NOVEMBER 3, 2023 ISSUE 30.44
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TO FIGHT THE GOOD FIGHT
One man’s fire Risking it all to fight the blaze from hell
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BUDGET BOOST Sea to Sky tourism projects get federal funds
20
TOP HONOURS SLCC Ambassadors win Citizen of the Year
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SHOWING OUT Pemby dancers represent on the world stage
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THIS WEEK IN PIQUE
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One man’s fire Bernhard Thor wasn’t about to give up his life’s work, so when last summer’s Casper Creek wildfire threatened his home near Anderson Lake, you can be sure of one thing: he was ready. - By Paul Lucas
14 BUDGET BOOST
The federal government has
24 IN THE HOUSE
Mount Currie teen Talon Pascal
splashed nearly $2 million on tourism projects across the Sea to Sky—in-
reconstructed a traditional istken, or pithouse, based on instructions from
cluding $500,000 for the new campground at Whistler Olympic Park.
the late, great Lil’wat storyteller and trapper, Charlie Mack.
15 TAKING ACTION
32 ON THE TRAIL
The first local meeting of
The Ultra Trail Whistler race has
rightwing Christian group Action4Canada draws condemnation from the
been met with heavy local backlash after beloved race organizer Gary Rob-
Lil’wat Nation.
bins detailed the cancellation of his Whistler Alpine Meadows event.
18 PARTY LINES
Sea to Sky MP Patrick Weiler discuss-
es his decision to break against the Liberal Party in signing a letter urging
36 SHOWING OUT
Two teen Pemberton dancers strut
their stuff at the IDO World Championship.
Canada to demand a ceasefire in Gaza.
COVER Do you know where your muster points are? I promise to stop by and pick anyone up on my way out of town. - By Jon Parris // @jon.parris.art 4 NOVEMBER 3, 2023
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THIS WEEK IN PIQUE
Weekend Forec Ins
SEE PAGE 11 >>
Weekend Forecast Inside
Opinion & Columns 08 OPENING REMARKS
The Conservation Officer Service has a serious staffing problem that
#202 -1390 ALPHA LAKE RD., FUNCTION JUNCTION, WHISTLER, B.C. V8E 0H9. PH: (604) 938-0202 FAX: (604) 938-0201 www.piquenewsmagazine.com
doesn’t serve the wildlife or public it has sworn to protect, writes Brandon Barrett.
10 LETTERS TO THE EDITOR this week’s letter writers share thoughts on the recent controversy
Publisher SARAH STROTHER - sstrother@piquenewsmagazine.com Editor BRADEN DUPUIS - bdupuis@piquenewsmagazine.com
in the trail-running community, share thanks for a haunted house well done, and EV grants for stratas.
Sales Manager SUSAN HUTCHINSON - shutchinson@piquenewsmagazine.com Production Manager AMIR SHAHRESTANI - ashahrestani@piquenewsmagazine.com
13 PIQUE’N YER INTEREST Whistler can’t afford to keep thinking small on big issues, writes
Art Director JON PARRIS - jparris@piquenewsmagazine.com
Andrew Mitchell.
50 MAXED OUT Action4Canada, a group that finds very little right with modern life, doesn’t reflect the
Advertising Representatives TESSA SWEENEY - tsweeney@wplpmedia.com GEORGIA BUTLER - gbutler@wplpmedia.com
values of Whistler, argues Max this week.
Digital/Sales Coordinator KATIE DOUGLAS - kbechtel@wplpmedia.com
Environment & Adventure
Production - production@piquenewsmagazine.com Features Editor BRANDON BARRETT - bbarrett@piquenewsmagazine.com Arts Editor ALYSSA NOEL - arts@piquenewsmagazine.com
28 RANGE ROVER Whistler photographer Paul Morrison has always had a knack for capturing the perfect shot.
Reporters
Lifestyle & Arts
BRANDON BARRETT - bbarrett@piquenewsmagazine.com ALYSSA NOEL - arts@piquenewsmagazine.com DAVID SONG - sports@piquenewsmagazine.com
34 FORK IN THE ROAD With Halloween and its sweet treats in the rearview, Glenda Bartosh
RÓISÍN CULLEN - rcullen@piquenewsmagazine.com SCOTT TIBBALLS - stibballs@piquenewsmagazine.com
reminds us that good food is good fun—and it’s good for the pocketbook, too.
Classifieds and Reception - mail@piquenewsmagazine.com Office and Accounts Manager HEIDI RODE - hrode@wplpmedia.com Contributors G.D. MAXWELL, GLENDA BARTOSH, LESLIE ANTHONY, ANDREW MITCHELL,
40 MUSEUM MUSINGS Revisiting the Whistler Mountain of 50 years ago.
ALISON TAYLOR, VINCE SHULEY Founding Publishers KATHY & BOB BARNETT Pique Newsmagazine (a publication of Pacific Coastal Publishing Limited Partnership, a division of Glacier Media) distributed to over 150 locations from Squamish to D’arcy. The entire contents of Pique Newsmagazine are copyright 2023 by Pique Newsmagazine (a publication of WPLP, a division of Glacier Media). No portion may be reproduced in whole or in part by any means, including electronic retrieval systems, without the express written permission of the Publisher.
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In no event shall unsolicited material subject this publication to any claim or fees. Copyright in letters and other (unsolicited) materials submitted and accepted for publication remains with the author but the publisher and its licensees may freely reproduce them in print, electronic or other forms. Letters to the Editor must contain the author’s name, address and daytime telephone number. Maximum length is 250 words. We reserve the right to edit, condense or reject any contribution. Letters reflect the opinion of the writer and not that of Pique Newsmagazine. Pique Newsmagazine is a member of the National Newsmedia Council, which is an independent organization established to deal with acceptable journalistic practices and ethical behaviour. If you have concerns about editorial content, please contact (edit@ piquenewsmagazine.com). If you are not satisfied with the response and wish to file a formal complaint, visit the web site at mediacouncil. ca or call toll-free 1-844-877-1163 for additional information. This organization replaces the BC Press council (and any mention of it).
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OPENING REMARKS
The Sea to Sky Conservation Officer Service has a staffing problem THERE HAS LONG BEEN an entrenched belief among a not insignificant portion of the Whistler community that calling the Conservation Office Service (COS) over a pesky bear will almost certainly lead to the animal’s killing.
BY BRANDON BARRETT There is plenty to question in how the COS manages bears, but I’m not one who assumes conservation officers get into this career to kill animals. The numbers locally appear to back this up as well. Data obtained last year through a Freedom of Information request by wildlife advocacy group The Fur-Bearers showed that, provincewide, the number of black bears killed in B.C. had remained relatively consistent since 2015, hovering between 415 and 632 deaths per year. While certain communities, such as Prince George and 100 Mile House, were seeing outsized numbers of bears killed compared to the rest of B.C., Whistler, one of 10 certified BearSmart communities in the province, has trended in the opposite direction. Bear killings in the resort have been on a steady downswing since at least 2015, when eight bears were killed, down to a low of two bears in 2021, the last year covered by the Freedom of Information request. That’s in spite of millions of curious visitors to Whistler and literally thousands of calls from the Sea to Sky to the COS in a given year. According to B.C.’s environment ministry, this year so far, Sea to Sky residents
have called the COS’ Report All Poachers and Polluters hotline more than 4,000 times over human-wildlife conflict. Whistler and the rest of the corridor should take a considerable share of the credit for this decline, with the persistent, yearslong messaging around securing attractants and giving bears the space they need clearly having its intended effect. But the relatively low numbers of bear killings points to evidence that conservation officers aren’t as trigger-happy as some make them out to be. The more glaring issue at the heart of the COS’s approach to wildlife is an altogether simpler one: resourcing. The province of B.C. counts 143 sworn conservation officers posted to 45 communities. Just five of those are
that averages to 400 calls a month, or about 13 calls a day. Of course, it’s reasonable to assume a good portion of those calls don’t require attendance by an officer, but even if a small fraction of them do, how are we expected to believe the COS is equipped to deal with wildlife in a timely manner that will be what’s best for both the animal and the public at large? The COS often talks up the value of calling its RAPP line early, to give officers enough time to intervene before an animal’s behaviour requires them to resort to lethal measures. As we well know in Whistler, the most serious wildlife encounters are often measured in a matter of moments, not hours or days, and if there’s even one call in another
this writing, get set to welcome more than 1,000 trick-or-treaters and their families to the neighbourhood to celebrate Halloween. In an Oct. 27 wildlife alert, the Resort Municipality of Whistler (RMOW) said the COS had captured and relocated the grizzly. Then, on Halloween, the environment ministry put out a statement, based on info from the COS, confirming the bear was back in the area just days after been relocated. Historically speaking, the COS was usually a phone call away, and while they didn’t always get back to us right away, you always knew someone would eventually. More recently, the Crown agency has been filtering all of its communications either through the Ministry of Environment or the RMOW, adding even
As we well know in Whistler, the most serious wildlife encounters are often measured in a matter of moments, not hours or days, and if there’s even one call in another Sea to Sky community taking up officers’ attention, there’s a good chance by the time they attend the call ... the opportunity to intervene has long since passed. committed to the Sea to Sky region—which, by the COS’ definition, stretches from North Van to Pemberton—but that doesn’t necessarily mean all five of those officers are working on a given day. A ministry spokesperson explained to Pique the number of officers on duty depends on a variety of factors, such as days off, leave allotments, training requirements, and more. So, going by the COS’ own figures, let’s do a bit of napkin math here: At roughly 4,000 calls to the COS from the Sea to Sky this year,
Sea to Sky community taking up officers’ attention, there’s a good chance by the time they attend the call, if they even make it there at all, the opportunity to intervene has long since passed. As Pique has written about in this space before, the COS’ lack of physical presence hasn’t been bolstered of late with robust communication to the public. Take the grizzly recently spotted around Myrtle Philip Community School, raising concern for Tapley’s residents as they, at the time of
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more time and bureaucracy to what should amount to simple and direct messaging to the public, messaging, it should be reiterated, that is directly connected to this community’s safety. Of course it also means the COS doesn’t have to answer direct questions about its tactics, or, indeed, its staffing levels. Wherever you stand on the debate around the COS’ reliance on lethal measures in dealing with bears, there’s no debating the agency has a serious staffing problem that doesn’t serve wildlife or the public it has sworn to protect. ■
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LETTERS TO THE EDITOR Vail Resorts did trail-running community dirty Reading Pique and listening to the general opinions of residents in the Sea to Sky, it’s easy to get fatigued with the constant Vail Resorts bashing about lift ticket prices and the quality of the cinnamon rolls, etc. All said and done, Whistler IS an unbelievable place to ski and mountain bike, and what isn’t expensive these days? This week, though, I think Vail took it too far. According to his blog, Vail shafting Coast Mountain Trail Running (CMTR) and Gary Robbins, the figurehead of the tightknit trail-running community, in such a crafty and deceitful way, is lower than a snake’s belly and downright cowardly. While it might seem redundant, adding fuel to the fire of Vail haters, this latest move necessitates big community action. By this I mean, we should partake in a total boycott of the UTMB race and the Everest race, including no volunteering, promotion, or sponsorship. Vail can staff their races, and the Fairmont can provide the gluttony, but locals, runners, and Whistler-based businesses should support the local race and, in doing so, support the many not-for-profits that CMTR donates a portion of race fees to. From Manchester to San Francisco and beyond, I’ve had people revere Robbins and the team at CMTR. I’d argue there’s not a place in
A very special thank you to the local businesses that supported this spooktacular event: The Hilton Whistler; Fresh Street Market; Sewak’s Your Independent Grocer; Purebread; Starbucks; Blenz; and Mountain FM. Much appreciation to parent volunteers Wendy Wheeler and Tara Heathcote, makeup artists Oak and Solomon, special effects lighting by Lexan Sancha, and sound technician Hugo. A huge shout-out to the Grade 12s who made it happen—the scare-actors, ticket and bake sale cashiers, set-up crew, and all the students who worked together seamlessly and efficiently to create this memorable event. You were amazing to work with and the future looks bright with your leadership skills. Stay tuned for the Sea to Sky Student Film Fest and grad fashion show coming up in the new year. Christy Craig // Whistler the world where world champions run with people of all abilities, ages, and backgrounds. All of these consistently well-organized and remarkable events are supported by passionate volunteers, illustrating how deep the spirit of genuine community is. The races themselves allow those who live, work, and play on these unceded territories to appreciate our local geographies and their histories. I hope Vail will choose to do better. Lastly, good luck to all the people who run the UTMB and Everest Challenge... I wonder who will hug you when it’s all over?
Tom Barlow // Whistler
A spooky shout-out to the WSS grad class On Oct. 30, the Whistler Secondary School graduating class of 2024 kicked off their fundraising with a haunted house at the high school. I had the privilege of working with student leader Finn Schutter, who coordinated the Grade 12s into pulling together a most frightening haunted house and bake sale that was a smashing success.
