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Marching for the ideal of equality for all

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The Salt Spring Women’s Walk 2019 takes place on Sunday, Jan. 20 beginning at 1 p.m. on the steps of the Salt Spring Public Library on McPhillips Avenue. Events will include women speakers, a silent walk around Ganges and music/dancing back at the library. Sharyn Carroll, one of the organizing team members, explains why she is joining the global 2019 Women’s March movement by participating in Salt Spring’s event. 

By SHARYN CARROLL

The Women’s March started in 2017 as a response to an election. The movement has grown over these last three years to include women across the world. Most women are mobilizing for women’s empowerment on every continent while also giving voice to local issues. 

I march because feminism is not a dirty word. I live in a culture where the “F” is sometimes viewed as something you would not want to find on the bottom of your shoe. But in fact when feminism works we all stand to gain. Because at its heart, feminism is based on the ideal of equality for all. 

My feminism of today is one of intersectional marginality. When we look at intersectional feminism, we acknowledge the historical, social and political discrimination coming at a person from many sides. Intersectionality refers to the connectedness of race, class and gender in describing and understanding discrimination and oppression. This political understanding means we are better able to recognize that some people are more vulnerable than others. Those who are likely to feel the effects of this global political paradigm are often characterized as “marginalized groups,” especially women of colour and Jewish women. The unifying principle of the international Women’s March echoes this, stating, “We must create a society in which women — including Black women, Native women, poor women, immigrant women, Muslim women, lesbian, queer and trans women — are free and able to care for and nurture their families, however they are formed, in safe and healthy environments free from structural impediments.”

Intersectional feminism also sees how traditional gender roles trap men and boys.

Across the planet we’ve seen a movement towards divisive and hate-filled politics: What is happening now is not something that I thought I would see in my lifetime. Protectionism of the status quo and politics of divisiveness. Only when we allow ourselves to be divided and not stand up for one another does everyone lose.

Someone asked me the other day, “Why participate in this feel-good exercise? You know none of this is going to change anything.” The march itself, in all these communities, may not change whose finger is on the red button this minute, but I believe that each step, no matter how small, can lead to greater, lasting change. This is the planet we inhabit and no matter what our belief system we are all interdependent, so it is our duty to stand up and say something for the betterment of all.

TATUM, Phyllis Wainman

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Phyllis Wainman Tatum
January 25th 1940 – January 3, 2019

Previous Salt Spring Island resident, Phyllis Wainman Tatum, 78, of Salmo, BC transitioned on Thursday, January 3rd 2019 at the hospital in Trail, BC due to various forms of cancer that began with her fight against breast cancer in 2007.

Born in Utica, NY on January 25th 1940 to the parents of Shirley and Gordon Wainman, Phyllis is survived by her brother David Wainman of Ilion, NY, her son Jeffrey Winston Tatum of Penticton, BC, her daughter Stacy Lowe Tatum of Tijeras, NM and her granddaughter Raven Gabrielle Francis-Tatum of Albuquerque, NM. As Phyllis also had a deep relationship with each of her pets it’s quite fitting to mention them here as Chelsea, Sugarplum, Captainn, Sunshine, Moonlight, Sushie, Bear, Eddy and finally Jimmy, were all very much apart of her life and loves.

A Smith College Graduate with a Masters Degree in Social Work, Phyllis married Ronald W Tatum of Joplin MO, moved to Albuquerque, NM where she had her 2 children. By 1975, Phyllis and Ron divorced, and Phyllis became an independent woman as a weaver and then one of the original business owners of the Mariposa Gallery. Then in 1981, she continued her journey and immigrated to Canada with her kids and opened up her 1st private counseling practice on on Salt Spring Island in British Columbia. In 1994 she then moved on to Nelson BC, and then finally to Salmo, BC in 2005.

Phyllis will be greatly missed as a deep friend and therapist to many as well as an accomplished artist and craftsperson. On the side of course she had the occasional point to make at the town council, was an avid gardener, loved to hang out by her cedar tree reflecting, to play in the Salmo bridge group and to support to the local library.

A celebration of her life gathering will be held in the spring. Memorials are suggested to the Callanish Society, a cancer healing retreat in Vancouver. https://www.callanish.org/donate/

LONG, Robert Barry

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Robert Barry Long
August 28, 1954 – January 2, 2019

It is with great sadness that we announce the passing of Barry “Bear” Long of Salt Spring Island on January 2, 2019 after a recent illness. He will be lovingly remembered by his daughter Amber (Brad), his son Reid, his mother, Norma, his sister Jacqueline (Bill), his brother Larry, his grandchildren Jake and Frankie, niece Danielle, nephews Joshua and Matthew, his partner in life Jackie as well as a large extended family. He was predeceased by his daughter, Lena.

Born on August 28, 1954 in Newmarket, Ontario, Barry’s life was filled with many great adventures with family and friends as well as the multitude of different lines of work that he pursued. Barry was a very social being and will also be missed by the many friends that he made along the way and around the world. He always loved to tell a story as well as listening to one and many were shared over the years. The tough “Bear” persona was largely overridden by the kind and generous help that he provided to many people everywhere he lived.

