Saturday, November 19, 2011
Thank You BOWEN ISLANDERS!
I'm going off with the Nature Club today, and hope the birding and fresh air will be a bit of an antidote to the hot air of the past month.
PLEASE! Get out and vote today, among whatever else you have planned......
Friday, November 18, 2011
More Thoughts on the National Park
That is the 'crossroads' choice. Bowen's European settlement history centred first on homesteading and logging, plus a bit of mining and brick making, but this rapidly gave way to the Union Steamship 'Happy Isle' era, which ended in the 50's.
Bowen languished in the late fifties to late 70's, despite the coming of the car ferry and some residential development- Lenora/ Melmore, Tunstall, Bluewater. Yes there were summer homes and visitors, an d some local service economy, but the population dropped in the sixties, and was barely over 500 people in the latter 70's.
We've seen an explosion (relatively) of full time residency on the island since then, and while there are still a number of weekenders/summer people, we are primarily a bedroom community with a high proportion of commuters.
OCP's going back to the 80's have tried to crystal ball our 'grow out', and given the number of folios, have predicted about 7500 people on Bowen if all lots were built out. Obviously, if smaller lots or more multi family units go in, that number would rise.
But Bowen's destiny as a lovely residential enclave would, in this scenario, be sealed regardless of build out numbers. Yes, we would still have visitors and artists and small institutions and services, but the focus of the community would be residential. Nothing really wrong with that, but much of Bowen's pristine, safe, small community appeal would likely be diluted over time.
The biggest impact of a National Park, much more so than the existing regional park, would be to change the focus of Bowen's future from residential, to residential PLUS tourist, and better conservation, some educational resources. It would be a game changer over time, though that time period would be longer than most of us would still be here to see.
Thirty years from now (and that's a common long term planning horizon), we expect Metro to be home to 3.5 million people, perhaps pushing 4. Bowen would be about 7000 give or take. Ferry issues- like in the past, obviously BC Ferries or their successor will have had to up service, unless we run out of oil or oil substitutes and are not as mobile as today.
With a National Park in the equation, there will be more visitors, there will be no more alienation of now public land for residential growth (think the southern toe of Mount Gardner, or the area adjacent to Seymour, both Crown lands). The watershed will be protected, there will be no logging in Park lands, and if one extends the time horizon, those perils probably would otherwise increase.
That is really the primary choice for Bowen Islanders- to choose one of two uncertain futures. To go down the park path, or continue the residential path. Obviously, there are scenarios of 'cake and eat it', but in simple terms it is more public land or more private land. And that choice is WAY beyond ferry or local propriety issues (or perceived proprietary rights).
Bowen isn't going to go back to the USSC heydays, regardless, but a National Park would certainly alter our place in the region. That future would be quite different from where we are now headed.
Crippen and the National Park proposal
Here is the answer to one enquirer:
The Crippen Park lands are central to the Parks Canada's vision of what an NP would look like and how it would function as an 'urban engagement' portal. No question they really want those lands, they want the Old General Store (library), and they will even put up with being saddled with the Orchard cabins. Parks Canada cannot, by law, expropriate. It has to negotiate.
Separating the Park Vote from the Candidate Vote
Re: Stated Positions of Candidates on Park, Part 4 November 17, 2011 05:01PM | Registered: 3 years ago Posts: 590 |
And the firm yes/no that you allude to is nonsense. Tim Rhodes, Wolfgang have spoken positively about a National Park.
I am in favour of creating A National Park on Bowen, so I will vote yes. But if this were a vote on the revised Park Concept Plan, I would vote no. I have strong feelings against Crippen being bought or given to the Feds. So where do you slot me?
Regardless of the vote, I would continue to do Council business, and more, if re-elected. Without rancour or acrimony about the vote outcome. There are so many issues on which ALL candidates agree, that it is their abilities, M.O.'s, energy and diligence which will differentiate good and better council members.
