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SPEED, Patricia Elaine Lorenz

Patricia Elaine Lorenz Speed
January 3, 1943 – September 26, 2017

Patti passed away peacefully at Lady Minto Hospital in the early morning hours of September 26th after a 10 month battle with cancer. She was born in Oceanside, New York, and moved from Massachusetts to British Columbia with her husband Jack and young family for a new life in the early 1970’s. She lived more than 40 years on Salt Spring, and along with her family and friends, this place and people were the things nearest and dearest to her heart. Patti had an infectious sense of humor and spirit, living her life with a lightness and zeal she brought to all she did and met. She loved adventure, working at a remote fishing lodge, and in Alaska, and in later years loved distance walking with her dear friends.
Patti is survived by her two children Jessica and Glen Speed (Rene), ex-husband Jack, brother Carl, in-laws Gordon (Marylou), Andrea (Robby) and Douglas Speed, and nieces and nephews Brook Speed, Jillian Jones, Westley and Isabelle Speed-Edwards.

Patti was so loved and cared for in her final months and weeks of life by members of this community. We are incredibly grateful to Lady Minto Hospital nurses, doctors and staff who were so caring and kind, with special thanks to Cathy, Jackie, Rose, Cyndy, Lynn, and Chelsea, Sharon at Home Support, Island Comfort Quilters, her dear and committed friends, and Saltspring Hospice Society who so generously supported Patti and her family in her final hours. Thank you to all who visited, brought food, sent cards, and supported her and her family in any way. You helped bring many indelible moments of beauty to a challenging journey with cancer.

If there was ever a place to both live well, and die well, it would be here on this island. Patti chose well.

A celebration of life will be held in the spring, with notice posted in the Driftwood. In lieu of flowers please donate to Lady Minto Hospital, Saltspring Hospice Society or BC Cancer Foundation.

SIMPSON, William J. F.

William J.F. Simpson
1958 – 2017

Bill passed away peacefully at home on Salt Spring Island, B.C, on August 29th with his wife (Jill), son (Quentin), and daughter (Clorisa) by his side.

Bill was born in Welland, Ontario, the son of V.S.C. Simpson (deceased) and Barbara Simpson. He grew up in Fonthill, Ontario along with his sisters Rosemary (David), Janet (Jim), and Katherine (Steve.)

In 1982, Bill received his Bachelor of Applied Science, Civil Engineering, from the University of Toronto. He started his career with William Shaw Limited, where he primarily engineered on commercial and industrial projects in the Toronto area.

When William Shaw retired in 1986, Bill joined his father as a partner at Swift Sure Group. In 1990, Bill received his Masters of Business Administration from Queen’s University.

Seeking a change in lifestyle, Bill and his growing family moved to Salt Spring Island in 2001. He practiced independently as a professional engineer in the area of structural and seismic design throughout the Gulf Islands and Vancouver Island. Bill was highly respected in his profession and was admired for his integrity, patience, modesty, and work ethic.

In his free time, Bill was involved in Scouts Canada as a leader both in Ontario and Salt Spring Island for over 12 years. His hobby was woodworking, and he enjoyed sharing his talent and teaching the art of furniture making to many people over the years.

A celebration of life will be held on Salt Spring Island in the spring. Date and location will be announced closer to that time.

LEWINGTON, Teresa

Teresa Lewington
October 26, 1926 – September 3, 2017

Teresa passed away with her children by her side, after a Summer’s stay at Lady Minto Hospital. Born to an Alberta farming family, Mom always retained her love of the soil and growing things. When she and her husband retired to Kelowna, instead of relaxing, they planted an orchard and a 1/2 acre vegetable garden, keeping everyone in her large and extended family well provisioned. When her husband Russell passed in 1984 she came back to the coast to be closer to her children, eventually following them to Salt Spring Island.

She is survived by her daughter Joann Grey, her son and daughter in law David and Jennifer Lewington, her brother Peter Sokalski, her grand daughter Marriah Grey and many nieces and nephews. Her children would like to thank the nurses and staff at Lady Minto for their many kindnesses and gentle care of our Mother. We would also like to thank the good people at Braehaven where Mom spent her last year.

ELWELL, Connor James

Connor James Elwell
May 10, 1993 – September 21, 2017

Last Friday we lost our loving and devoted eldest son. We lost our brilliantly clever and hilarious brother; our outrageous cousin; our kind, silly and fiercely loyal best friend; our diligent employee; our intelligent and imaginative Dean’s list student. We all, each of us, lost so much.