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Resort Municipality of Whistler Whistler Village property owners, managers and merchants As the winter season is with us again, we’d like to take this opportunity to remind owners, property managers and merchants of the importance of keeping walkways, roofs, stairs and landings adjacent to their stores and properties free of ice and snow. It is essential that customers and guests visiting our Village feel safe and comfortable in being able to travel freely about the area. You are required to clear snow and ice from walkways, roofs, stairs and landings adjacent to stores and properties by 10 a.m. daily. RMOW Property Maintenance Bylaw No. 810 Get ready for winter by: 1. Stocking up on ice-melting products (not road salt) and shovels 2. Checking the heat tracing on stairs and ramps around your property Thanks in advance for your cooperation. Download the Property Maintenance Bylaw at www.whistler.ca/bylaw in the Frequently Requested Bylaws section.
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RAISE THE ROOF ONLINE AUCTION BY DELTA WHISTLER VILLAGE SUITES IN SUPPORT OF WHISTLER ADAPTIVE SPORTS PROGRAM & BC CHILDREN’S HOSPITAL FOUNDATION
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PIQUE N’ YER INTEREST
The perils of thinking small in Whistler WHISTLER STARTED out as a big idea—a brand new resort in the middle of what was practically nowhere at the time, a summer fishing spot at the end of a gravel road that would be purpose-built to host an Olympic Games… eventually. The village was a big idea, as was the latter merger of Whistler and Blackcomb
BY ANDREW MITCHELL mountain resorts. Thinking big and taking massive risks made this town. Unfortunately, somewhere along the way, we developed a tendency to think smaller, even while our resort town (technically a resort city now) has gotten bigger. There are lots of examples. Millennium Place (now the Maury Young Arts Centre) was originally conceived as a privately funded faith centre backed by the municipality. It is a few rows of seats too small to host profitable theatre productions, movies, concerts and other cultural events. It has its uses, no question, but at 230 seats, it’s a limited cultural resource. We also went small with the library. Taxpayers, outraged by the growing price tag, left the municipality no choice but to
scale back plans and leave the Whistler Museum out of the final project. And while it’s a great facility, we outgrew it almost immediately. Finding a chair to sit and read or a desk to work is always a challenge, especially at this time of year. It took the better part of five years of lobbying to build a turf soccer field and it’s already more or less booked from March to November, while being too singular to host tournaments. The Meadow Park Sports Centre was also a compromise build in its time— probably an amazing venue in its day, but by now it’s much too small for the 26,000-ish people (Whistler’s daily population equivalent) who sleep in the resort at any given time, nearly 14,000 of them permanently, according to the latest census. It was also built north of the village, where the land was at the time, which also happens to be the opposite end of town to where we’re building housing in Cheakamus Crossing. Whistler has a long footprint—the distance from Function Junction to Emerald Estates is about the same distance as the stretch from Park Royal in West Vancouver to the Langara Golf Course at the bottom of Cambie. All this is to hint, broadly, that we’re overdue for something bigger, something central, something that acknowledges our growth, our past mistakes in thinking small,
and our long-term community needs— things for teens, locals and visitors to do; more recreation and more excitement. Before I throw in my two cents, a brief word about golf. I like it, sort of —the first 12 holes are OK. Five hours for a round is much too long. And like most locals, and a good number of our guests, I can’t really afford to do it that often. And while the sport as a whole is drawing new players since the pandemic, the median age of golfers in the U.S. is 54 (or it was in 2019) and more than 75 per cent of players were older than 45. It’s also summer only, daytime only, with space for a limited number of people to play rounds on any given day. It begs the question whether this is the best use of land. And do we really need three of them? I’m talking about downsizing the Whistler Golf Club, which is as central as locations get. It’s probably the only land available to build a big idea, something that could provide year-round entertainment and recreation for locals and visitors, morning and night. I’m talking about a new community centre. A hockey arena with seating for 4,000 to 5,000 that’s able to host concerts, trade shows, and has a BCHL hockey team to cheer on. A decent pool complex with waterslides, diving boards and platforms, a lap pool, a kids play area, a good-sized lazy river, and more—maybe even a small
wave pool or standing wave. A bigger fitness centre with a running track that could go all the way around the outside of the arena. A curling rink. Some housing—mostly for BCHL players—but also for people working at the facility. Outside there could be pickleball and tennis courts, possibly on turf, possibly also in a bubble so it could be used for indoor soccer. It wouldn’t be hard to add an outdoor hockey rink and basketball court. And the best part is that it would take up a small part of the existing course footprint; there would still be more than enough room to rebuild the remainder into a world-class executive par 3 golf course that anyone could afford to play and where you could finish a round in two hours or less. That course could be converted into snow biking trails in the winter months. It wouldn’t be cheap—$100 million, easily. We would have to borrow a good chunk of that and pay it back to the province over decades. Property taxes would need to go up. It also won’t be easy, as locals tend to bristle at investing in anything but housing these days. Some people also seem to like golf. But I also think something on this scale needs to happen. At build-out, we will have well over 65,000 people in the resort on any given Saturday, which is the size of Prince George. We need more places to go and things to do. n
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NEWS WHISTLER
Feds splash almost $2 million on tourism-related projects in the Sea to Sky FUNDING INCLUDES $500K FOR WHISTLER SPORT LEGACIES TO DEVELOP ITS NEW CAMPGROUND AT OLYMPIC PARK
BY SCOTT TIBBALLS THE FEDERAL government has dished out $1.9 million to a suite of tourism-related projects in the Sea to Sky corridor. “Through projects like these, we are committed to growing our local economy, creating jobs, and attracting the world to Canada’s adventure playground,” said Sea to Sky MP Patrick Weiler in an Oct. 27 release. In total, 11 projects will receive funding from two sources: $1.4 million from the Canada Community Revitalization Fund going towards four projects, and $500,000 from the Tourism Relief Fund to another seven projects. From the Community Revitalization Fund, $500,000—the largest single funding amount—went to the Whistler 2010 Sport Legacies Society for its new camping and RV park in Whistler Olympic Park, which opened in July. Society president and CEO Roger Soane said the federal funding will allow the
BUDGET BOOST MP Patrick Weiler at KIND Yoga in Squamish announcing close to $2 million in federal funds for tourism-related projects in the Sea to Sky. PHOTO COURTESY OF PATRICK WEILER
14 NOVEMBER 3, 2023
organization to broaden its camping offerings in the summer months. “Obviously, as a non-profit organization, we’re trying to diversify our organization so we are less reliant on funding and more reliant on generated revenues,” he said. “[Whistler Olympic] Park is a great winter operation and we’ve been doing very well with our winter
pleased with the first couple of months.” The Resort Municipality of Whistler (RMOW) received $142,416 in funding to go towards revitalizing pedestrian infrastructure at Whistler Olympic Plaza and the Ted Nebbeling Bridge in the village. From the Tourism Relief Fund stream, the Spearhead Huts Society will receive $99,999,
“Sometimes public sector grants are a lot of hoops to jump through, but we were so glad we took the initiative and applied for this grant.” - IAN LOWE
program, [but] we wanted to open the park more over summer.” The campsite, with 20 tent pads and 22 spaces for RV campers, was operating at around 80-per-cent capacity for the two and a half months it was open, said Soane, who added that it was 100-per-cent full on weekends. “‘That was with very little advertising,” he said. “It was a soft opening because we wanted to see how things would go [and] we were very
which will help build a well and install solar power at the Kees and Claire Memorial Hut. Most of the $500,000 in Tourism Relief Fund money went to groups in Squamish; of the seven projects listed, five are in or near Squamish, with activities ranging from yoga to axe throwing. One of the local groups to receive funding was the Squamish Off Road Cycling Association (SORCA), which was allocated
$67,250 to revitalize trail infrastructure and build new trails. Executive director of SORCA, Ian Lowe, said the association was delighted to receive the funding. “Sometimes public sector grants are a lot of hoops to jump through, but we were so glad we took the initiative and applied for this grant,” he said. The funding, which came through last year for 2023 operations, was split between supporting a new trail crew, and building two new trails: Cardrona (opened early in the 2023 season) and Miki’s Extension (due to be opened any time now), both of which are to the east of Alice Lake. Miki’s Extension doubles as an adaptive trail. “When we built Miki’s, it wasn’t necessarily built for adaptive riders’ needs in mind, but we learned we had built an incredibly fun bike trail for adaptive riders. So, when we built Miki’s Extension, we did it through the lens of making it equally as much for two wheels as it would be for four wheels or three wheels depending on the adaptive rider’s needs,” said Lowe. Funding was also allocated to Sloquet Hot Springs for campground upgrades, and to Tourism Pemberton for the revitalization of backcountry infrastructure. n
NEWS WHISTLER
Action4Canada looks to set up Whistler chapter
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RIGHTWING CHRISTIAN GROUP SAW SPARSE ATTENDANCE AT FIRST MEETING AT WHISTLER’S CATHOLIC CHURCH
BY BRANDON BARRETT A RIGHTWING CHRISTIAN group that describes itself as a grassroots movement dedicated to protecting “faith, family and freedom” in Canada held its first meeting locally last week, as it looks to set up a Whistler chapter. Held at Our Lady of the Mountain Catholic Church, Action4Canada saw low turnout at its inaugural Whistler meeting last Thursday, Oct, 26, with six people in attendance, along with local organizer Christine Mortimer. While the group touches on a wide range of issues, from the supposed risks of 5G technology to its staunch anti-vaccine stance to its fears over the “radical and violent nature of Islamic ideology,” most of the discussion at Thursday’s meeting—which Pique attended— surrounded Canada’s Sexual Orientation and Gender Identity (SOGI 123) resource that has drawn the ire of a range of alt-right populists. Designed to help educators make schools more inclusive and safe for students of all sexual orientations and gender identifies, SOGI 123 and the teaching of so-called “gender ideology” is viewed by Action4Canada and other groups like it as actively harming Canadian children. “The Canadian government, as well as the education system, has been infiltrated by radical LGBTQ activists who are using the SOGI 123 resource to promote homosexuality and transgender ideology, and normalize sexual deviancy,” a pamphlet distributed at last week’s meeting reads. Jackie Dickinson, executive director of the Whistler Community Services Society, which offers a range of LGBTQ+-inclusive programming, including its Healthy Choices program delivered in local schools, said that at the heart of SOGI 123 is the goal of fostering a sense of safety and inclusion for all students. “It cultivates a sense of belonging. That’s exactly what the SOGI curriculum emphasises: that all students, regardless of sexual orientation or gender identity, belong and they can safely ask questions and express themselves in a safe space,” she said. “When you walk in these doors and enter these spaces, you are welcome any way you are.” Local Action4Canada organizer Mortimer, a mother of two children, aged 17 and 21, argued that matters of sex and sexual health are better left for the home, not school. “That education should start at home with parents who are tapped into their kids and the age they’re at. It’s going back to the responsibility of the parents to care for their children and understand them enough to know what phase they’re in and what they’re going through.” she said, stressing that she’s speaking on her own behalf, not neccessarily for Action4Canada. Reached for comment, a spokesperson for School District 48 provided the following statement: “We encourage folks to check out SOGI FAQs for Parent/Caregivers on our website if they’d like to learn more about SOGI-inclusive education in SD48. Parents are
also always welcome to speak with their child’s teacher or school principal with specific questions about their child’s education.”