A Celebration of Life will be held at a future date.

“It was in Bobcaygeon, I saw the constellations
 reveal themselves, one star at time”

Michael Robb artwork in focus

December’s destructive windstorm played havoc with many islanders’ Christmas holidays and will cost untold thousands in property damage, but most residents were able to return to life as usual.

That was not the case for esteemed local artist Michael Robb, who had been in serious health decline for the past year. In some ways Robb became a casualty of the storm, after a move from his home to Lady Minto Hospital in order to access oxygen proved too much for him. He died with his wife Donna Johnstone by his side on Dec. 23.

The loss of the self-taught, highly inventive sculptor and painter is a considerable one for the arts community. The timing is particularly sad because Robb was getting ready for a January show at Fault Line Projects, which would feature his own latest works as well as a series of photos based on his studio space taken by Michael Wall.

That show, Eidolon, is still going ahead as planned and will open this Friday, Jan. 11 with a reception from 5 to 8 p.m.

In ancient Greek literature, eidolon meant the spirit image of a person, either living or dead. The term can also mean an idealized image or thing. But the uncanny name is not something that was added to the show after Robb’s death; he and Wall had agreed on it after several other suggestions.

While Robb was often dismissive of his own talent and wouldn’t care to be idealized, he did have a feisty energy, one that it’s easy to believe will carry on. He grew up in Kansas on a Shell oil lease and learned to experiment with art through working at a paint and wallpaper store. Later on he earned a master’s degree in European history, while remaining keenly interested in modern politics. He moved to Canada because of the situation with the Vietnam War, although he was not personally at an age when conscription would be a risk.

Robb’s self-taught and self-invented practices included glass-blowing, sculpting, painting and computer art. He is perhaps best known for his welded sculptures that combine imagined and historically informed elements to become 100 per cent original, often surreal figures. Bird or animals could be outfitted with ancient Egyptian, Roman or Middle Eastern motifs. Although he had to give up sculpting over the past year, the upcoming show will include a good sample of Robb’s three-dimensional works.

Robb suffered a massive heart attack earlier in the fall, but he was still working and managed to do five new paintings before he died.

“That’s what he lived for, was to work,” Johnstone said. “He couldn’t eat, he couldn’t walk, he was in a lot of pain — but it was a very happy time for him. He had drawings galore and he was thinking about what to do after this show . . . Art was his reason.”

Michael Wall’s professional career as a graphic artist meant working with precise lines and images, so in his artistic practice he tends to look for chaos, transformation and more random elements. He and Robb got to know each other around five years ago and became mutual supporters, sometimes exchanging work.

Wall had to work on Robb for some time, however, before he was permitted to capture the older artist’s studio life.

“I knew that Michael’s workshop was a complete mess so I was really itching to get in there and take some photographs,” Wall said. “I finally got into the workshop around a year ago, but I realized the photos were missing a certain element — which was Michael.”

It took another campaign to convince Robb to be in the photos. The process started with Wall hanging around in the background while Robb worked, but it evolved into them having conversations about art, philosophy and work.

“The result is quite abstract,” Johnstone said of the photos, which take in aspects like Robb’s flame-decorated welding helmet and sparks flying, as well as assemblages of art stacked up in the studio space. “It works out to be a perfect companion show for Fault Line Projects. It’s really looking at process and the Michaels’ work.”

Robb was 83 when he died. He did not wish to have an obituary or a memorial event, so the show is one way that people can pay their respects to the co-founder of the Alliance of Salt Spring Artists and the monthly Art Night critiques, now running for some 16 years.

“I think it’s going to be a very interesting show. I think the combination of the two will be interesting — to get a better idea of Michael, his work and how he is,” Wall said.

Eidolon runs at Fault Line Projects to Feb. 9.

After the Storm: Two Salt Spring Island Roads

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The number of trees that fell on the afternoon of Dec. 20, 2018 on Salt Spring Island cannot be calculated, but video footage of select areas can at least give some idea of the impact. 

This video includes roadside footage of Langs Road, at the northern head of St. Mary Lake, and Channel Ridge Drive in the Channel Ridge subdivision. Both areas were among the hardest hit on the island.

The Channel Ridge Drive footage was taken soon after the storm, when numerous trees  throughout the island were still hanging dangerously on lines and over roads. 

The Langs Road footage was taken more than two weeks after the storm hit, indicating the amount of work done and still to be done to restore properties in the area.

Islanders take frigid dip at New Year’s polar bear swim

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Brave souls celebrated the new year by diving into the water at Vesuvius Beach. This year marked the 40th anniversary of the annual polar bear swim, which has been going on since 1979. For those who preferred to stay warm, see the video below for what it is really like to take the plunge.

Windstorm Photos

The windstorm changed the face of Salt Spring. Readers have been submitting photos since December 20, showing where and how the island has changed.

 

Rowing team loses half its fleet

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The Salt Spring Island Rowing Club is facing a major hurdle after the Dec. 20 windstorm caused over $130,000 in damage to the team’s fleet.

“It’s a bit devastating,” said coach Stacy Mitchell. “It’s nothing that we can’t come back from, but we had a much brighter future before [the storm]. Now the focus goes from training to win to back to refocusing. I thought we had turned a corner, but now we got smacked back down.”

