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KITCHEN, Brian Keith

Brian Keith Kitchen
March 10, 1961– August 10, 2018

Brian Kitchen passed away in Lake Cowichan on August 10, 2018 at the age of 57 years.

He was the loving father of Derek (Lyndsey) of Maple Bay, and Graham (Kyra) of Salt Spring Island. He will also be dearly missed by his Grandchild Abigail. He will also be lovingly remembered by his siblings, Rick, Karl (Kathy), Phil, Mike (Dionne), Liz (Rob) and many nieces and nephews.

He was predeceased by his mother Margurieta Sampson, father Rodrick Kitchen, and brother Roger Kitchen.

Brian was born and raised on Salt Spring Island, British Columbia. He enjoyed his sports such as hockey and baseball. He coached his sons in both sports. Brian played fastball and slo-pitch for many years.

Brian moved to Calgary, Alberta in 2005 and worked for Safeway for 9 years. In 2014 he moved back to BC and made his home in Lake Cowichan where he worked for Country Grocer for 4 years. He really enjoyed life there and he knew that would be his permanent home. Brian was known for his big smile, warm heart, and hugs. He will be missed dearly by all those who crossed his path.
A Celebration of Life will be held on
Saturday, September 8, 2018 in Lake Cowichan at the Riverside Pub, (56 North Shore Rd.), starting at 2:00pm.
Everyone is welcome.

FLOOK, Donald R. Ph.D

Donald R. Flook, Ph.D
January 30, 1928 – August 16, 2018

Donald, passed away August 16th in the palliative  care unit of the Saanich Peninsula Hospital at the age of 90 after a life very well lived.

He is greatly missed by his wife of 57 years, Fiona Flook, son Martin Flook (Toronto) , daughter Moira  and her husband Robert Tucker,  and their 3 children,  Callum, Brynn, and Emma Tucker (Victoria) and nephew Bruce Flook (Winnipeg).

He felt honoured to have had a long and rewarding career working as a biologist for the Canadian Wildlife Service.

A celebration of his life took place at their family home in Victoria.

Donations may be made in his memory to the Nature Conservancy of Canada or the Saltspring Island Conservancy to help protect environmentally important lands.

COTTON, Barry

Barry Cotton
1917-2018

Hugh Barrington Cotton died quietly and peacefully at the age of 100, on Aug. 22, 2018 at his home in Vancouver.

Born in Wallasey, England on Dec. 17, 1917, Barry served in World War II in the British army, in the Middle East and as a commando.  After coming to Canada in 1946, he qualified as a BC Land Surveyor and worked all over his beloved BC, preferring jobs that took him deep into “the bush”.  A committed environmentalist, Barry had a zest for life and learning, and led an active life in the outdoors, never happier than when he was hiking and exploring in BC’s wilderness.  His heart was given early to BC’s southern Chilcotin, where Tyax Lake and Gun Creek figured importantly in his life. He brought up his family in North Vancouver, and later lived on Salt Spring Island for 17 years.

Passionate and highly opinionated, he was a published writer of history and poetry, expressing his views with humour and insight.  His infectious laugh, his love of music, and his voracious sweet tooth will be remembered by his family and friends.

Married and widowed twice, he was predeceased by both Kittie Cotton (2006) and Daphne Tobler (2018).  Barry is survived by his daughter Wendy Vine (Kevin), son David (Denise), stepdaughter Tania LePage, and grandchildren Korena (Nathan), Gabrielle, Daniel and Paul.

Donations in Barry’s memory may be made to the David Suzuki Foundation, Dying with Dignity, or the Brock House Society.

Private Celebration of Life to be organized at a future date.

CALAM, JOHN HELLAWELL

JOHN HELLAWELL CALAM
DEC. 8, 1925 — AUG 8, 2018

John died after a prolonged illness, in Comox, BC on August 8 at the age of 92. He was pre-deceased by his beloved wife Renée in 2017, and his dear sister Margaret in 2013. He is survived by his three daughters Marie-Françoise (George) Betty (Roger) and Rachelle (Neftali), his three grandsons Gregory (Dalal), Stefan and Nicholas (Jayme), his two great granddaughters Isla and Zadie, and his nieces Pat and Sarah and nephew John.

