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Islands Trust welcomes pipeline court decision

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The Islands Trust welcomed today’s unanimous decision by the Federal Court of Appeal, quashing the federal government’s approval to build the Trans Mountain Pipeline expansion project.

The court stated that the National Energy Board assessment of the project was flawed to the point that the federal government should not have relied on the process to give approval to the project in 2016. Appeal court justices also found that consultation with First Nations was inadequate. In response, the federal Liberals reaffirmed their commitment to complete the oil pipeline, which the government has just purchased from Kinder Morgan, after revisiting the process.

“The Islands Trust is resolutely opposed to this project, believing that the increased tanker traffic it would bring to the Salish Sea represents an intolerable risk to the marine and island environments and communities who live and work along the transport corridor,” states a press release issued Thursday.

“The court’s decision aligns with Islands Trust’s beliefs, touching on issues we believe are critical for our local island communities,” explained Islands Trust Council chair Peter Luckham. “First is the need for all levels of government to consult with Indigenous people in a meaningful and truthful manner. We applaud those First Nations who argued so effectively in court. Secondly, the court recognized that the National Energy Board did not properly assess the impacts that increased tanker traffic would have on the sensitive marine environment of the Salish Sea, including the beloved and endangered southern resident orca populations.”

An oil spill within the Trust Area could have devastating impacts on the abundant biodiversity of the region and significantly affect species at risk, as well as harm the liveability and economic well-being of local communities, the Trust says.

Islands Trust Council says its members have been concerned with oil spill and oil tanker issues since 1979. As early as 1983, the Islands Trust Policy Statement included a policy to oppose increased oil tanker traffic in and adjacent to the Islands Trust Area waters and to support measures to reduce such traffic.

“The Islands Trust was an early and leading voice in asking for the federal government to consider the impacts of both marine shipping and diluted bitumen on the environment,” said Luckham. “We thank those agencies and First Nations that argued this case in court. We were with you in spirit and are grateful for your hard work. We hope this decision will cause the government to rethink its position on Trans Mountain and find alternative ways to invest in Canada’s future.”

Numerous Salt Spring Island residents have been among those protesting the pipeline project, along with First Nations, on Burnaby Mountain this year. Saanich Gulf Islands MP Elizabeth May and several islanders are among those who pleaded guilty to contempt of court for blocking access to the pipeline work site.

 

Relief turns to disbelief in road line drama

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Salt Spring residents watched with disbelief last week as a number of freshly painted road lines laid down at the end of July were covered over by another different crew.

The appearance of fresh yellow centre lines on July 26 was widely celebrated by islanders who had long campaigned for safer driver conditions, including local elected official Peter Grove. Road repairs are also usually welcome, but not when gravel and tar go directly over lines painted a few weeks back.

Aubrey Smith is a Salt Spring resident who has been pursuing two MLA constituency offices, Mainroad Contracting and the Ministry of Transportation and Infrastructure for three years in an effort to get yellow lines repainted on the island, as well as other road repairs. A particular concern has been the intersection where the major north-end roads meet at the junction with Southey Point.

“Well, the road that I was complaining about, around North End as it moves on to Sunset Drive, has now been tarred and gravelled. Three weeks after the new lines were painted. I despair,” Smith wrote to the Driftwood on Aug. 22.

Writing on Facebook, Dave McKerrell made a similar observation.

“After years of faded lines on our Salt Spring roads they decide to spend our money and paint them, a beautiful job indeed,” McKerrell said. “Then what incompetent manager decided to blast our beautiful new lines with chip seal. The lines are now obliterated in a lot of important places. Such incompetence . . . someone should resign or be fired.”

According to the ministry’s communication department, it is most cost effective to schedule all line painting in the Gulf Islands at once. The timing is based on geography, contractor availability and weather. With those factors, line painting on the Gulf Islands this year happened in late July.

The ministry said overall maintenance work for Salt Spring roads, scheduled with a different contractor, got underway in August to ensure it could be done before the rainy season instead of after winter.

“Ministry staff will continue to work with this contractor to try and replace paint, where possible.”

The ministry would not comment on the possibility of creating policy to ensure scheduling is set to ensure a more rational order of work.

Smith noted this is not the first time the scenario has happened. Lines that were painted in 2015 were then covered with spray tar in some areas, including a stretch of Sunset Drive. That stretch was not repainted again until this summer, he said. (Many other lines painted in 2015 soon disappeared, apparently due to a more environmentally friendly but less durable paint.)

