The North Salt Spring Waterworks District will be looking into implementing solar power at their office to ensure continued operation in the case of an emergency, and to reduce their reliance on the conventional power grid for day-to-day operations.
The decision to explore options was made by board trustees at their Aug. 1 meeting.
A recommendation from district staff was put forward for the installation of propane-powered generators to act as a backup in the case of emergency. The recommendation looked at propane because it would be easy to implement by this winter. However, after calculating the cost of the project, board member Gary Gagné recommended looking into a solar option.
“Adding up some of the numbers here for the generator, tanks, switches, gas fitters and whatnot, it comes out to roughly $37,000,” Gagné said during the meeting. “For $37,000, a pretty decent solar system could be put in place and this site happens to be in a good solar area.”
NSSWD’s services affect around 7,500 people on the island, either directly or indirectly through contract work with the CRD. In the event of an emergency like the Dec. 20 windstorm or the snowstorm in February, the utility’s goal is to maintain services and have an emergency operations centre for their staff and for communications purposes.
Having a powered hub would also benefit the district operators, who would be able to recuperate and warm up in a lighted and safe facility.
Though the original idea presented to the board at the meeting was to install a large propane tank at the district office, which would provide partial power for up to one week before needing to be refilled, Gagné asked about the possibility of converting to solar power. Other board members were in agreement with the idea. They said solar had added benefits such as lowering the district’s hydro bill, being useable not only in emergencies but year round, and setting an example for the island and investing in environmentally friendly technology.
“Do we just stay doing the same old same old in burning fossil fuels? Or do we show some leadership to the community?” Gagné asked. “Once we have a solar system set up, we don’t have to wait for an emergency to use that solar system. We can use it on a daily basis, especially in the summertime when there’s lots of excess power. We could even consider the option of selling power back to the grid.”
The board voted to ask staff to investigate the idea of converting the facility to solar power, and the issue will come back to a future board meeting for discussion.
For more on this story, see the August 7, 2019 issue of the Gulf Islands Driftwood newspaper, or subscribe online.
This month’s exhibition at the KiZmit Galeria/Cafe brings together a trio of artists who are working in very different formats yet share a similar reverence for natural materials as the basis for inspiration or enhancement.
Laura Keil, Luke Hart-Weller and Barbra Edwards are the artists behind Clay, Wood, Pigment, which shows at KiZmit during the month of August. Keil provides the clay side of the equation, and her work shows a lovely respect for the medium’s earthy origins. Wood-fired mugs have the rich smoky palette of russet and caramel‚ a good fit for the rustic, sturdy forms. With the finish dependent on the firing process, Keil provides another layer of ornamentation through imprinted patterns. These include shapes that further emphasize natural geometry, such as discs or angular starbursts.
Keil also has some lovely double-walled bowls, with a cream-coloured finish set off by rust edging, and some larger sculptural works based on hand-built vases. Here, the luscious curves of stacked globes end with a funnel shape on top, with some parts adorned with a crocheted shell in a thick-gauge wool. In one piece, brown and natural-toned fibre is set off by tiny flecks of pink. The textured bottom half of the vase contrasts nicely with the smooth fired clay above in tones of burnt orange and egg yolk.
Moving over to the wood side of the show, Hart-Weller has many gorgeous art furniture pieces in glossily finished wood adorned with copper. Hart-Weller is known for using traditional joinery methods with non-traditional design, conveying the same grace and strength of the original trees into their beautiful end products.
A wide bench, for example, has a sculpted branch as the centre of the backrest. Finished in a charcoal black that contrasts with the gleaming seat, the branch sprouts several flowers and leaves sculpted from brilliant copper sheet.
Edwards may not work directly with nature as a material but it is certainly her prime influence and the subject of her bright abstract works. For this show she has contributed both larger-scale paintings and smaller mixed-media works using materials such as watercolour ink, coloured crayon and collage. In both techniques, the artist takes in the colour, light and energy of growing things and transmits this back to the viewer as a new expression, somewhat like a kaleidoscope but without the mirror-image reflection or the ordered patterning.
An artists’ reception will take place this Friday, Aug. 9 from 6 to 8 p.m.
For more on this story, see the August 7, 2019 issue of the Gulf Islands Driftwood newspaper, or subscribe online.
Salt Spring’s Aidan Cassie will share her second children’s book with the local community with a reading and launch party for Little Juniper Makes It BIG taking place this Saturday, Aug. 10 at the Salt Spring Public Library.
Cassie is the author and illustrator of the picture book Sterling, Best Dog Ever, which was released to great acclaim in 2018. Her new book follows a young raccoon girl as the central character.
A press release from the Macmillan Children’s Publishing Group explains that with Little Juniper Makes It BIG, Cassie “employs her pitch-perfect humour and heartwarming illustrations here again to help little ones love themselves at any size.”
“What Juniper lacks in size, she makes up for in heart. And her heart is dead-set on growing up and getting taller. She’s tired of having to reach for the cookie jar or use a stepping stool for the toilet. Everything in Juniper’s world seems to be made for adults. Ugh!
“Juniper is industrious, however, and builds several silly contraptions to help reach her goals. But it isn’t until she makes a fun new friend at school, Clove, who is even smaller than Juniper, that she is able to see her world from a new perspective — and appreciate all sizes, big or small.”
Cassie attended the Emily Carr University of Art and Design and Edinburgh College of Art, where she studied animation and earned a media arts degree.