Born on December 8, 1925 in Huddersfield Yorkshire UK, John was the son of Percy Calam and Doris Lodge and the younger brother of Margaret. John came to Canada in wartime 1939 and attended Burnaby South Highschool, thereafter enlisting as a navigator in the Royal Canadian Air Force. He went on to do his Bachelor of Arts and teacher training at the University of British Columbia, working one summer in the Yukon for a placer gold mine near Dawson City, growing a beard, and working as an extra on a movie crew. He then started teaching and in 1953 married Renée his childhood friend and sweetheart from Belgium. Together they embarked on a remarkable adventure raising three daughters and pursuing a teaching and academic career that spanned four decades in communities as diverse as Forest Grove, Telkwa and Kitimat in rural BC, as well as Montreal, New York City and Vancouver. He offered his unique talents to being a teacher, high school principal, graduate and doctoral student at McGill and Columbia, editor, professor, department head, associate dean and emeritus professor with the Faculty of Education at the University of British Columbia. After retiring to Salt Spring Island BC where he and Renée created cozy homes with beautiful gardens, he continued to write, publish and mentor students and colleagues. He loved walking, hitchhiking and scooting around Salt Spring to chat with everyone he met. John and Renée enjoyed many happy years on Salt Spring before moving to the Comox Valley in 2016.

John was an accomplished writer, poet, musician, rock hound, kite flyer and craftsman. He could spin a yarn, make a walking stick, repair a clock, find an agate, build a sturdy bench and write a sonnet. His daughters remember his compelling bedtime stories, his efforts to avoid doing dishes by playing the guitar and making up colourful nonsense verses to well-known songs, and his courage in teaching us all to drive a VW van with manual transmission overseeing terrifying brake starts on hills, and precise parallel parking.

Throughout his life John enjoyed road trips, marvelling at the natural beauty, history and people throughout British Columbia and Yukon, including Haida Gwaii, Dawson City, and the Cariboo, writing or telling stories about his keen observations and insights along the way. As he aged and welcomed grandchildren and great grandchildren into his world John often said that he had been blessed with a wonderful life and “good innings.” The family wishes to give thanks for the exceptional care John received from his family physician Dr. Bobby Crichton and staff at the Lady Minto Hospital while on Salt Spring, and to acknowledge the compassionate care and support in Comox of Dr. Ric Potter-Cogan, the staff at the Comox Valley Seniors Village, the North Island Hospital and finally at The Views, where Nurses Rene, Dave, Miriam, Max and Liv provided superb palliative care for John in his final days. All who met or knew him said how thoughtful, humorous and respectful he was, playing his harmonica and enjoying ice cream and being a perfect gentleman even towards the end.

John will be deeply missed and mourned by his family, friends and colleagues. He requested no funeral and the family will hold a celebration of his life at a later date. Condolences can be sent to bettycalam@hotmail.com and The Calams at: 2936 West 13th Ave. Vancouver BC V6K 2T9

In lieu of flowers please consider a contribution to The Views, St Joseph’s in Comox (cvviews.com) Heart and Stroke Foundation (heartandstroke.ca) or to a charity of your choice.

Killer whales visit Ganges Harbour

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Old Scott Road resident Jill Rigby was sitting on her deck Friday afternoon when she heard an unusual noise that sounded like whales blowing.

To her knowledge, whales had never before appeared off Old Scott Road that close to Ganges. And so she continued reading. 

When the whooshing sounds continued, one glance at the water confirmed four orcas swimming and blowing offshore. Her video footage even includes one of them spyhopping.

“They were probably 20 yards from our property,” she said. “It was unbelievable. I think there were only a half dozen people who noticed. I shall never forget the wonder of watching them with no one else around. Isn’t that as it should be?”

Musgrave brush fire prompts fast action from fire department

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Salt Spring fire crews battled an 8,000-square-foot brush fire on the south end of the island Tuesday afternoon.

Crews were called out at 3:26 p.m. to a fire located about two kilometres up the gravel portion of Musgrave Road. When they arrived on scene at around 4 p.m., the fire was beginning to burn into the bark of the trees, but the lack of underbrush prevented it from growing too much.

“It was kind of a more thick treed area. There weren’t many low branches or underbrush, which helps us as far as lack of fire growth is concerned,” said Salt Spring Assistant Fire Chief Jamie Holmes.

