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Island’s Opt Clinic faces closure due to rising costs

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A sexual and reproductive health clinic on Salt Spring could join dozens of others across B.C. facing closure, organizers say, unless the province comes through with additional funding. 

Founded in 1997 as a Planned Parenthood branch, the Options for Sexual Health office on Salt Spring –– the “Opt Clinic” –– has been on the second floor at 134 McPhillips Ave. since 1998 (except for a short period when the building was being renovated), delivering information, education and healthcare; from contraceptive management and STI testing to gynecological referrals and screenings for cervical cancer, its clients are often the most vulnerable among an estimated 4,000 islanders without a family doctor.  

If the Opt Clinic here closes, organizers say, those essential services will fall out of reach, particularly for those unable to afford –– or even arrange –– a trip off-island. 

In a statement earlier this month, Options for Sexual Health’s board of directors said that after years without increases in its provincial funding levels –– while nursing wages in B.C. have risen –– the majority of the organization’s network of 52 clinics will be shuttered. 

“The possibility of having to close many, if not all, of our clinics comes after more than a decade of operating under significant financial strain,” read the open letter. “With no substantive increases to our core funding during this time, rising healthcare costs, inflation, and the growing cost of living have outpaced our ability to meet the demands of need for our health care services.” 

Options’ board said it has sent a letter to Premier David Eby to request additional funding. In the meantime they are urging supporters to add their own voices to the conversation –– by contacting their MLAs to ask for them to support the funding request.  

There is no current appeal for funds from the community, but organizers have launched an online petition which had 175 signatures at press time: change.org/p/save-salt-spring-island-options-for-sexual-health. 

Editorial: Partnerships key for community’s success

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Holiday season newspapers can be a challenge for editorial staff everywhere, to put it mildly.

Press deadlines are often shifted since everyone takes time off; and the usual flow of news-making events also shuts down.

In order to ensure you had something good to read in these pages, we asked a handful of community groups and leaders to provide what we called “looking back/looking forward” pieces, inviting reflections on accomplishments of 2024 and a glimpse of plans for 2025.

We think the result is inspiring; akin to opening a door on a bustling workshop-like atmosphere of focused activity and achievement. While we obviously report on what’s happening each week, when the writing reins are given to the doers, as they were this week, the collective images and details are more vivid somehow.

One facet that stands out is the fact that local organizations rely on many cohorts in order to meet their goals.

We often characterize Salt Spring groups and governance as operating in silos, but the picture that emerges from this week’s submitted pieces is that it’s not really true. Collaboration with other groups (and receiving critical funding support in some cases) is a persistent theme.

One such collaboration is making its debut next week, when Restorative Justice Salt Spring Island personnel lead the first Restorative Dialogue Circle at ASK Salt Spring on Jan. 10, and continuing on the second Friday of each month. Use of these circles to hold difficult conversations in a safe environment has enormous transformative power, increasing mutual understanding and helping to heal rifts among members and groups in our community.

The Driftwood, of course, relies entirely on collaboration and partnerships in order to do what we do. We would love to be able to thank each person individually for their contributions to these pages in the past year, whether it came from a casual conversation, an interview or a written submission. Instead, we hope you know who you are and appreciate that we are sincerely grateful for your shared words and deeds.

Happy New Year from all of us at Driftwood Publishing Ltd. We look forward to interacting with and serving our readers and community every day in 2025.

Actions help protect drinking water resources

BY SSI WATER PRESERVATION SOCIETY

The Salt Spring Island Water Preservation Society (WPS) was founded in 1982 to protect the sources of drinking water on Salt Spring Island, promote research into local water resources and increase public awareness of the value of water resources.

Over the last 42 years, members have provided important input to ensure public policies recognize the vulnerability of our freshwater supplies, and safeguard this critical gift of nature. A special event in 2024 was the granting of a well-deserved B.C. Community Award to longtime WPS members Wayne and Doreen Hewitt, in recognition of their 30 years of persistent work to protect water resources on Salt Spring Island.

One of the most significant WPS accomplishments in recent years is the Freshwater Catalogue. This has been a very successful citizen-science project, collecting data and local knowledge to improve our understanding of the diversity, quantity and quality of the island’s surface and groundwater. We appreciate the valuable contributions of numerous volunteers who’ve monitored streams, lakes, ponds, springs and wells over a six-year period. Loads of detailed information and links, including one to an interactive web-map, is available at sites.google.com/view/freshwater-catalogue/home. Anyone interested in contributing to this important research project would be very welcome, and is asked to contact us at ssiwps@gmail.com.

