Posts Tagged #keepingitliving
the bean: estuary rant
Posted by admin in Comox Valley, Keeping It Living, Social Media Solutions on 21/06/2010
Keeping It Living – Estuary Gala Gathering media
Posted by admin in Comox Valley, Keeping It Living, Social Media Solutions on 15/06/2010
Finally, the media from the Estuary Gala Gathering event is up on the Keeping It Living site.
Click HERE to see it.
Here’s a taste of what you’ll find there:
JCP Positions available at Project Watershed
Posted by admin in Comox Valley, Social Media Solutions on 10/06/2010
Hi, Comox Valley Project Watershed Society has two 6 month positions available:
- Assistant GIS/ GPS Technician
- Assistant Volunteer Co-ordinator
- Candidates for these positions must meet EI eligibility requirements. These positions are supported by a Ministry of Housing and Social Development Job Creation Partnership Grant.
- A valid drivers license is required.
- Application deadline is June 24, 2010. To request a referral contact the Job Shop and set up an appointment with a Career Advisor (250) 334-3119.
More details on the two positions can be obtained by contacting us.
Cheers,
Caila
You’re invited to the Estuary Gala Gathering!
Posted by admin in Comox Valley, Keeping It Living on 26/05/2010
You’re invited to a Feast for the Eyes and Palette ….
Mark May 29th, on your calendar as the night to enjoy the best of west coast seafood, art and music at the semi-formal gala dinner being hosted by Project Watershed. This event is part of the “Keeping It Living” campaign to raise awareness and funds for estuary restoration and protection.
Our valley is rich in natural and culinary treasures which will be used by Chef Dawn McRae in preparing a buffet of west coast specialties like smoked tuna canapé, halibut cakes, candied salmon mousse, and sautéed prawns. She has also prepared blueberry ginger chicken and a selection of Natural Pastures Cheeses to satisfy your cravings.
As well as the valley’s rich culinary treasures, art treasures for the silent auction will also be displayed. This will be the last chance to bid on an array of estuary inspired art. Local artists such as Bev Beyerly, Tracy Kobus and Ken Kirkby have produced rich and original pieces to reflect the beauty of the estuary and of Comox Bay. To preview the artwork go to the Gallery section of www.keepingitliving.ca.
There will be a feast for the mind and heart as well as with Peter Donaldson of the Salmon People. If you did not see this guy last time he was in the valley, you owe it to yourself to see him now. Donaldson will be accompanied by the newly formed Estuary Ensemble, a collection of local storytellers, musicians, and actors. They will be presenting a collage of sights and sounds representing one of the jewels of the Comox Valley – our estuary.
All of this is to raise funds and to help us “Value what is Invaluable” here in the valley. Dr. Scott Wallace of the David Suzuki Foundation will inspire us to see that the paradise that we are living in is worth protecting.
To wrap up the evening Luzna Orchestra will get you on your feet with music that will keep you dancing – http://www.myspace.com/luznaorchestra. And if that isn’t enough the Cona Shuttle will whisk you to the after party “Under Water; DJ’s” at the Avalanche Bar and Grill on 8th and Cliffe.
Gala dinners of the Valley are an excellent way to contribute to causes that make the Comox Valley a great place to live and a way to experience the best of what our valley has to offer.
Tickets are $35 per person ($45 at the door) available from: Blue Heron Books, Brambles Market, Freakin’ Coffeeshop, Seeds Natural Market, Tarbell’s Café.
The event takes place at the Fish and Game Hall on Comox Lake, a shuttle is available from Shoppers Drug Mart. Doors open at 6:00 pm, presentations 7 -10pm and lots of dancing after. Check out www.keepingitliving.ca for more info.
From Caila.
Keeping It Living – March
Posted by admin in Keeping It Living, Social Media Solutions on 03/03/2010
Raising awareness and interest for the Courtenay River Estuary.
Check out the latest page that was printed in today’s Record online on www.tidechange.ca
WHY SIERRA CUB COMOX VALLEY IS APPEALING THE COURT DECISION!