Twenty-two members responded to the fire, and 18 stayed on scene. The other four returned to Ganges to remain on standby. The crew shuttled water from the Fulford fire hall to help fight the blaze. Three water tenders, two mini pumpers, the forestry trailer and command unit were on scene. BC Forestry Service was advised to be on standby, but was not needed.

“I would say we had containment of the area by about 5:30,” Holmes said. “Then what we do is we ring the fire and we work from the outside in. We look at hotspots and make sure that it’s not going to flare up again.”

No structures were threatened by the fire. Neighbourhood PODs for Isabella, Musgrave and Mount Tuam were notified, but no evacuations were needed.

The fire was extinguished by 7 p.m. Crews returned later Tuesday evening to check for flare ups, and again on Wednesday.

“It was good that it was close to the side of the road and that it was reported quickly. We could have had much bigger fire growth if it had gotten started before anyone really got a chance to report it,” Holmes said.

The cause of the fire is under investigation, but no obvious signs of camping or smoking material were found.

Spring Awakening prepares to rock

Local theatre company exitStageLeft’s new production is a rock musical that tells the story of teenagers discovering their sexuality in an oppressive society.

Spring Awakening is based on a play written in 1891 by Frank Wedekind. The play had a limited run and was revisited in the United States beginning in the 1960s. It was developed for Broadway in the early 2000s with music by Duncan Sheik and a book and lyrics by Steven Sater.

The play is set in 1890s Germany and follows a group of teenagers as they come of age sexually in an authoritarian and repressive society. Though the play covers such themes as sexual assault, suicide, abortion and sexual repression, the rock music soundtrack gives the audience a chance to relate with the characters and see them as real people.

Amelia McCluskey, the youngest member of the cast at 15, said that the play is “at moments . . . comedic, and at others it’s very romantic and [then] there are some really dark themes. It all fits really neatly together.”

“There are moments that are very real and impact a lot of people,” she added. “I think that Spring Awakening is focused around the characters and community . . . these things are still happening right now. These characters still live now. It’s much more about depicting something that is universal.”

Members of the cast have jumped headfirst into their roles. While it may be incongruous seeing mature themes come from such young people, they feel that they are opening up difficult topics for discussion and inviting the audience to think about things they might not be comfortable with.

“It’s real life,” said cast member Patrice Bowler. “There is mature subject matter . . . suicide, abortion, physical, sexual and emotional violence. Anyone who has dealt with that might find it triggering, but it’s totally palatable because you have this amazing soundtrack.”

Cast member Kahlila Ball said that getting into her character was the hardest thing she’s had to do.

“It has also been one of the most rewarding things. My character has a difficult scene with her friends and the first time we worked that, I could feel the energy and the power it held,” Ball said. “The more I’ve been able to work it, the more I feel like I’m able to hopefully bring a bit of justice and truth to the stories.”

The driving force behind this play comes from the young cast.

“It wouldn’t have happened if it wasn’t for them,” said company co-director Christina Penhale. “They’ve dedicated their whole hearts and souls to stepping into these characters and doing this story justice. It has been incredibly inspiring and humbling to watch them go through the process.”

ExitStageLeft’s decision to perform Spring Awakening this year brings extra awareness to the struggles still faced by young people today. The current political climate is one that fosters intolerance, discrimination and oppression, and Penhale explained that this was the company’s way of speaking against that.

“I think it’s important to give a voice to acceptance and tolerance and to open the discussion,” Penhale said. “Since this is a piece being told from the perspective of youth who are being silenced, we just kept coming back to it.”

“It’s going to affect each audience member differently,” she added, “if they can just stay open to whatever they may experience.”

Spring Awakening opens at ArtSpring on Aug. 31, and continues on Sept. 1, 5, 6, 7 and 8. The show begins at 7:30 p.m.

Water district moves to Level-4 restrictions

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North Salt Spring Waterworks District water users are now subject to Level-4 conservation restrictions.

Level 4 is the highest level of water restriction in the district. The Aug. 17 decision was made based on current conditions in St. Mary and Maxwell lakes, the short-term weather forecast and seasonal weather predictions from Environment Canada. With no rain in the forecast into September, the restriction could be in place for a few more months.