Connor was big – he was a big person with a big heart and a big mind and a brilliantly big and magnetic personality. When he loved, he loved fiercely and with all his heart. And he loved a lot. He loved his first dinosaur, Rex. He loved the stuffy that he won from the “best claw machine ever” at the Kings Lane bowling alley, aptly named, Ally. Another well-loved stuffy, Whaley, still resides at his bedside. He loved all animals, with a special fondness for sea life especially whales and jellyfish. He loved his pets, especially Abby, Buddy, Kai, Casey and Delilah. He loved good comedy and a good debate. He loved justice, philosophy, and fairness for all. He, like all members of the family, was an active member of the grammar and punctuation police. He would have added semicolons appropriately for me here.

He loved his brothers Brendan and Christopher an unfathomable amount. He was never happier than when in a dogpile of brothers and cardboard swords. Or strategizing for hours on the trampoline playing that game that had the constantly changing rules.

He loved his best friend, Rebecca, loyally and consistently. She was his rock, and his constant companion for two and a half years at VIU.

Connor possessed intense focus. As noted above, he was on the Dean’s list in Criminology for four years running, and was just two courses short of completing his degree. He had planned to pursue a career in law.

He loved music. He had impeccable taste in everything: people, clothes and music. Some of his favourite bands were Muse, Florence and the Machine, the Black Keys, The Killers and Lana Del Rey. He also loved anything from Rock Band, most songs on which he had earned perfect scores on the guitar and drums. He was an avid fan of Game of Thrones.

He challenged himself constantly. He was an amazingly competitive gamer and could beat anyone crazy enough to take him on in Halo, Wow, Rock Band, Mario Kart, Hearthstone and Super Smash Brothers. His written school papers were brilliant, intelligent and fresh.

Connor the baby. Connor the boy. Connor the man. At each stage so gloriously unique; so absolutely sure of what he loved and so careful to protect it. You always knew that if Connor was on your side, you wouldn’t lose. If it was Connor’s goal to cheer you up, you’d be laughing so hard that your sides would be splitting and you’d be begging him to stop.

He was brave and powerful. He battled courageously to protect the underdog. There was nothing he couldn’t do if he put his mind to it. Or so it seemed. Had we known the depth of his despair; had we seen through his brave face; we would have made him know how loved he was. How special. How very necessary.

For those who knew Connor, there will be a service to commemorate his life at two o’clock on Thursday, October 5, 2017 at All Saints by the Sea. Space is limited, so we would appreciate if only those who knew Connor attend. In lieu of flowers, please donate in Connor’s memory to the Canadian Association for Suicide Prevention https://www.canadahelps.org/en/charities/canadian-association-for-suicide-prevention/#donate_now.

In the meanwhile, please post your favourite memories of Connor on the Facebook page: Loving Connor Elwell.

SKUCE, Andrew Gordon

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Andrew Gordon Skuce
July 22, 1954 – September 14, 2017

Andy passed away on September 14, 2017, at the age of 63.
Born and educated in England, Andy worked for most of his life as a geophysicist for various Canadian oil companies based in Calgary. However, after being diagnosed with cancer in 2002 and retiring from full-time work, he became more and more concerned about climate change. He began doing research and educating the public on the dangers of continuing to burn fossil fuels. His work appeared in various publications and he quickly gained a reputation as an eloquent spokesperson against climate change deniers.

Andy had a wide circle of friends and admirers who appreciated his work and are deeply saddened by his loss. He was a wonderfully kind and generous person, a great storyteller too, with a fine sense of humour.
He is survived by his wife Annick on Salt Spring, and by family in England and the US.

Elected Officials’ Statements on Referendum Result

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Salt Spring Local Trust Committee members George Grams and Peter Grove, and Salt Spring’s electoral area director to the CRD Wayne McIntyre have provided the following statements in response to the incorporation referendum result:

By GEORGE GRAMS

The turnout for, and the result of, the incorporation referendum yesterday were both satisfyingly decisive. For myself the result marks a conclusion to the question of which governance model is appropriate for our community and I hope others feel likewise. Work remains to be done on island to continue to preserve and protect our environment and to build a better community and I look forward to devoting my energies as a trustee to advance both. 

I would like to thank the ministry of Community, Sport and Cultural Development (now the ministry of Municipal Affairs and Housing), in particular Linda Galeazzi and Marijke Edmondson for supporting the community throughout this process. 

