communications, this licence should be granted. Salt Spring Island is isolated from other population centres and relies solely on air or water transportation for our everyday needs. When a major catastrophe occurs in the southwest corner of B.C. we would be on our own for many days and perhaps several weeks. Communications would be vital in that scenario as they are in any emergency. Our amateur radio operators will do our best to help with the flow of information region wide but we do not have the coverage that would be provided by broadcast radio.

Editorial: Wish list

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With the Driftwood’s publishing date falling on Christmas Day this year, it’s an ideal opportunity to compile a Christmas wish list for Salt Spring.

A number of items are already in process, so we wish for them to be expedited in 2020 and for no unforeseen obstacles to arise in the meantime.

While Salt Spring continues to suffer from an acute housing shortage, a few developments have overcome most of the hurdles required, and two have even had official ground-breaking ceremonies. Hopefully the new Meadowlane seniors complex, Croftonbrook expansion and Salt Spring Commons projects continue to proceed without incident, and that more good news is on the horizon in the housing realm.

Another project we hope will flourish is the Wagon Wheel Housing Society’s non-profit laundromat in the Creekhouse complex in Ganges. Funds are still needed to see that come to fruition, so hopefully some Christmas season generosity will help speed up its opening.

The possibility of even part of Fulford-Ganges Road being repaved in 2020 is a present that many Salt Spring residents will be excited to open when the time comes, especially with dedicated space for walkers and cyclists up Ganges Hill and to Beddis Road being discussed.

More urgently required, though, is for line-painting trucks to come to the island as soon as possible in the spring. As drivers are in the middle of another winter of travelling blind after sunset, something needs to change so that lines are painted more frequently than the current Ministry of Transportation and Infrastructure schedule allows. 

A perennial wish is for ferries to run on time and not be overloaded. We know we’re dreaming a bit with this one. So what we at least hope for is no repeat of the true ferry mayhem that affected numerous Salt Spring residents when the Howe Sound Queen was retired in June. Bringing the Bowen Queen onto the Vesuvius-Crofton route in the spring will hopefully be the answer to smoother sailing next year.

Something that all community members could use more of year-round is kindness and understanding. Let’s hope the charitable theme of the holiday season continues as far as possible into 2020 for all of us.

Swing Shift Big Band New Year’s Dance With the Andrews Sisters

New Year’s Eve and big band swing music are virtually synonymous.

This year, for the first time in over a decade, Swing Shift, Salt Spring’s own 17-piece big band, hosts a New Year’s Eve celebration at Mahon Hall. The musical entertainment, which starts at 9 p.m., will feature all of the best of the big band era, including music by Glenn Miller, Count Basie and Benny Goodman, to name just a few.

There will guest vocalists, including Salt Spring’s own Andrews Sisters, who were such a hit at the Valdy Goes Big Band Show. As well as all the great swing classics there will Latin music, pop and funk by such composers as Tito Puente, Chicago and Bruno Mars. A champagne toast, while the band plays Auld Lang Syne at midnight, will ring in the new year in old-time style.

Tickets will be available at Mondo Trading for $25.

Snacks by Lou Ellis will be available for purchase as well as wine and beer.

This event will likely sell out, so get your tickets early to avoid disappointment.

WATT, Donald Lynn

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Donald Lynn Watt
March 24, 1927 – Dec 11, 2019

It is with great sadness that we announce the passing of our dear father, Donald Lynn Watt. Don was very recently pre-deceased by his wife of 69 years, Valerie Anne Watt (nee James). Born March 24, 1927 in Kelowna to Lynn and Winnifred Watt, Don spent his youth in Kelowna amongst many dear family members and great friends.

Don and Val were married on June 1, 1950. They started a family in Kelowna then later moving to Vancouver and finally Victoria to raise their children. Don was employed in the 60’s with Carnation in Vancouver and then with Switzers and Neptune Food distributors in Victoria during the 70’s and 80’s.