“It definitely could be a while,” said NSSWD environmental manager Meghan McKee on Tuesday. “The lake has to be well on its way to refilling before it will be lifted.”

The district has implemented strict watering restrictions since 2015 and reached Level 4 in both 2015 and 2016, but those years still saw more rain than Salt Spring has received this summer.

The NSSWD’s licence with the province allows the water level in St. Mary Lake to drop only to 40.0 metres above sea level before the district must apply for a licence amendment, which is an expensive process.

“We have to be really cautious to make sure that the level stays above 40.0 metres in St. Mary Lake until it starts to refill, which is honestly sometimes in November or December,” she said.

Under a Level-4 restriction, homes within the district can turn on micro or drip irrigation systems, or use a spring-loaded hose nozzle or hand-held container to water gardens and trees for a maximum of one hour per day on alternating days. Residents with even-numbered addresses are permitted to water on even-numbered days, and vice-versa. Watering gardens is allowed for one hour total per day between 5 and 10 a.m. or 5 and 10 p.m. on permitted days.

Uses like sprinkling, vehicle and boat washing, washing driveways, sidewalks, parking lots and buildings, filling pools and ponds, and watering public parks, sports fields and open spaces are not permitted.

“Water restrictions really apply to outdoor water, but in a Level-4 drought we would encourage everybody, as the provincial government is doing, to minimize their indoor water use as well, so take shorter showers, turn off the tap when you’re brushing your teeth and washing dishes, just do all the small things that you can,” she said.

The restriction also affects commercial businesses like car washes that are located within the waterworks district.

This has been a particularly dry summer for the region. Other water districts on Salt Spring have been affected by the dry spell, with the usual seasonal restrictions in place for Cedar Lane and Cedars of Tuam water districts, for example. Ralph Dom, the chair of Cedar Lane Water Service Commission, said the district is recommending “total minimal water use at this point, because the well levels are very low.”

Dan Robson, Capital Regional District operations manager in charge of local CRD water district matters, said the CRD has been putting out signboards informing residents about ways to save water.

“The province is going into Level-2, 3 and 4 drought conditions, so we’re putting that out on a regular basis now annually,” Robson said.

The provincial government declared a Level-4 drought level on East Vancouver Island last week. This rating is separate from the water restriction rating used by the NSSWD, but the information provided by the government factors into their decision.

“We’re at less than three per cent of our normal summer rainfall,” McKee said. “I don’t [know of a] year where we’ve had such little rainfall in July and August.”

We must take steps to adapt to a hotter climate reality

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By JOHN BORST

When I moved to Salt Spring Island 14 years ago, I fell in love with our forests. I still love their variety, size, depth and age.

On the hottest days I would walk in the Douglas fir groves and enjoy the cool peacefulness they brought to my life. I loved knowing that their shade kept our homes cool and comfortable.

Over the past years I have sensed a substantial change. Our summers feel hotter and longer and there is less summer rain. Our cedars are dying and scientists predict they will disappear from all but the wettest parts of our islands. The changes we are experiencing due to a warming climate have shaken me.

The future projections made by climate scientists are not good. The projected change for rainfall in the Capital Regional District is the most dramatic: an 18 per cent decrease in summer rain by 2050 and a 26 per cent decrease by 2080, while fall, winter and spring rains will increase by an average of 22 per cent by 2050 and 35 per cent by 2080, and storms are expected to become more intense.

Average temperatures here are expected to increase by an average of 2.7 degrees by 2050 and 4.4 degrees by 2080. For comparison, the events we are now experiencing are a result of only one degree increase over the past 200 to 300 years. (Source: Climate Projections for the Capital Region: April 2017.)

A significant and frightening result of hotter and drier summers is the probability of a major fire. The news is full of large fires burning throughout the world: Spain, Portugal, Greece, Australia, California, Ontario, Quebec and B.C. have significant fires. Nanaimo has in the past few weeks seen a stubborn fire on its outskirts and our Salt Spring emergency services extinguished a two-hectare blaze in a steep and heavily forested area in the south end earlier this month.

In addition, regrowth after a major fire may result in an entirely different forest. Burned forests are re-growing as shrub lands in many areas of the world. Our beautiful cedars and Douglas fir may never return.