WPS is a partner with the local Climate Action Research Lab group, which is working to improve the hydrology and fire resistance of the Maxwell Lake watershed, one of Salt Spring’s main sources of potable water. This project is increasing knowledge about restoration practices, and is gaining the attention of experts throughout B.C.

Over the past year, WPS also collaborated with Raincoast Conservation Foundation and other local groups studying the health of the waters of Fulford Bay. Peter Ross, who oversees Raincoast’s Healthy Waters program that monitors water pollution, presented a very interesting and informative public talk about invisible pollutants impacting freshwater, oceans, wildlife and humans in June. In addition to providing information on the Freshwater Catalogue and WPS websites, we submitted an article to the Driftwood for World Water Day in March, explaining how our interconnected watersheds and natural systems are key to our island’s continued freshwater sustainability.

We enjoyed talking to people at our booths at the annual film festival and fall fair, and are always open to hearing water-related concerns and feedback from the public. We offer personalized water catchment tours, and hope to have more public education events in the coming year.

Currently, WPS has concerns regarding the North Salt Spring Waterworks District’s proposed lifting of the moratorium on water connections. We look forward to discussions with NSSWD and the community about this critical issue in the coming months. We will continue to monitor local, regional and provincial policies that affect water, and provide thoughtful input to safeguard sustainability into the future. WPS owns 337 acres of watershed lands, mostly under strict conservation covenants, and stewards these to protect the ecology and thus the health of the water resources they provide.

This past summer, students from Ocean Wise helped us remove garbage from a legacy landfill site near critical wetlands on the Larmour lands. Every year we remove invasive weeds such as broom and tansy, plant native shrubs, grasses and forbs, and monitor all of these special properties. We were pleased to learn that endangered sharp-tailed snakes have been found on our St. Mary Lake Watershed and Nature Reserve this year. It’s very important that people walking in this sensitive reserve near Channel Ridge stay on the trails, keep dogs on leash, and refrain from riding bikes and horses. Signs outlining the rules are posted, and we ask that everyone abide by them to protect the drinking water used by numerous households.

Members of the public can help safeguard our island’s water resources by being mindful of their water usage and conserving water as much as possible, especially during the summer. Letting lawns go golden, mulching and using water catchment systems for gardens, taking short showers, flushing less often, running only full loads in dishwashers and washing machines, installing low-flow fixtures and asking visitors to avoid wasting water are simple changes that add up to important savings.

Another role for citizens is to work toward creating change in provincial and federal water conservation policies. Writing letters to elected officials supporting improved stewardship of water resources, and joining stakeholder organizations such as WPS that amplify the voices of individuals, are concrete actions we all can take to protect this most precious resource. 

We encourage anyone interested in learning more or becoming a member of the Water Preservation Society to contact us at ssiwps@gmail.com.

Editor’s note: The above is one in a series of “looking back/looking forward” retrospective pieces submitted by community groups and leaders to the Driftwood for its Jan. 1, 2025 edition.

Community-building sees results

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Part of the Driftwood’s Looking Back/Looking Forward series of retrospective pieces submitted by local organizations and published in the Jan. 1 issue of the Driftwood newspaper.

Key achievements of the Salt Spring Island Chamber of Commerce from 2024 include:

Restoring Financial Stability: Resolved outstanding grant obligations, bringing the Chamber back into compliance with funding bodies. New grants were also secured to support operations and community initiatives.

Enhancing Membership Value: The Chamber launched a state-of-the-art digital membership platform and directory at SaltSpringDirectory.com. These tools have improved member services, simplified renewals, and made the Chamber’s offerings more accessible and inclusive.

Building Community Connections: A reinvigorated focus on engagement included successful initiatives such as Member Mixers, the Convergence Festival, a revitalized newsletter and refocused Information Centre. These efforts brought together businesses, residents, and visitors, strengthening the Chamber’s role as a community leader.

Advocating for Local Solutions: The Chamber focused on the critical advocacy issues of affordable workforce housing and short-term rental policies, working closely with stakeholders to develop a balanced, sustainable approach to both that would meet the needs of the business community.

As the Chamber looks ahead to 2025, priorities include increasing membership, driving further financial stability, and expanding support for local businesses. The Chamber is looking forward to leveraging the momentum generated this year with a 2025 seasonal membership drive enhanced with new promotional opportunities and InfoCentre operations. 