LIL’WAT NATION, RMOW RESPOND
Action4Canada has come under fire recently from First Nations groups across the country that have vehemently opposed founder Tanya Gaw’s stance on Indigenous rights and Canada’s efforts towards Truth and Reconciliation. In an Oct. 12 post on social-media platform, X, Gaw wrote: “It’s time to pull the plug and end the charade of the Truth and Reconciliation witch hunt. The graves are empty and Indigenous violence is their own doing!” The tweet drew swift backlash from the Tseshaht First Nation in Port Alberni, where Gaw had a speaker event scheduled at a local restaurant that was ultimately cancelled. In a statement, acting Lil’wat Chief Sík Sík Joshua Anderson condemned Gaw’s comments and Whistler’s Catholic church for hosting last week’s event. “The Lil’wat Nation cannot believe that the Catholic Church would allow this event to occur during a time of Truth and Reconciliation. Providing a platform for a group that denies the well-documented atrocities of residential schools is unbelievable,” the statement read in part. Referring specifically to Gaw’s tweet, Anderson said it “should be more than enough for [the church] to know better and be better. We call upon the leaders of Whistler to examine tax exemptions for the Church if they are promoting a denialist political agenda. This has no place in today’s age of Reconciliation.” In his own statement to Pique, Whistler Mayor Jack Crompton reiterated the RMOW’s commitment to “ensuring our history of colonialism and residential schools is not ignored or made invisible,” he wrote. “I do not believe the position being taken by this group represents our community values.” Crompton also highlighted the RMOW’s new permissive tax policy, “which will allow the municipality to evaluate applications moving forward and bring a measured and thorough process to each decision. This is our best approach to ensuring those we grant tax exemptions to engage in value-aligned work and provide space for the conversations needed to make these important assessments.” When reached by email, Father Andrew L’Heureux of Our Lady of the Mountains declined comment, explaining he doesn’t “feel your paper has the ability to communicate what I would want to say. I know I would not be given editorial rights to ensure what was quoted on would be used correctly so I am not interested in commenting.” A handful of Our Lady of the Mountains parishioners defected last year over the church’s $5-million plans to construct a new building, as well as its courting of Californiabased traditionalist Catholic group, The Napa Institute, formed in 2010 to combat what it sees as the secularization of American society. n
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NEWS WHISTLER
Whistler approves new hostel for Nordic Drive THE NEW 22-DORMITORY HOSTEL WILL HAVE CAPACITY FOR 42 SINGLE BEDS AND SIX DOUBLE BEDS
BY SCOTT TIBBALLS THE RESORT Municipality of Whistler (RMOW) has issued a development permit for a new hostel in Nordic. Located on Nordic Drive, the budgetfriendly, three-storey hostel from proponents and long-time locals Chris Pelz and Angela Perzow has a capacity of 42 single beds and six double beds contained within 22 dormitories, along with plans for a common kitchen and gathering area, sauna, hot tub, laundry and underground parking. The RMOW’s advisory design panel had requested some parking be removed in favour of exterior landscaping, and for the addition of bike parking for short-term visitors: both recommendations the applicant agreed to. As the proposal stands, it exceeds municipal parking requirements, with 25 stalls on the lot, divided between eight underground spots and 17 in an exterior carpark. During discussion and questions, Councillor Cathy Jewett acknowledged the importance of providing short-term accommodation to those that move to Whistler as they are trying to get established. “It’s bringing new life to people arriving in town, because it’s a really tough thing for people to find a place to stay short-term so
$3,150,000 3
HOSTEL HAVEN Whistler officials recently approved a development permit for a new 22-dorm hostel planned for Nordic Drive. PHOTO BY SCOTT TIBBALLS
they can get on their feet and find a place to live, which is another thing we’re trying to solve,” she said. “This is a really great asset, and I hope that those people are the ones that get to use it.” Coun. Ralph Forsyth said it was
“encouraging to see there’s a business case to be made for youth hostels. “I am glad someone’s reinvesting in hostels because they’re an essential part of the community.” Coun. Jen Ford indicated she was
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initially uneasy with the proposal, especially considering Whistler’s need for purposebuilt affordable housing. “We wouldn’t be clamouring to support new hotels,” she said. “We’re not being asked to build new hotels; we’re being asked to build housing for people who live here and work here.” But, she added, while the proposed hostel doesn’t directly address those housing concerns, she felt the proposal was acceptable because it was part of the “continuum of housing” for newcomers that move to the area, while expressing reservations about the enforceability of the RMOW’s short-term accommodation zoning requirements. Mayor Jack Crompton said he was grateful to see the lot being rebuilt as a hostel. “My understanding is we see a lot of gentrification towards big single-family homes that sit empty, and this won’t be that. So, I’m grateful that the owners have brought back something that could see the same sort of energy and use that has marked this town for a very long time.” The development permit from the RMOW came with some strings attached around landscaping, along with conditions requiring the development to have a driveway width of six metres for its entire length. The driveway was noted in the report to be a challenge due to the site elevation, and the required length of the driveway access from Nordic Dr. n
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NEWS WHISTLER
Sea to Sky MP breaks with Liberals in calling for ceasefire in Gaza PATRICK WEILER WAS ONE OF 33 MPS THAT SIGNED LETTER DEMANDING CANADA LOBBY FOR CEASEFIRE AND HUMANITARIAN CORRIDOR PIQUE: Why did you decide to sign this letter?
BY BRANDON BARRETT SEA TO SKY MP Patrick Weiler has joined 32 other Members of Parliament who have signed a letter demanding Canada call for an immediate ceasefire and establishment of a humanitarian corridor in the ongoing IsraelHamas war, breaking with his Liberal Party on an issue that has divided political parties across the country. In the letter, addressed to Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, federal officials condemn the killing of more than 1,400 innocent Israeli civilians by Hamas in the shocking attacks of Oct. 7, and call for the release of the more than 200 hostages still under the terrorist group’s control. Israel has responded with colossal force, showering the Gaza Strip with rockets and in recent days launching a ground offensive. More than 8,300 Palestinians have so far been killed, according to the Hamas-controlled Gaza Health Ministry, most of whom it says are women and children. Pique caught up with Weiler to discuss the letter, his push for a ceasefire, and what comes next. The following interview has been edited for length and clarity. To read the Q&A in full, visit piquenewsmagazine.com.
WEILER: Like everybody else, it’s hard to look at what’s happening, first in Israel and now in Gaza, and not be absolutely horrified and heartbroken. From seeing the absolutely horrific and barbaric terrorist attack that Hamas carried out on Israeli civilians to now seeing a brutal war being waged in Palestine. It’s absolutely tragic, and in Canada, we have an important role to play as a country that helped craft international law, particularly humanitarian law. I think right now we have a very important role in ensuring international law is followed, to make sure we do everything we can to protect civilian life, whether that’s in Israel or in Palestine, where there is a humanitarian disaster that is quickly worsening. Four-hundred Canadians are stuck in Gaza right now, and we have a responsibility to protect them and get them to safety. We didn’t see any way to get around this other than to have a ceasefire. You went against party lines to sign this letter. Do you think there is political risk involved with you taking this position? There’s always political risk in anything you do, particularly on an issue like this where
people have very strongly held views. I think there’s also a risk in not taking a position on something as important as this. In all this, this isn’t about taking Israel’s side or Palestine’s side. This is about valuing human life, and that’s what this is really about. I firmly believe this is not just in the best interest of Palestinians; I think it’s in the best interest of Israelis and in the best interest of Canada to be calling for peace. It’s something we have a very proud legacy of in Canada.
is watching on these matters. At the end of the day, I think the idea that Hamas can be dismantled and destroyed and that somehow Israel is going to be safer as a result of that in the long term, I disagree with that being the likely scenario. What I think we will see with this is tens of thousands of civilians that are going to be killed in the process, and the views people hold of the Israeli military and government are only going to harden. We’ve seen this play out in other wars and invasions over the last 20 years.
Do you believe there is a way to eradicate Hamas while avoiding the level of civilian deaths we’ve seen to this point in Gaza?
What do you see as the next step following a ceasefire?
I think it’s possible, but it’s not only possible, it’s necessary, To be in compliance with international law, there’s a duty on states to take positive steps to protect civilians, and ensure that civilians can never be targets. I’m very alarmed to see things like schools and hospitals being bombed. There’s also international rules against using excessive force and a requirement of proportionality. It is well accepted that collective punishment of civilians is not in accordance with international law, and these are principles the Israel government needs to take seriously and the international community needs to remind them the world
Self-determination for Palestinians has to be a long-term goal in this, and that’s well accepted in international law, and was well accepted at the creation of Israel in the first place. The long-term solution … is having an independent Palestinian state living peacefully side by side with an Israeli state. The borders have been decided on that, and there obviously have been new [Israeli] settlements and advancements into occupied territories that would need to be discussed, but the long-term solution has to be a political one. Ideally, the end goal would be kept in mind before starting this type of military action; I’m not sure it has been. Without that, I fear the cycle of violence is likely to continue. n
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NEWS WHISTLER
SLCC Ambassadors take home Citizen of the Year honours at Whistler Excellence Awards THE RESORT’S BEST AND BRIGHTEST WERE CELEBRATED AT THE WHISTLER CHAMBER-PRODUCED GALA ON OCT. 25
BY BRANDON BARRETT WHISTLER has a new Citizen of the Year—in fact, it has several of them. The Indigenous Ambassadors at Whistler’s First Nations museum, the Squamish Lil’wat Cultural Centre (SLCC), took home the honour at the 2023 Whistler Excellence Awards, held Wednesday, Oct. 25 at the Fairmont. “The Indigenous Ambassadors at the Squamish Lil’wat Cultural Centre have been citizens of this land long before Whistler was a town. Whether they are giving guided tours, curating the next museum exhibit, teaching their languages, sharing traditional foods, or caretaking for the business and building, the SLCC Ambassadors give an immeasurable amount of inspiration and belonging to future generations of Indigenous Youth, while beckoning people from all over the world to see Indigenous peoples in a more fulfilling and powerful light,” read the nomination entry for the Ambassador team. The Ambassador Program is an immersive, 14-week cultural and business program that teaches the foundations of business through the lens of a First Nations museum, and is open to Indigenous youth and young adults
between 16 and 30 years old. The other nominees for Citizen of the Year were Brandi Higgins, long-time Whistlerite and coach with the Whistler Sea Wolves Swim Club, who has been “pivotal in assisting athletes of diverse needs, abilities, and ages achieve their aquatic goals,” her nomination entry read; as well as Carol Leacy, co-founder of Whistler 360 Health and chair of the Whistler Health Care Foundation, who has been instrumental in the development of the resort’s new primary care health model, overseen by Whistler 360. Whistler 360 Health was also named the Emerging Business of the Year, with Forecast Coffee and Creekside Health rounding out the list of nominees for the award. Jackie Dickinson, executive director of the Whistler Community Services Society, socialservice provider and operator of the Whistler Food Bank, took home the Business Person of the Year award. Starting with the non-profit in 2009, Dickinson eventually worked her way up to the director role, and, in 2022, she and her WCSS team were recognized, in partnership with local health-care and community service providers, with the Rural Coordination Centre of BC’s Community Health Award for their outstanding response to COVID-19. Tourism Whistler president and CEO Barrett
Fisher and Pepe Barajas, Infinity Enterprise Group founder and restaurateur behind The Mexican Corner, La Cantina, Rockit Coffee, and more, were also nominated in the category. In the Innovative Business of the Year category, Navio Immigration (formerly Whistler Immigration) took home the top honours, with Whistler Blackcomb and Prior Snowboards also nominated. Vintage and second-hand clothing retailer The Velvet Underground received the Sustainability in Action Business Award, given to a local business that has demonstrated considerable positive impact in advancing sustainability in their company, sector and wider community. Also nominated were plant-based eatery Naked Sprout Café and sustainable home builder, GNAR Inc. In the Whistler Champion of Arts & Culture category, which recognizes an individual or organization (in alternating years) that has contributed significantly to the development arts and culture locally, events industry veteran Kristen Robinson received the top honour. Affectionately known as “KR,” Robinson has had a hand in programming many of Whistler’s most popular arts and music events, including the World Ski & Snowboard Festival, Crankworx, the Whistler Summer Concert Series and Whistler Live!—
the resort’s 27-day live site program held during the 2010 Winter Olympics. Contemporary artist, creative event manager and art instructor Andrea Mueller, and multi-instrumentalist, vocalist and musical event host Monty Biggins were also nominees in the category. In the Rising Start of the Year category, which recognizes a local businessperson making an impact beyond their years, Fairmont Chateau Whistler’s special events manager, city director for WNORTH’s Whistler chapter, and figure skating coach Katia Barton took home the honours. Lizi McLoughlin, Zero Ceiling’s new co-executive director, and Lisa Coulter, the Whistler Community Services Society’s director of social services, were fellow nominees. Meanwhile, Quattro Restaurant won the Service Excellence award for large businesses, given to a local business with 35 or more employees that has shown industry-leading service delivery. The Four Seasons Resort and the Fairmont Chateau Whistler Golf Club were also nominated. In the Service Excellence: Small Business category, cocktail bar The Raven Room won the top accolade, while Whistler Valley Tours and Sierra Window & Property Services made up the other nominees. n
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WEDN ESDAY N OV 15
Fitness Class: Full Body H.I.I.T. 11:45am-12:45pm • Meadow Park Sports Centre
Join us for a week filled with fun, social, NO COST activities designed to help everyone in our community get better acquainted with why they live here.
With emphasis on form, the aim of this class is to encourage you to love moving your body. FCFS.
Toxic Drug Prevention Luncheon Noon-1pm • Whistler Community Services Society
Respectfully taking place on the unceded traditional territories of Sk̲wx̲wú7mesh Nation and Líl̓wat Nation.
MO NDAY N OV 1 3
Whistler Museum’s Guided Walking Tour 11am-12pm • Whistler Visitor Centre Uncover Whistler’s history from the tales behind the mountain development and the stories of Whistler’s journey to the 2010 Olympic and Paralympic Winter Games. Tours are led by a Whistler local, each with their own personal knowledge of Whistler’s story to add. Registration req’d.
Pizza Party 5-7pm • Maury Young Arts Centre Downstairs at LUNA A chance to connect with new and long term community members and win awesome prizes. Registration req’d.
TU ES DAY N OVEMB ER 14
Whistler Museum’s Guided Walking Tour 11am-12pm • Whistler Visitor Centre If you missed the walking tour on Monday, be sure to check it out today! Registration req’d.