Other complaints Smith has about the current process include no white lines on the edge of roads or at stop signs where “the roads are too narrow;” no yellow line painted on Upper Ganges Road from Central; no arrows at turn lanes in Ganges and no repainting of pedestrian crossings.

Above all, Smith is frustrated there appears to be no co-ordination between ministry staff and contractors.

“I can’t find out the names of the people who make these decisions nor will they let me have minutes of meetings where the decisions are made,” Smith said.

Previous Saanich North and the Islands MLA Gary Holman had a semi-regular meeting with MoTI’s regional office to go over issues in the riding. Line painting was a topic that frequently came up, according to a 2016 report.

Current MLA Adam Olsen and his chief of staff Aldous Sperl have also fielded countless road maintenance requests and complaints from islanders, including the most recent road line situation. They have met with local operations managers three times over the past year to highlight concerns and issues across the riding. The office is also in regular communication when an update from the ministry is needed. 

“We’re hearing about this issue. We have flagged it with the ministry and we’re expecting a response,” Sperl said.

Islanders can contact the Mainroad Contracting hotline for the Southern Vancouver Island service area at 1-877-391-7310 to report road hazards and safety concerns.

Salty Flea market brings the best of the island together

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By combining vintage goods, handmade artisanal products and interactive community-friendly vendors, the Salty Flea market is bringing the quirks of Salt Spring to Fulford Hall on Sept. 2.

The market was started by Julie Rieter and Bronwyn Clark as a way to bring everything they love about the island community into one space. Initially brought together by their love of all things vintage, the two have created a market space that celebrates oddities, knick knacks and eccentricities.

“The Salty Flea market is a combination of many things that already happen on this island,” Rieter said. “Regardless of whether you’re vending or shopping or you just want to come hang out, there’s room for all of that.”

The first Salty Flea brought 1,100 people through the doors of Fulford Hall in February, and Rieter and Clark are optimistic about the upcoming edition. They have made a few changes to the event after a blind run the first time. They hope that by incorporating outdoor space and a different layout to the floor this time will be even more successful.

“We have just over 50 vendors indoors who will be offering everything from basement and attic treasures to vintage collections to garage sale items,” she said. “We also have handmade artisan wares from salves to jewellery to ceramics and textiles.”

Additional vendors include a hand poke tattoo artist, a tarot card reader, musicians and food and beverage vendors. The event also has a community corner for people to sit and relax during the market.

“We really are trying to make an incentive to give vending spots to those who don’t already have a spot in the Saturday market,” said Clark. “It’s essentially a flea market with some awesome perks.”

Rieter had the initial idea for the market. After she approached Clark with the idea, the Salty Flea was up and running.

“I was just really craving a time and space where they happen all at the same time,” Rieter said.

Though the September event is only the second iteration of the market, Rieter and Clark feel the Salty Flea will be continuing on into the future. Plans for next February are in the works.

“I hope that there are many more Salty Fleas,” Clark said. “I hope it continues and grows. It’s such an awesome thing to be a part of. I’m really excited for the second one.”

The Salty Flea market runs from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. at Fulford Hall on Sunday, Sept. 2.

Saturna eco-school grant goes to field research tools

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Gulf Islands School District’s Saturna Ecological Education Centre (SEEC) has received a grant to purchase a set of environmental sensors that students will use to build their ecological and technological literacy skills.

The $10,000 grant from Vancity will be used to purchase the various sensors as well as some interfaces to help record and process data. The new sensors are expected to be delivered shortly after the start of the school year. Martin Anevich, the teacher at SEEC, hopes that the sensors will help students become more familiar with the tools used by real researchers in the field.

“We’re just not going to be sitting in the classroom memorizing terms about ecology,” he said. “It’s a chance to engage with some place-based activities. We can pursue this experientially, and see it, touch it and be a part of things.”

Saturna Island offers unique opportunities for science and research, Anevich explained. Rather than having students sit in a classroom and finish textbook labs with predictable outcomes, he is looking to partner with some researchers and organizations to get the students into the field and contributing real data to national research projects. The three-hour hike to the research site to collect samples is as important as the results.

“I was hoping that we get used to the sensors and we work on playing with them experientially and move right into contributing to national data sets on climate change,” Anevich said. “It’s much more authentic.”