Reflecting on his tenure, outgoing executive director Matthew Quetton shared, “Leading this turnaround has been a privilege. Together, we’ve laid a strong foundation for the Chamber’s continued success and feel optimistic about the future and grateful for the chance to serve this incredible business community.”

Stay tuned for updates on 2025 programs and events that aim to make Salt Spring Island an even better place to live, work and do business.

Island Pathways reports on busy 2024

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By ROBIN JENKINSON and

PETER MEYER

This year held many great events and projects to advance safer walking and cycling pathways on Salt Spring Island.

From a Kids Bike Park Rally and BBQ, to a youth mountain biking movie night, to adult social rides and an ebiking safety course, our Cycling Salt Spring Committee has engaged all ages. We’ve had fun distributing free helmets for children, selling maps and connecting with community at schools, the Tuesday and Saturday markets, the Volunteer Fair, Salt Spring Film Festival and Fall Fair, and offering free bike repairs at Transition Salt Spring’s Repair Cafe.

The Salish Sea Trail Working Group, including the Capital Regional District, Islands Trust, ministries of transportation and tourism, and other partners convened by Island Pathways and former MLA Adam Olsen, resulted in CRD Regional Parks and the federal Active Transportation Fund developing a preliminary design for a multi-use pathway from Fulford to Vesuvius. Regional Parks has allocated $630,000 for design and outreach work over the next two years and millions for construction beyond that.

The Partners Creating Pathways Committee also had a productive year, with a new pathway at Brinkworthy completed in November, and plans under development for Brinkworthy Phase II, which will extend the trail to the entrance of the Brinkworthy complex. This is a great example of how Salt Spring Island collaboration works between a volunteer organization (Island Pathways), the CRD, the Local Community Commission, Parks, Arts, Recreation and Culture, the CRD director, private party land dedication and the contractor, Sam Erk. Plans are underfoot for additional collaborative pathway construction between Kanaka Road and Park Drive, the Swanson Road/Lakeview Crescent Pathway, and the long-anticipated extension of a pathway to Merchants Mews. The new Woodland Cliff Trail is being considered by the Salt Spring Trail and Nature Club for insurance coverage and maintenance, and we have entered into discussions with Country Grocer regarding pathway improvements on their property and near the Summerside Strata. Three new benches (numbers 49, 50 and 51), built by Donald McLennan, were also installed along trails.

In 2024, the board updated our logo and commenced a strategic plan, with a focus on connecting, building and good health. In 2025, please look forward to a new website, along with two exciting volunteer-driven programs. One will use our ebike-driven bike lane sweeper to clean up gravel and debris. The second is the launch of a Salt Spring chapter of Cycling Without Age, offering safe bike rides on our new electric “trishaw.”

We’d like to extend deep appreciation for outgoing board members Natasha Kong and Michi Main and a warm welcome to our newest board member, Neal Barman. Bob MacKie, Wendy Webb, Steve New, Luke Campbell, Simon Rompre, Margaretha Nordine, Peter Meyer and Naomi Tweddle carry on! Many others lead and participate in committees and special projects.

We invite you to join us to achieve safe active transportation infrastructure on Salt Spring. Become a lifetime member, donate or sign up for our newsletter at islandpathways.ca.

MacWilliam featured poet at library

The first Poetry Open Mic night of 2025 on Thursday, Jan. 9 features Adelia MacWilliam, who Salt Spring Islanders may remember from a Raised by the Sea art, tea and poetry event she put on with her cousin Briony Penn in November of 2022.

According to a Salt Spring Public Library media release, “When Adelia did her poetry thesis at the University of Victoria, she discovered that if you cast the mythic imagination across a piece of land that has always been part of your life, everything will out. What she encountered amidst the remnants of a stunning wilderness — a savage history, with its culturally sanctioned amnesia — changed her view of her home forever.”

The complexities of being part of a settler culture struggling to create a home in a world that is simultaneously gutting are explored in her Details of the Passage chapbook and poems from her current manuscript called Films the Dead Are Showing.

MacWilliam’s work can be found in various publications, including Drift, Poems and Poets from the Comox Valley, (The Poem Factory), Sweet Water, Poems for the Watersheds and, most recently, ‘Counterflow’, a digital magazine from Nanaimo’s WordStorm.

MacWilliam is also one of the three co-editors of Cascadian Zen Volume One and Two (Watershed Press), an anthology that brings together non-fiction, poetry and translations that explore expressions of Zen within the Cascadia bioregion.

Sign-up for the open mic starts at 6:45 p.m., with one poem allowed per reader and three minutes max. The evening begins at 7 p.m. with the featured poet taking the mic at about 7:30 p.m.