Saturday’s event starts at 1 p.m. and will include an author reading, cupcakes, book and prize give-aways, and book sales by Salt Spring Books.
Spirit Point Dragons earned a gold medal in the second division at the 2019 Victor Simonson Dragon Boat Races in Comox over the long weekend.
Sunday’s festival was part of Comox Nautical Days with 13 participating teams (six women’s and seven mixed).
The Comox marina venue in beautiful Comox Bay was the perfect setting for the festival. The dragon boats loaded from docks alongside pleasure boats and whale watchers. There were three 450-m races as well as a Fun Mystery Race that involved pool noodles, a stint of paddling with hands and a few dizzying 360-degree turns.
The round-robin format meant race times were tallied to determine the winners in the mixed and women’s teams. In the first race, Spirit Point raced their best time of 2:28, placing a solid first ahead of Phoenix Rising (2:30) and Jolly Dragons (2:31). They faced stiffer competition in the second race, coming second with (2:36) behind Mid Island Masters’ strong performance (2:11) and ahead of Jolly Dragons (2:42). The third race was the most competitive of the day with Spirit Point up against Mid Island Masters and Prevailing Wins, the top two teams who battled it out for first place inDiv.1. Mid Island Masters prevailed with a one-second lead. Spirit Point kept pace with the two leaders and raced their second best time of 2:29, landing a gold in Div. 2.
Spirit Point paddlers for the races were Lorrhaine Ekelund, Donna Cochran, Serena Mellen, Robyn Huntley, Lynda Green, Mary Lou Cuddy, Wendy McEachern, Melynda Okulitch, Christa Wohlfahrt, Carmelle Labelle, Ann Marie Davidson, Chris Ortlepp, Shirley Julien, Lorenn Ekelund, Samantha Goddard, Susana Helgason, Lisa Coles, Andrew Okulitch, Janet Bright, Joni Devlin and Susan Ahn. Special thanks to guest paddler (and retired Spirit Point Dragon), Wendy Eggertson. Coach Mary Rowles kept up a furious pace of drumming and shouting encouragement to keep the team focused. Each race featured a different steersperson. Lorenn Ekelund, Sam Goddard and Tom McKeachie all expertly steered the boat through the days’ changing tides.
Many of you folks will remember with fondness some of the 20-plus years that Barb Isles and Mary Paul ran Mouat’s Clothing. I had the good fortune to be their “boss” for a good portion of those years and like a good boss I did precisely what they suggested I should do.
Barb and Mary were very clever when it came to fashion retailing but, like most people, they could make the odd mistake. Here’s the prize: they would try something, analyze the result and, if it was not sound, they would correct it. Even if it meant abandoning the idea. This is a very simple strategy, but it’s remarkable how seldom it’s employed.
A case in point relates to BC Ferries, and a quick recap will be helpful. The Howe Sound Queen, a 60+ car ferry operating on the Vesuvius-Crofton route, reached its expiry date this spring and was retired by BC Ferries. This seems to have caught BCF by surprise because they replaced the Howe Sound Queen with the Quinitsa, a 45+ car ferry. Now, the Howe Sound Queen was experiencing overloads for some years prior to its retirement, but somehow BCF felt that a significantly smaller ship was the appropriate replacement vessel. To its credit, BCF added two sailings per day to the route and now point, with some satisfaction, to the somewhat more comparable capacity of the two ferries given the added sailings (see the explanatory ad in last week’s Driftwood). This is precisely the reason that I can tell that BCF has learned absolutely nothing from its earlier mistake.
Currently, taking a ferry to or from Salt Spring has become a very real problem. There are often ferry lineups in Vesuvius extending from the terminal to well beyond Sunset Drive (likely a three-sailing wait). The other day we brought our vehicle to Vesuvius at 8:20 in anticipation of catching the 9:35 ferry. The parking lot was already full and cars had begun queuing up Vesuvius Bay Road. This was over an hour in advance of the next sailing and we were already well into a two-sailing wait.
A note to BCF: If passengers are expected to sit in ferry lineups for one, two or perhaps three hours, then ferry capacity will never be an issue because BCF will be leaving with full ships every sailing. The real issue is not capacity, it’s the adverse impact on the residents of and visitors to Salt Spring who can no longer rely on a reasonably efficient and effective ferry service. Constant overloads and serious wait times are taking away a good deal of the pleasure of living on Salt Spring.
Because the needs and quality of life of the ferry users are not important components of the BCF planning process is how I know that they don’t really understand what they are meant to be doing.
I know two retired clothing store managers who would have this problem solved in short order.
The Gulf Islands’ senior elected officials were in Vancouver over the weekend for the largest Pride event in the province.
Elizabeth May and Adam Olsen may have been wearing the colour of their Canadian and B.C. Green parties, but their energy was 100 per cent rainbow. Their enthusiasm for diversity and equality in Vancouver will soon be matched at this island’s Pride celebrations in September, and the brand new Pride event that comes to Pender Island Aug. 15-17.
Many signs suggest mainstream culture continues to shift to inclusion. Lil Nas X, the Atlanta rapper who paired up with Billy Ray Cyrus for the astronomically successful hit Old Town Road, stepped out of his hyper-masculine zone and came out as gay on World Pride Day, June 1. Closer to home, the current season of the Amazing Race Canada includes a pair of married First Nations men, who have become good friends with a more traditional young Indo-Canadian couple.