Posted by admin in Sierra Club Comox Valley, Social Media Solutions on 16/02/2010
From Mike Bell (read the article on Tidechange.ca),
People have been asking us why we are appealing the January 20, 2010 court decision which allows the issuing of the development permit for the proposed Gas N Go station on the Dyke Road. The simplest answer is a legal one. Our lawyers have told us there are grounds for an appeal. But there is a deeper reason and it has to do with couple of signs down on the Dyke Road.
Whenever we travel down Comox Hill onto the Dyke Road on our way to Courtenay, we see a small sign high up on a post. It says, simply, “Save Our Estuary.” A little further on there is another sign. It says “Respect.” We’ve always wondered about the person who put these signs up—a man or woman, or perhaps some young people, probably with very little money, who took some boards, painted the messages on them and, when the paint dried, got a ladder, climbed the posts in the dead of night so as not to be noticed and hammered them in.
They are rather simple signs, unlike our more professional looking red and white “No Gas On the Dyke” signs. But they strike a different chord. The word “our” in “Save our Estuary” suggests a sense of place that the sign-maker and his or her family and friends, share with the salmon, the eagles, the shore birds and trumpeter swans, the flowing waters and the mountains beyond. These little signs give eloquent voice to the human-earth community on the Dyke Road and in the estuary.
There are many other people who share this sense of place and are involved in trying to save the estuary.
The word “our” in “Save our Estuary” applies most of all to the K’omoks First Nation. Many of their member s live and work on the Dyke road. Their ancestors have protected the estuary for more than a thousand years. KFN has written numerous letters to local governments protesting the proposed gas station, they have hired lawyers and tried unsuccessfully to get intervention status on our recent court case and they have managed to get a temporary halt on the development of a left hand turn lane into the Gas and Go site until they are consulted.
Project Watershed has assembled a team of technical experts and has been working with them for more than a year to create a vision and long term action plan to protect and restore the estuary. The Comox Valley Regional District is now working with Project Watershed and has put a temporary freeze on industrial developments on the Dyke Road.
Over the months of struggle we have heard from many people who share our concerns about the need to save the estuary. They recognize that the proposed station is in an earthquake zone, on unstable ground, in an Important Bird Area, a few metres away from both the feeding grounds for migrating salmon in the estuary and the wintering fields for Trumpeter Swans. It is in a flood plain area with recent floods coming close to the proposed gas station site. People wonder how anyone could ever allow such a development on this site.
We’ve heard the concerns from local businesses and residents who are worried about their property values. We’ve received numerous complaints from drivers, cyclists and pedestrians who are deeply concerned about traffic accidents and the increased risks from a proposed left hand turn into the site. As one woman put it to us, that short stretch of the Dyke Road between the proposed Gas N Go Site and Portuguese Joe’s is the place where traffic accidents will go to happen.
None of the people we’ve talked to are opposed to business or to gas stations. We all fill our cars up each week or two at a gas station. But a gas station on the Dyke Road is an invasive species. It threatens to overwhelm the life of all that surrounds it and jeopardizes the sense of place which is so important to so many of us who live in this valley.
Sierra Club is following the lead of the unknown sign-maker and launching the Save Our Courtenay River Estuary Campaign. We are supporting it with a legal fund to help us with our current court costs and provide a financial base for the appeal.
We are urging everyone to join the campaign. We are encouraging businesses, schools, sports clubs, seniors groups, youth groups, environmental groups, non-profit groups, organizations of all kinds to organize estuary fund raising events: earth day events, garage sales, dinners, bake sales, bike-a-thons and walk-a-thons, dances, estuary tours, silent auctions, films nights, art shows. Sierra Club will also organize events, provide advice on possible projects and help with the publicity.
The situation is urgent. We know from the sudden clear cutting of Lannan Forest that, if the gas station is ever built, there is nothing that anyone can really do to control what happens on the site. Let’s not mourn, let’s organize. Let’s help Save Our Courtenay River Estuary.
Mike Bell, Chairperson
Sierra Club Comox Valley
250-890-3671
PS: SOME UPCOMING EVENTS:
1) Sierra Club Comox Valley—–Meeting of Members and Friends
Where: BCGEU Office, #201-910 Fitzgerald Ave – entrance on 8th St. (next to H.E.R.E. Computers). Take elevator to 2nd floor.