The review would not have been possible without the energy, commitment and time devoted by islanders, in particular those who served on the two study committees, the Governance Review Committee that reported in 2013 and the Incorporation Study Committee that concluded its work last year. My thanks to them for the huge amount of work and the excellent service they provided our community. 

Islands Trust staff undertook considerable work with diligence and objectivity in order to assist islanders to understand the implications of a change in governance for the agency. I am grateful to them for their hard work, their commitment, and for the quality of service they continually deliver. 

My fellow trustees at Trust Council are due my thanks for the patience they have exercised whilst the Salt Spring community undertook its lengthy deliberations. I am pleased for them that the uncertainty generated by the review is finally over and we can resume our collective efforts to improve our islands and our communities.

Lastly, my thanks to my colleagues, CRD Director Wayne McIntyre and trustee Peter Grove, without whose fellowship the governance review would not have been possible and who helped make the years we have spent since embarking on it both educational and pleasurable.  

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BY PETER GROVE

I am pleased that our community has reached its decision about the Islands future form of governance. It has been a long journey for all those involved and there are so many we must thank: the two separate committees, the first looking at governance and the second being the incorporation study committee itself; the countless volunteers on both sides who put in so many hours; the Driftwood and the Exchange for reporting and communicating so effectively; our community for engaging, discussing and debating in ways which were (mostly!) respectful and thoughtful, and for participating in the vote in such record numbers. I feel privileged and proud to be a part of such an engaged and often passionate community, and to have played my part.

It is clear that there are many who are dissatisfied with our present form of governance. I will do all I can to work towards changes within the system to address the concerns, to improve what we have, to better serve our communities needs. As I have stated previously, I am committed to work for the best interests of all islanders.

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BY WAYNE MCINTYRE

The incorporation referendum is now over, complete with a clear community “no” decision on the option to incorporate. It is now time to recognize and thank many who have been involved:

• The Provincial Government, through the Ministry of Community, Sport and Cultural Development (now the Ministry of Municipal Affairs and Housing) not only provided financial support for studies but staff expertise. Particular thanks to Linda Galeazzi and Marijke Edmondson who were a terrific support to Trustees George Grams, Peter Grove and myself as well as the two volunteer committees. The first committee study compared our present governance model with an incorporated one and the second was the full incorporation study complete with costing and is dated November 21, 2017. Both committees worked extremely hard, provided ongoing opportunities for public input, answered many questions and delivered quality reports to help inform our community on a variety of governance matters.

• The Capital Regional District, through the Executive Office, had an oversight responsibility on the governance of the two studies as well as ensuring compliance to government guidelines and managing the budget provided. Thanks to our Corporate Officer, Brent Reems, and his staff, who also provided support for the referendum voting process.

• Our local media for keeping on top of the issues, providing a forum for a balance of opinions and doing so in a timely manner.

• The voters who turned out in record numbers. It was gratifying to see that in a recent survey most felt they had the information needed to help guide them in their decision.

• To my colleagues Trustees George Grams and Peter Grove: thanks for starting our journey together six years ago and continuing it in a collaborative manner with only a few challenges along the way.

It is now time to put aside any differences and focus on working collectively to make Salt Spring an even better place.

Metal truck flips in Fulford

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 Salt Spring emergency services responded to a rollover of a large two-trailer truck on Friday in Fulford.

According to Salt Spring Island Fire Rescue, 14 firefighters responded to an 11:39 a.m. call to assist with the crash, which saw the Schnitzer Steel truck go over the concrete barricades in the 2800 block of Fulford-Ganges Rd. and roll part way down the embankment.

“One of the trailers full of metal recycling flipped along with the cab and lost all its contents over the bank,” said SSIFR Chief Arjuna George. “The last trailer was high centred on the barricade.”

George said one patient was attended to by B.C. Ambulance Services and no other injuries were reported.

“SSIFR stabilized the vehicle from any further movement and began fuel catchment. The SSIFR HAZMAT trailer unit responded and assisted with the spill protection. Berms, absorbent pads, trenching, and booms were installed for any potential hazmat or fuel spills. No oil or contaminants entered the Fulford Harbour waterway.” 

Also attending the scene were Johnson Automotive and Mainroad personnel.

“Traffic was redirected for several hours during the incident,” said George. “We thank everyone for their patience while we managed this complex scene.”

SSIFR left the scene at 4 p.m.