Wednesday, November 16, 2011
Q&A regarding Air Quality- Sea to Sky Air Quality Society
Lifted from the Phorum- Commentary on the sewer project
$$$ down the sewer? Who is responsible? November 16, 2011 05:57AM | Registered: 3 years ago Posts: 2,156 |
This whizz bang bit of ineptitude was overseen by Nerys and Doug, Peter, Cro and Allison. And these people want you to give them the keys to the safe again??
Is this the kind of thing that needs some sort of official inquiry?
No N P
Richard
Primitive societies are always more complex than civilized ones - Robert Heinlein
Re: $$$ down the sewer? Who is responsible? November 16, 2011 07:48AM | Registered: 3 years ago Posts: 583 |
First- the cost of the enterprise. Originally, yes, we looked at tripling the size of the plant. Brad Hawthorn did the background engineering, and Eco Fluid provided the original estimate. The estimated cost was $560k. We applied for a 'Towns for Tomorrow' grant of $400,000, that I helped to craft. It was turned down. Remember, the sewer committee, including Wolfgang Duntz, vetted this process, debated the merits of different sized facilities. The application was resubmitted, with upgrades to capture the kinds of things the province was looking for- tertiary rather than secondary treatment, sludge thickening, potential discharge of aqueous treated waste into Davies Creek. That grant was successful.
However, an analysis revealed that the costs for the fancy system would be considerably higher than expected. Cro Lucas and Dave Wrinch helped put together a Canada Builds grant application for the now more elaborate project, leveraging the smaller grant. That too was successful, with a number of strings attached.
In the end, the specs. were modified (we had a new ops. manager by then), and the final price of $2.1 + million was tallied. We made a conscious decision to put in $721k of municipal money to hold up our end. There were bidding procedures, final adjustments, etc. The project commenced.
Under the terms of the grant all work nationally had to be complete by March of 2011. However, this was having the effect of distorting costs, and was unrealistic. So- across Canada, the deadlines were delayed, and we eased up on the throttle, getting the project done according to the new schedule, and doing a better job for it. Guys like Bob Robinson will tell you what the working conditions were like during last year's rainy season, with crew tying steel and pouring concrete in far less than ideal circumstances.
The result is we have about the best plant this side of Whistler- certainly better than any other system around the metro region. It has worked well in the commissioning phase, and the collection pipes were NEVER part of the project cost under the grant program, but an anticipated add-on.
We never did have the workshop to apportion collection pipe costs; we still need to do that.
So rather than smearing Council- whose role was limited to approving the plan and expenditures, besides grant writing and lobbying, perhaps Richard and Wolfgang (whose lands benefit) should applaud that we now have a state-of-the-art facility. Remember that BOD counts were periodically high on the old system, even before it was fully subscribed by the Cates Hill new hookups. And Wolfgang was VERY concerned at sewer committee meetings, along with Rondy, that they be saddled with any extra costs. They should thank their lucky stars at this point, along with the rest of the users within the sewerage district.
More sewer info:
This was in answer to a question about the capacity of the sewer plant expansion to provide hookups for Belterra, Parkview Slopes and all the other Community Lands/infill/Miller Road/Abbeyfield properties.
The price comparisons for doubling or tripling at first made it seem stupid NOT to triple. However, as the price of the whole system went up, to capture the bells and whistles which made it a 'green' enough project to warrant government funding, the additional capacity began to look like more than the proverbial straw on the camel's back. It had become substantially more expensive to increase overall capacity.
Adding Comments- OOOOPS!
Another Endorsement- this time from James Tuer
I first meet Peter at a local Bowen Island symposium on heritage architecture. I was on a speaker’s panel and Peter in the audience. The first thing that struck me was Peter’s enthusiasm for all things Bowen. Over the last 6 years I have gotten to know Peter much better. Peter has been instrumental in the Sung Cove Planning efforts, challenging many of the misconceptions of where the plan could and could not go. Peter bridged the gap between the heritage folks and the development folks and as a result we have some really great ideas on the table that after years of just talk are now council instructions to staff to make good on our collective planning efforts.