But despite these encouraging examples in popular culture, counter viewpoints are still in play, and can cause deep harm to young people. Conversion therapy, a forced psychological and sometimes medical treatment to turn gay people straight, is currently getting attention at the political level.
Conversion therapy is not covered by the Medical Services Plan or recognized by professional colleges. The B.C. Greens introduced legislation in May that would make the decisive step of banning it outright for anyone under age 19. Ontario, Manitoba and Nova Scotia have passed laws to restrict conversion therapy for minors, and the cities of Vancouver and St. Albert, Alta. have implemented complete bans.
On Aug. 1, the B.C. government wrote to federal Justice Minister David Lametti asking the federal government to add conversion therapy to Canada’s Criminal Code. And Lametti had already written to provincial governments asking them to do what they could to end the practice in their jurisdictions.
Pender’s Pride Parade is described as a festive way for LGBTQ+ folk and their allies to be visible and support a diverse community, but also to support those around the world who still do not enjoy equality and safety.
Senior government efforts to ban conversion therapy show there is still plenty of work to be done at home. As we get ready for local Pride events in the islands, we should encourage our leaders to get that work done.
Salt Spring’s Lions Hall resembled a mini-Clayoquot Sound last December when sign-bearing protesters rippled through and then completely overwhelmed audience seating at the Local Trust Committee meeting.
Some of those involved were veterans of the 1990s “War in the Woods” against old-growth logging on B.C.’s West Coast. This time the fight was personal, with 45 hectares of mature second-growth forest about to be clear-cut on Beddis Road.
Those who turned out for the local government meeting included four young students from the Stowel Lake Farm class, each of whom urged the trustees to maintain forest cover for the sake of biodiversity, climate action and the next generation.
“I think we need to protect the forest because trees have been a big part of our life and they help us, and if we get rid of them we’re just going to be a dead planet,” 11-year-old Sebastian Ralston summed up.
It may be some time since the dramatic arrests of the ‘90s occurred, but forestry practices in British Columbia are as divisive as ever. As the world rushes toward a climate tipping point, a dramatic clash between the resource economy and planetary survival is unfolding. And on Salt Spring Island, where virtually no old-growth remains, the fate of one 45-acre property has come to encapsulate a crisis that has local, regional and global levels.
“We have 10 years turnaround for climate disaster, and if we don’t do something about emissions and protecting the carbon sinks, we’ve had it,” said long-time Salt Springer Briony Penn, an award-winning author, educator and naturalist.
Preserve and Protect
On the practical side, forests are key to maintaining the global carbon balance. Natural Resources Canada lists a range of “essential ecosystem services” that forests provide, which include filtering pollutants from air and water, improving air and water quality, and reducing surface and air temperatures, among other benefits.
Trees also tend to inspire emotional connections. The Beddis Road situation has been especially heartbreaking for neighbours like Peter McAllister and Bernadette Mertens-McAllister, whose property backs directly onto the contested land. Peter is a veteran of anti-logging campaigns in Clayoquot Sound, the Carmanah Valley and Moresby Island, so the whine of the chainsaw and the crash of large timber is a painfully familiar sound. But it’s not something he ever expected to face in his own backyard in the Gulf Islands, where land-use is governed under a “preserve and protect” mandate by the Islands Trust.
Touring the edges of the by-now mostly cleared Beddis parcel this spring, the McAllisters mourned the loss of cedars and firs that may have been close to 200 years old when they were felled, with trunks spanning five to six feet in diameter. Based on the fact the timber was being removed for profit, while the property was zoned for agricultural and residential uses, a group of residents had asked and failed to have the Islands Trust get a court injunction against the logging. They were told the zoning bylaws do not preclude clearing the land of trees, and they were now pondering raising the funds for a citizen-led suit.
“We’re going to take the legal action that it’s the responsibility of the trustees to undertake. But since they’re abrogating their responsibilities, we’re going to have to do it,” McAllister said.
The Islands Trust was created by a provincial NDP government in 1974 with the specific mandate to protect the islands in the southern Strait of Georgia and Howe Sound from over-development. Its local committee meetings have been known to inspire riotous crowds when people are upset by land-use planning decisions, especially when more restrictive bylaws are contemplated.
Bernadette Mertens-McAllister in the “Heart Grove,” a favourite place in the forest.
The group of residents that has been protesting the Salt Spring Local Trust Committee over trees is unusual, though, in comprising those who normally align most with the Trust’s aims: the kind of people who voted in the nation’s first Green party MP in Elizabeth May, and then helped create B.C.’s Green caucus by electing Adam Olsen as MLA.
Many of them participated in the War of the Woods, on Vancouver Island and at home on Salt Spring. Battles for trees in the 1990s and 2000s included the locally infamous situation that would have stripped most of the timber from two mountains on land owned by the Texada Land Corporation. Islanders were moved to chain themselves to machinery and even take off their clothes for the cause. Penn pulled off a modern-day Lady Godiva act, horse and all, during a downtown Vancouver protest, and numerous island women and men took off their clothes for fundraising calendars.
In the end, the campaign was successful and conservation groups managed to fundraise enough money to partner with BC Parks to protect a large area that included endangered Garry oak ecosystems. The problem with local government’s inability to regulate forestry remains the same, however, while the urgency to protect the remaining forests has only increased.
“We can’t get naked every time we need to protect something,” Penn observed.
Nor is purchasing every parcel under threat a possibility.
Regulatory hurdles
Controversial logging of privately owned Salt Spring acreages over the past few years has included several agricultural properties that had reverted to forest and were cleared for new farming uses, and trees removed from the Buddhist retreat on Mount Tuam.