Tree chipping available Jan. 5

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Salt Spring Island Fire Rescue (SSIFR) is once again offering its Christmas tree chipping service.

On Sunday, Jan. 5 from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m., SSIFR personnel will be on hand at the Central Fire Hall (#3) with a contracted chipper to grind up islanders’ trees, ensuring they don’t become a fire hazard if they are not safely disposed of.

Please note that trees will not be accepted outside of the four-hour period on Jan. 5, and they must be free of decorations, lights, tinsel and stands.

The service is offered by donation (with a $10 suggested amount).

NSSWD eyes federal funds for Maxwell plant

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Trustees and staff at Salt Spring’s largest water district may have a path toward a seemingly improbable zero per cent tax increase in 2026, should the will of ratepayers –– and of a federal funding program –– swing their way.  

The hope comes despite the need for a new water treatment plant at Maxwell Lake, mandated by Island Health last year and incorporated into the North Salt Spring Waterworks District’s (NSSWD) resiliency-building plan –– a multi-pronged long-term roadmap that also includes a provincially-funded $10 million raising of the weir at St. Mary Lake and a significant pump station upgrade, enabling bi-directional supply of domestic water from either of the district’s lake sources. 

Now, both the $14.6 million Maxwell Lake plant and the $1.78 million Crofton Road pump upgrade are part of a grant funding request, according to NSSWD CAO Mark Boysen, who told district trustees Thursday, Dec. 19 staff had raced to submit a timely application with the Canada Housing Infrastructure Fund –– a $6 billion source, with much of that available for improvement districts with projects that will remove barriers to new housing supply. 

If successful, that funding could cover up to 40 per cent of the projects. 

“I’ll bet we were one of the earliest applicants,” chuckled Boysen, crediting the district’s extant resiliency plans for a speedy and well-sourced application. “I think we’re in good shape, at least we put our best foot forward.” 

Without figuring in the grant funds, existing reserves and projected revenues allocated for the required Maxwell Lake plant leave an $11.7 million shortfall, necessitating a loan whose annual payments are already on the books, even while district ratepayers will need to vote to approve the borrowing itself.  

“The discussion we quite often have in the office is that we’ve been required by the province to build this, but we have to get approval from our ratepayers to pay for it,” said Boysen. “The other alternative –– not getting a loan –– is not a good story. It’s a very expensive option.” 

2025’s annual $300 surcharge –– rising to $400 in 2026 –– is already approved by the board, but the grant’s potential $6 million reduction in the amount needing to be borrowed could cut the annual payment on a loan by half. 

“What it could potentially look like is that we would be able to just hold at a $300-a-year surcharge,” said Boysen, “and not have to go up.” 

The proposed Maxwell Lake plant has a final design and loan authorization through a referendum in the spring, with work beginning in early 2026. Updates from the district to Island Health on the plant’s planning process seem to have satisfied that agency, according to operations manager Ryan Moray, who told trustees there had been no concerns expressed with NSSWD extending the construction timeline. 

“We will be bringing forward an ask, to confirm a process for that loan authorization,” said Boysen. “If I can bring grant news to that discussion, that would be great.” 

Search sparked for northern hall site

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The year 2026 may seem a little like the distant future, but Salt Spring’s fire district is already looking past that expected completion date for the new fire hall –– toward improving coverage on what will by then be a shifted protection landscape on the island.  

Specifically, trustees for the Salt Spring Island Fire Protection District (SSIFPD) are examining response times to fires, through the lens of the new Fire Hall No. 1 moving nearly two kilometres north from its current location.  

A property is considered well-covered, and a homeowner’s insurance ratings are most helped, when situated within eight kilometres of a fire hall, according to Fire Chief Jamie Holmes –– not as the crow flies, but along connecting roadways. By this time next year, there will be overlapping coverage between Hall 1 and the satellite fire hall at Central –– Hall 3, at the intersections of Lower Ganges, Upper Ganges, Vesuvius Bay and North End roads.  

That inefficiency suggested to trustees there might be advantages to moving Hall 3 north, to potentially cover areas like Southey Point that haven’t been within the eight-kilometre protection zone before. 

“We think there’s more bang for the buck further north, when we start to count houses and response times,” said SSIFPD CAO Rodney Dieleman, who brought trustees a requested plan to start looking at whether that move would be feasible –– or desirable — at their Dec. 16 meeting.  

It’s a long-term, forward-thinking notion; the ultimate goal would be an island-wide network with one main fire hall branching off to strategically located satellite halls, ensuring comprehensive coverage everywhere.  