George said alternating traffic was in effect but a full road closure could be required once the heavy rescue equipment from off island arrives to flip and tow the commercial vehicle.

 

Electric bike ignites structure fire

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Salt Spring Fire-Rescue crews spent the last hours of the Labour Day long weekend putting out a structure fire on Rainbow Road.

Soaring weekend temperatures and extra dry conditions were likely factors in the incident, which started sometime after 8 p.m. when the occupant of a small cabin was working on his electric bike.

Cabin tenant Hugh Pomeroy is a chef at Meadowbrook and also has a sideline building electric bikes. He said although the lithium batteries are usually quite safe, they can short if pressure is put on them. This happened without him noticing as he was working on the bike inside.

“It happened very very quickly. It only took five seconds for the house to start to burn,” Pomeroy said, adding lithium batteries don’t require oxygen to burn.

Pomeroy took the bike outside immediately but the battery had fallen out. The flames quickly ignited his bed, which was close by.

Salt Spring Fire-Rescue incident commander Lt. Colby Sawchuk said around two dozen firefighters responded to the 8:20 p.m. call-out and stayed on scene until midnight. Thanks to an aggressive, quick attack and interior operations, they prevented the fire from spreading. They saved the structure, but the interior was completely destroyed by fire and smoke, Sawchuk reported.

“The property owners were there and hosed down the outside to make sure the fire didn’t spread into the bush, which helped a lot,” Sawchuk said.

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In other fire news, the latest Salt Spring Fire-Rescue crew members to be deployed to wildfire suppression in the B.C. Interior were released and returned safely home to Salt Spring on Monday. Firefighters Colin McDougall and Alex Reid were the fifth local team to assist the province. They were sent to the Sheridan Lake area on Aug. 31.

For more on this story, see the Sept. 6, 2017 Gulf Islands Driftwood newspaper or subscribe online.

Bowen Islanders reflect on municipal life

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The discussion around potential Salt Spring incorporation has prompted people to share their knowledge of what occurred in other jurisdictions in B.C., Canada and the U.S. in the past when voters chose a municipal form of governance.

No examples can provide an apples-to-apples comparison for a number of reasons, the main one being that Salt Spring has evolved under the Islands Trust. The following is a compilation of input received from some active Bowen Island community members.

Peter Frinton was an elected official on Bowen from 1999 to 2011, as both a municipal council member and an islands trustee.

“The advantages of being a municipality are, fairly obviously, having a one-stop-shop and the other being master of your own house,” said Frinton in a recent interview. “And it allows you to do so much, from setting road standards to giving money to community groups.”

“We’ve been able to exercise authority in ways we never had before,” he added. One example is creating a headland authority to deal with derelict vessels in Mannion Bay.

He also feels Bowen has done well in acquiring public amenities over the years, especially through local developer John Reid, who “has always offered more than asked.” Affordable housing is the next amenity area of focus, he said.

Reid has done about a dozen different developments, with preserving green space and linking public lands being hallmarks of his projects. He told the Driftwood his goal is to get more land into public ownership and cluster homes on smaller lots, instead of creating 10-acre parcels that can end up with few trees and owners wanting further subdivision. His latest project would see a 200-acre nature preserve around the island’s major water supply of Grafton Lake.

Bowen Island’s Official Community Plan and the municipality’s 2017 Island Plan are filled with strong environmental language, and Reid’s developments conform to island visions.

The first of 12 Island Plan goals mirrors the Islands Trust object: “To preserve and protect the unique amenities and natural environment of Bowen Island for the benefit of Bowen Island residents and, generally, for residents of British Columbia.”

Sue Ellen Fast was elected as a council member and Islands Trust trustee for the first time in 2014 but also chaired the OCP update steering committee. She agrees that the OCP and municipality’s plan have strong environmental policies but said they have not been embraced through municipal activities.

“How do you do the proactive [environmental] things when it’s not the main thing of a municipality?” she asked. “I’m for nature and the community, but I just don’t see that we’ve done much preserving and protecting.”

As part of the Islands Trust, Bowen Island participates in and helps fund Trust-wide initiatives, such as the Trust Fund Board’s conservation of land through purchase and covenants, or projects like water-resource education for islanders. Bowen was among 11 islands holding Trust-organized groundwater workshops this summer. Two of eight Islands Trust Community Stewardship Award winners were from Bowen Island in 2017.

Doug Hooper was a municipal council member from 2008 to 2011 and also served on the OCP review committee in the early 1990s. He shares Fast’s view about environmental or Islands Trust awareness on Bowen, despite the island’s official participation in the Trust.

