Bishop gifts St. Joe’s Comox site to Providence Health Care

Bishop gifts St. Joe’s Comox site to Providence Health Care

George Le Masurier photo

Bishop gifts St. Joe’s Comox site to Providence Health Care

By George Le Masurier

The Views at St. Joe’s has been gifted to a new entity called the Providence Residential & Community Care Services Society (PRCC).

Chair of the St. Joe’s Board of Trustees Chris Kelsey told Decafnation last night the Bishop of Victoria has given St. Joe’s, including its 17 acres of property at the top of Comox Hill to the nonprofit company.

Providence Health Care is a British Columbia Catholic health care organization that operates St. Paul’s Hospital and seven community care facilities in the Lower Mainland. The Bishop of Victoria sits on the board of a society that owns Providence.

The Views at St. Joe’s is Providence’s first acquisition outside the Lower Mainland and is, at the moment, the sole operating facility of the newly-formed PRCC. It’s expected that Providence’s other community care facilities will eventually be moved in the new company.

The acquisition means that, at the closing date of April 1, the current St. Joe’s board will be dissolved. But Kelsey has been appointed Vice Chair of PRCC, and he said there will always be representation on its board.

“What this means is, we’re not going anywhere,” Kelsey said.

Kelsey said the St. Joe’s board starting working on its future role four years ago, when it became clear that Island Health was closing down its acute care hospital. And, he said, Providence shares their vision of a campus of care dedicated for seniors.

“With Providence, we’re building an organization focused solely on seniors care,” he said. “A dementia village concept is part of that plan.”

Running an acute care hospital requires “90 percent of your attention and your budget,” leaving less flexibility to make seniors care better.

“Now we can focus just on that,” he said.

The Views staff will become PRCC employees and medical staff will receive their privileges through the new company.

FURTHER READING: Providence Residential & Community Care

To get out from under the financial restrictions of the Hospital Act, it’s the intent to eventually make PRCC an independent entity, and distance itself from Providence hospitals. That would allow PRCC to borrow funds for capital project, which it cannot do under the Hospital Act.

That’s important for The Views, which needs to be modernized, as do several of Providence’s existing and aging seniors facilities the Lower Mainland.

Providence assisted St. Joe’s in preparing its proposal for the new Comox Valley long-term care beds.

But Kelsey said he does not believe St. Joe’s is the leading proponent for the news beds.

“If that were the case, we would be talking by now. And we’re not,” he said.

But that won’t delay PRCC from moving ahead with a new vision for the St. Joe’s site.

“Whether or not we receive any of the new long-term care beds from Island Health, we will move ahead with a redevelopment of The Views,” Kelsey said. “Either through a competitive process or direct negotiation.”

Kelsey said St. Joe’s and Providence have been working with Island Health and the Ministry of Health through the transfer of ownership process, and both have supported the change.

The Views Administrative Officer Michael Aikins said the change in ownership actually accelerates the redevelopment plans.

“With PPRC as owner, we’re going to build a community with various levels of housing and care options that support seniors, and their spouses and partners, to age in place on a single campus — ranging from independent living, long-term care and specialized dementia care and neighbourhoods,” he said in a news release.

 

 

WHO IS PROVIDENCE
HEALTH CARE?

 

Compassionate care for over a century
Providence Health Care’s commitment to serving those most in need began more than 120 years ago when the Sisters of Providence
came to Vancouver and opened St. Paul’s Hospital, a 25-bed “cottage” on the path to English Bay. Now operating 17 sites, Providence
Health Care is a health and wellness resource for families, patients and residents from all parts of British Columbia.

Providence Health Care was formed in 2000 through the consolidation of CHARA Health Care Society, Holy Family Hospital and St.
Paul’s Hospital, and is now one of the largest Catholic health care organizations in Canada. Providence sites include two acute care
hospitals, five residential care homes, an assisted living residence, a rehabilitation centre, seven community dialysis units, a hospice,
an addictions clinic and a youth health clinic.

Living our values
To this day, Providence continues the mission of the five founding congregations of sisters by meeting the physical, emotional, social
and spiritual needs of patients through compassionate care, teaching and research. Providence welcomes the challenge of caring for
some of society’s most vulnerable populations. 