“What we really want to see is what are the spots where you could cover the island completely, with the fewest number of fire halls,” said Holmes. “And at that point you can determine if the population and densities support that. Or not.” 

To that end, the district will be pursuing confidential expressions of interest for acquiring new land to the north, first reaching out directly to entities like provincial ministries and the Capital Regional District –– because, said Dieleman, “they may have land that we want more than they do.” 

And meanwhile, SSIFPD staff are collaborating with a copywriter to draft and publish what is essentially a “land wanted” ad, which will run in local publications and online through the first weeks of January. The hope is to garner expressions of interest from landowners, and ideas from the public, which Dieleman will present to trustees during an in-camera meeting Jan. 20. 

“These expressions don’t have to be ‘I’d like to sell you my land’,” said Dieleman. “It could be creative proposals; the board has flexibility at this point.” 

Any proposals for potential new sites would be evaluated and presented to the board with analyses of whether each increased or decreased coverage, or met fire hall requirements such as water, sewer, storage and sound –– high bars, perhaps, but hopefully less complicated than choosing the site for Hall 1 necessarily became. 

“These aren’t $15-million halls,” said Dieleman. “These are garages to store equipment, for people to respond from.” 

A real estate appraiser took stock of Hall 3 earlier this month, Dieleman said, and the market value of the land and building should soon be available for trustees for their planning purposes. 

“We’re not saying we’re selling the property,” said Dieleman. “We’re just accepting proposals so we can determine if it should be put up for sale, traded, swapped, donated or returned to the taxpayers.” 

On the other end, the relocation of Salt Spring’s largest fire hall will lengthen response times to the south, at least before the eight-kilometre range of Hall 2 –– the Fulford satellite fire hall –– begins. Holmes and Dieleman said with areas such as the end of Beddis Road or the tops of Cranberry and Dukes roads losing some coverage, a second parcel of land for a mid-island hall between Ganges and Fulford might be a future project as well. It would be a smart, strategic place to store equipment, Holmes said, at least for a longer-term plan. 

“But the centre of the island actually has pretty good coverage right now, even with the hall moving,” said Holmes. “Our two biggest [priorities] are Southey Point, and Beaver Point; if Beaver Point densifies, we would need to plan for a hall somewhere in that area.” 

Notably, Holmes said, as the North Salt Spring Waterworks District’s moratorium on new connections eases, concerns about fire coverage for possible densification at Channel Ridge are, almost accidentally, alleviated. 

“With Hall 1 moving north, it’s actually within eight kilometres of the Channel Ridge site,” said Holmes. “So we actually have coverage there, which is a bonus.”

Editorial: Wish list five years later

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It’s been five years since the Driftwood’s publishing date last landed on Dec. 25, meaning we have an opportunity to update our Christmas wish list for Salt Spring.

 Santa seems to have had us mostly on his “nice” list since 2019, delivering many of the specifics we’d asked for. Our big-ticket item was a seemingly improbable repaving of Ganges Hill, now underway through the Fulford-Ganges Road Improvement Project –– temporarily snarling traffic from Seaview to Cranberry but amazingly slated for completion next year.   

We’d asked for the Wagon Wheel Housing Society’s “Laundr-O-Mat” to find a home and flourish, and indeed it has –– delivering a much-needed service in our community and promoting the end of single-use plastic, all through a social enterprise structure dedicated to raising funds for lower-cost housing.  

Our request for earlier springtime line-painting for island roads has been met, somewhat sporadically; but it seems to be on the radar of our Local Community Commission to keep asking, so we’ll tick it off our list as having landed on theirs. 

And our evergreen wish for on-time, not-overloaded ferries seems to be in a better place to be fulfilled than it was five years ago –– or at a minimum, it isn’t getting worse, dramatic growth in traffic notwithstanding. The Quinsam may not have the upstairs lounge of the Howe Sound Queen, but it sure beats the Quinitsa. 

Sadly, nowhere in that peddler’s sack have we yet found an end to Salt Spring’s affordable housing shortage; as in 2019, we note promising projects on the horizon but continue to wonder whether the earnest, thoughtful efforts of our governing bodies, community organizations and ambitious individuals can hope to keep pace.  

But our wishes for more kindness and understanding continue to be granted. More often than ever, islanders have stepped up to keep the charitable spirit of the holidays in their hearts and actions year ‘round. Whether responding to neighbours acutely in need or working to make our community stronger, we’re going to make our wish for the next five years a simple one: more of that, please.