Residential properties cleared in the south end along Morningside and Beaver Point roads prompted heated community discussion on social media, while the Beddis Road situation has produced a campaign involving over 300 residents signing onto letters sent to the ministries of Environment and Forests, Lands, Natural Resource Operations and Rural Development. Multiple delegations have now appeared before the Islands Trust, most recently at the Islands Trust Council’s quarterly session in June.
Trust Council chair Peter Luckham and Salt Spring Island trustees Peter Grove and Laura Patrick have repeatedly said they are sympathetic to residents’ concerns and indeed share them, but a combination of provincial laws that privilege forestry practices and limit local government ability to regulate tree-cutting has left them with few legal tools. Those that do exist have yet to be fully developed on Salt Spring.
“Precedents show that [Beddis Road] landowner is within their rights to pursue that authority [to clear the land] — as sad as that might be,” Luckham told the crowd who came back for the January committee meeting. “The LTC does not have the ability to interfere in that. Certainly looking ahead we may want to look into our bylaws and development permits to protect these delicate ecosystems in the future.”
Under the Local Government Act, local Trust committees can establish development permit areas for their communities and develop guidelines that would limit tree cutting in those areas, according to some specific parameters. They can also establish tree-cutting bylaws for areas that are subject to flooding, erosion, land slippage or avalanche.
“Unlike municipalities, however, Islands Trust does not have the ability to regulate, prohibit or impose requirements generally in relation to trees outside of the two situations mentioned above,” the Ministry of Municipal Affairs and Housing told the Driftwood in June.
And while many residents of the Trust area consider this a huge omission in preserve and protect powers, the ministry said the province is not considering amending the Local Government Act at this time.
“We’ve made strides with bylaws about excessive noise and intrusion, but we haven’t dealt with our collective responsibility for trees, and that they’re actually essential for our survival,” Penn observed. “It’s just not in the public consciousness. It’s not reflected in our legal system.”
Islanders of all ages have not ceased demanding the Islands Trust do more to stop clear-cut logging on privately owned properties. Though they’ve been informed again and again over the past year that clearing land is currently within property owners’ rights, many simply cannot believe that a local government agency formed to protect the environment has no ability to save its trees.
Part Two:
Twenty years ago, Salt Spring Islanders gave everything they had to stop a massive logging operation, putting their criminal records, bank accounts and modesty on the line to save 770 hectares once slated for clear-cutting by the Texada Land Corporation.
Similar battles were taking place on other islands with more tragic consequences. The name Mike Jenks — who has been identified as British Columbia’s largest private land logger — remains anathema to people on Denman after his company removed up to a third of the island’s forests in the late 1990s.
Local regulations enacted for environmental protection on Denman were powerless to stop the destruction. The B.C. Supreme Court upheld the rights of the private company to pursue its business and quashed a forest cover bylaw on the basis of jurisdictional over-reach.
“That was really the apocalypse here for us. That was the real struggle, and we really couldn’t stop him,” said Patti Willis, who won an Islands Trust Community Stewardship Award in 2010 for her work with the Denman Conservancy Association.
Considering the current climate crisis and the dwindling trees, she added, “Maybe it’s time to try to enact forest bylaws again.”
Legalities limit power of the Islands Trust
Clear and enforceable local regulations are needed to maintain the Islands Trust Area’s remaining forest, whether the threat comes from large forestry corporations or new neighbours who prefer a parklike estate to acres of trees. A look at recent history on Salt Spring and islands like Denman suggests that developing such tools requires political will and community support. They also have to be crafted very carefully to meet provincial laws and survive legal challenges.
Linda Adams, who was the Islands Trust’s chief administrative officer before retiring in 2016, was the senior planner on Salt Spring for many years. She has decades of expertise working under the Local Government Act.
Logging trucks. Photo by Darryl Martin
“One of the misunderstandings I see is that people kind of think because the Islands Trust has this preserve and protect mandate, they can just go and tell people ‘Stop tree cutting, right now,’” Adams told the Driftwood. “But the local Trust committee can only tell people to stop tree cutting if they had previously put a bylaw in place that regulated tree cutting on that person’s land. They can’t just go and tell somebody to stop, and that’s the same with any government.”
Zoning could be used to establish setbacks that protect trees, for example by requiring that development take place a certain distance from the lot’s centre or that it take place in a certain area to keep building sites clustered together. Zoning cannot regulate tree removal by itself, however, because provincial law does not consider it to be a land use, but natural resource extraction.
Local governments, including the Islands Trust, can regulate tree-cutting to some extent with development permit areas, but those areas have to be defined with mapping in the official community plan. They are also permissive by definition, to be awarded as long as the applicant follows the guidelines, and they can’t restrict uses that are allowed by zoning. Another challenge of the development permit area is that it can only be established for specific purposes. The forest cover DPA established on Denman Island failed to hold up in court when challenged by 4064 Investments Ltd., for the very fact that it purported to regulate logging on private lands.
Denman Island’s cautionary tale
Prior to 4064‘s purchase, around one-third of Denman had been owned by a forestry company that wasn’t actively logging. The public was used to accessing the forest through unofficial community trails. After 4064 Investments bought the land, company officials implemented a business plan based on a rapid clear-cut. They also cleared large portions that had been reserved for covenant under the sales agreement. (A lawsuit by the Denman Island Conservancy eventually led to these covenants being registered at Komas Bluffs and the Railway Grade Marsh — after 80 per cent of the trees had already been removed from the latter site.)