Whistler 101: Indigenous Peoples 4-5pm • Squamish Lil’wat Cultural Centre Learn about the history, language, and culture of the Squamish Nation and Lil’wat Nation with Mixalhíts̓a7, Alison Pascal, Curator of the Squamish Lil’wat Cultural Centre. Registration req’d.
DodgeBall 8-10pm • Myrtle Philip Community School
Presented by Late & Unique Nighttime Activities (LUNA). Wear your shorts and headbands, It’s Dodgeball time! Bring a team, a friend, or come solo! Registration req’d.
Presented by WCSS. Learn about harm reduction while enjoying a delicious lunch. Try our drug checking machine and receive Naloxone training. FREE take home Naloxone kit & fentanyl test strip. Registration req’d.
Ambassadors. View artifacts and hear stories that give an overview of the past and present way of life of the Squamish and Lil’wat peoples. Registration req’d.
Fitness Class: Strong Core & Glutes 1-2pm • Meadow Park Sports Centre Focusing on these strong foundations to promote healthy glutes and an active core, mobile hips, aiding injury prevention and making gains! FCFS.
Drag Bingo 7-9pm • Whistler Public Library Featuring six rounds of nail-biting, edge-of-your-seat bingo, plus comedy and incredible drag performances by Squamish Bingo Queen, Sativa the Diva. Registration req’d.
And while you’re here, check out the Re-Use-It Centre, Whistler’s favourite non-profit thrift store!
Backcountry Skiing and Avalanche Awareness 7-9pm • Maury Young Arts Centre Presented by Mountain Skills Adventure Academy and supported by the Friends of the Library. A must for backcountry explorers. You could win a MSAA AST 1 Course. Registration req’d. THU R SDAY N OV 16
Museum Tour: Squamish Lil’wat Cultural Centre 1-2pm • Squamish Lil’wat Cultural Centre Our signature tour, “What We Treasure”, delivered by Cultural
F RI DAY N OV 1 7
Guided Tour: Audain Art Museum 11:15am-12:15pm • Audain Art Museum An intimate look at Audain’s permanent collection of BC art. Registration req’d.
Polar Dip 1-3pm • Lost Lake Park Presented by LUNA. Brave souls can take the freezing plunge! Registration req’d.
Fitness Class: Zumba 2:30-3:30pm • Meadow Park Sports Centre An exhilarating, efficient, easy-tofollow, Latin inspired dance fitnessparty™. FCFS. Schedule is subject to change.
The more events you attend the better chances to win some AWESOME prizes including a Whistler-Blackcomb Season’s Pass, Ziptrek Adventure package, a Go Pro and more! To register for all events please visit wcss.com/connectwhistler or scan the QR code.
NEWS WHISTLER
RMOW says it ready for accelerated EV targets MUNICIPALITY SAYS IT IS FUTURE-PROOFED FOR BC’S PLANS TO REQUIRE ALL NEW VEHICLES BE ZERO-EMISSIONS BY 2035
BY SCOTT TIBBALLS LAST WEEK, the provincial government introduced legislation that will prod along zero-emissions vehicle (ZEV) adoption at a faster rate in B.C. than it already has, with amendments accelerating sale and lease requirements by five years. Under the legislation introduced Oct. 24, automakers are under the gun, with the requirement that all sales and leases of new cars be made up of ZEVs rocketing all the way to 100 per cent by 2035. The legislation moves up the sales requirements by five years, superceding previous plans by Victoria to meet the target by 2040. Uptake of electric vehicles in B.C. has been ahead of the rest of Canada for some years, with the most recent numbers from the province saying there are almost 130,000 registered ‘light duty’ (passenger) electric vehicles now, compared to only 5,000 in 2016. ZEVs need infrastructure though, and according to the Resort Municipality of Whistler (RMOW), it has plans to ensure it can both meet its own vehicle adoption while also supporting more widespread ZEV use in the community under the accelerated timeline.
The RMOW adopted its EV strategy recently, which includes action items to encourage greater access to EV charging at residents’ homes, expand the public charging network, and speed up the RMOW’s adoption of EVs in its own municipal fleet.
installed in Day Skier Lot 4, with more to come in other key locations like Bayley Park in Cheakamus Crossing.” According to the RMOW, the strategy adopted in June 2022 was future-proofed enough to account for fast uptake in the community.
“Whistler is a four-season resort that receives over 3 million visitors annually and is also a drivable market to regions of B.C. with the highest EV adoption rates.” - RESORT MUNICIPALITY OF WHISTLER
“One of the initiatives outlined in Whistler’s EV Strategy is expansion of the municipal EV charging network,” said a municipal communications official when asked about whether the new provincial legislation changed the timeline for the RMOW. “The RMOW will be installing 42 new Level 2 and Level 3 chargers, now through 2025. You may have seen the 10 new chargers
“The CleanBC Roadmap to 2030 detailed new light-duty ZEV sales targets in line with the amendments to the ZEV Act, and these targets were used to forecast anticipated future public charging infrastructure needs in Whistler,” the municipality said. “Whistler is a four-season resort that receives over 3 million visitors annually and is also a drivable market to regions of
B.C. with the highest EV adoption rates. All these factors were considered in the Whistler EV strategy, which positions us well for the accelerated adoption of ZEVs. Another major consideration for the RMOW is its own fleet; local governments replace their fleets on a rolling basis as vehicles reach the end of their operational lives. Whistler council will be considering a Corporate Greenhouse Gas Reduction Plan in December that will include a specific ZEV fleet procurement plan that, if adopted, would bake in a long-term adoption plan for the municipality. The RMOW already requires vehicle suppliers to provide electric options for vehicle classes the municipality wants to purchase, with the procurement procedure guidelines specifying that “environmental impact will be considered when purchasing products and services known to contribute to greenhouse gas emissions, energy/fuel consumption, air pollution, water contamination, landfill accumulation, or human toxicity.” Under the current plans, capable and allseason EV options “receive a higher scoring in [RMOW] evaluations.” As of October 2023, the RMOW’s fleet of vehicles includes six battery electric vehicles, two plug-in hybrids and nine hybrids, with plans for more to be added in the next year. n
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NEWS PEMBERTON
Lil’wat Nation teenager builds pithouse using traditional skills EIGHTEEN-YEAR-OLD TALON PASCAL IS NOW DETERMINED TO PASS ON HIS SKILLS TO FAMILY AND FRIENDS SO THE TRADITION CAN BE PRESERVED
BY RÓISÍN CULLEN Local Journalism Initiative Reporter “THE OPENING at the top of the larger houses was approximately four feet by six feet, but the rain and snow never went inside because the fire was directly below. In the meadow, the housepits were quite shallow to avoid hitting water. Once the pit was dug, logs were laid horizontally across the ground, surrounding the four sides of the hole. At each end of the logs, a notch was burnt in, using hot rocks, so that the next log would fit snugly into place. More logs were placed on top and eventually the top became smaller, as shorter logs were used. The smoke-hole was also the entrance. At the highest point, the winter house was between eight and nine feet above ground. Then cedar planks were cut or split from wind-falls and placed over the logs. The cracks were filled with cedar bark, and the house was covered with dirt.” That was Charlie Mack’s description of the pit-house (istken) he built, as captured in the 2010 book, The Lil’wat World of Charlie Mack. Born in 1899, Mack was a talented Lil’wat storyteller, an experienced trapper, and a man determined to share the knowledge he had gathered in his lifetime. Decades after his death, an 18-year-old
IN THE HOUSE The interior of a traditional istken, or pithouse, built by Lil’wat teen Talon Pascal. PHOTO COURTESY OF TALON PASCAL
24 NOVEMBER 3, 2023
Lil’wat man from Mount Currie decided to build his own pithouse based on Mack’s short description. An archaeology student at Simon Fraser University, Talon Pascal has been interested in the ancient past from a young age. “Unlike a lot of people the same age as me, I actually knew what I wanted to do from a really young age,” said Pascal. “I’m glad because it made everything easier. I knew what to prepare for. I knew what I had to
and my high school buddies,” he said. “We were hiking up one of our favourite trails and there’s a really nice flat spot there. My dad was always saying that it would be a good place to build a cabin. I wanted to build a pithouse. We started it years ago, but it was really hard because we were in high school and all my buddies had jobs. It was kind of on and off.” Luckily, Pascal was able to quickly put together the pieces in his head and imagine the finished product. ”The main goal was to
“You get people who still carve totem poles. You get basket makers. I think building a pithouse is the same thing on a much bigger scale.” - TALON PASCAL
do going into it. My main goal was to study prehistory, so before the creation of nations, before the rise of really big civilizations.” Pascal and his brother recently skied down Ts’zil, knwon by settlers as Mount Currie, a journey that was captured in the new documentary film, Slides on the Mountain. (See story on page 25.) When Pascal decided to build a pithouse, it was difficult to find literature on the subject, apart from Mack’s brief passage. “When we first had the idea to build it, it was just me
get a pithouse done in the traditional style that the people here used to do,” he said. “The main inspiration was from the little paragraph in the Charlie Mack book. He was able to explain it in such nice detail with so little words. I can read something and then put it together in my head, the way it would work. When I read that paragraph, I was able to put together in my head how it would look when it was done.” The work of James Teit also helped the young man on his quest for answers. A settler from Scotland’s Shetland Islands,
Teit spent time in Spences Bridge, B.C., northeast of Lytton, and became immersed in Nlaka’pamux traditions, including pithouse building. “He was a late 18th-, early 19th-century ethnographer. He had this whole ethnography written out about almost every aspect of the … lifestyle and how they lived,” Pascal said. Balancing the build with other commitments was a tricky task. Pascal now hopes to use the completed pithouse as a hunting cabin. “Within this last year, I’ve really been trying to put my time into it. I managed to finish it before I went off to university. We would just put it up on Instagram and lots of people would come out to help. Me and my cousin slept in there one weekend,” he said. Pascal understands the vital importance of sharing and possessing these timehonoured skills to his community, just like Charlie Mack before him. “Someone going out and building a pithouse is not something you see every day. We live in modern houses now. We live in apartments, and we have jobs so it’s not necessary. But I still think it’s important because it’s still part of our culture. You get people who still carve totem poles. You get basket makers. I think building a pithouse is the same thing on a much bigger scale,” he said. “It’s something that still needs to be kept alive. I know a handful of people in Mount Currie who still do the bow making, but then again, it’s only a handful of people. I definitely think it’s part of my responsibility to teach others.” n
NEWS PEMBERTON
BROTHERLY LOVE Riki and Talon Pascal, right. PHOTO BY BLAKE JORGENSON
Lil’wat brothers ski down Ts’zil, the mountain they grew up under NEW DOCUMENTARY CAPTURES THE PASCAL BROTHERS ADVENTUROUS FEAT, WHICH SCREENS AS PART OF THE VANCOUVER INTERNATIONAL MOUNTAIN FILM FESTIVAL
BY RÓISÍN CULLEN Local Journalism Initiative Reporter RIKI AND TALON Pascal grew up in the shadow of Ts’zil. Then they skied it. A new film, Slides on the Mountain, depicts the two brothers from Lil’wat Nation’s quest to ski down Ts’zil, known by settlers as Mount Currie, with all screening proceeds going to the Indigenous Life Sport Academy. Sixteen-year-old Riki said he and his brother, 18-year-old Talon, immediately grabbed the opportunity to be involved in the project. “We both kind of jumped at it. We didn’t really think it was going to happen,” he said. “We started training on Whistler Blackcomb. I realized I wasn’t going to be able to ski Mount Currie unless I did more training.” Growing up, Riki often emulated his older brother. “I used to try everything he did until I was about nine or 10,” he said. “Then, I gave up.” As kids, Talon said he and his brother were more focused on having fun on the slopes than the technical aspects of the sport. “We were pretty good skiers,” he said. “Before this, we were never trying to practise technique or anything. It was always just to go up there and have fun. I knew that we definitely needed more training to do something like that. We needed to touch up our skills.” When the boys finally reached the top of the summit, reality kicked in. “I was feeling completely fine until we got into the chute,” said Riki. “I put my skis on and looked down. I just thought, ‘Holy crap, that’s steep.’” Meanwhile, Talon was just ready to get going, as evidenced by the huge smiles the filmmaking crew captured during his descent. “I was excited,” he said. “It was intimidating, but I wasn’t scared or anything like that. It was super exciting to be there.” Talon knew he wanted to ski Ts’zil at some point in his life, but didn’t know it would be
so soon. “I’m not a person that gets all excited about something,” he said. “It felt like an accomplishment. People are always asking me if I would do it again. Yeah, I’d do it again if I had the chance.” Sandy Ward of the Indigenous Life Sport Academy, who co-directed the film alongside Seth Gillis, has been involved with getting First Nations kids on the slopes since she was a kid herself, and supported the Pascal brothers after her partner, ski coach Morgan Fleury, recommended them for the ambitious project. “He was coaching these boys and felt they could do it,” she said. “I rang the boys’ dad, Ryan, and asked for his permission. From that it just snowballed.” Ward was well aware of the dangers that come with this kind of adventure. “People come from all over to ski it, but there’s only a couple of days a year that it’s safe to do so,” she said. “You really need to time it. You need to be aware of the snowpack, the weather that we’ve had and everything to do with the valley.” Ward had been nursing an injury, one that finally got the better of her at the very beginning of the group’s descent. “I was by myself in the couloir on my toe edge, not able to move. It took every bit of strength in me to move to the side and get to the guide. It was sheer pain,” she recalled. “When you put your entire life into something, you want to be there. I saw the boys coming down, making turns and doing it so well. I knew my time had come to leave and they didn’t need me anymore.” The mentor refused to go to the hospital when a helicopter brought her back down to the valley. Instead, she watched in awe as Riki and Talon skied down the mountain they grew up under. Slides on the Mountain screens in-person on Nov. 14 at the Rio Theatre in Vancouver as part of the Vancouver International Mountain Film Festival, and is also available to watch online between noon on Nov. 14 and 11:59 p.m. Dec. 10. Learn more at vimff.org. n