What really strikes me about Peter is his ability to listen to both sides and to not be a slave to his own ideas. If a better idea comes along Peter is willing to change his position. However even more important to me in an elected leader is that when it comes down to core values Peter follows his heart. As an example, Peter was the lone voice to contain the Cove redevelopment to a south side village. I know that is just symbolic but to his constituents that believe in this principle he is their voice as we move forward investigating what a two sided street will look like.
I’ll be voting for Peter as he is an elder statesman on Bowen and can bridge the gap between the new and the old. He is a career politician in the most positive meaning of the word. He’s hard working, smart, a great reader, well connected and a great ambassador. With Peter’s help we easily navigated the Metro Vancouver bureaucracy and found instant champions of Bowen Island both on the Parks board and also within the organization itself.
Tuesday, November 15, 2011
Just Another Council Meeting
Monday, November 14, 2011
Another Endorsement
Bowen Islanders are privileged to have Peter Frinton running for councillor as he is dedicated to understanding and focusing on the issues that preserve a high quality of life on Bowen Island - a jewel in the lower mainland urban metropolis. He is rarely absent from council meetings and spends countless hours preparing for discussion on the topics for the forums he attends. His commitment to improving rural and urban living conditions goes beyond Bowen Island, having served on Metro Vancouver boards making planning decisions on future transportation, waste management, parks and lower mainland food supply. Peter Frinton is a dedicated councillor worthy of re-election in this November’s civic election.
Brian Money, Victoria resident
Friday, November 11, 2011
And Now for Something Completely Different.....
Sorry- I lie. Now to revisit stuff that has not been peeped about in a long while.
Sunday, November 6, 2011
A Very Modest Proposal
Something occurred to me during the Abbeyfield House AGM today. One of their biggest impediments to getting going on any construction is lack of sewer. They have now decided to start with an approx. 10 unit complex with very limited common spaces, so as to reduce initial costs. I thought with my mouth open and flapping, that maybe a workaround to the lack of a sewer pipe out front, would be to plumb in a largish septic tank, but with no outlet, fitted with a device to measure how full it is getting. Then, get it pumped and the sewage transported periodically- every week? to our new plant just down the road. Unlike septage, which is partially dewatered and has a much higher BOD, raw sewage is exactly what the plant is designed for. If a 'honey truck' were located on-island, I suspect the haulage cost to be fairly modest, particularly if it picked up Belterra and perhaps other new-build project waste. Is this unrealistic, already thought of and discarded, or a brilliant idea?
Saturday, November 5, 2011
A Modest Proposal Regarding Number of Council Members
This came up on the Phorum a couple of months ago- Why do we have a Council of 7, instead of 5 as most similarly sized incorporated communities do? I recalled it having to do with the Islands Trust Act.
Friday, November 4, 2011
Personal Successes of This Last Term
- Contributed new policies/objectives in the OCP- air quality and economic development
- Obtained a $10,000 grant to update our outdoor burning regulations
- Proposed Crippen Park boundary adjustments to enable more seniors' housing, better alignment and use of Trunk Rd.
- Pushed hard to forward our solid waste management strategy
- Revised the North Shore Congress Charter on Childhood Development
- Got Bowen designated Rural, Recreation and Parks, plus excluded from the Regional Growth Strategy Urban Containment Area
- Helped develop the Translink Mayors' Council response to the 2010 & 2011 Supplemental Plans, which eventually passed.