“Now on Denman there aren’t a lot of forested lands left, partly because Jenks cut a swath through here. There’s really not all that much available to protect relative to what was available,” said Des Kennedy, a well-known writer and a former chair of the Denman Conservancy Association. “For years, every ferry that left the island had at least one logging truck on it because it’s such small capacity, so only one truck could go at a time.”
In the midst of community uproar, in 1999 the Denman Island Local Trust Committee created a suite of bylaws aimed at environmental protection, including a development permit area for forest cover and sustainable forestry that impacted much of the island. A professional forester was hired to draft the bylaw with community input.
When the bylaw was challenged in court, B.C. Supreme Court Justice Robert Bauman found in favour of 4064 Investments. While Bauman conceded the Local Government Act permits DPAs that “protect the natural environment, its ecosystems and biodiversity,” he questioned the Denman LTC’s interpretation this could extend to the regulation of tree-cutting on private land.
“On its face, that conclusion seems a considerable reach, indeed it seems a considerable leap,” Bauman wrote in his decision.
He stated elsewhere in the judgement, “The fact that the legislature did not expressly give Trust Committees the broad tree-cutting regulatory powers found in [the Local Government Act for municipalities], leads to the further inference that it did not intend regional districts and Local Trust Committees to have these powers.”
In puzzling contrast to Denman, Galiano Island has a broad tree-cutting DPA that stretches across much of the island, and which has been in place since 2000. Adams said one reason the case may be different is the authors avoided taking a forestry approach.
“It was very much focused on ecosystems and protection of biodiversity and protection of Coastal Douglas-fir forests. It’s more in line with the intent of the legislation,” she said.
Meanwhile, after a BC Supreme Court appeal, other environmental DPA bylaws on Denman were upheld, including one that determined a 50-metre setback for tree clearing on Komas Bluffs.
“The take-away from that is when we’re doing development permit areas we can still protect ecosystems and biodiversity, but they have to be really defined,” said David Marlor, who was Denman Island’s planner in 1999 and is now the Trust’s director of local planning services. He suggested a narrow focus, such as a DPA where Garry oak stands exist, would be more feasible.
Since the province has moved to protect contiguous areas of Coastal Douglas-fir on some Gulf Islands’ Crown lands in the past several years, the case could potentially be made for the ecosystem’s wider protection under a DPA. Some trustees suggested during the June Trust Council session on Gabriola Island that Trust-wide protection is in order. But as it stands, the legal precedent is still defined by Denman.
“If the Islands Trust were to argue the CDF is a sensitive ecosystem, that would have to be tried in court, and who knows if a judge would find that a valid argument, or be swayed by the Trust’s mandate,” Marlor said.
Salt Spring’s early attempts at forest protection halted
Public feedback to the Salt Spring Local Trust Committee over the past year suggests there is community appetite to develop forest protection tools; participants at an open house strategic planning session held in March named regulation of tree cutting among the highest community priorities.
If the LTC does move forward by making forest protection a priority project for this term, it will have to both work within the legal parameters and ensure political will meets the need.
People wondering how the Salt Spring Local Trust Committee failed to enact tree protection tools in the past can look back a couple of decades for the answer. Sensitive ecosystem mapping launched by the province in 1993 through the Conservation Data Centre catalogued over 100 species at risk and dozens of ecosystems at risk in the southern Gulf Islands, including the Coastal Douglas-fir zone, western red cedar sword fern swamps and coastal savannas.
Logging truck at Vesuvius. Photo by Darryl Martin
The Salt Spring LTC incorporated some of the new information when it initiated a major overhaul of the official community plan in 1996. The first draft of the new plan proposed a development permit area for most of the island that restricted tree cutting on many unstable slopes, along the entire shoreline and in an extensive area around all the drinking watersheds and community well-capture zones.
“And that’s when the people went berserk,” said local naturalist Briony Penn, who worked on the original mapping. “They went ‘No way, you’re imposing, you can’t impose this on landowners, it’s an extra burden we have to care for.’ And so it got thrown out.”
Salt Spring’s former head planner Linda Adams said some of the guidelines were intended to prevent negative impact on neighbouring properties such as had recently occurred when steep lands on the side of Mount Maxwell were logged in 1994-95. But the trustees’ will to proceed crumbled in the face of public opposition, which included Driftwood editorials and one heated community meeting attended by 250 islanders.
“I think people often agree in principle with some of this stuff, and then when it starts affecting their own property, less so,” Adams said.
She noted there were also attempts in the late 1990s to protect Garry oak ecosystems on Salt Spring, with equally strong reaction.
“Some of the large property owners that had Garry oaks actually began to cut their trees down. I don’t think that bylaw even got first reading. People thought buffers would restrict their ability to develop their properties, so thought they’d just remove them before the bylaw took effect,” Adams recalled.
In the end the LTC decided to go with an educational approach and to encourage voluntary protection of Garry oaks because the proposed bylaw was having the opposite effect intended. A similar approach was taken with many of the measures drafted into the OCP. The review ended with much lighter restrictions. Tree cutting was regulated only on the highest-instability slopes and in a setback from the shoreline along just a few highly sensitive stretches.
Part 3:
Salt Spring Islanders joined people from 20 other communities throughout British Columbia on April 6 to rally in support of reforming forestry practices.