NOVEMBER 3, 2023
25
NEWS PEMBERTON
Pemberton Meadows families say they are living in fear of nearby grizzly SOME PARENTS REPORT MEETING THEIR CHILDREN AT THE BUS WITH GUNS OR TRUCKS IN TOW AFTER A RECENT CLOSE ENCOUNTER
BY RÓISÍN CULLEN Local Journalism Initiative Reporter FAMILIES IN PEMBERTON Meadows say they are living in fear of a nearby grizzly and her cubs after children in the area have reportedly come face to face with the bear while playing outside. Residents say they are worried it is only a matter of time before someone is seriously hurt or killed. Melissa and Bruce Ronayne said their family has been worried about the animal for several years now. “We have a female grizzly here,” said Melissa. “She first came here a few years ago and it was said that her behaviour was strange for a grizzly bear on the valley floor. We were told just to respect her space and leave her alone. Since then, she has raised four cubs. She has no fear of people; neither do her cubs.” The Ronanynes said they have received very little support from the Conservation Officer Service (COS). “If we haze or make loud noises, she doesn’t care,” said Melissa. “It just feels like we are not getting any support from the COS.” The COS did not return a request for comment by press time. Recently, the parents’ fears were exacerbated when their children had a run-in with the grizzly. “I was getting the kids ready
for school and they walked out the door in front of me,” said Melissa. “They went right into the grizzly bear. Luckily, they had just done a bear-spray workshop with Coast to Cascades [an organization dedicated to the recovery of the region’s grizzly population]. They knew enough to stop and back up slowly. I wasn’t too far behind them.” Parents now meet their kids at the bus stop. “Now, one of us has to meet the kids at the bus with a shotgun or a truck,” said Melissa. “She’s always so close to the house. If the kids are in between her and her cubs, then it’s just not a good situation. “ Locals worry the bear has become too habituated to humans. “Because we were told to give her space, she never formed a fear of people,” said Melissa. “They were constantly people parking and taking pictures of her. She got used to vehicles and people being near her at all times.” Melissa is worried someone will get hurt. “There are a lot of us who are afraid up here,” she said. “There are a lot of kids here. How do you just get used to having grizzly bears in your yard at all times?” Susan Hellevang said the family of bears comes onto her property as often as three times a day. “We have the bears here continuously,” she said. “It’s this one family of bears. She has been here three years, and she is on her second set of cubs. She doesn’t
CLOSE ENCOUNTER A grizzly bear and cub photographed by a Pemberton Meadows farmer. PHOTO BY BRUCE RONAYNE
leave the valley floor. My daughter got chased last Friday.” In a statement to Pique, a representative for the Coast to Cascades Grizzly Bear Initiative said the group has been working in the Pemberton Meadows and other areas, collaborating with residents, government and other partners for several years. “We have been making every effort to understand and find solutions to the grizzly bear issues that concern residents in the Meadows area, and we have been doing so at our own expense,” the spokesperson said. “We conducted thorough analyses of bear movements across
the valley, natural, seasonal food sources that bears may have used historically and still do, and human food-based attractants that may lead to unnatural bear behaviours in response to those attractants. Our aim is to allow grizzly bears to move across the Meadows in a way that is safe for both bears and residents. We continue to work with local farmers and other residents to secure attractants that should be off-limits to bears—whether black or grizzly—with electric fencing, proper storage and the provision of educational materials and workshops.” Coast to Cascades stressed that residents need to remove all bear attractants from the area. “There are two outstanding needs that must be addressed to achieve optimal outcomes for both people and bears, with which most folks agree. One is that everyone in the Meadows area must take responsibility to secure their attractants—whether it be carrots, grain bins, garbage or fruit trees. Unfortunately, there are some residents that continue to have unsecured bear attractants and those may be holding bears in the Meadows area.” Coast to Cascades also called for the hiring of a bear management specialist to deal with potential conflict in the region. “Successful coexistence requires compromises from both bears and human inhabitants. This balance has been shown to work in other regions with larger grizzly bear populations than those found in the Meadows area.” n
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27
RANGE ROVER
Paul Morrison: The Money Shot SHORTLY AFTER the final Pleistocene ice sheet melted, Paul Morrison moved to Whistler. He wasn’t first, of course, but part of the initial trickle who eventually made the valley what it is today—an acme and envy among North American ski resorts. As a ski photographer of note, he not only enjoyed helping drive the bus of Whistler notoriety, but holding up a mirror to its careening path.
BY LESLIE ANTHONY I didn’t know much about those halcyon days when I moved to Whistler in December 1999. But like any ski-magazine editor worth his Whistler Blackcomb comp pass, I certainly knew who Paul was. One of a handful of storied names around the light-table at Powder magazine where I worked, Paul’s money shots were a guiding light to what we all sought—the perfect turn in perfect snow and perfect light with friends whom, if not quite as perfect as the conditions, were certainly as good as they came. Long before I met them, folks like Paul were remotely filling my head with an idea of what life could be—and apparently was in Whistler: untouched powderfields and endless on-slope shenanigans amidst soaring peaks and blue-fanged glaciers where fuchsia sunsets and beer bled their last into the snow together. In those analog days of slides, black-andwhite prints and tiny names etched in faint,
MONEYMAKER Whistler photographer Paul Morrison has a knack for being at the right place at the right time to capture the perfect shot. SCREENSHOT COURTESY OF LESLIE ANTHONY
28 NOVEMBER 3, 2023
sic-point type on the corner of a magazine page, it was hard not to imagine these unseen lensmen as ethereal legends somehow borne of the things they portrayed—like some Norse god levitating through the high alpine arenas on their own cloud. The best part of my job was getting to meet and know many of these pseudodeities, having fun together, realizing they were just as human as myself, and becoming friends. I can’t quite remember when I first met Paul—maybe at a ski show, or more likely an editorial turn in Whistler while I was living in California—but by the time I arrived in town on a more-or-less permanent basis, we were
slogan, sticker and T-shirt we came across… skied insanely deep powder in the trees of Niseko… stole Szocs’ shoes and left him asleep in a yurt bar during a snowstorm to find his own way home… drank water from a spray toilet… called each other “dude” with such incessance it persists to this day (at least with Mike, Paul and I)… and dug Ben out of an avalanche in Naeba with injuries severe enough to require both his scalp and chin be sutured back onto his head. For Paul and I, then in our 40s and already the group’s “seniors,” two risible memories lingered: dodging a Colombo-like
Even after decades of crazed, mad-cap missions that scorched retinas with the unfamiliar and caused memory banks to overflow like an overstuffed filing cabinet, this was One of Those Trips. well acquainted. Enough, at least, that we were paired on the first big editorial trip undertaken from my new digs for the soon-to-launch sbcSKIER magazine: a foray to Japan with New Canadian Air Force pilots Mike Douglas, JP Auclair and Shane Szocs, along with skier Smiley Nesbitt and filmer Ben Mullin. Even after decades of crazed, mad-cap missions that scorched retinas with the unfamiliar and caused memory banks to overflow like an overstuffed filing cabinet, this was One of Those Trips. You know, like that time we… wore avalanche transceivers in the Tokyo subway system so we wouldn’t lose each other… documented every Jinglish
detective looking to question me about the avalanche, and a van ride to Sapporo airport in which Paul, cripplingly hungover from an all-nighter in a basement bar where we sat on tree dolts under a ceiling so low that darts whizzed past our heads—declared into Szocs’ Hi8 camera, “Every moment of my life up until now has been slightly better.” All in all, there was exhilaration and exultation, hilarity and tragedy, and enough camaraderie to form a bond. As sbcSKIER took off, Paul and I worked together regularly. If he wasn’t helping out with some of our crazier ideas (like photographing the ultimate sandwich, gas-station tandoori
KFC or homemade “babagadouche”) we were travelling together—Switzerland, Italy, France, Aspen, Bulgaria, Kashmir, Chile and a dozen resorts and heli-operations across B.C., creating stories and memories (chasing sasquatch across the ski areas of Washington State stands out). No matter the conditions or circumstances, Paul never once failed to get the money shot. Generous even as a parent, he sacrificed his only scion, Ian, then 11, to play defence in the first-ever SBC Skiers vs. Snowboarders hockey game at Meadow Park, and willfully exposed him at home dinners to the wisecracking antics of pro skiers and bikers, recognizing an unconventional milieu of free childcare. Through it all we became close friends, further bonding over our Southern Ontario roots, love of canoeing, the Maple Leafs and beer—a crucible that might explain considerable time spent in The Boot and Tapley’s. As we aged, our work changed. Less madcap youngman’s high life and more grounded soft adventure—like a sailing trip to Haida Gwaii to report on biodiversity and Indigenous tourism initiatives. Our families are close and regularly wine, dine and canoe-trip together, through which I’ve come to understand how the King of Light and wife Gail have remained so long bonded: her mastery of cooking and running a photo business dovetail’s perfectly with his proficiency at pressing buttons and ability to reheat frozen pizza. My buddy Paul turned 70 this week, which means I’m not far behind. Sure, it’s great to reminisce about the good ole days, but one thing you learn by this point is that there’s always more to come. Another One of Those Trips. For someone who’s been here since the Pleistocene, that’s a money shot in itself. Leslie Anthony is a Whistler-based author, editor, biologist and bon vivant who has never met a mountain he didn’t like. ■
Join our Board of Directors! Join the Whistler Community Services Society Board of Directors and play an essential role in guiding, creating and building the future of this vital and dynamic community social service organization whose mission is to support and advocate for a healthy community. Successful candidates will have a strong background in one or more of: • Financial oversight • Nonprofit finances • Senior level business management As well as the capacity and interest to grow into a leadership role. New Board Directors must be able to attend a monthly Board meeting (can occasionally attend virtually), as well as a monthly finance committee meeting (mainly virtual attendance), as well as time to support the work of the Board. To apply, please submit to secretary@mywcss.org: - Board Director application form available at: mywcss.org/about-wcss/employment/ - Current resume and references (optional) Application Deadline: November 17, 2023 The initial term is to June 2026. Board meetings are held on the last Wednesday of each month, and Finance Committee meetings the Monday prior. All applicants will be contacted. If you would like assistance with the application process, interview readiness or tips for resume and cover letter writing, send your question via email to secretary@mywcss.org and we will make a WCSS Board Director available to you as an advisor. WCSS is dedicated to diversity, inclusion and antiracism. Our commitment is reflected in our programming, the clients we engage with and the team members we employ. We encourage a workplace in which individual differences are recognized, appreciated and respected.
Resort Municipality of Whistler
Winter Parking Regulations Whistler's Winter Parking Regulations are in effect Nov 1 to Mar 31
Neighbourhoods NO PARKING:
• On the EVEN side, Mon to Fri, 9am to 5pm (excluding holidays) • On the ODD side (year round)
Whistler Village Day Lots NO PARKING 3am to 6am
Vehicles parked in contravention of posted parking regulations will be ticketed and towed at the owner's expense. SLEEPING or CAMPING in vehicles is not permitted year round (unless in designated campground)
We welcome applications from all qualified candidates! whistler.ca/winterparking
NOVEMBER 3, 2023
29
FEATURE STORY
By Paul Lucas
M
ary Thor charged through the smoke down her treacherous driveway in the little Toyota. With one hand gripping the family dog and the fire literally exploding trees behind her, she headed for the strip of washboard road cut into the side of the mountain that she hoped would eventually lead her to safety. It was July 27, and evacuation notices had been issued for all of the country affected by the raging Casper Creek Wildfire that was threatening the entire area near Anderson Lake. It was a hair-raising 30-kilometre drive, and Mary was on her own. Her husband, Bernhard, had stayed behind to fight the blaze, and she wasn’t sure she would ever see him again. In what was likely a very short discussion, Bernhard had made it clear he wasn’t about to give up a life’s work because of some forest fire. Besides, he had been preparing for this day for years, every season clearing ground cover and cutting firebreaks to mitigate a possible spread. In the end, it was that, along with a ready water supply and an indefatigable constitution, that made him think he might have a real chance of saving the land. When the fire finally approached the house, he was ready.
