vol.16.7
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Monday, March 7, 2016
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/Archive
... attention must be paid* |
W A T E R ! all the views we care to share |
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How British Columbia Became a Fairer Place
In late September, we sat down with Garry Merkel to talk about the Columbia Basin Trust Act ... its history and and what it might mean for our futures. As a founder and creator of the Trust, Garry is a well-placed source for understanding why the Trust Act was passed and the tools it provides to help us shape our communities. He says that the Treaty Act is much more important than most people realize:
The full program about the CBT's history is here or below:
Later we will add the second part of our conversation, about what we might want to do with our future.
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a Celebration Which Includes the Story of the Origin(al) Deal Last Tuesday (February 7), the College of the Rockies celebrated its 40th anniversary. At the Aboriginal Gathering Place as part of the celebration, Ktunaxa Storyteller Joe Pierre recounted some of the stories of how our world came to be. One such story includes the deal by which human beings were supported by the animals and plants already living here.
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The Place In Which We Live: Columbia Commonwealth
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Monthly Minutes with the Mayor
The quality of Kimberley's WATER and the role BC Timber Sales consumed much of our February discussion. Improvimg the city's budgeting process got most of the remainder.
This is a short excerpt of what the Mayor had to say about the potential threat to our water quality of cutblocks near Mark Creek wetlands and on steep terrain above the creek:
In 2013, Aqua-Tex produced a report on the water quality of Mark Creek. The executive summary is here. The full (215 page) report is here.
This is February's full discussion:
Mayor Don McCormick
If you prefer, you can listen to this program here.
In 2013, Aqua-Tex produced a report on the water quality of Mark Creek. The executive summary is here. The full (215 page) report is here.
Earlier editions of our conversations with the Mayor are here.
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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 Seven Month Operational History
(Em)Powering us since 27 July, 2015
Congratulations Kimberley!
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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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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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All materials contained on this website are copyrighted by Clarion Group Live, Inc. and may not be used for any commercial purpose without the express, written consent of Paula Gordon. Non-commercial use is permitted and encouraged provided that credit is given to 'Berley Times, appropriate urls cited, links are provided where possible and meaning is not altered by editing.