“There is very little ethos around preserve and protect on Bowen right now,” he told the Driftwood.

Hooper was never a fan of Bowen becoming a municipality, and believes the process has been expensive. He described the provincial government’s support for post-incorporation road upgrades, similar to what Salt Spring has been offered, as “putting lipstick on a pig.”

Frinton is among those who feels the costs have “not been excessive,” even if the municipality ended up hiring far more staff than its incorporation study predicted and road maintenance costs were also higher. 

Murray Skeels is the present mayor of Bowen. In providing asked-for input to the Salt Spring Island Incorporation Study Committee, he said, “In regard to property taxes, before incorporation we were told our roads would either bankrupt us or fall apart. Today our annual taxes are very much in line with other communities our size and every year our roads are better. One big advantage we found to municipal status is that we can set priorities, fund them in our next budget and then get to work. In my opinion there is a tremendous efficiency to be gained by incorporating.”

Hooper also feels Bowen’s “grassroots democracy,” with volunteers stepping up to get things done, has changed as a result of incorporation.

“You shift to a suburb or city perspective that the government is going to be the entity that takes care of things.”

Fast and Skeels disagree that volunteerism has decreased.

“There is still a really high level of volunteerism and community groups and neighbours helping neighbours,” said Fast.

“We still have a tremendous array of clubs, societies and councils,” said Skeels, “but we have incorporated some of the groups, such as the recreation commission, library board and water districts, into our municipal structure,” said Skeels.

Both Hooper and Frinton were not re-elected in 2011 when a pro-development council was elected as a result of heated conflict about whether or not a national park reserve should be established on the island. Frinton noted, however, that the 2011-2014 council was so dysfunctional that nothing got done. The mayor during that period, who died in 2014, is the one who has been quoted as questioning why Bowen was still in the Islands Trust.

Hooper feels things were “pretty topsy-turvy” on council and in the community for the first 15 years, but said the current council is balanced and functions well.

For more information about Bowen Island Municipality, see www.bimbc.ca.

Salt Spring Pride festival this week

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By SHELLYSE SZAKACS

A World of Pride is the theme of the 13th annual Pride celebration on Salt Spring Island.  This year’s slogan speaks to the world within each of us, the world we live in and the world we envision. One World, One Love.

Here, we are celebrating our Pride and recognizing the tremendous privilege it is to be able to do so in a community that supports and embraces us. Thank you, Salt Spring Island!

We walk in Pride knowing that, in some parts of the world, a simple celebration such as this is not possible and/or safe.  And we walk in Pride knowing that there are some members of this community who are not able to walk it themselves. We know that here too, LGBTQ2S+ people can still be harassed in our workplaces, shunned at school and still struggle because we are not fully understood and accepted by our families and by our peers.

This year we walk in Pride for ourselves and all those who cannot.  We welcome you to walk in Pride as allies for your family members and friends and colleagues and neighbours.  We invite you to walk in Pride for the folks around the world who are not safe to celebrate their Pride in who they are and how they love.

It has been a year of soul-searching, and pride, and change for our LGBTQ2S+ community here on Salt Spring Island. The change of our name, from GLOSSI to DAISSI — Diverse and Inclusive Salt Spring Island — is the outcome of that soul-searching. As well as the parade and public events, we are hosting LGBTQ2S+ events to nurture new understanding, and growth, and cooperation within our diverse community. We believe that if we take care of ourselves, we will have more to share with others.

Last year our Pride came on the heels of the Orlando Massacre, reminding us that while we may feel relatively safe here on Salt Spring Island, discrimination and hate still impact our LGBTQ2S+ community. We are deeply grateful to our allies who stood beside us in our horror and held us in our grief at last year’s difficult Pride. Gay marriage is not the end of our work for equality. As we continue our efforts to build a society that honours all its members, we see that trans rights, adapting to the new language and needs of our non-binary members and the issues of women and of black people, Indigenous people and people of colour, particularly as they intersect with LGBTQ2S+ are key, ongoing concerns.

This year we return to the essence of Pride as a celebration of love and a celebration of diversity. This year we hold ‘A World of Pride’ in our hearts, for the world we live in and the world we envision for all.

Come get a sticker, walk with us and tell us: Whom do you hold with Pride? For whom do you walk in Pride?

Happy Pride!

The writer is chair of Diverse and Inclusive Salt Spring Island.