A work of art Bernhard and Mary Thor have lived on the mountain for more than 50 years. Like myself, Bernhard staked property in the days when the province of B.C. saw fit to open up land to settlers. On that stake north of Whistler B.C., he built his home. But not just any home. A multi-faceted man of the arts, he used all of his skills as a sculptor, stone mason and painter to build a dwelling that was, itself, a piece of art. That, along with some incomparable bush skills, made him one of our few true modern day Renaissance men—a fact only outshadowed by a remarkable early life. His upbringing reads more like a piece of thriller fiction than a childhood. Born in East Germany, he escaped the political oppression of the Soviets by making a run for it through a no man’s land of minefields, razor wire, electrified fences and booby traps—all overseen by guard towers and machine gun nests. The whole thing took some serious intestinal fortitude, and it’s a miracle he is alive to tell the tale. What he didn’t know was that one day he would need every bit of that snot and vinegar to face the raging wildfire that would threaten his house and land.
loss of property has yet to be determined. The projections, however, are staggering. This kind of frequency is unprecedented. Between 1984 and 2015, the number of forest fires in the west doubled, and the last several years have seen some of the worst results of that increase. My partner Lynn and I narrowly missed one of the most dramatic fires in B.C. history when we chose not to stay at the Lytton Motel on the night of June 29, 2021, deciding instead to push on to Vancouver. The following day, as we now know, a raging wildfire burned the town to the ground. It was the sheer luck of the draw. The firefighting community has struggled to keep pace with this new reality, throwing everything they have at the problem, from equipped, trained and air-supported fire crews, to modern technology ranging from satellite imagery and infrared scanning to fire modelling. But they need help from the public. The people on the land can do a great deal to protect their own and their neighbours’ property by taking a few simple steps, and Bernhard Thor might be a living example of how that’s done.
A mythical struggle It was late in July when the fire soared up the steep ridge towards the property, turning what began as a simple sighting of smoke into a mythical struggle for survival. Bernhard didn’t waste time in responding. Alternately soaking land, buildings, and slashing bush, he fought off the flames with everything at his disposal. Over the years, he had developed a complex sprinkler system to water the extensive acreage that hosted, amongst other things, a huge vegetable garden, a workshop and several sheds. He expanded this to allow the continual watering of the roof of the house. That, he hoped, along with several strategically placed fire breaks and a cleared forest floor, would be enough to save the property. When it became clear he wasn’t going to abandon the land, the fire crews in the area took the opportunity to make it a base for operations. But not before the police were called in to try and persuade him to evacuate. When they arrived, they asked him what he was still doing there. The reply was pure Bernhard. “I don’t like to run away from trouble,” he said. “I prefer to run towards it.” There were some raised eyebrows from the fire crew, along with a little poking at the ground and staring into the distance as they slowly digested who they were dealing with. Then all of a sudden, one by one, they started to laugh. And that was that. They settled down at that big old kitchen table and put together a plan of action. Firefighting is a complicated and dangerous business. Above all, though, it is extremely hard work. In the days that followed, those crews laboured to save the properties on the side of that mountain with a dedication that can only be described as Herculean. Meanwhile, Bernhard continued to cut, clear, and water day and night, taking only brief naps when he could no longer stand up.
One man’s fire Risking it all to fight the blaze from hell
Fire and fury This summer was the worst on record for forest fires, both in B.C. and around the world, and the area north of Pemberton didn’t escape their fury. The final cost in human suffering and
30 NOVEMBER 3, 2023
FEATURE STORY In the end, it all paid off, because when a worried Mary Thor returned after 10 days of living out of her car, she found her house still standing and her husband alive and well... more or less, anyway. Bernhard was worn right down to the nub. He was, however, according to Mary, “sporting a very large grin.” That land now sits like an emerald on the face of the mountain—a tiny oasis that stands as a monument to the human spirit.
Words of wisdom We visited Mary and Bernhard immediately after the fire. After talking our way through the road blocks, we wended our way up a damaged track towards the property. Even after disaster, this country remains spectacular, and the views from this wild and rugged road continue to take my breath away. The devastation we found, however, was chilling. In that peculiar way a forest fire burns, it had charred entire mountainsides while leaving certain areas untouched, so much of it dependent on the prevailing wind and weather. Relief flooded over us when we saw that the house and land were still intact. Bernhard and Mary are our friends, and the thought of them losing a life’s work to fire had been haunting us for weeks. We had a fine old celebration that night. Lynn dragged out her accordion, I grabbed my guitar, Mary cooked a monster dinner and Bernhard went to raid the beer cooler. It was the best of all possible endings. After his brush with death, Bernhard had some words of wisdom for to all those willing to listen. “The best way to protect a community from forest fire is by removing the ground cover, cutting effective fire breaks and continually watering the land and buildings when property is threatened,” he said. What he failed to mention was that it also takes an inordinate amount of courage to stand up to these natural disasters. When asked if he’d had any sort of “Plan B” in mind if things had gone south, he just shook his head and replied with, “Well, if push came to shove, I figured I’d just grab a cold beer, head out to the pond, cover myself with a wet horse blanket and wait.” Yep. That’s pretty much the man in a nutshell. Whether or not we are living through a world-wide paradigm shift where seasonal fires have be-come the norm is, at the moment, unclear, but 2024 promises destruction just as devastating as what we’ve seen this summer. How we choose to handle this ballooning threat may well determine our future on this rock. Firefighting skills and technology will no doubt improve, but a lot depends on how individuals and property owners handle themselves. Let’s take Bernhard Thor’s advice to pay attention and prepare the land around us for what appears to be a very real threat to our well-being.
Bernhard and Mary Thor Photo by Fillip Krykorka
Photos by Laurence Thor
Paul Lucas is a musician, writer and composer who lives part of each year off the grid in his cabin south of Atlin B.C. His latest book, A Guitar Player On The Yukon Border, is available at local bookstores and amazon.com. He can be found at: paullucasmusic.com ■
NOVEMBER 3, 2023
31
SPORTS THE SCORE
Newly-announced Ultra Trail Whistler race met with heavy local backlash MANY SEA TO SKY RUNNERS ARE INSTEAD SUPPORTING GARY ROBBINS, WHO PUBLISHED A BLOG POST DETAILING THE CANCELLATION OF WHISTLER ALPINE MEADOWS
BY DAVID SONG NEWS OF THE UTMB Group’s first Canadian World Series trail-running contest, Ultra Trail Whistler, has elicited widespread backlash from the Sea to Sky community. Hordes of runners and their supporters are denouncing both the event and UTMB/Ironman as a collective while standing in solidarity with Coast Mountain Trail Running (CMTR). Back on Feb. 10, CMTR’s Whistler Alpine Meadows (WAM) races were permanently cancelled. WAM had been a beloved local event for six years up until that point, as well as an economically productive one: the 2022 edition generated $717,000 in Gross Domestic Product (GDP) for Whistler and $1.2 million for Canada as a whole. At the time, Vail Resorts senior communications manager Dane Gergovich indicated that WAM organizers refused to adhere to a number of unspecified safety concerns despite being given the chance to prepare a revised arrangement. Meanwhile, WAM leadership cited a lack of communication from the Vail side and disputed the necessity of its demands. The plot thickened last week when, on
UPHILL BATTLE Two hikers atop Whistler Mountain, the site of Vail Resorts’ newly announced Ultra Trail Whistler race. PHOTO BY MATTHEW SYLVESTRE
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Oct. 26, UTMB/Ironman announced Ultra Trail Whistler, which would effectively replace WAM on the local sporting schedule. CMTR frontman and accomplished ultramarathoner Gary Robbins fired back with a lengthy blog post on his own website, in which he details “what really went down in Whistler with the WAM races.” In the blog, Robbins revealed CMTR’s plans to establish a new British Columbia-based race in September 2024 that would compete directly with UTMB’s event. He said that more information can be expected by Jan. 15.
Ironman, which reached out in 2021 and again in 2022 about acquiring the Squamish 50 races. After much deliberation within their circles, Robbins and business partner Geoff Langford decided to tentatively explore the proposal, signing a non-disclosure agreement and meeting with UTMB personnel. “On the single Zoom meeting we had with this group, I came forth by saying there were many non-negotiables on my end, meaning our community support programs, our volunteer appreciation programs, et cetera,” wrote Robbins. “The response was simply that
“I find myself thankful that this group has gone and shown us exactly who they are.” - GARY ROBBINS
‘FOX IN THE HEN HOUSE’
Robbins revealed that he and his colleagues had heard nothing about Ultra Trail Whistler being in the works prior to last Wednesday— and they’re not alone in that regard. “We’ve since learned from contacts at VailWB that no one knew about this internally as it’d been kept completely under wraps the entire time,” he wrote. “Just as we had not been consulted or even notified about this until the night before it launched.” CMTR has had prior contact with UTMB/
that’d be a conversation for another time. The last we’d heard from them was in late June saying they were putting a pause on this for the short term. “I find myself thankful that this group has gone and shown us exactly who they are. I was giving them the benefit of the doubt, but in my heart I always knew better. I am embarrassed to have to admit that I almost let a fox in the hen house. I feel like I owe every single person in our community an apology for believing for even a fraction of a second
that this group could do right by our sport— could do right by our community.” Many appear to agree with that sentiment. Dominic Grossman has gone as far as to set up a GoFundMe in support of CMTR’s currentlyunnamed new race—though the fundraiser facetiously claims its primary goal is to raise $50 million to help Robbins buy out UTMB. “They bided their time as Vail cratered WAM,” said Linda Barton-Robbins on her X (formerly Twitter) account. “Made it impossible for WAM to launch. Then Vail said it was [CMTR’s] fault just to be extra a-holes, then UTMB/Ironman swoops in, steals the idea. It’s even the same weekend. So transparent. F- that. F- Vail, UTMB and Ironman.” John Kelly also spoke up on X. “Originally, I feared Ironman would use UTMB to do to ultras what they did to triathlon with Kona,” he said. “This is worse. I know how much [Robbins] put into WAM. I want to experience UTMB but I will never run a UTMB race. No, they won’t care about me. But if enough don’t, maybe they will.” On the other hand, Vail representatives claim in a statement emailed to Pique that UTMB did not bring forth the idea of a World Series event in Whistler until news of WAM’s cancellation had gone public. “The decision to cancel Whistler Alpine Meadows was made by race organizers in February 2023,” the statement reads. “Whistler Blackcomb was open to working with them on a revised plan that would adequately meet the logistical and safety needs of a race of its size and scope in order to bring it back. They declined and moved on.”