Global leader in health care excellence and innovation
Providence is home to St. Paul’s Hospital. St. Paul’s serves 174,000 unique patients who account for over 500,000 visits annually.
As one of two adult academic health sciences centres in B.C. (affiliated with the University of British Columbia and other postsecondary institutions), St. Paul’s is a renowned acute care hospital recognized provincially, nationally and internationally for its
work, including its several centres of excellence and affiliated research programs. In coordination with its health partners – including
the Ministry of Health, Vancouver Coastal Health and the Provincial Health Services Authority – the Providence Health Care Research
Institute leads research in more than 30 clinical specialties. This research continues to advance the lives of British Columbians
every day.

SUBSCRIBE TO OUR NEWSLETTER

Enter your email address to subscribe to the Decafnation newsletter.

The Week: Providence, Dutcyvich, Socialism and Blueberries

The Week: Providence, Dutcyvich, Socialism and Blueberries

It’s not quite this warm in the Comox Valley, but unseasonably so, according to local blueberry plants  |  George Le Masurier photo

The Week: Providence, Dutcyvich, Socialism and Blueberries

By George Le Masurier

This week’s announcement that a new entity called Providence Residential & Community Care Services Society (PRCC) has assumed ownership of The Views at St. Joe’s changes the long-term care picture in the Comox Valley. Providence, a nonprofit Catholic organization operating in the Lower Mainland, has more resources to fund the vision for a seniors ‘campus of care’ developed by the former St. Joe’s Board or Trustees.

Whether or not Island Health awards any of the promised, but much-delayed, new 151 long-term care beds to The Views, the PRCC will move forward with its redevelopment plans, including a dementia village concept.

But the larger question still remains: where are those promised new beds? As we reported a year ago, the shortage of long-term care beds is critical. In fact, 151 still won’t be enough to fulfill the Comox Valley’s immediate needs.

On that topic, a recent letter from a local group called Senior Voices had this to say:

“The money wasted on using hospital beds instead of residential care has increased to the tens of millions of dollars. Worse, the suffering (agony would not be too strong a word) of Comox Valley elders and their caregivers, with inadequate home care and needing residential care, has deepened, since the Valley probably needs at least 225 beds and more, with an ever-aging population. Where are the beds? Ask your government and your MLA. We deserve better.”

¶ I stand with the BC nurses in demanding written guarantees from the provincial government that more nurses should be hired for understaffed hospitals. For example, most Island Health facilities, but especially Comox Valley and Campbell River hospitals are not only understaffed they are chronically overcapacity with patients. That’s a double-whammy for nurses.

¶ David Dutcyvich, the wannabe Riverwood developer, is throwing another tantrum because the Comox Valley Regional Growth Strategy doesn’t allow him to build 1,300 homes on a hunk of rocky ground between the Puntledge and Browns rivers. He’s set up barricades armed with employees to make sure nobody sneaks onto his vacant property.

To a casual observer, it appears that in Dutcyvich’s world, a developer should be allowed to do whatever he wants, and people who deny him this God-given right should be singled out and shamed. And then sued in court.

But what Dutcyvich desperately needs is better advisors, especially in the public relations department. His various retaliations to the publicly-elected Comox Valley Regional District board’s rejection of his subdivision proposal puts him in the same category as Donald Trump shutting down the U.S. government over a hissy fit about a border wall. That is to say, he’s making more enemies than friends.

Dutcyvich says he’s cut off easy access to Stotan Falls to mitigate any risk or liability. But if he’s hoping the move will also apply public pressure on the CVRD board to cave, he’s dreaming. It might have the opposite effect.

People should just ignore the dude. There are other ways to get to Stotan Falls, if you really need to do that. But there are fun swimming holes on other local rivers. And, honestly, swimming at Goose Spit or Comox Lake is a heck of a lot safer.

¶ The CVRD and 3L were originally due in court on Jan. 17 and 18 in Vancouver, but sources tell us that’s not likely to happen, and new dates have been set.

¶ Somebody call Ontario Doug Ford ASAP! According to a North Island director on the Comox Strathcona Solid Waste Management board, using social procurement policies to leverage municipal spending amounts to SOCIALISM! So Premier Ford needs to know right away, because the City of Toronto practices social procurement.