Forest March BC participants demanded changes to provincial legislation to ensure logging plans include ecosystem restoration, sustainable forestry and meaningful community consultation about forests. March organizer Jennifer Houghton had produced a documentary film and founded the Boundary Forest Watershed Stewardship Society after Grand Forks was hit by historic flooding in 2017 and 2018, which has been linked to clear-cuts in the local watershed.
“Our little group is just one of hundreds across B.C. working to make significant changes to forestry legislation and practices. Many groups are having the same experience: making very little progress when attempting to make changes to the forestry practices that are negatively impacting their communities,” Houghton said.
Demonstrators take part in a Forest March through Ganges.
Individually, every community involved in the march had a local crisis needing to be addressed. Citizens were outraged to learn 109 hectares of Vancouver Island old-growth forest near Port Renfrew were about to be auctioned. In the Kootenays, community members were embroiled in a campaign to prevent the logging of 600 privately owned acres located on the steep hills above a prized lake. And the tiny village of Ymir (population 230) had pitched a massive campaign to stop logging in the watershed that provides that community’s only water source.
Given the cry for change coming from all across the province, a complete shift in the forest’s role is required to give local governments much-needed authority over lands in their jurisdiction.
Cascading limitations
Forestry regulation limitations in B.C. are stacked like the proverbial house that Jack built. The owners of fee simple private lots are not required to file stewardship plans or commit to replanting, whether they are logging 10 acres or 1,000. Regulations established by local government bodies that would restrict tree clearing — or even hamper forestry indirectly — can be completely overridden by the Private Managed Forest Land Act. Critics are asking that landowners registered with the PMFL program follow the same rules as Crown land timber lease holders, at the very least. Meanwhile, the Forest Practices Board, B.C.’s independent watchdog for sound forest and range practices, has found these rules are also insufficient.
“For more than 20 years, the board has called for improved planning and objectives at the landscape and watershed scales,” said Kevin Kriese, Forest Practices Board chair. “Recent board work has confirmed that forest stewardship plans, despite considerable energy and effort to develop and approve, do not address the need for planning for multiple forest values across the landscape.”
Frustrated efforts to reduce forestry impacts start at the community level. Islands Trust Council, the group of 26 trustees elected to represent 13 Salish Sea island communities, voted to prioritize Coastal Douglas-fir protection at their March 2019 session.
Denman Island author Des Kennedy, who is a former chair of the Denman Conservancy Association, said he thinks it’s wonderful the Trust is willing to view land-use applications with CDF protection in mind. However, he believes there is an underlying flaw in the entire system: even if the work is put in, it’s questionable how far local committees can get. Most remaining forests on Denman have been protected through purchase by the conservancy, an unreasonable solution to export as Gulf Islands land values continue to rise and development pressures increase.
“Most troubling is that a succession of provincial governments has refused to fully enable the Trust with the legislation that would allow it to carry out its mandate,” Kennedy said. “To me it is obscene and embarrassing that we should have an Islands Trust that is not empowered to have any control over the destiny of forests in one of the most endangered ecosystems in the country.”
Private Managed Forest Land review
The NDP government implemented reviews of B.C.’s two main forestry laws this year, with public comment on both the Forest and Range Practices Act and the Private Managed Forest Land Act capped earlier this month. During the spring legislature session, Green MLA Adam Olsen asked Forests Minister Doug Donaldson to put a moratorium on PMFL logging until the review was complete and decisions made on how to proceed. Donaldson replied that many provincial and federal acts ensure forestry practices meet water sustainability and environmental regulations, and investigations are made on complaints. While he acknowledged the importance of maintaining forests for climate regulation and biodiversity, he also raised the spectre of forestry job loss. No moratorium would be ordered.
Managed Forest is a BC Assessment property classification established in 1988 to encourage private landowners to manage their lands for long-term forest production on lots of 25 or more hectares. Stewardship plans for these lots are supposed to guarantee protection of key public environmental values, including soil conservation, water quality, fish habitat, critical wildlife habitat and reforestation. In return, landowners get property values assessed at a lower taxation rate, and they are assured the right to harvest trees unrestricted by local government bylaws. There is nothing to require landowners to be in the program, though, or to stay in it if they wish to withdraw.
According to the Ministry of Forests, Lands, Natural Resource Operations and Rural Development, there are 5,125 hectares in 190 parcels of private land registered in the Private Managed Forest Land Program within the Islands Trust area. On Salt Spring, there are 32 parcels totalling approximately 997 hectares of PMFL. The program may pose the biggest challenge to planning on Galiano Island, where roughly half the island or 3,100 hectares was once owned by MacMillan Bloedel. Today, around 1,350 hectares are registered as PMFL.
Islands Trust Council unanimously passed a resolution in June to ask for an amendment to the PMFL Act that would require those landowners to uphold the same standards Crown land loggers are held to, and to give local governments the power to regulate activity on privately managed forest lands. Similar motions were endorsed by the Union of B.C. Municipalities last September. The UBCM has endorsed nine such previous resolutions dating back to 1991.
Galiano Island Islands Trustee Tahirih Rockafella. Photo supplied.
“Trust Council and other municipalities have approached the provincial government to amend the PMFLA numerous times as there are significant concerns with the legislation,” said Galiano trustee Tahirih Rockafella. “These include the lack of public consultation on stewardship plans, the submitting of management plans only after harvesting and road building has taken place, and the general self-regulating guidelines that do not ensure sustainable forestry and the protection of key environmental values.”