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MEET AND GREET Gary Robbins, left, greets a finisher at one of the previous Whistler Alpine Meadows races he helped organize in Whistler. FILE PHOTO BY SCOTT ROBARTS PHOTOGRAPHY
TROUBLE IN PARADISE
From Robbins’ perspective, the first conflict arose in 2021 when Vail gave WAM’s traditional weekend away to Everesting—an organization that offers hiking excursions— without prior notice or deliberation. CMTR was blindsided and did everything possible to save WAM through what is described as “a Hail Mary attempt”. An 11th-hour arrangement with RBC GranFondo Whistler panned out, but the trouble was far from over. Robbins stated that CMTR’s Vail contact ghosted them for more than 100 days to close out 2022, refusing to return emails or attend numerous booked Zoom meetings. During this time, Robbins and his associates heard only vague remarks about potential issues with WAM, even after other Vail employees tried to investigate on their behalf. Around late January to early February, CMTR finally made contact with Vail senior management and were told to conform to a new event approval process. Robbins claimed that Vail brought up a host of unprecedented demands, including a hefty new operating fee as well as technical and safety requirements extraneous to the operation of a proper trailrunning contest. Vail begged to differ. “What this comes down to is we simply were not satisfied or comfortable with how Whistler Alpine Meadows planned to address safety issues from the race the year prior,” said a Whistler Blackcomb representative in a statement. “We will not compromise on safety as it is our number one priority, and we should note that our safety protocols and policies have not changed significantly year over year. We were not willing to move forward with the 2023 race without an adequate safety and medical plan, and WAM was unwilling to work with us on this.” Robbins said that CMTR was, in fact, willing to adjust, but asked to open registration immediately in order to meet key operational timelines. Vail, however, prohibited them from promoting WAM in any way until it fully conformed to new event criteria. Given CMTR’s existing commitment to producing several races outside of Whistler, Robbins states that the time needed to meet Vail’s requirements
made it impossible to bring WAM back for 2023. “My personal take in the end was that we were very obviously being forced out,” he wrote. “By going about it in this manner, no one ever had to take responsibility for saying no to our event, and to [Vail’s] credit they never did say no to us. They simply pushed us out by other means.” Robbins placed much of the blame on Vail’s former events manager, the one he said could not be reached for almost the entirety of October, November and December 2022. He does not name the contact, but recounts a renewed sense of optimism about WAM’s future after this individual was fired. Instead, CMTR felt ambushed once again late last week by a cursory notice about the emergence of Ultra Trail Whistler. Vail offered an apology for the communication woes. “To the issue of communication, we take accountability that we did not communicate as effectively as we should have, and for this, we apologize,” said a Vail spokesperson. “We are committed to improved communication with all partners. We are proud of our long history of hosting a wide variety of events and groups of all kinds that enhance our community and our culture, and that support what makes Whistler special. We are committed to continuing this tradition and look forward to hosting future events and races at Whistler Blackcomb.” For his part, Robbins is disinterested in taking on Vail or UTMB in a knock-down, drag-out PR brawl. He said in a follow-up to his original blog post that he and Langford are bringing their focus back to what they love: putting on races. They’re grateful that all kinds of runners have gone to bat for them, but do not wish to dwell on what has already transpired. “Geoff and I want to take this time to say thank you for all the incredible outpouring of support and encouragement,” Robbins wrote. “It’s been truly uplifting and overwhelming to see this coming in from trail runners around the globe. My suggestion for now would be to get out for a run and pump some good vibes into your veins, and come race season, you do you and go and vote with your hard-earned dollars.” n
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FORK IN THE ROAD
‘G is for ‘good-for-you’ GOOD HEALTH INCLUDES GOOD FUN AND GOOD FOOD, WHICH IS OFTEN GOOD FOR YOUR POCKETBOOK, TOO WITH THE SPOOKIEST week of the year for sweets and treats almost behind us and—coincidentally, or not—more and more studies being published on how bad processed foods and too much sugar are, I couldn’t think of a better time to remind us all that it doesn’t take much to reach for something tasty and truly good for us when it
BY GLENDA BARTOSH comes to snacks and meals. The neat trick is that when we move away from sugary, fatty, processed foods, including those Halloween treats, they’re often way cheaper, so they’re good for our pocketbooks, too, in these scary inflationary times. Sure, we all need a wee treat now and then, but bottom line is when making good food choices, it’s often just a matter of breaking habits and routines that trigger certain cravings that spell trouble. I know: now that the spooky fun time is winding down and we head back to normal, getting over-amped juggling work with kids over-amped on sugar, and more, the last thing you need is one more thing niggling at the back of your mind.
IT’S GOOD TO GET GHOSTED Scaring kids at Halloween is fun plus it helps them build confidence. Just remember to balance the sweet treats with good food. PHOTO BY VLADIMIR VLADIMIROV / E+ COLLECTION / GETTY IMAGES
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But maybe this little trope of “G” standing for good grains and greens and anything smacking of goodness might stick with you in a fun “alpha” way—like those giant spiders and skeletons that make you smile even as you take them down and tuck them away until next year’s hijinx. By the way, researchers report that it’s good to scare kids at Halloween. The adrenaline rush makes them feel energized and excited, and it helps kids learn to control their emotions and build confidence. It usually makes them giggle, too. Speaking of fun, I tip my hat to CBC Radio’s Margaret Gallagher, host of the popular show North by Northwest, and her regular guest, the Word Guy, Jonathan Berkowitz, professor at UBC Sauder School of Business and a wordplay wizard whose latest book, Tales from the Word Guy: What Your English Teacher Never Taught You, is as lighthearted and interesting as Jonathan is. I’m sure there’s a word for it Jonathan would know, since the device I’m using this week (“G” is for “good-something”) was inspired by his Oct. 21 NXNW segment—word mistakes that start with “M,” like malapropisms, where people misuse words in a humourous but illiterate way ( “They were singing without accompaniment, you know—Acapulco.”) This after he playfully reminded us that “laughter” is “slaughter” without the “S.” Click on the link above to distract yourself with lots more “M”-type amusements, including mixed metaphors. But first, here are some good food Gs to keep you healthy, and happy.
‘G’ IS FOR...
Garlic and ginger… Both fresh. Use often.
Way cheaper and tastier than powdered forms. Fresh garlic is low in calories, and has been proven to boost your immune system, and lower blood pressure and cholesterol. Some say it boosts athletic performance, too. Fresh ginger increases serotonin and dopamine levels and reduces inflammation, which may cause depression. Try thinly slicing some into a pot; add a cup or two of water; bring to a boil and simmer. A great elixir—way better than sugar! Grains, whole grains… If I see one more TV commercial showing moms buying sugared cereals by the armload, I’ll scream. Stop it. Kids need whole grains just like the rest of us; whole grains that are way cheaper than that processed stuff. I’ve written about it before: Go oatmeal (or Sunny Boy or Red River Cereal), or even brown rice and quinoa, or go home. Add a bit of sweetener, if you must, or, better, nuts or raisins for breakfast. Fresh veggies for dinner. Best fuel ever. Green, anything fresh… You know the story: Shop the outer aisles of your grocery store. Fresh produce, fresh meat and dairy. Anything fresh that’s green (or not) is better than what’s in the middle aisles, except for those whole grains. Green cabbage; green grapes; kale; lettuce; celery (good for your heart). A handful of parsley makes a great snack (tons of fibre; rich in vitamins C and K). By the way, if, like me, you’re still not done with Halloween and enjoy the way it’s morphing into a week-long affair, like Christmas, take heart. Día de Muertos or Day of the Dead, the traditional holiday of joyful, even humourous, celebrations of the dead widely observed in Mexico and beyond, happens Nov. 1 and 2, though other days, Oct. 31 and Nov. 6, may also be included, depending on the region.
Here’s to more play—and good food—and less stress.
THE ELECTRICAL SIDE OF US
Here’s a soundbite about brainwaves to keep in mind, add winking emoji. Our lovely brains produce five different brainwaves (alpha, beta, delta, gamma and theta)—the electrical impulses between neurons that communicate actions, emotions, and ideas. When we’re awake, beta waves dominate, but if the frequencies get too high, we can feel agitated and stressed. Theta waves occur during light sleep, while alpha waves occur when our minds relax, and during activities like yoga or doing creative things. We humans are all about electricity in more ways than one. Remember, electricity was key to poor Dr. Frankenstein creating his “monster” in Mary Shelley’s classic, Frankenstein, or, The Modern Prometheus, published in 1818 when she was only 21. An intriguing aside: It was the poet Lord Byron who, while they were all hanging out together in Switzerland, suggested that Mary and the young poet Percy Shelley each try writing a ghost story. Only Mary finished hers. It was the start of something big. After she turned down Percy’s suggestion of a ménage à trois with his then-wife, Harriet, Mary and Percy ran away and eventually married. Harriet drowned herself. Not long after, Percy also drowned in a mysterious sailing accident. All very spooky. Glenda Bartosh is an award-winning journalist who was due to be born on Halloween, but popped out two days early just to scare everyone. n
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ARTS SCENE
Two Pemberton dancers strut their stuff at IDO World Championships ASHANTI FAITH SALIO-AN WENT TO THE ACROBATICS CHAMPIONSHIP, WHILE JANAE IBBOTSON-SPENCER TOOK PART IN THE HIP-HOP EVENT
BY DAVID SONG A PAIR OF TEENAGE dancers from Spud Valley have taken the next step in their competitive pathways. Back in July, Pemberton Dance Studio’s Ashanti Faith Salio-An travelled to Monterrey, Mexico to take part in the IDO World Acrobatic Dance Championship. Janae IbbotsonSpencer represented Pemberton’s Mountain Movement Dance Collective late this October at another IDO event, the World Hip Hop & Popping Championships in Kielce, Poland. Salio-An had to wait for her moment. She first auditioned for Team Canada in 2020, but found herself sidelined with the rest of us as the pandemic took hold. The 13-year-old and her peers made sure to stay active and connected, knowing their opportunity would come. Their patience and work ethic paid off. “I think it’s better that we had more time to train and to perfect those dances,” says
DANCE, DANCE REVOLUTION (Left) Janae Ibbotson-Spencer of the Mountain Movement Dance Collective. (Right) Ashanti Faith Salio-An of the Pemberton Dance Studio poses for the camera. PHOTO BY RYO KAWASHIMA PHOTO BY KATHRYN WATERS
36 NOVEMBER 3, 2023
Salio-An. “[Worlds] was very life-changing. I made so many friends, so many memories, and the dances were amazing there. It was just an amazing experience that I’ll never forget. “I’m very pleased [with my performance]. There were so many people watching, so I really had to just keep it together.” Though she didn’t have to deal with
it through a round,” explains the 15-year-old. “I think it’s exciting for them to just get out there, see the world, see a bigger pond of fish, do what they love and grow from these experiences,” adds Anna Kroupina, Salio-An’s teacher and the owner of Pemberton Dance Studio. “It’s wonderful that they have the means to do so, because trips like that are
“[Worlds] was very life-changing. I made so many friends, so many memories, and the dances were amazing there. It was just an amazing experience that I’ll never forget.” - ASHANTI FAITH SALIO-AN
COVID-mandated lockdowns, IbbotsonSpencer worked just as hard to prepare for her own international debut. “I transformed my garage into my own dance studio to be practising, and I’ve just been trying to grow my stamina because for these competitions—especially the hip hop—you have to be going every 20 minutes if you make
something that families really have to plan for. That being said, we’re so grateful.”
GOING FOR IT
Both girls were introduced to dance by way of ballet classes their parents enrolled them in as toddlers. It didn’t take long for Salio-An to realize
she preferred cartwheels to pirouettes, and her mom placed her in acro when she was seven. She’s loved being upside-down ever since. Ibbotson-Spencer joined a competitive team around the same age, and though she’s dabbled in many genres of dance, hip hop became her true passion. Her worlds squad in Poland is composed of 21 dancers from across British Columbia and Alberta, and she’s proud to put Pemberton on the map. “It’s really crazy, especially us from this small town—from nowhere, basically—to make this big dance team,” Ibbotson-Spencer says. “We need to go for it to prove that we’re good as we got chosen for. I think everybody’s really supportive of each other.” Kroupina herself is a living example of what opportunity can do. She grew up behind the Iron Curtain, training from age three under traditional Russian ballerinas and mentors. After immigrating to Canada in 2007, she expanded her portfolio as an International Dance Teaching Standards accredited coach, a member of the Vancouver Ballet Society, and a registered acrodance teacher. Now in her second decade as an educator and her fourth as a dancer, Kroupina aims to give her students as many opportunities as possible. That’s a goal she shares with Hayley Edmondson, who coaches at Mountain Movement Dance Collective. n
ARTS SCENE
SCRATCHING THE SURFACE Scott Arkwell, a.k.a. Vinyl Ritchie, teams up with DJ Foxy Moron to bring a new Tuesday hip-hop show to Whistler.
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As a true hip-hop head, Arkwell has worked in a myriad of clubs since moving to Whistler in the 1990s. In those days, the world hadn’t turned to hip-hop the way it has now, and he found himself playing lots of Elvis Presley, The Beatles and The Tragically Hip. Numerous club owners pushed back against the idea of mixing in a new genre, claiming it was “too cool”— whatever that means. Arkwell stuck to his guns, though, and ended up on the right side of music history. “I saw the writing on the wall,” he says. “I got into hip-hop in the ’80s and we started messing around with it then. I was telling all the venues: ‘Mark my words, in a couple of years, you’re going have to do entire nights of this.’” Arkwell looks forward to collaborating again with Foxy Moron, a local legend in her own right, whom he first met nearly three decades ago at Tommy Africa’s (which has since changed hands and rebranded to Apres Apres). Foxy wasn’t always keen on entering the DJ industry, but eventually came around. She’s since established herself as one of Whistler’s favourite turntablists. “There’s not too many women that spin [45 RPM records] or have a hip-hop collection of 45s and reggae,” says Arkwell. “I think it’s a good look for women in the industry. I think it’s important that Foxy’s there. “She comes at it from a different angle from me, you know what I mean? The records she chooses are different from what I would choose.” According to Arkwell, Hip Hop Hooray is off to a flying start. The Brewhouse staff is onboard, and he’s heard rave reviews from some of the guys he skateboards with. “Generally, I like to go into a venue and see what night they’re struggling the most and try to make something happen,” he says. “That’s the challenge that I like.” n
9D
SEA TO SKY HIP-HOP fans have something new to look forward to as Vinyl Ritchie and his partner-in-crime, Foxy Moron, are back on the scene with a new show. Hip Hop Hooray Tuesdays takes place every Tuesday at 8 p.m. at High Mountain Brewing Co., better known locally as The Brewhouse. Vinyl Ritchie (whose real name is Scott Arkwell) and DJ Foxy Moron (Ace Mackay-Smith) are paying tribute to the golden era of the genre by breaking out the seven-inch records all winter long. “We’re trying to fill a gap that I think needs to be filled in Whistler,” Arkwell explains. “It’s just an old-school hip-hop night. We’re staying true to the craft. It’s the golden era of hip hop—no mumble rap, no Drake, just the good old ‘boom-bap’ stuff. “There’s a difference in the amount of time you can put on a seven-inch. Obviously, compared to a 12-inch, it’s much shorter, so the versions are usually edited. From a DJ point of view, you’ve got to be on your game.” Arkwell is excited to be playing at the Brewhouse, which he describes as a venue with dialed-in sound, a good subwoofer setup and desirable acoustics overall. “I like the room to sound really good,” Arkwell says. “I don’t want it to be too loud and overwhelming. I want people to be able to have a conversation, but I also want [the bass] to be felt. That’s important to me.” The relatively early start is no accident either. Arkwell found that his Motown on Mondays event last year at The Raven Room was sometimes a hard sell due in part to its 10 p.m. start time. He hopes that Hip Hop Hooray can attract a different demographic that may be not interested in burning the midnight oil, but are nonetheless down for a few drinks and some sick beats before bed.