- Contributed to Metro Vancouver's Solid Waste, Air Quality, Revised Parks Plans, and especially the Regional Food Strategy
* Collaborated with Abbeyfield/Bowen Court to craft the new rezoning solution that will establish the seniors' precinct as the first 'on the ground' project of the Snug Cove Village Plan- within our current OCP height and density provisions
* Sought out and obtained funding for women's crisis support on Bowen Island
* Led the successful bylaw process to adopt Green Building Standards on Bowen
* Initiated and helped write the Towns-for-Tomorrow grant that secured $400,000 funding for the Snug Cove sewer upgrade
* Spearheaded the Islands Trust acquisition of Fairy Fen - valued over $1 million
* Researched and promoted a Reuse-It store that led to the Knick Knack Nook
* Brought in our first Sea-to-Sky Air Quality bylaw
Translink Summary of Activities 2011
TransLink Mayors' Council Update #8 – November 4, 2011
Dear Colleagues:
With the completion of our 2011 meeting schedule, I thought it appropriate to summarize not only what we discussed at the October 27 meetings, but also reflect back on the events of the past year and where the work of the Mayors’ Council currently sits. I would also like to propose some next steps, which the Mayors’ Council might consider in the year ahead.
It was suggested during our recent meeting that the election of the next Chair and Vice Chair occur after the mid-December Metro Vancouver elections. I support this and suggest that the election take place at the 2012 Inaugural meeting to be held Wednesday, January 11, 2012 at 9:00 a.m. Although the Mayors’ Council is separate by legal constitution from the governance of Metro, transportation issues are tangential to land planning, and the leadership synergies within the municipal sector are obvious.
The Mayors’ Council Rules and Procedures stipulate that the end of term for Chair and Vice Chair is December 31, and that the Chair and Vice Chair declare their intentions prior to November 1. I am certainly open to serving again but will not make my mind up until after both the November municipal and the December Metro elections and committee appointments have taken place. As my predecessors, Mayors Watts and Mayor Fassbender can attest, this role requires significant time and the commitment needs to be balanced against other duties and responsibilities incurred as elected leaders. Thus I encourage anyone thinking of taking on this important regional role to not be shy in communicating their interest to regional colleagues.
Review of Past Year
At the beginning of 2011 we determined collectively to better understand the complexities of transportation funding in our region. As a result, we requested TransLink staff to prepare, and we subsequently received in March 2011, the “Mayors’ Council Curriculum Materials: Research on Funding for Transportation”.
This assemblage of reports included:
third party research conducted by the IBI Group on both short term and long term funding for TransLink;
consideration of best practices that included Paying Our Way: A New Framework for Transportation Finance from the National Surface Transportation Infrastructure Commission;
Local and Regional Funding Mechanisms for Public Transportation from the Transit Cooperative Research Program; and
Time to Get Serious: Reliable Funding for Greater Toronto and Hamilton Area from the Toronto City Summit Alliance.
The Curriculum Materials also included a history of TransLink funding and a series of background reports that identified various potential future funding sources for the region. As noted by Mayor Brodie at our October 27, 2011 meeting, the Mayors’ Council is already in possession of considerable research and analysis of transportation funding best practices applicable for our region.
Between February and April 2011, while we were awaiting both the Government’s selection of the Premier and the appointment (or confirmation) of the Minister, the Chair engaged other local government elected officials and some MLAs in the development of a set of principles for funding sustainable transportation within our region. These principles were approved by the Mayors’ Council unanimously in May 2011, and have since provided an important framework for discussions with Minister Lekstrom.
On July 6, 2011 a conceptual funding strategy was agreed to with the Province, recognizing two important positions that Metro Mayors have been consistently advocating:
that the current funding mix in the TransLink legislation, with an ongoing reliance on property taxes, is not sufficient to meet the needs of our growing region; and
that the governance structure for public transportation, introduced in 2008, does not provide locally elected officials with a sufficient role in the development of transportation plans for the region.
Minister Lekstrom responded to these issues by:
providing an additional two cents of fuel tax for the region, while launching a process to both develop new funding sources to replace the $30 million of time-limited property tax contained in the Moving Forward Transportation Plan, and also provide new funding for future transportation plans for the region;
having heard consistently that TransLink’s current governance model is an issue for the Mayors’ Council, committed to discussing the governance structure with the Mayors.
On October 7, 2011, the Mayors’ Council subsequently approved the Moving Forward Transportation and Financial Plan, marking the first time in more than three years that a significant improvement to Metro’s transportation service has been committed to. The Plan fulfills the region’s commitment to fund its portion of the Evergreen Line and introduces much needed service improvements across the whole region.