SEEC was started in 2007 by Steve Dunsmuir, a teacher who at the time was based on Saturna. The course is a boarding program offered to students in grades 10 and 11. Students stay in cabins at Haggis Hollow on the island for three nights every week. The cabins are off-grid and eco-friendly, powered by solar panels and micro-hydro power. Students are expected to cook for themselves and to take care of the cabins. With learning opportunities taking place all over Saturna, the students do not spend their whole day in a classroom. The school still focuses on outdoor education and skills like kayaking and fly fishing, but with some real-world scientific literacy as well.

The students still follow the B.C. curriculum and their year at SEEC has a full 32 credits that count toward graduation. Students get two science courses, two physical education courses, social studies, two English courses and Careers 10.

Anevich, who is starting his second year at SEEC, hopes that the new sensors help make it more than just an outdoor education program. He wants SEEC to stay “cutting edge” and allow the students to be on the forefront of education.

“SEEC might be traditionally seen as technology adverse,” he said. “I’m interested in letting people know that we’re still innovating and taking on some neat projects.”

The school is open to any student in School District 64 who is in Grade 10 or 11. One spot is still available at SEEC for the 2018/2019 school year. Students interested in applying this year can do so at http://seecsaturna.ca/apply/.

For more on this story, see the Aug. 29, 2018 issue of the Gulf Islands Driftwood newspaper, or subscribe online.

Islander pitches return of Saturday market concerts

A Salt Spring resident is seeking to bring back a quintessential part of her island experience by encouraging musicians to perform in Centennial Park.

Yvonne Saunders was a frequent visitor to Salt Spring before she moved here, often coming over from West Vancouver to see her mother who lived on the island from 1991 to 2001. One of the things she liked most about the community was the “village green” quality of the park, where live music and dancing were often found on market Saturdays.

“It was such a joy. Now I’m living here and that’s what’s missing,” Saunders said. “No music means no dancers, means no atmosphere.”

Even a couple of years back, Saunders notes, it was not uncommon to hear the sounds of groups like the always-popular Oka winding through town from the park gazebo. The low cost to rent the space — at current rates $10.61 per hour or a maximum $53 per day — ensures a prime location and a power hook-up.

“It’s a lovely building, right on the waterfront, and has everything you need,” Saunders said.

The park did play host to the Fiddleworks finale concert on Friday night and will be home to this year’s post-parade Pride party. But fewer acts seem to be taking advantage of the venue this summer.

Salt Spring’s parks and recreation manager for the Capital Regional District, Dan Ovington, said he’s not sure if the gazebo is seeing fewer rentals or why that might be.

While the cost is already low, the Salt Spring Parks and Recreation Commission does sometimes consider partnering with community groups for events or helping with costs, on a case by case basis. Direct sponsorship and scheduling of music acts by PARC has not been considered, however, since no such proposal has been made to the commission.

“We haven’t had that request come forward,” Ovington said.

He explained that when PARC did schedule bands in the past it was to promote a pilot program for extra market days on long weekend Fridays, and vendor fees for the extra sessions offset the cost.

Saunders recently attended the Sidney Street Market and was thrilled by all the different musicians she found performing in the vicinity. She even took the business cards of some who had them, but she observed Salt Spring also has many talented artists and really has no need to import them.

“The recent block parties on Salt Spring were wonderful,” Saunders said. “But this proves we could do a lot more than doing nothing.”

Saunders said she is willing to help organize a schedule of performers at the park, or any other job needed, and is hoping to get a few interested people before the 2018 season ends. For more information contact her at 250-931-7373.

For more on this story, see the Aug. 29, 2018 issue of the Gulf Islands Driftwood newspaper, or subscribe online.

Junior open sees tough competition

Portlock Park was the spot for exciting junior tennis play when the Gulf Islands Junior Open took place over the Aug. 25-26 weekend.

Salt Spring player Scott Goddard had a great weekend at the boys U12 event, taking down the first and third seeds on his way to the finals where he lost to George Leith Murray from Victoria in a third set tiebreaker (4-1, 0-4 and 7-2).

Sixteen players competed in a compass draw format over the weekend, each playing four matches. Salt Springers Sisaye Patterson, Sam Barrett, Ronan Wardroper, Toby Beardsmore and Noah Logan all competed well with players coming from Vancouver, Abbotsford and Victoria.

Jag Singh Sanghera of Surrey won third place, defeating Evan Chen from Coquitlam 2-4, 5-3 and 7-4 in a tiebreaker.

In the U10 Future Stars event, Charlie Murray of Victoria was undefeated in the group round robin, where Nate Kray-Gibson of Salt Spring performed well with a fourth-place finish. Future Stars events are full court matches using green dot balls for a slightly slower pace.