¶ CVRD Area B Director Arzeena Hamir, who is also an organic farmer, reports the local blueberry plants budded in January, due to the unseasonably warm weather. That could have been good news for a long growing season, except for a short cold snap.

If the Comox Valley experiences another, longer cold period frost in the next month or two, it could mean a short growing season for blueberries. If temperatures stay above freezing, there will be a long season, and a bounty crop.

Other people have reported similar out-of-season growth. Garlic already 6 inches high. Cherry trees blooming in Vancouver and Snow Bells in Victoria. Some Rhodos, Witch Hazel and Lavender have bloomed. People have also noticed tent caterpillars.

¶ Most people don’t often think about how wastewater travels from their bathrooms to a septic field or, if you live in Courtenay, Comox, the K’omoks First Nation or CFB Comox, how it gets to the Brent Road treatment plant. Nor should you have to.

But how we convey our wastewater is important. Right now, people who live in the Comox Valley’s rural areas rely on septic systems, and Cumberland has its own system.

But the Courtenay-Comox sewerage system relies on a 35-year-old sewer pipe located in the K’omoks estuary, Comox Harbour and along the beach below the Willemar Bluffs. The way our climate is changing, this is a recipe for disaster.

The Comox Valley Regional District, which manages the sewerage system for Courtenay-Comox, is in the process of creating a Liquid Waste Management Plan that will design a future vision for conveyance and treatment of sewage in the Comox Valley. That plan could, and should, include abandoning the sewer pipes in our foreshores, and rerouting them overland.

That’s why you should think about wastewater now. Your input can influence this plan.

There are two information sessions coming up at the end of this month. The public and technical advisory committees will present an early and long list of system design options. Make sure your voice is heard.

¶ I’m proud that Canada has taken the world lead on cannabis legalization. Because of us, cannabis will finally be studied scientifically; not just for breeding and genetics as the world’s first Cannabis Innovation Centre will do, although that’s critical. But also for the science that others will do about potential medical benefits and other effects on humans.

But it baffles the mind that, three months after legalization, there are still illegal pot shops operating all over the 10 provinces. There are more than 20 illegal shops in Vancouver alone. 

If legal cannabis has any hope of eliminating the black market or even reducing it to insignificance, which we know is a process that will take years, they have to eventually close the illegal operators down. We don’t allow unlicensed breweries or other moonshiners. Why do we tolerate illegal pot shops?

 

SUBSCRIBE TO OUR NEWSLETTER

Enter your email address to subscribe to the Decafnation newsletter.

More

Social Studies 02.27.2017

Yes, we know it's now April. So we're a little behind. We took a vacation, okay. Chill. The Decafnation has left its sickly, lifeless existence behind The Decafnation has left its sickly, lifeless existence behind and transported ourselves to an all-inclusive tropical...

Valley faces a watershed moment

Comox Councillor Barbara Price has offered up misleading statements to defend changes to an antiquated sewerage system that serves only Comox and Courtenay residents. Price chairs the Comox Valley Sewage Commission, which is itself a misnomer. The Sewage Commission...

The pressure mounts on Comox

With new organizations and high-profile individuals joining the movement to preserve the waterfront home of internationally known naturalist and Town of Comox benefactor Hamilton Mack Laing, there are rumors that some Comox Council members might reconsider the town’s...

Was Mother Earth Goddess drunk?

Today we celebrate the spring equinox, the beginning of a new astrological year, a time when hope and creativity soar and our hearts beat to the rhythm of the Earth’s renewal. And we just pray to the Mother Earth Goddess that it doesn’t fucking snow again. Because...

The Decafnation has left the Island

The Decafnation has left its sickly, lifeless existence behind and transported ourselves to an all-inclusive tropical oasis, where we can eat 15 meals a day and the steel drummers outnumber the the guests. We've traded our medical masks for scuba masks, and our...

Social Studies 02.20.2017

If you hate the same things, you might fall in love How did Valentine’s Day turn out for you? Not so good? You might want to try the new dating app called Hater. It’s based on the premise that long-term compatibility depends more on the things you hate than what you...

Imagine a sewer pump station with a homey feel

What would the City of Courtenay and the Town of Comox do if they didn't have a convenient ocean to dump their contaminated sewage into? Imagine, a homey feel at the Courtenay Air Park Treatment Plant (CAPTP). A place suitable to host wedding receptions and city...

