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Editorial: How we vote, Part Ten: Local representation, proportionality and less corruption

Local representation – everyone wants it, right?  Some people may not realize how important local representation is until  an issue arises that affects them directly.  Then suddenly they want to talk to their MLA. But wait; do they want to talk to an MLA for a party they didn’t vote for? We do have local representation now,...

Editorial: Who opposes proportional representation, and why?

There’s an old saying:  follow the money.  In the case of the upcoming referendum on whether or not BC should change our voting system from First-Past-the-Post (FPTP) to a form of Proportional Representation (ProRep), those most vocally opposed to a change seem to have one thing in common: they are people who think they would...

Opinion: Reconciling Energy and Indigenous Rights

In 2007, Canada was one of four countries to vote against the UN Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples (with New Zealand, the United States and Australia). With its single-minded focus on making Canada an “energy superpower,” albeit only with fossil fuels, the Harper government feared the declaration’s concept of ...

Castlegar hosts pre-election workshop for region

Government! Government! Government! Despite your initial reaction, government is not a four letter word. Too often, we criticize it and complain about it as if it were the enemy. Federal and provincial partisan governments get lumped in with local government often leaving a sour taste in people’s mouth. But your local government is different. It […]

Column: From the Hill -- Columbia River Treaty issues

Last week I spent three days in Spokane at the Pacific Northwest Economic Region meetings.  Over 600 legislators, business people, and other interested folks from BC, Washington, Oregon, Idaho, Montana, Alaska, Alberta, Saskatchewan, the Yukon and Northwest Territories gathered to talk about issues important to this region....

Native Plants vs. Herbicides: Oregon Grape Quandary in the Columbia Cemetery

Last year, several hikers were alarmed and dismayed by signs in the old Columbia Cemetery announcing that a nearby native shrub – Oregon grape -- had been treated with herbicide.  They wondered why a harmless native plant was being sprayed, in a City with a policy of not using herbicides except in unusual circumstances...

Editorial: Our Choice of Voting Systems -- Part Eight.

There are large, loud and expensive ads urging people to vote against Proportional Representation in this fall’s referendum.  Are the points made in those ads valid? As citizens, or even just as residents, we should all care deeply about how well our government serves the public interest.  We need to get it ...

Column: From the Hill -- the Bus Service Problem

Greyhound’s announcement that it will be pulling all its routes out of western Canada at the end of October came as a surprise, and for many it was more serious news.  It left them wondering how they were going to travel to work sites, to visit relatives and friends, or to go to university in the fall.  For them, the bus isn’t...

Editorial: Our Choice of Voting Systems -- Part Seven: Extremism?

Why people defend FPTP and oppose Proportional Representation: There have been some frightening statements made about proportional representation, by a few people.  Why do they want to keep using First-Past-the-Post (FPTP)?  What are their reasons for opposing all of the three Pro-rep systems being offered in this fall’s...

Rossland arena's importance; a video surveillance policy; toward that Forest Park; water restrictions? And more . . .

Rossland City Council Meetings, July 16, 2018 Present:  Mayor Kathy Moore and Councillors Lloyd McLellan, John Greene, Andrew Zwicker, Andy Morel, and Aaron Cosbey.  Absent:  Marten Kruysse. 1.       Public Hearing: Council invited members of the public to express their opinions on four bylaws: the bylaw on Cannabis Regulation...

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