All posts by Roy Hales

Executive Director Responds to 5 Myths about Food Banks

The Cortes Island Food Bank has a new Executive Director. Filipe Figueira retired last November, and Angelica Raaen has been at the helm since then. In this morning’s interview, she responds to five myths about food banks and also talks a little about her new role.

Angelica Raaen: “I think it’s really important that the stigma around food banks and food assistance be addressed, and that everyone who needs to access the food bank—or could use help—feels comfortable doing so. We’re here if anyone needs us.”

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Inspirations: An interview with Ruby Singh

Juno-nominated musician Ruby Singh recently returned to Cortes Island, both as a facilitator for the CASE Youth Leadership Conference at Hollyhock and to give a concert at Manson’s Hall. In this morning’s interview, he talks about his many forms of artistic expression, inspirations, and relationship with Cortes Island. 

Ruby Singh:  “I find inspiration in a lot of different ways. I feel like we are all just small tendrils of creation, so the act of creation and the act of creativity are among the most natural ways of being. Other artists really inspire me. I am deeply inspired by ancestry and futurity at the same time, so finding ourselves where we are in this timeline of inheritance from our ancestors, and what we are thinking about leaving here when we leave. Long timelines really inspire me, and deep time is a very inspirational thing. I get a lot of inspiration from my community, from the people around me, and from this more-than-human world that surrounds us.” 

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UN Says Nations Have a Legal Obligation to Address Climate Change; Trump Tweets Otherwise

The UN backed a world court opinion stating that countries have a legal obligation to address climate change. Canada, China and every EU country except Czechia were among the 141 nations that supported the resolution. The United States, Russia, Saudi Arabia and Iran were among the eight that voted in opposition. Twenty-eight countries abstained. 

UN Secretary-General António Guterres tweeted, “I welcome the adoption of the General Assembly resolution on the @CIJ_ICJ’s (International World Court) advisory opinion on climate change – a powerful affirmation of international law, climate justice, science & the responsibility of states to protect people from the escalating climate crisis. Those least responsible for climate change are paying the highest price. That injustice must end.”

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Coming Soon: The Library’s 90th Anniversary

We’re coming up to the 90th anniversary of the Vancouver Island Regional Library. In this morning’s interview Beatrix Baxter, the new Circulation Supervisor at the Cortes Island branch, talks about the library, her love of books and how they are going to celebrate on Saturday, May 30th.

Beatrix Baxter:  “The Vancouver Island Regional Library was established in 1936, and it started off with six library branches, 28 sub-branches, and seven van routes. Now we’re up to 39 library branches and our online branch, which we say is open 24 hours a day, seven days a week, because you can go online anytime.”

“All 39 branches share what we call a floating collection. We all each hold part of the collection. When a library customer goes online to put a book on hold, the call goes out to all the branches that might have a copy of that book. The first one to respond sends the book off, and it goes through our system and ends up here on Cortes, or wherever the person is requesting it from.

“I don’t know how many books we have, but more than five million items are circulated annually. That’s books, magazines, video games, DVDs, TV shows, audiobooks — it’s everything that we have, which is actually quite a lot.”

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Jennifer Lash on Mark Carney, the MOU and Canada’s low carbon future

There have been a lot of concerns that the MOU with Alberta represents a step backward when it comes to reducing climate-change-causing emissions from big industry and advancing clean energy. In this morning’s interview, Jennifer Lash, who was both a senior adviser at Environment and Climate Change Canada and a Liberal candidate in the last election, shares her perspective on these issues.

Shortly after the radio version of this story first aired, Carrie Saxefrage from the Cortes Island Climate Action Network emailed, “Ten years ago, Bank of England Governor Mark Carney gave a speech in which he said the world must turn risk into opportunity by building new markets in climate transition and green finance. Last week, Prime Minister Carney just backed down before the oil industry bullies who are pushing our shared Earth further toward mass extinction. The new Mark Carney may survive to fight another day, but how much of our money will he have thrown away, or locked into climate destruction? What and who will be left to save? “

Canada needs the Mark Carney of ten years ago, the leader who is eager to use his political capital to persuade Canada that our taxes and regulations must, with deliberate speed, transition our nation toward stability and away from fossil fuels.”  

May Thaysen added, “The Cortes climate action network is here to build a home base for the people power we need to stop the pollution that is threatening our lives and livelihoods – that includes political pressure on the Prime Minister to force him to do the right things.  Reach out at [email protected].”

Jennifer Lash explained, “I went through a bit of an existential crisis when the MOU was announced. That was a hard moment for me. I’ve spent many years arguing against pipelines and arguing for carbon pricing, but I had to step out of the old way I was looking at climate. I had to step into a new way of looking at it, one that took more into consideration the current global crisis we’re in and the political situation.”

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