During the storm, one branch broke off a nearby tree and fell on the bows of six of the team’s boats. Three doubles, valued at $30,000 each, and two quads, valued at $60,000 were destroyed in the storm. One additional quad has a leak and takes on water, but had less damage than the others. The damaged boats make up over half of the club’s seats, which means that most of the rowers are unable to practise until new boats are acquired.

While the team had planned on sending a crew of rowers to nationals this season, the damage may prevent that from happening.

Mitchell has reached out to neighbouring clubs for assistance and has been able to borrow enough boats to keep the team training for the time being. Teams from Nanaimo, Maple Bay and Victoria have donated boats to keep the Salt Spring rowers afloat until replacements are found.

The team has also put out a call to the island community to help pay for the new boats. A GoFundMe campaign has been set up to help cover the costs. Repairs are an option for at least one boat, but the others are too damaged to be fixed.

Rob Pingle is a rowing club parent and helped spearhead the GoFundMe drive. He said that even though the amount of money to be raised is high, attaining it is still within the realm of possibility.

“Rowing is a tight-knit community and I think that if the word spreads within that community… $100 here or there is nothing,” Pingle said. “There are thousands of rowers all over the world. Hitting that number is not impossible.”

For more on this story, see the Jan. 9, 2019 issue of the Gulf Islands Driftwood newspaper, or subscribe online.

Stewart Road shut by washout

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People who live on Beaver Point Road and want to get to Ganges can expect to take a major detour for the foreseeable future.

Stewart Road will be closed near the top of the 200 block for at least two months due to a major slide that swept a large piece of asphalt and roadbed over the side of the hill on Friday morning. The closure means Stewart Road residents can still access their homes travelling south or north up to that point, but it will end the road’s use as an alternate route between  the south and Ganges for the time being.

The Ministry of Transportation and Infrastructure reported Monday that geotechnical engineers and maintenance contractor Mainroad were in the process of assessing the damage and would work to repair the road as quickly as possible. The approximate date for completion was given as two months.

“The ministry thanks everyone on the island for their patience and understanding,” an email communication to the Driftwood states.

While drivers will be inconvenienced by the closure, perhaps those most affected are Abby and Ed Neff, whose property lies immediately downhill from the rupture.

The Neffs awoke at 1 a.m. Friday to the sound of a loud boom. They have lived there for 18 years, but this was a first.

“I thought the crash was a big tree coming down,” Abby said. “It was a big crash and then I opened my window and I said, ‘Ed, I can hear water rushing.’”

The following morning’s light revealed that a huge amount of mud had washed down the steep side of their property, carrying with it all their firewood for the winter. Also carried down with the flood were a number of rocks and some large cedar logs, which Ed Neff believes must have been buried underneath the original gravel road bed many years before.

A new creek runs through the ravine on the side of their land, where they used to see just a trickle of water.

“There was always a bit coming down. I think that’s what filled up the cavity behind the logs,” said Ed, who pictures the scene under the roadbed as a balloon that filled up until it burst.

“There was a lot of water behind it,” he said. “I assume there was a cavity behind the logs where the water kept piling up. There was just so much pressure that it washed it down the hill.”

For more on this story, see the Jan. 9, 2019 issue of the Gulf Islands Driftwood newspaper, or subscribe online.

Boil water advisories given all clear

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Residents of two CRD water districts were under a boil water advisory for about two weeks after the power was lost due to the Dec. 20 windstorm.

People living in the Highland-Fernwood and Beddis Water systems were affected by the advisory, caused by damage to the water system and power outages after the storm. Both areas went under the advisory on Dec. 23 after the systems were depressurized.

“What happens in these services if they don’t have backup power, the water plants stop producing water. We do have a couple of days of storage in the water tanks in these services,” said CRD senior manager of infrastructure operations Matthew McCrank. “If the power disruption lasts for too long, of course the plant isn’t producing any water and the water in those tanks is used up by just general usage.”

The Highland-Fernwood infrastructure was also damaged by falling trees, which caused a break in the main line and drained the reservoir tank faster.

After power was restored to the Highland-Fernwood system, a pressure control valve malfunctioned, impacting the system further and causing damage to some private plumbing systems.

The Beddis system was able to re-pressurize without any incidents and the boil water advisory for that system was given the all clear by Island Health on Jan. 2.

Highland-Fernwood residents were able to drink their tap water again on Jan. 6 after repairs and testing were complete.

McCrank said that one of the major hurdles to this operation was the loss of power at the same time. Typically, boil water advisory notices are sent out through electronic methods like email and phone messages. However, since the power was also out, people in the areas affected were unable to receive messages from the CRD. The CRD enlisted Salt Spring Island Search and Rescue members to help distribute the boil water advisory notices, as well as provide bottled water to those in need.

Under a boil water advisory, the water is considered safe to drink after being boiled for one minute. Any non-drinking water uses are still permitted, as long as the water is not consumed.

For more on this story, see the Jan. 9, 2019 issue of the Gulf Islands Driftwood newspaper, or subscribe online.