Comox destroys heritage in Canada’s 150th

The National Trust for Canada has just released a report that over the last 30 years Canada has “shockingly” lost over 20% of its historical buildings. (At almost 100%, Comox definitely exceeds national standards.) Shakesides and Baybrook are victims of the same...

Doctors link flu outbreak to sewage leaks in estuary

Re: Current outbreak of flu potentially linked to leaky force mains in estuary News Reports in the Vancouver Island media suggest a serious stomach flu this winter caused by the norovirus has been linked to eating raw or poorly cooked oysters. Oysters are one of the...

Shakesides adviser releases letter sent to Mayor Ives

May 4, 2016 Town of Comox Office of the Mayor 1809 Beaufort Avenue Comox, B.C., V9M 1R9 Attention Paul Ives, Q.C. Dear Sir, Re: Mack Laing Nature House Advisory Committee - Terms of Reference (TOR) As our Committee rather abruptly concluded its meetings on Friday and...

Nine things you need to know about the Unist’ot’en blockade

Nine things you need to know about the Unist’ot’en blockade

Unist’ot’en camp photo

Nine things you need to know about the Unist’ot’en blockade

By George Le Masurier

What is going on in northern British Columbia where RCMP have broken up a Wet’suwet’en First Nation camp protesting a natural gas pipeline to the Kitimat LNG project?

In this article, Zoe Ducklow, a reporter and photographer for The Tyee, explains nine things you need to know about the blockade by the Unist’ot’en Clan, one of five clans of the Wet’suwet’en First Nation.

“Brooklyn Creek is a small creekshed whose hydrology and ecological services have been altered and degraded by decades of land use impacts,” — Tim Pringle in the preface to Assessing the Worth of Ecological Services Using the Ecological Accounting Process for Watershed Assessment: Brooklyn Creek Demonstration Application in the Comox Valley.

 

 

WHAT IS THE ECOLOGICAL ACCOUNTING PROCESS (EAP)?

Ecological Accounting Process — “The EAP approach begins by first recognizing the importance of a stream in a natural state and then asking: how can we maintain those ecological values while allowing the stream to be used for drainage,” says Jim Dumont, Engineering Applications Authority with the Partnership for Water Sustainability in BC.

SUBSCRIBE TO OUR NEWSLETTER

Enter your email address to subscribe to the Decafnation newsletter.

More

Social Studies 02.27.2017

Yes, we know it's now April. So we're a little behind. We took a vacation, okay. Chill. The Decafnation has left its sickly, lifeless existence behind The Decafnation has left its sickly, lifeless existence behind and transported ourselves to an all-inclusive tropical...

Valley faces a watershed moment

Comox Councillor Barbara Price has offered up misleading statements to defend changes to an antiquated sewerage system that serves only Comox and Courtenay residents. Price chairs the Comox Valley Sewage Commission, which is itself a misnomer. The Sewage Commission...

The pressure mounts on Comox

With new organizations and high-profile individuals joining the movement to preserve the waterfront home of internationally known naturalist and Town of Comox benefactor Hamilton Mack Laing, there are rumors that some Comox Council members might reconsider the town’s...

Was Mother Earth Goddess drunk?

Today we celebrate the spring equinox, the beginning of a new astrological year, a time when hope and creativity soar and our hearts beat to the rhythm of the Earth’s renewal. And we just pray to the Mother Earth Goddess that it doesn’t fucking snow again. Because...

The Decafnation has left the Island

The Decafnation has left its sickly, lifeless existence behind and transported ourselves to an all-inclusive tropical oasis, where we can eat 15 meals a day and the steel drummers outnumber the the guests. We've traded our medical masks for scuba masks, and our...

Social Studies 02.20.2017

If you hate the same things, you might fall in love How did Valentine’s Day turn out for you? Not so good? You might want to try the new dating app called Hater. It’s based on the premise that long-term compatibility depends more on the things you hate than what you...

Imagine a sewer pump station with a homey feel

What would the City of Courtenay and the Town of Comox do if they didn't have a convenient ocean to dump their contaminated sewage into? Imagine, a homey feel at the Courtenay Air Park Treatment Plant (CAPTP). A place suitable to host wedding receptions and city...