Don and Val greatly enjoyed boating in the Gulf Islands aboard their boats Maon and Duna where many great friendships were established. Together they were wonderful grandparents and later great-grandparents and very supportive of their adult children. Eventually, they moved to Salt Spring Island to enjoy the retirement years. Don continued with Power Squadron activities, ham radios, n-scale model trains, gardening, and became an avid reader. They immensely enjoyed road trips throughout BC and spending quiet days in Parksville. Don and Val shared everything together. They loved each other and their family very much.

Don is pre-deceased by his wife Valerie, son Douglas, brother Michael, sisters-in-law Mary and Gay, brother-in-law Bill and son-in-law Tom.  He is survived by his children Chris (Kerry), Barbara, and Robert (Liz), grand children Shaun (Lindsay), Breanne (Mike), Michael (Mimi), Katherine, Emerson, Vienna and Geneva, and 11 great grandchildren.

We extend our sincere gratitude to the wonderful staff at Lady Minto Hospital – Long-term Care on Salt Spring Island. The service for both Don and Val was on Dec 14, 2019 in the Anglican Parish of Salt Spring Island.

KYLER, Lillie (Johnson)

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Lillie Kyler (Johnson)
December 12, 1922 – December 15, 2019

Our dear mom, Lillie Kyler (Johnson) passed away on December 15, 2019 at Pleasant Valley Manor in Armstrong, BC, three days after celebrating her 97th birthday with family members. Lillie was born on December 12, 1922, the second child of Fred and Lillie Johnson in Sidney, BC, about one mile away from the present day Swartz Bay Ferry Terminal. Lillie was raised in Sidney, BC and once she was married to Pat they moved to Salt Spring Island in 1948 and raised their children there. In 1975 they moved to Kaslo for 6 years, Lumby, Falkland for 10 years and finally to Armstrong in 1991. She was devoted to her family, loved sports, keeping track of the weather, enjoyed cards, playing crib and scrabble. Lillie was an active member in the communities she lived in.

She is predeceased by her mother, father, husband Hershell (Pat) in 1993, brother Bill in 2003, son Phillip in 1986, son Rick in 2001 and daughter Dawn in 2018. She leaves behind her daughter Diane (Ron) Coutts of Vernon, son Ken of Qualicum Beach, daughter Denise Kyler-Funk (Trevor) of Meadow Creek, a loving grandmother to 11 grandchildren, a loving great grandmother to 12 great-grandchildren, nieces, nephews and extended family.

The family would like to thank the friendly staff at Abbeyfield House in Armstrong and the wonderful caring staff at the Pleasant Valley Manor for the care they gave our mother while she was there for 22 months. In lieu of flowers, donations can be made to the Children’s Make a Wish Foundation. Expressions of sympathy may be forwarded to the family at www.MyAlternatives.ca.

Arrangements entrusted to
ALTERNATIVES FUNERAL & CREMATION SERVICES®
Armstrong 250-546-7237 & Vernon 250-558-0866

BOLTON, Devon

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Bev and Terry Bolton, and their daughter Kirsten, are greatly saddened to share the recent passing of their beloved son and brother Devon in Calgary.

Devon and Kirsten grew up on the international circuit with the family, gaining experiences in other cultures, skiing, traveling, excelling at school sports, arts, and making lifelong friends. His interests and talents were diverse — photography, music, history, architecture, even the pondering of theoretical physics. He became a gifted, award-winning filmmaker and respected marketing creative director, but most importantly, a dedicated family man and father to four beautiful children whom he adored — Courtenay (27), McKenzie (25), William (6), and Evelyn (3.) Devon and his family lived on Salt Spring for a time, with Courtenay and McKenzie attending Salt Spring Middle School and High School.

He went on to achieve his Executive MBA from Queens University, top of his class, and was voted class president by his peers.