The Sportsmanship Award was awarded to Sam Barrett for showing outstanding character in reversing a call in his opponent’s favour on match point. His gesture was one of integrity and in the spirit of true competition, coming on the final point of a very hard fought match.

Tournament director Marjorie Blackwood thanked the volunteers and Salt Spring Tennis Association junior committee, PARC for allowing use of the courts, and Country Grocer and Glad’s Ice Cream for contributing goodies for the competitors to enjoy.

Blackwood and fellow Centre Court indoor coach Peter Schelling say they are looking forward to expanding junior tennis lessons and events this fall with the addition of a second indoor court ready by Oct. 1.

Hothouse Earth news just as bad as feared

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By GWYNNE DYER

It would be churlish to ask what took them so long. Let us be grateful, instead, that the climate scientists are finally saying out loud what they all knew privately at least 10 years ago.

What 16 of them are now saying, in an article in the ‘Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences’, is that if we don’t soon get off the highway we are currently travelling on, we will be irrevocably committed to a ‘Hothouse Earth’. How soon is ‘soon’? Probably no more than 10 to 20 years away. That’s the last exit.

The article has the usual low-key scientific title: ‘Trajectories of the Earth System in the Anthropocene’. The authors never raise their voices, but they do point out that the likeliest of those trajectories –  the one we will stay on even if all the promises in the 2015 Paris Accord on climate change are kept –  runs right off a cliff.

‘Hothouse Earth’ is not very hospitable to human life. Hundreds of millions or even a billion or two would probably survive, but the damage to agricultural systems would be so extreme that billions more would die. (The authors don’t say this, of course. Putting it into words is too ‘alarmist’ –  but the people who actually have to think about these contingencies, like the military in the developed countries, know it very well.)

What the authors ARE saying is that ‘global warming’ driven directly by human emissions of carbon dioxide and other greenhouse gases is only part of the problem. In fact, it’s the smaller part. The real threat is the unstoppable natural ‘feedbacks’, triggered by the warming that we have caused, that will take us up to the killing temperatures of Hothouse Earth.

They list 10 of them, the biggest being the loss of Arctic sea-ice, the melting of the permafrost zone, dieback in both the boreal and the Amazon forests, and changes driven by warming in the ocean circulation system. Just triggering one or two of these feedbacks could cause enough additional warming to set off others, like a row of toppling dominoes, and take us up to those lethal temperatures within this century.

Now, this is not really news to climate scientists. When I was writing a book about climate change 10 years ago, I interviewed scores of them in half a dozen countries, including Dr. Hans-Joachim Schellnhuber, one of the lead authors of this paper and then the director of the Potsdam Institute for Climate Impact Research in Germany (and Angela Merkel’s climate advisor).

He already knew all this stuff then. Everybody did, at Potsdam, at the Hadley Centre for Climate Change in England, at the National Center for Atmospheric Research in Boulder, Colorado, and in universities that had a serious climate research program. It was the point of departure, the underlying assumption of every conversation I had.

Yet the role of these feedbacks in the system was not discussed in the scientific journals, not included in the predictions of future warming issued every four or five years by the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC), and definitely not part of the public debate. Why not?

If you spot smoke billowing out of a house, you don’t wait to see actual flames, check what substances are burning, and calculate the heat of the fire. You call the fire department immediately. But that’s not how science works.

When you make a statement in science, you have to be able to prove it, generally with hard numbers and testable predictions. The hard numbers simply weren’t available yet —  and if you go public without that evidence, you will be torn to pieces by your scientific colleagues (who are also your rivals, of course).

So the climate scientists didn’t make grand assertions, but they did manage to get the threshold of two degrees Celsius higher global temperature adopted as the never-exceed target for the IPCC’s efforts to get the warming under control. (Nobody said publicly how they arrived at that number, but it was because the scientists thought that +2 degrees C was about where the feedbacks would start kicking in.)

The scale and trigger-points of the feedbacks have finally been calculated, more or less, and the news is just as bad as the scientists feared. We have already passed the point where a return to the stable climate of the past 14,000 years is possible, and we are on course for Hothouse Earth.

The best we can do is try to stabilize the warming at or just below +2 C, and that will not be possible without major human interventions in the climate system. The ‘Stabilized Earth’ is not a natural stopping place: staying there would require “deep cuts in greenhouse gas emissions, protection and enhancement of biosphere carbon sinks, efforts to remove CO2 from the atmosphere, (and) possibly solar radiation management . . . .”