Comox destroys heritage in Canada’s 150th

The National Trust for Canada has just released a report that over the last 30 years Canada has “shockingly” lost over 20% of its historical buildings. (At almost 100%, Comox definitely exceeds national standards.) Shakesides and Baybrook are victims of the same...

Doctors link flu outbreak to sewage leaks in estuary

Re: Current outbreak of flu potentially linked to leaky force mains in estuary News Reports in the Vancouver Island media suggest a serious stomach flu this winter caused by the norovirus has been linked to eating raw or poorly cooked oysters. Oysters are one of the...

Shakesides adviser releases letter sent to Mayor Ives

May 4, 2016 Town of Comox Office of the Mayor 1809 Beaufort Avenue Comox, B.C., V9M 1R9 Attention Paul Ives, Q.C. Dear Sir, Re: Mack Laing Nature House Advisory Committee - Terms of Reference (TOR) As our Committee rather abruptly concluded its meetings on Friday and...

Dancing in Gumboots: Comox Valley stories of cultural shift

Dancing in Gumboots: Comox Valley stories of cultural shift

Anthologist Jane Wilde at the Blue Heron Bookstore in Comox  |  George Le Masurier photo

Dancing in Gumboots: Comox Valley stories of cultural shift

By George Le Masurier

You can see everything I love about the new book Dancing in Gumboots on its cover. Two young women sit on a log at a Crown Zellerbach logging site high above Comox Lake in the 1970s, smoking cigarettes, drinking beer from what we used to call stubbies and sharing a private joke.

We don’t get the exact punch line that brought smiles to Jeanine Maars and Gloria Simpson in that cover photograph by Jane Gilchrist. But the book’s 32 first-person stories of women who moved to the Comox Valley between 1970 and 1979 reveal the underlying reason for their happiness.

These were women feeling free and enjoying their lives in ways that previous generations could not.

Dancing in Gumboots is an anthology by Lou Allison and Jane Wilde. It follows the success of their first book, Gumboot Girls, featuring similar adventurous women who migrated from cities, the United States and Europe to settle on Haida Gwaii or the Prince Rupert area.

“The goal of the books was, first of all, to save our stories,” Wilde told Decafnation. “But they also document a generation that represents a big shift in culture.”

Written in the first-person and without much editing, these stories reflect on how a wave of women who settled in the Comox Valley broke down gender barriers as tree planters and fishers, embraced feminism and built lives based on self-confidence and self-reliance.

Many of the women speak with surprising candor about the most intimate parts of their lives, including divorce and sexual orientation, and the challenges of building their own homes. But there is a vivid sense of joy and fun that runs through each of the stories.

The Comox Valley was a small community back then. People knew almost everyone else. There was only one stoplight at Fifth and Cliffe. In 1971, just 13,000 people lived in Comox, Courtenay and Cumberland.

So when long-haired young women — and men — started arriving to scratch some internal itch to live on an island, work as a deckhand on a commercial fishing boat or to merely search for a taste of the pioneering lifestyle, it was noticeable.

And was hard to not notice them.

In their stories, these women speak about the early days of the Arts Alliance and the Renaissance Faire, about illegal midwifery, starting the Women’s Self-Help Network, the Youth Chance Society and the Comox Valley Transition Society. That was wildly progressive stuff for a little community still defined at the time by logging and fishing.

For those of us who arrived at the same time and know these women, reading their mini-memoirs will recall fond memories of our own. It takes us on a trip back through our own journeys.

But for those who have discovered the Comox Valley more recently as the surging knowledge-based urban center it is today, these stories provide not just historical references but a deeper sense of place. Knowing who it was that came before you and how they shaped your town’s culture, helps a person understand their own place in the continuum of community evolution.

Plus, Dancing with Gumboots is just fun to read. It’s kind of a guilty pleasure.

 

Gumboot anthologist

“These are flash memoirs,” Wilde said. “We told the writers not to agonize over their essays, just keep them fresh.”

Wilde and Allison created the whole book with only few in-person meetings. They sent five questions to potential contributors via email and asked them to respond in 1,000 to 1,500 words and to do it within two months. It was the same formula they used for their North Coast book.

“The first book was done almost as a lark,” Wilde said. “But then we sold 1,000 copies in the first month and our publisher said, hey, you’ve got something here.”