Minister Donaldson declined to be interviewed for this series. A response from the ministry said stakeholder groups were encouraged to provide a formal submission to the PMFL Act review process.
“The provincial government is committed to discussing how provincial legislation and local government jurisdictions can work together more effectively for all British Columbians,” the ministry stated in an email.
Paradigm shift needed
Olsen says his Saanich North and the Islands constituency office has received email representing 22,000 individual concerned citizens regarding B.C.’s forestry practices. People have called for help to stop old-growth logging on public lands and private land clear-cuts, including the 18 hectares on Beddis Road that first galvanized Salt Spring’s community last winter.
Olsen believes the B.C. government has critically failed to move beyond the resource exploitation-based economy of early colonial days. As a result, forest values such as carbon sink use, water purification and oxygen production are not being calculated.
“Forests are viewed as being only for our benefit, and only for their cash value — an asset that only has value if it’s liquidated,” Olsen said.
“The only calculation is for cash value and if the province is generating even a few dollars from that, that’s what we’ve always done as a province, and that’s what we’re going to continue to do.”
Olsen conceded the NDP government has made some recent amendments to the Forest and Range Practices Act. One bill opens up transparency around what is being cut and where logging roads are going to be on Crown land. Another bill makes it more possible to track forestry company tenure sales and transfers of cutting rights. But he categorizes these shifts as mere “window dressing.”
MLA Adam Olsen questions forestry practises in the Legislature. Photo supplied.
“What’s really disappointing for me is to hear the minister of the government that was so critical of the BC Liberals now basically rolling out the same rhetoric that every forestry minister has rolled out, at a time in which we don’t have the benefit of time that maybe past forestry ministers thought they had,” Olsen said. “We are now being told by scientists and the science community that we’ve got 11 years [before irreversible climate change] . . . We need a complete rethink on how we approach these issues.”
Local naturalist and author Briony Penn also argues the paradigm must shift on how forests are valued. To start with, the forestry industry’s real impact in terms of emissions and the loss of carbon sinks should be determined. Penn further suggests people should be rewarded for protecting forest cover, instead of profiting by cutting it down,only to cause problems whose impact has yet to be tallied.
“It’s world view: we haven’t got it in our heads that trees are important to humanity,” Penn said. “If we have trees, we have water; if we have trees, we have air; if we have trees, we are cooling the climate. And I think we’re slowly getting there, but not fast enough.”
Bernadette Mertens-McAllister walks through a clear cut.
This story originally ran as a three-part series in the Driftwood from July 10 through 24.
Canada Coast Guard members were on site at Ganges Harbour Wednesday morning to contain and remove a marine fuel spill.
Jim Heath, Harbour Authority of Salt Spring Island manager, said the clean-up operation had ended by mid-day. The spill was first detected by a boat owner who was moored at one of HASSI’s downtown docks on Tuesday night.
Heath said the boater called 911 and got a response from Salt Spring Fire Rescue. Their members arrived at the same time as a returning Coast Guard crew, who took over the operation from there.
“I’m very appreciative of my boater for making the appropriate call,” Heath said.
Staff at the Coast Guard’s marine fuel spill report line said that crews got to work on an environmental response near the floatplane dock around 8 a.m. They employed booms around the marina to contain the fuel and pads to clean up some product.
The source of the spill had not yet been determined by Wednesday afternoon.
Heath said a fuel sheen was also spotted near the Three Sisters Islands. That seemed to confirm a suspicion the diesel came in from a spill further out in the harbour, based on the combination of the wind and the tide on Tuesday night.
“The best guess is that it’s marked diesel,” Heath said, noting the characteristic red colouring. “Now we’re trying to find out who might have had it and who might have been travelling that area last night.”
Island dwellers hardly need to be convinced they live in a special place, but a new collection of writing put out by Salt Spring-based Mother Tongue Publishing will resonate equally with readers who wished they had more island time and those who have made one their home.
Love of the Salish Sea Islands contains many a delightful ode to those individual rocky outcroppings that lie between B.C.’s southern mainland and Vancouver Island. An amazing cast of award-winning contributors share their personal connection to these spaces in poetry, memoirs and essays, set off perfectly by landscape paintings by acclaimed Salt Spring painter Nicola Wheston.
The entries often catalogue the islands’ natural beauty, or give a history of how a good place to visit became a beloved home, but the contributions also delve into a more complex contemporary relationship with place. This relationship is both informed by the past and cognizant of an uncertain future, as development pressure, ecosystem loss and climate change threaten to change the Salish Sea islands along with the rest of the world. The book is perfectly current with modern concerns, as the book features new, original pieces rather than anthologizing suitable past works.
One of the first things readers will notice is just how good the writing is. Starting with the introduction by Driftwood editor Gail Sjuberg, the book offers a textured immersion into the archipelago. As Sjuberg notes, the inhabited islands have similar cultures and landscapes, yet each community is absolutely unique.
Many of the writers acknowledge the Indigenous people who made their homes among the island for thousands of years. They make a point of including pre-colonial names and meanings, and tell the stories of the friends and mentors who are still very much a part of the picture. As Stephen Hume writes in his essay on Saturna, life on the islands is like a palimpsest, a “parchment on which a previously erased or obscured text can be read through what’s written over it, the old story mysteriously revealing itself behind and underneath the new telling.”