When: Thursday, February 18, 7:00 pm- 8:30 pm
What: Join us for an update on the Gas N Go issue and strategy for our next steps
Contact: sierraclubcv@gmail.com
2) “Vancouver Island Birds: An Evening with Mike Yip, Photographer & Author”
Where: Stan Hagen Theatre, North Island College
When: Tuesday, February 23, 7:30 pm- 9:00 pm
Tickets: $15 for General Public, $10 for Sierra Club members and youth
Advance sales: Videos N’ More, Comox; Benjamin Moore House of Color, Courtenay. Also on sale at the door from 7:00 pm Feb. 23.
SIERRA CLUB CANADA TO APPEAL THE GAS ‘N GO DECISION!
Posted by admin in Sierra Club Comox Valley, Social Media Solutions on 09/02/2010
OTTAWA–Sierra Club Canada is appealing the BC Supreme Court decision on the Gas N Go project in Comox Valley, British Columbia. The court ruled against Sierra Club Canada’s request to quash the issuing of a development permit for the gas station, which if built would devastate an important watershed.
“We have reviewed the judge’s decision and believe there are grounds for an appeal,” said John Bennett, Executive Director of Sierra Club Canada. “This is an important case not only for protecting this estuary in the Comox Valley, but for other estuaries and watersheds in the rest of B.C. as well.”
Mike Bell, Chair of the Sierra Club Comox Valley, noted the local group was reinvigorated with the decision to appeal. “Gas service stations have a notorious reputation for polluting nearby bodies of water through spills and runoff”, said Bell.
The Gas N Go station poses real risks to the environment. The site is in the middle of a Canadian Important Bird Area with the second highest concentration of over-wintering waterfowl in B.C. including Trumpeter Swans. The area provides an essential habitat for threatened species, endemic species and has an exceptional concentration of birds.
There are a number of other environmental concerns with allowing this development to go forward. The site is only a few meters from a critical rearing area for endangered salmon stock. It is in a floodplain area subject to flooding, which occurred close-by twice this winter. The ground is in an earthquake zone and is inherently unstable—as was demonstrated by the 1946 earthquake in the area, which caused liquefaction in surrounding fields and damage on the Dyke Road where the station is being planned.
Along with Sierra Club Canada, West Coast Environmental Law supported the initial law suit and is also supporting the appeal. Sierra Club B.C. has provided organizational support and Jennifer Millbank, Nanaimo, is legal counsel for the group.
Sierra Club Comox Valley must provide funds to cover current and potential court costs. “We will be turning to the community to provide financial support through our newly created Courtenay River Estuary Legal Fund,” said Bell. “This estuary and watershed is much more important to our community than another gas station.”
Sierra Club CV’s lecture series starts Tuesday.
Posted by admin in Sierra Club Comox Valley, Social Media Solutions on 25/01/2010
Comox Valley Echo
Published: Friday, January 22, 2010
Want to learn about Canada’s first female meteorologist, how to prune your trees and shrubs, the history of the Courtenay River Estuary, organic gardening, local bird species? Want to hear what Highland School’s Eco Team is doing locally to protect globally? These are just some of the fascinating topics included in the upcoming fundraising lecture series presented by the Sierra Club Comox Valley.
On Tuesday January 26th at the Stan Hagen Theatre – 7:30 pm author/historian/teacher Richard Mackie will present: Campaigning for Nature: Melda Buchanan Comox Harbour and the Estuary.
As part of Sierra Club’s mandate to work with local youth to protect our environment The Highland Eco Team will be on hand to talk about their innovative “green” programs. This dynamic team of young adults at Highland School is setting new standards for rethinking, reducing, reusing and recycling in schools on North Vancouver Island. Teacher/Team Leader Jill Peacock notes the team is very happy to accept any batteries you have that need recycling, so please bring those along.
Mark your calendar for Tuesday February 23rd as local author/photographer Mike Yip will be entertaining us with an evening of his remarkable photographs and experiences observing our local birdlife.
Also look for the Sierra Club Comox Valley at the World Community Film Festival, the Sid William’s Theatre on February 6th and 7th. Come by our booth and say hello.
Please check out our website for details of all our upcoming events: http://www.sierraclub.bc.ca/local-groups/comox-valley/events-1
We now have PayPal on our website, it’s so easy to make a donation, please consider Sierra Club Comox Valley, and we appreciate your continued support.





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