Wilde and Allison are part of the generation of women featured in their books. They both migrated to Haida Gwaii in the early 1970s and both wrote their own stories in Gumboot Girls, which has sold 8,000 copies to date.

Wilde arrive on the North Coast in 1976 and stayed until 1979. They she left for nursing school, but returned to Prince Rupert in 1981 to practice her new profession. For health reasons, she and her long-time partner, Richard, moved to the Comox Valley in 2016. He died in December.

“As I started to meet women in the Comox Valley, my eyes were opened to a completely different, yet similar migration of women from those I had known on the North Coast,” she said.

Wilde says no writers make any money from either of the books. All of the profits from the latest book go to the Comox Valley Transition Society, and to a similar nonprofit in Prince Rupert and Haida Gwaii from the first.

Wilde remains noncommittal about producing future anthologies, maybe because she’s accomplished what she set out to do in her first two books.

“It’s kind of the chicken soup of aging baby boomers. It’s stories about our generation,” she said. “They needed to be written down.”

 

 

 

NEXT READING: 2:15
JAN. 17 COURTENAY LIBRARY

 

 

AVAILABLE IN COMOX VALLEY
BOOKSTORES

 

Blue Heron Books
1775 Comox Ave., Comox
339-6111

Laughing Oyster Books
286 Fifth St., Courtenay
334-2511

Abraxas Books
1071 Northwest Road
Denman Island

 

 

LIST OF AUTHORS
IN DANCING IN GUMBOOTS

Roberta DeDoming, Patti Willis, Peggy Kabush, Sandy Kennedy, Susan Holvenstot, Gerri Minaker. Sally Gellard ,Cara Tilston Lee Bjarnason, Devaki Johnson, Rosemary Vernon, Jackie Sandiford, Monika Terfloth, Susan Sandland, Sure Wheeler, Anne Davis, Nonie Caflisch, Denise Nadeau, Olive Scott, Phyllis Victory, Linda Rajotte, Brenda Dempsey, Gloria Simpson, Jeanine Maars, Marguerite Masson, Judy Norbury, Linda Safford, Ardith Chambers, Linda Deneer, Josephine Peyton, Gwyn Sproule and Lynda Glover

 

Both Dancing in Gumboots and Gumboot Girls were published by Caitlin Press, Halfmoon Bay, British Columbia

 

SUBSCRIBE TO OUR NEWSLETTER

Enter your email address to subscribe to the Decafnation newsletter.

More

Social Studies 02.27.2017

Yes, we know it's now April. So we're a little behind. We took a vacation, okay. Chill. The Decafnation has left its sickly, lifeless existence behind The Decafnation has left its sickly, lifeless existence behind and transported ourselves to an all-inclusive tropical...

Valley faces a watershed moment

Comox Councillor Barbara Price has offered up misleading statements to defend changes to an antiquated sewerage system that serves only Comox and Courtenay residents. Price chairs the Comox Valley Sewage Commission, which is itself a misnomer. The Sewage Commission...

The pressure mounts on Comox

With new organizations and high-profile individuals joining the movement to preserve the waterfront home of internationally known naturalist and Town of Comox benefactor Hamilton Mack Laing, there are rumors that some Comox Council members might reconsider the town’s...

Was Mother Earth Goddess drunk?

Today we celebrate the spring equinox, the beginning of a new astrological year, a time when hope and creativity soar and our hearts beat to the rhythm of the Earth’s renewal. And we just pray to the Mother Earth Goddess that it doesn’t fucking snow again. Because...

The Decafnation has left the Island

The Decafnation has left its sickly, lifeless existence behind and transported ourselves to an all-inclusive tropical oasis, where we can eat 15 meals a day and the steel drummers outnumber the the guests. We've traded our medical masks for scuba masks, and our...

Social Studies 02.20.2017

If you hate the same things, you might fall in love How did Valentine’s Day turn out for you? Not so good? You might want to try the new dating app called Hater. It’s based on the premise that long-term compatibility depends more on the things you hate than what you...

Imagine a sewer pump station with a homey feel

What would the City of Courtenay and the Town of Comox do if they didn't have a convenient ocean to dump their contaminated sewage into? Imagine, a homey feel at the Courtenay Air Park Treatment Plant (CAPTP). A place suitable to host wedding receptions and city...