This decision, although not unanimous, was made in a manner that allowed each of us to express our positions and what we saw as the strengths and weaknesses of the funding structure. With the Plan now in place, the Mayors’ Council can focus its attention on the long-term sustainable alternative funding and governance improvements.
Since 2010, the Mayors’ Council has been able to improve its working relationship with the provincial government, beginning with Chair Fassbender, who negotiated the November 2010 Memorandum of Understanding with Premier Campbell’s administration. It has gained further momentum under Premier Clarke’s administration, with Minister Lekstrom playing a critical role in furthering the agenda. Hopefully, the next six months will see significant achievement allowing us the Mayors’ Council to approach the future with more certainty.
October 27, 2011 Mayors’ Council Meeting
It is difficult when chairing a meeting to record the salient points, so please advise me if the list is incomplete. My recollection is that in our discussion with the Minister we agreed:
that the existing Joint Technical Committee (JTC) begin to put together funding options and related technical work to be brought back post-election as a beginning; then involve a subcommittee of elected officials to look at what has been brought together on the technical side; and
that with regard to governance, the JTC, with input from the Regional Administrators’ Advisory Committee (RAAC), identify issues and consider what can be done to enhance the relationship between TransLink and the Mayors’ Council and address concerns regarding how Supplemental Plans are developed.
Mayor Watts also suggested that the October 2009 Comptroller General Ministry of Finance’s Report on Review of Transportation Governance Models is a good starting point for sourcing possible governance changes.
The Mayor’s Council also covered a number of other issues with the Minister with regard to funding and governance, which will be captured in the meeting minutes. However, we communicated clearly to the Minister a sense of urgency that work be conducted as soon as possible in order that action can be taken during the 2012 legislative session.
Finally, the Mayors’ Council passed a motion recommending to the Government of British Columbia that TransLink be included within the mandate of the new Municipal Auditor General’s Office, should such an authority be established.
In closing, I want to thank all of you for the support shown during the past 10 months. We do not agree on every issue, but there has been strong collective support for process, and we are at the table in a meaningful way. The balance between cautious corporate memory and cautious optimism as we negotiate the ‘unique’ paradigm of Metro transportation planning is delicate – but good policy flows from good debate and a shared commitment for the common good.
Good luck on November 19 for those of us still in the fray, and many thanks to our four colleagues stepping away from public life.
Thank You
Mayor Richard Walton
Chair
Mayors’ Council on Regional Transportation
At Least One Person Likes Me....the Mayor!
Mayor Bob was kind enough to write the following, unsolicited:
“Councillor Peter Frinton has consistently provided thoughtful, informed, and practical input to Council on a broad array of issues. His ability to speak clearly and directly and even courageously about challenging island issues has many times provided the critical framework for a council decision. Peter draws on his broad and deep knowledge of Bowen Island, does his homework, and arrives at Council prepared. He is connected to a diverse community of islanders and consistently brings important community input to the council table. As Council liaison to the Greenways Committee, Peter has provided effective support for a variety of trail building, beach access, park acquisition, and community garden initiatives on the island.
Councillor Frinton has represented Bowen Island very well as Bowen’s voice on the MetroVancouver regional district board. He has earned praise from regional mayors for the quality of his contributions, and he has consistently demonstrated his command of this complex subject matter in his reports to Council. Peter’s leadership has advanced critical discussions between the municipality and MetroVancouver Parks on the transfer of Crippen Park lands for an expanded Snug Cove village.
I strongly support Peter Frinton as a Councillor on Bowen Island’s next Council.”
Mayor Bob Turner
Thursday, November 3, 2011
Making Sense of the National Parks Proposal
If the Bowen Phorum is any indicator, there is certainly a lot of hyperbole out there about the proposed National Park, the status of Crippen Park, negotiations in the event of a 'yes' vote,and how the referendum results might impact all of the above.