You will notice that geo-engineering (“solar radiation management”) is already part of the package, and that it will be down to human beings to manage the entire ecosystem to keep it “stable.” As Jim Lovelock, the creator of Earth System Science (‘Gaia’), wrote 39 years ago, we may “wake up one day to find that (we have) the permanent lifelong job of planetary maintenance engineer.”

I haven’t bothered to ask Jim if we are there yet. Of course we are.

Gwynne Dyer’s book Climate Wars was published in 2010. Unfortunately, he says, almost every word in it is still true.

Editorial: Craziness Continues

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We hate to be cynical, but we suspected having Salt Spring road lines repainted last month was too good to be true.

Where painting has occurred in the last month since the first sighting on July 26, local drivers have felt relief knowing that the centre and sides of island roads were visible and could remain that way at least through the treacherous winter months.

Curiously, on some of the wider roads where double yellow lines were applied, only one side of the road has a new white fog line. That means people travelling on those roads on a rainy night can drive safely to an event, or back, but not both ways. We hope Ministry of Transportation and Infrastructure personnel intend to ensure the line-painting contractor completes the job — but not right away, as there’s a new twist in Salt Spring’s road maintenance tale.

Last week a chip-sealing crew appeared on the island, applying asphalt and gravel to various roads, in whole or in part, to repair the numerous cracks in existing pavement. Suddenly, those beautiful white and yellow lines we’ve barely grow accustomed to vanished as quickly as they appeared.

This scenario belongs in a sit-com about bureaucratic ineptitude.

Southey Point resident Aubrey Smith is one islander who has spent a great deal of effort advocating for safer roads and refreshed road lines. He was pleased to see new lines finally appear on North End Road near Southey Point Road last month, but that was understandably replaced with “despair” when a huge swath of the road was chip-sealed, completely obscuring the lines.

It seems reasonable to assume that the road-line painters will return to re-apply lines to chip-sealed areas, but the official MoTI response so far is that “staff will continue to work with this contractor to try and replace paint, where possible.” In other words, “maybe.”

This situation is simply unacceptable. It’s ridiculous to pay contractors to paint lines on roads and then pay another company to obliterate those lines. Somebody at MoTI is making decisions that waste taxpayers money and provide poor service. Alternatively, the system is so out of whack that no decisions are made, but the result is the same.

Nothing less than new lines painted over the chip-sealed surfaces, including white fog lines on both sides of our roads, is acceptable.

PAGE, Gladys

Gladys Page
June 4, 2018

With much sadness we announce the passing of Gladys on June 4, 2018 at Victoria Hospice with family at her side.

Survived by her beloved husband of 69 years Harold, daughters Judy, Louise, Shirley, Yvonne, four grandchildren, three great-granddaughters, and extended family.

Long-time residents of Victoria, Gladys and Harold replaced their summer cottage at Fulford Harbour with their retirement home. They spent many wonderful years actively enjoying, supporting and contributing to their island community. Gladys was a long time member of the Lost Chords choir and an enthusiastic supporter of ArtSpring. For the last four years, Gladys resided with Harold at Meadowbrook which she wholeheartedly enjoyed. She will be lovingly remembered for her joyful exuberance and zeal.

A celebration of Gladys’ life will be held at ArtSpring in Ganges on September 22, 2018 from 2 to 4 pm.

Special thanks to Victoria Hospice staff and volunteers for their exceptional care and kindness. Donations in Gladys’ memory to Victoria Hospice would be appreciated.

MULLAN, Patricia Anne (nee Cunningham)

Patricia Anne Mullan (nee Cunningham)
January 15, 1935-August 22, 2018

Originally from the Vancouver area, Pat and her young family moved from Toronto to Salt Spring Island in 1974 to be near her mother Muriel, and brothers Frank and Ron. Over the years Pat worked on and off in various administrative jobs. By the mid 1980s, Pat settled into the executive secretary job at the Gulf Islands School Board office, a job that she loved for 15 years. After retirement she was able to spend more time working on her wonderful textile art, along with many hand knitted socks and blankets that she donated to those in need.

Predeceased by her husband John Mullan, Pat passed peacefully at Lady Minto Hospital with her daughters Wendy and Kelly by her side. She is survived by her two daughters, sons-in-law Claud, and Paul, grandchildren Émile, and Gisèle, and great-grandchildren, Ada, Hugh, and Maeve.

Thank you to all the doctors, nurses, and staff at Lady Minto Hospital.

In lieu of flowers please consider a donation to Lady Minto Hospital.