Comox destroys heritage in Canada’s 150th

The National Trust for Canada has just released a report that over the last 30 years Canada has “shockingly” lost over 20% of its historical buildings. (At almost 100%, Comox definitely exceeds national standards.) Shakesides and Baybrook are victims of the same...

Doctors link flu outbreak to sewage leaks in estuary

Re: Current outbreak of flu potentially linked to leaky force mains in estuary News Reports in the Vancouver Island media suggest a serious stomach flu this winter caused by the norovirus has been linked to eating raw or poorly cooked oysters. Oysters are one of the...

Shakesides adviser releases letter sent to Mayor Ives

May 4, 2016 Town of Comox Office of the Mayor 1809 Beaufort Avenue Comox, B.C., V9M 1R9 Attention Paul Ives, Q.C. Dear Sir, Re: Mack Laing Nature House Advisory Committee - Terms of Reference (TOR) As our Committee rather abruptly concluded its meetings on Friday and...

The snow is falling … but it won’t last

The snow is falling … but it won’t last

The snow is falling … but it won’t last

By George Le Masurier

Snow starting falling in the Comox Valley today, and forecasters expect between 5 cm to 20 cm to fall throughout the day. But enjoy the snow while it’s here. It will start raining overnight, and probably be gone by Wednesday morning.

SUBSCRIBE TO OUR NEWSLETTER

Enter your email address to subscribe to the Decafnation newsletter.

More

Social Studies 02.27.2017

Yes, we know it's now April. So we're a little behind. We took a vacation, okay. Chill. The Decafnation has left its sickly, lifeless existence behind The Decafnation has left its sickly, lifeless existence behind and transported ourselves to an all-inclusive tropical...

Valley faces a watershed moment

Comox Councillor Barbara Price has offered up misleading statements to defend changes to an antiquated sewerage system that serves only Comox and Courtenay residents. Price chairs the Comox Valley Sewage Commission, which is itself a misnomer. The Sewage Commission...

The pressure mounts on Comox

With new organizations and high-profile individuals joining the movement to preserve the waterfront home of internationally known naturalist and Town of Comox benefactor Hamilton Mack Laing, there are rumors that some Comox Council members might reconsider the town’s...

Was Mother Earth Goddess drunk?

Today we celebrate the spring equinox, the beginning of a new astrological year, a time when hope and creativity soar and our hearts beat to the rhythm of the Earth’s renewal. And we just pray to the Mother Earth Goddess that it doesn’t fucking snow again. Because...

The Decafnation has left the Island

The Decafnation has left its sickly, lifeless existence behind and transported ourselves to an all-inclusive tropical oasis, where we can eat 15 meals a day and the steel drummers outnumber the the guests. We've traded our medical masks for scuba masks, and our...

Social Studies 02.20.2017

If you hate the same things, you might fall in love How did Valentine’s Day turn out for you? Not so good? You might want to try the new dating app called Hater. It’s based on the premise that long-term compatibility depends more on the things you hate than what you...

Imagine a sewer pump station with a homey feel

What would the City of Courtenay and the Town of Comox do if they didn't have a convenient ocean to dump their contaminated sewage into? Imagine, a homey feel at the Courtenay Air Park Treatment Plant (CAPTP). A place suitable to host wedding receptions and city...

Comox destroys heritage in Canada’s 150th

The National Trust for Canada has just released a report that over the last 30 years Canada has “shockingly” lost over 20% of its historical buildings. (At almost 100%, Comox definitely exceeds national standards.) Shakesides and Baybrook are victims of the same...

Doctors link flu outbreak to sewage leaks in estuary

Re: Current outbreak of flu potentially linked to leaky force mains in estuary News Reports in the Vancouver Island media suggest a serious stomach flu this winter caused by the norovirus has been linked to eating raw or poorly cooked oysters. Oysters are one of the...

Shakesides adviser releases letter sent to Mayor Ives

May 4, 2016 Town of Comox Office of the Mayor 1809 Beaufort Avenue Comox, B.C., V9M 1R9 Attention Paul Ives, Q.C. Dear Sir, Re: Mack Laing Nature House Advisory Committee - Terms of Reference (TOR) As our Committee rather abruptly concluded its meetings on Friday and...