So I have reluctantly concluded that we must accept a new reality. We can no longer ignore the increasing probability of a major fire on our Island. It is with this acceptance that the Environment Working Group of the Community Alliance and I have proposed an integrated fire management model of fire safety for our homes. It combines FireSmart practices with rainwater harvesting and grey water recycling and water conservation. The more we save during the winter the more water we will have available for our gardens — and for firefighting if needed.

The Environment Working Group shared its proposal at the July Community Alliance meeting and will share it with the entire community in a short series of articles during the next few weeks. This first article is about our island climate history. Next we will present FireSmart ideas for Salt Spring homes followed by rainwater catchment and grey water ideas. If we implement these ideas, they would increase the likelihood that our homes will survive and also reduce the chances that a house fire will spread to the forest.

While these ideas are challenging in both visual impact and expense, the more fully they are implemented, the more likely it is that our homes and our forests will survive in the event of a major fire. There is ample evidence from other places hit by catastrophic events like fire and flood that it is cheaper to take preventive steps than to repair the damage resulting from a major destructive event.

The CRD and the Trust need to assist property owners to protect their homes, as well as their forests and their fields, and to adapt to the new hotter reality we all face.

Assisting John Borst with this piece are fellow Community Alliance Environment Working Group members Anne Parkinson, Jean Wilkinson, Chris Dixon, Pierre Mineau, Tom Mitchell and Maggie Squires.

Viewpoint: Contempt of court statement shared

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The following is the statement made to the court by Salt Spring’s Heather Martin McNab upon being sentenced for protesting the Kinder Morgan pipeline.

Thank you for this opportunity to make my statement today in this court on unceded Coast Salish Territories.

I am a mother and grandmother, still working full time between two jobs. I have had my job with special needs adults and the same employer for 30 years and have had my own commercial cleaning contracts for the past 10 years. I am a basket maker and artist.

I am also a Zen Buddhist and am wearing my Rakasu. It is a representation of Buddha’s robes and of the vows I took in 2011. The first precept is similar to the first commandment in that it has deeper layers of spiritual depth and meaning than the statement “not to kill.” Thich Naht Hanh translates this precept as “reverence for life” and as all life is connected and inter dependent. It refers to all of nature and everything within it. I became a Buddhist because the precepts align with my own values and it is those very values and my vows that would not let me stand down.

Even the grieving mother orca would not stand down when she held her dead baby up for weeks while being supported by her pod. If that was not an organized protest, I don’t know what is! She held her dead baby up for the world to see as if to say, “Look what you have done! Look what you are doing!” The resident pods are starving to death. They are unwell and they are in serious decline. If the pipeline goes through, there will be more sonar, more engine droning and much more tanker traffic. Spills are inevitable, but even the increased traffic will harm the whales and other marine mammals. There is no way to determine the number of leaks and spills that will happen along our coast and along the pipeline, but we know they will take place.

I am dumbfounded as to why the Trudeau government would buy this pipeline project in the first place and at such an atrocious cost to the taxpayers and the environment.

I can only surmise that what we call democracy is a front to the backroom politics manipulated by corporations, who hold the strings most of our politicians dance to.

This buyout sends a clear message to the rest of the world that although the Canadian government is well aware of all the scientific facts regarding climate change and fuel emissions, it has no intention of meeting our climate goals. Continuing to invest in outdated, costly and harmful technology rather than investing in renewable, clean energy options sends a message that the Canadian government lacks innovation and forethought. It tells the rest of the world that the Canadian government will not hold our end of the responsibility to meet the Paris Climate agreement to reduce climate change.

We have no way to determine the costs of clean up, how clean is clean enough, or how much damage will be irreversible. We know that the environmental costs are immediate and have far reaching consequences. Regulations will not prevent disasters from happening.

On the heels of reconciliation, this project threatens to pass through unceded territories, breaking treaties and agreements with First Nations leaders and the people. Canada has a shameful history of genocide, human rights issues and broken treaties. Canada’s government and the corporate giants, who were the forefathers of today’s corporate giants, did their best to wipe out First Nations people and culture for a rampant greed called progress. After all that they have endured, they stand strong and now more and more of the settler population stands with them and takes their lead to protect the earth for the sake of the next seven generations.

I am proud and saddened to be on this side of the struggle to wake our government up to what is truly at stake.