The authors are arranged alphabetically by surname, which means Indigenous writer Taiaiake Alfred has the book’s first entry. Alfred’s essay grounds the collection with his experience of hunting deer on WSÁNEC territory — known by settlers as Tumbo Island — with his young son and friends from the Tsawout Nation. They decide the name Temosen is more appropriate.
“Being on Temosen is powerful salve on the soul scarring caused by the discontinuation from nature and each other that marks the everyday existence we all endure. It is medicine, and our visits are a kind of ritual reclaiming, renaming and represencing to strengthen our spirits so we don’t completely lose ourselves under the constant pressure of whiteness bearing down on us,” Alfred writes.
In the following piece, archeologist and scholar Chris Arnett also talks about how Indigenous history imbues the islands’ spirit, even if modern settlers are not aware of it. He gives a humourous yet thoughtful account of more recent island culture, where a dog’s funeral threatens to be “very saltspring” and not in a good way, but teaches a surprising lesson in the end.
Longtime North Pender resident William Deverell breaks down his community’s social hierarchy — one that will be familiar to most other Salish Sea residents as well. Moving to the island from Vancouver in 1979, Deverell was a high-profile lawyer, not part of the wave of back-to-the-landers and “blissed-out hippies.” But like many, he immediately felt he’d found his home after visiting the Gulf Islands, and now finds 40 years have passed.
“The reward for my staying power is that I have finally attained the lofty rank of old-timer,” Deverell writes. “There is a higher class, to which it is hopeless to aspire, of seniors born or raised here. And there are several levels of lesser nobility: full-time residents, weekend cottagers, visitors, vacation renters and, of the lowest rank, the yahoos who think it’s okay to bomb around on country roads tossing beer cans and plastic wrappers.”
The contrary challenges and joys of making home on an island after moving from the city comes through two delightful poems by Denman Island’s Matsuki Masutani.
“It shatters me to think how many times I have escaped serious consequences by chance,” he writes in At Midnight, which ends with the beautiful image of northern lights, shimmering in a green curtain across the night sky.
Salt Spring’s Derek Lundy moves outside the human domain in Water Makes Islands, recounting a healthy respect for the surrounding Salish Sea and the dangerous rocks that emerge from it while recounting some sailing adventures. Diana Hayes summons another evocative version of this thrilling dance in her poem I Was Never a Sailor. The sea is portrayed both as a balm and as a potentially terrifying end by two writers connected to Protection Island. Nancy J. Turner recounts the perfect joy of the rowboat as vessel, while Maria Coffey learns to overcome a past near-drowning with daily swims in the Salish Sea.
Islands less transformed by human development also get their due, from Christina Johnson-Dean’s memory of needing to carry all groceries to Gambier Island via water taxi, to Alison Watt’s tribute to Mitlenatch Island, an uninhabited park reserve and bird sanctuary.
With its references to happy summer trips, ocean swims and blue skies, Love of the Salish Sea Islands makes for perfect summer reading. It’s easy to imagine reading a selection or two in the ferry lineup on the way to a new adventure, or a return visit to a beloved place. It’s also the kind of book islanders will want to keep on their own book shelf, to lend out to visitors but also to return to themselves again and again.
Concerned residents of Pender Island held a rally against the draining of the Gardom Pond on Thursday, which turned into an impromptu town hall after Saanich North and the Islands MLA Adam Olsen made a surprise appearance.
Residents of the Razor Point area on North Pender Island have been concerned about plans to decommission the pond’s dam, which was identified in a provincial survey of dams as “high consequence.” Residents are concerned that the dam contains a large amount of fresh water, and that removing the dam would affect the water supply of the area, as well as the ability to fight fires in Razor Point.
“Everywhere we turn it’s like we’re facing this wall of bias towards getting rid of this freshwater, which we have very little of here on North Pender. Some people are not flushing their toilets and saving their toothbrushing water to put on their gardens so they don’t dry up, and in the meantime we’re watching 2.5 million gallons roll down the hill into the ocean,” Razor Point resident Mark Benson said.
In December 2018, the Capital Regional District received funds from the National Disaster Mitigation Program to decommission the dam. Consultation was done with the six water licence holders (of which the CRD is one) and the licensees agreed to decommission the dam in February 2017. Since work began on the project in June of this year, members of the public have been speaking out against the plan. Thursday’s protest was part of that outcry. At the event, Olsen heard from members of the public about their concerns with the project, and will hold a meeting with the involved stakeholders to discuss options other than completely decommissioning the dam.
“There are people who live downstream of it, and should it fail, it’s going to cause environmental and economic damage and potentially the loss of human life,” Olsen said. “It’s quite potentially disastrous should it give way. It needs to be brought up to standard, it needs to be maintained, there needs to be an organization that does that work, and we need to explore what the options are and the legal ramifications of doing it, and then find a solution of who’s going to hold that liability and who’s going to do the maintenance of the dam going forward.”
The residents of Pender Island are concerned about the lack of political will to look into other options.
“It’s so beyond comprehension why there isn’t more political will in this era of global climate change and unprecedented drought to make the necessary moves,” Benson said.
Olsen explained that he would be reaching out to various governments and property owners to try and organize a meeting that would bring all of the issues to the table.
“A large number of Penderites have said to me that water’s precious, not just for drinking, but for fire suppression and potential impact on aquifers,” he said. “There’s been an expression from the public to do what we can to try and preserve it as a community aspect and the challenge that they’ve laid in front of us is to find that solution.”
For more on this story, see the July 31, 2019 issue of the Gulf Islands Driftwood newspaper, or subscribe online.