Known for his fierce intellect, relentless curiosity, spirit of adventure, and infectious sense of humour and charm, Devon was a deeply kind, sensitive, and compassionate soul, especially caring about the homeless and the plight of those with mental health challenges.

After many struggles, Devon took his own life Tuesday, December 10th. He was deeply loved and will be profoundly missed. The name Devon means “Poet.”

For those who wish, in Devon’s memory, please consider giving to mental health or suicide prevention organizations and reaching out to those who suffer.

Money laundering alleged in suit

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The B.C. Civil Forfeiture Office has filed a lawsuit to seize a Salt Spring property alleged to be acquired through the proceeds of crime and to have been used to launder money.

According to court documents, a waterfront property at 391 Baker Rd. was used by Alicia Lee, Geordie (AKA Skye) Lee and Vincent Manalastas as part of an international stock fraud scheme amounting to $200 million. The forfeiture suit was filed at B.C. Supreme Court in Victoria on Dec. 11.

The lawsuit states the property is registered to Beresford Estates Inc., which is owned or operated by the three defendants. Manalastas, who is believed to live in the Philippines, is listed as Beresford’s sole director. The Lees are a married couple who have been living at the Baker Road home, according to the court claim.

“By converting the proceeds of the unlawful activity into property, the property was used by the defendants as an instrument of unlawful activity, namely the laundering of the proceeds of crime,” the lawsuit claims.

If proven, the property could therefore be forfeited to the provincial government. BC Assessment lists the current value at $2.14 million.

The notice of claim alleges that Beresford Estates Inc. is tied into the Silverton Platform, a scheme to disguise ownership of publicly traded companies and circumvent securities laws. An investigation by the United States Securities and Exchange Commission in 2018 determined the Silverton Platform was responsible for $165 million USD in unlawful proceeds accrued between June 2015 and September 2018.

The SEC investigation found that Beresford was used in British Columbia to receive and distribute proceeds of the securities fraud. RCMP investigating the case in Canada subsequently found the Lees had contracted renovations to the home to Burrard Green City Builders amounting to $526,000, which were paid for through a series of wire transfers. The money transferred was the proceeds of the unlawful activity, according to the investigation.

The defendants had not responded to the civil lawsuit as of Dec. 17. Allegations within the suit have not been proven in court.

Trustees rescind turf field support

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Plastic will no longer be an option for the Gulf Islands Secondary School soccer field, after school board trustees voted to rescind their June motion supporting the construction of an artificial turf field at the school.

However, trustees did recognize the need to ensure that field’s playability in the future, and will be looking into ways to improve it without going to an artificial surface.

A staff report submitted last week on the financial impact of the synthetic field showed that the district would still be required to commit $30,000 per year for the field, which would go into repair and maintenance as well as a sinking fund for replacement costs. The soccer association would commit to an equal share of the replacement costs. The final third of the costs would be fundraised by both the district and the soccer association. The report recommended that the district not proceed with the project, since it was a significant long-term financial commitment in a time where the district is in funding protection with the Ministry of Education.

“Once we’ve committed, we are no longer able to back out of the annual commitment or the long-term commitment for replacement,” said secretary treasurer Jesse Guy during last week’s board meeting. “That does put the district in an unfunded liability while we are in a time of fiscal restraint.”

The decision came after months of discussion and feedback from the community, and debate amongst the trustees at both board and committee meetings.

“This has been a huge topic of conversation at our tables,” said Galiano Island trustee Shelley Lawson. “This has been something that we’ve all taken home and done our suggested readings on and I think at one point or another we’ve all swung through the options and come down on different sides of it.”

Though use of plastic has been taken off the table for the school board’s fields, they are open to coordinating with the soccer association or other groups to find a way to improve the playing surface while staying within a natural medium. Another stipulation about staying cost-neutral for the district was added as a necessary requirement to moving forward.

For more on this story, see the Dec. 18, 2019 issue of the Gulf Islands Driftwood newspaper, or subscribe online.