Clark McKay and Carol Pierce have been running the Floathouse restaurant, on Cortes Island, since last October.
Continue reading Clark McKay and Carol Pierce: How COVID changed the meaning of take-outAll posts by Roy Hales
Rainbow Ridge debt free: All loans can now be repaid
Donations to the Rainbow Ridge affordable housing project, on Cortes Island, have reached the point that all loans can now be repaid.
A number of people loaned the project large sums of money, at rates as low as 0% interest.
Continue reading Rainbow Ridge debt free: All loans can now be repaid2021: Local historian says recent Bute Inlet slide was one of many
While the largest slide in human memory occurred only months ago, local historian Judith Williams says Bute Inlet ‘lets loose’ all the time.
Continue reading 2021: Local historian says recent Bute Inlet slide was one of manyDirector Anderson to be given notice of SRD Board’s expectations
The Strathcona Regional District is sending Cortes Island Regional Director Noba Anderson a letter advising of the SRD Board’s expectations regarding communications between Directors and Regional District staff.
Continue reading Director Anderson to be given notice of SRD Board’s expectationsThe Helicopter View: Fish Farms Around the World
[OPINION/EDITORIAL/RESEARCH, the audio of which will be broadcast over Cortes Radio as the first part of a special of Fish Farms – Sat, Feb 13, and repeated on Wed, Feb 17, 2021, Click here to access the other part of this special]
The “fish farm” issue simmering for decades on the BC Coast has boiled over again, in the controversy over DFO’s recent decision to close down open-net Atlantic salmon “farms” in the Discovery Islands and Broughton Archipelago areas. Locally, the issue is mostly being discussed in terms of First Nations sovereignty vs employment, though debate continues over the scale and impact of externalities like sea lice infestations, chemical and biohazard effluent, etc.
I’d like to back up a bit and try to put this local conflict into a larger perspective. “Fish farming” is a global issue, with a long history. Canada is only one minor player in the international Great Game of Atlantic salmon feedlots. This is such a big subject that it can’t be fully covered in a readable article; I’ve compiled a brief bibliography (of links) by topic, at the end. There are also many links and footnotes throughout the text, so readers can dig deeper.
Continue reading The Helicopter View: Fish Farms Around the World