vol.16.2
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Wednesday, 6 January, 2016
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/Archive
... attention must be paid* |
Welcome to 2016 and Perhaps Some New Neighbors all the views we dare to share |
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Kimberley Refugee Resettlement Group
This group has been working for almost two months. After a meeting of the Kimberley Refugee Resettlement Group (KRRG) Communications Team in our kitchen, we asked each of the participants to tell us what motivates their involvement.
We'll be talking soon with other members of the KRRG ... stay tuned.
The City of Kimberley has formally endorsed the Group. We asked Mayor McCormick what makes this Group important to the City.
The Kimberley Refugee Resettlement Group needs your support and your help. You can reach them at KimberleyRefugee@Gmail.com.
You can see an overview of what will be required to successfully resettle and integrate refugees in our community here.
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Markus Pukonen: Routes of Change
There's much more on Markus' website and on all sorts of social media. You can follow the next 4 1/2 years of his journey there as well. We thank our Kimberley neighbor Randy McLeod of the Canadian Wildlife Federation for introducing us to Markus.
Our full discussion with Marcus is here.
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During the holidays, we had a small celebration at Kimberley's Butterfly Garden restaurant. The food was delightful and the briefly reunited family sent us, all of us, into the New Year with a hearty toast:
And then there was ...
Platzl Moon: Brightening the Dark
Several Minutes with the Mayor
In December's installment of our monthly conversations with Mayor McCormick we talk about KRRG (Kimberley Refugee Resettlement Group),CKDI (Cranbrook Kimberley Development Initiative), demographics and, yet again, the flume.
Mayor Don McCormack
If you prefer, you can listen to this program here.
In November, Mayor McCormick gave us a short introduction to the newly formed Cranbrook Kimberley Development Initiative (CKDI). Our full November conversation with the Mayor is here.
SunMine The largest solar installation in western Canada officially signed onto the grid on 27 July, 2015. Built on a reclaimed brownfield site of what was once the world’s richest lead and zinc mines, the aptly name SunMine moves Kimberley, BC decisively toward a sustainable future.
The SunMine Now Has a Five Month Operational History
(Em)Powering us siince 27 July, 2015
Congratulations Kimberley!
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Broadband is Not Enough, But It IS Essential
Before deciding to relocate to Kimberley, we looked at communities on four continents and one large island. Two important criteria in our seach were air quality and internet connectivity. Kimberley's air quality is acceptable, though significantly improved by HEPA filters.
In June, 2009 we were assured by the appropriate authorities that Kimberley had "high-speed" internet service, aka broadband. Our sources believed what they had told us. They had been given inaccurate information. Since moving here, we have become tedious on the absolute necessity of having broadband service available to our community.
With Telus now about to offer service via fibre optics and Columbia Basin Broadband Corporation working to facilitate access to broadband, we thought it time to assess where Kimberley is in the broadband-sphere.
In January we had scheduled a discussion with Johnny Strilaeff, CBT's chief operating officer. We planned to talked about the SunMine but also took the opportunity to discuss CBT's relatively new creation, Columbia Basin Broadband Corporation (CBBC).
Part 1
The other parts of this conversation are here.
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Archive | If your internet connection has the bandwidth, watch these video clips in High Definition. |
Audio Bits: American author and playwrite E.L. Doctorow died in July. We talked with him in 2005 about his novel The March and about the relationship between writers and readers. These are excerpts from that conversation. |
Contact Us: send your questions, ideas, suggestions, insights, revelations, et al, up to and including critiques to: comment@ekology.net | Why we do this
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