FROM THE BEGINNING
R N OV E M B E R
BY DAVID SONG
IS TLE
HIP HOP HOORAY TUESDAYS IS A NEW WEEKLY SHOW FEATURING TWO OF WHISTLER’S FAVOURITE DJS AND SEVEN-INCH RECORDS
WH
Vinyl Ritchie and Foxy Moron going old school at the Brewhouse
NOVEMBER 3, 2023
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ARTS SCENE PIQUE’S GUIDE TO LOCAL EVENTS & NIGHTLIFE Here’s a quick look at some events happening in Whistler this week and beyond. FIND MORE LOCAL EVENT LISTINGS (and submit your own for free!) at piquenewsmagazine.com/local-events
• • • • •
ALTA LAKE BIRD WALK PHOTO BY SHARON TALSON/MOMENT COLLECTION/GETTY IMAGES
ALTA LAKE BIRD WALK Join the Whistler Naturalists on the first Saturday of the month for a walk to Rainbow Park from the bottom of Lorimer Road. Open to anyone interested in learning about birds. There will be experienced birders on-hand who are happy to share their knowledge while monitoring bird activity. More information at whistlernaturalists.ca/birding. > Nov. 4, 9 a.m. > Meet at bottom of Lorimer Rd. by Catholic church > Free
RETRO TIGHT N’ BRIGHT PARTY Get ready for a night of old school ski and snowboard films on loop with a live DJ! Get your tightest and brightest together—dressing up is strongly encouraged. > Nov. 5, 7 p.m. > The Longhorn Saloon > Free
VIRTUAL WHISTLER MEDITATES
to explore an array of traditional and sciencebacked breath and meditation practices, skills, and tools that can make a difference in your daily life—and, to engage with our growing Whistler meditation community. Everyone welcome, from first-timers to practised meditators. Join us once, occasionally, or every month, as you wish. Guided by mindfulness facilitator Susan Reifer. > Nov. 8, 7 p.m. > Online > Free (registration required)
HOUSE PARTY: BEST OF BC Kick off Cornucopia, Whistler’s annual celebration of food and drink, in style at House Party: Best of BC. Peruse and sample from a variety of wineries, breweries and distilleries from Whistler’s backyard, each eager to share their distinct drops, techniques and inspirations. > Nov. 9, 6 to 9 p.m. > Whistler Conference Centre > $75 plus tax
A monthly community mindfulness class on Zoom
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MUSEUM MUSINGS
BOTTOM LINE Skiers in line to take the gondola up Whistler Mountain in the early 1970s.
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PHOTO FROM THE WHISTLER MOUNTAIN SKI CORPORATION COLLECTION / COURTESY THE WHISTLER MUSEUM
Revisit the Whistler Mountain of 50 years ago BY ALLYN PRINGLE IT’S NOT UNUSUAL, as we approach the reopening of the lifts each November, to hear conversations about the coming winter: what to expect, what is new, and what is different. In its fall 1973 issue, Garibaldi’s Whistler News (GWN), the publication put out by Garibaldi Lifts Ltd., tried to anticipate such questions and provide some answers. So, what could skiers (it would be another 16 years before snowboarders were welcomed on Whistler) expect of Whistler Mountain 50 years ago? GWN began with the announcement that all lift rates would remain the same as the previous season. This meant an adult skier could expect to pay $155 for an annual pass (just over $1,000 when adjusted for inflation), while day rates ranged from $5 half days
For skiers new to the Whistler Mountain area, GWN provided a guide on “How to Handle a Big Mountain.” According to the guide, “Whistler is a huge, friendly, thoroughly enjoyable ski mountain, but for some skiers, seeing it for the first time, it’s overpowering,” and so they provided “hints” and tips to make it more approachable. According to GWN, the first thing to do was to check the weather conditions on the weatherboard located next to the ticket office. Then, it was recommended that skiers familiarize themselves with the international trail marking signs used to indicate the difficulty level of a run (the same green circle, blue square and black diamond that you’ll see today), before heading up the Gondola or Olive Chair to the Red or Orange chairs. GWN suggested Whiskey Jack, Ego Bowl, Pony Trail, and Olympic Run as the first runs to try out, though those who headed down Olympic Run needed to check
“Whistler is a huge, friendly, thoroughly enjoyable ski mountain, but for some skiers, seeing it for the first time, it’s overpowering.” - GARIBALDI’S WHISTLER NEWS GUIDE FOR THE MOUNTAIN
to $7 weekend days. Annual passes could be purchased by cheque if accompanied by two passport-sized photographs or in person at the ticket office, where photographs for passes were taken free of charge. With this pass, skiers could access over 20 runs and eight lifts. Skiers familiar with the terrain on Whistler Mountain would notice changes to some of the runs after a major summer works program. On Upper and Lower Franz’s, $10,000 had been spent widening a more-than-twokilometre stretch from 15 to 45 metres wide. Blasting on the Downhill run had completed the leveling and grooming of certain pitches. Around the Green Chair, the lift line had been widened in anticipation of installing another parallel lift for the 1974/75 season. The lift company had also enlarged and upgraded the kitchen facilities at the Roundhouse, as well as installing a concrete floor.
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the bus schedules at the Information Booth to ensure they got a ride back to the lifts. The guide also provided tips on where to eat lunch (the Roundhouse or L’Apres, both owned by the lift company), where to find information on the mountain, and which runs to take at the end of the day. One piece of advice they included, which is often repeated today, was to “bear in mind that most ski accidents happen late in the day—so don’t take that last extra run when you’re tired.” While GWN didn’t instruct skiers to expect long lineups, bad traffic, or less than optimal conditions (not surprising in a publication intended to promote the ski area), experienced skiers would have known that those were possibilities. Those who head up Whistler Mountain this winter will find that a lot has changed over the past 50 seasons, from opening new facilities to merging with Blackcomb Mountain to adapting to changing weather conditions. n
PARTIAL RECALL
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1 WALKING DEAD Hordes of the undead descended on Cheakamus Crossing for the neighbourhood’s 10th annual Zombie Walk on Oct. 29. PHOTO BY ASHLEY OUELLETTE / COURTESY OF JAMIE DOWLING 2 EXCELLENCE EXEMPLIFIED The Pique sales team got all dolled up for the Whistler Excellence Awards on Oct. 25 at the Fairmont Chateau Whistler. PHOTO COURTESY OF SUSAN HUTCHINSON 3 CAT NAP Leo and Zorro enjoy some downtime on the couch last week. PHOTO BY HEIDI RODE 4 WITCHIN’ AIN’T EASY The One Mille Witches for Peace took to One Mile Lake in Pemberton last week. PHOTO COURTESY OF ANNE CROWLEY 5 TOP CHEFS Karen Roland and RD Stewart of Roland’s Pub and The Red Door Bistro were inducted to the BC Restaurant Hall of Fame on Oct. 23. PHOTO COURTESY OF CATHY OWEN
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ASTROLOGY
Free Will Astrology WEEK OF NOVEMBER 3 BY ROB BREZSNY
Apply now for a winter of fun if you are a local and you want to…
Share what you know and love about Whistler Connect with visitors Do fun and meaningful work in your community Receive great rewards To apply or receive more information, visit whistler.ca/volunteer or contact: Cathie Wood at cwood@whistler.ca or 604-935-8478
Apply by Monday, Nov 6, 2023
ARIES (March 21-April 19): “Our bodies sometimes serve as the symbolic ground where order and disorder fight for supremacy,” writes storyteller Caroline Kettlewell. Here’s good news, Aries: For you, order will triumph over disorder in the coming weeks. In part through your willpower and in part through life’s grace, you will tame the forces of chaos and enjoy a phase when most everything makes sense. I don’t mean you will have zero problems, but I suspect you will have an enhanced power to solve problems. Your mind and heart will coordinate their efforts with exceptional flair. TAURUS (April 20-May 20): I recently endured a three-hour root canal. Terrible and unfortunate, right? No! Because it brought profound joy. The endodontist gave me nitrous oxide, and the resulting euphoria unleashed a wild epiphany. For the duration of the surgery, I had vivid visions of all the people in my life who love me. I felt their care. I was overwhelmed with the kindness they felt for me. Never before had I been blessed with such a blissful gift. Now, in accordance with your astrological omens, I invite you to induce a similar experience—no nitrous oxide needed. It’s a perfect time to meditate on how well you are appreciated and needed and cherished. GEMINI (May 21-June 20): Unless you are very unusual, you don’t sew your clothes or grow your food. You didn’t build your house, make your furniture, or forge your cooking utensils. Like most of us, you know little about how water and electricity arrive for your use. Do you have any notion of what your grandparents were doing when they were your age? Have you said a prayer of gratitude recently for the people who have given you so much? I don’t mean to put you on the spot with my questions, Gemini. I’m merely hoping to inspire you to get into closer connection with everything that nourishes and sustains you. Honour the sources of your energy. Pay homage to your foundations. CANCER (June 21-July 22): Cancerian singersongwriter Suzanne Vega has had a modest but sustained career. With nine albums, she has sold over 3 million records, but is not in the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame. She has said, “I always thought that if I were popular, I must be doing something wrong.” I interpret that to mean she has sought to remain faithful to her idiosyncratic creativity and not pay homage to formulaic success. But here’s the good news for you in the coming months, fellow Cancerian: You can be more appreciated than ever before simply by being true to your soul’s inclinations and urges. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): “Everything in the world has a hidden meaning,” wrote Greek author Nikos Kazantzakis. Did he really mean everything? Your dream last night, your taste in shoes, your favorite TV show, the way you laugh? As a fun experiment, let’s say that yes, everything has a hidden meaning. Let’s also hypothesize that the current astrological omens suggest you now have a special talent for discerning veiled and camouflaged truths. We will further propose that you have an extraordinary power to penetrate beyond surface appearances and home in on previously unknown and invisible realities. Do you have the courage and determination to go deeper than you have ever dared? I believe you do. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): How many glowworms would have to gather in one location to make a light as bright as the sun? Probably over a trillion. And how many ants would be required to carry away a 15-pound basket of food? I’m guessing over 90,000. Luckily for you, the cumulative small efforts you need to perform to accomplish big breakthroughs won’t be nearly that high a number. For instance, you may be able to take a quantum leap after just six baby steps. LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22): In the 17th century, John Milton wrote a long narrative poem titled Paradise Lost. I’ve never read it and am conflicted about the prospect of doing so. On one hand, I feel I should engage with a work that has had such a potent influence on Western philosophy
and literature. On the other hand, I’m barely interested in Milton’s story, which includes boring conversations between God and Satan and the dreary tale of how God cruelly exiled humans from paradise because the first man, Adam, was mildly rebellious. So what should I do? I’ve decided to read the Cliffs Notes study guide about Paradise Lost, a brief summary of the story. In accordance with astrological omens, I suggest you call on similar shortcuts, Libra. Here’s your motto: if you can’t do the completely right thing, try the partially right thing. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): Who would have guessed that elephants can play the drums really well? On a trip to Thailand, Scorpio musician Dave Soldier discovered that if given sticks and drums, some elephants kept a steadier beat than humans. A few were so talented that Soldier recorded their rhythms and played them for a music critic who couldn’t tell they were created by animals. In accordance with astrological omens, I propose that you Scorpios seek out comparable amazements. You now have the potential to make unprecedented discoveries. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21): Sagittarian novelist Shirley Jackson wrote, “No live organism can continue for long to exist under conditions of absolute reality; even larks and katydids dream.” Since she wrote that, scientists have gathered evidence that almost all animals dream and that dreaming originated at least 300 million years ago. With that as our inspiration and in accordance with astrological omens, I urge you to enjoy an intense period of tapping into your dreams. To do so will help you escape from absolute reality. It will also improve your physical and mental health and give you unexpected clues about how to solve problems. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): Capricorn writer Kahlil Gibran believed an essential human longing is to be revealed. We all want the light in us to be taken out of its hiding place and shown. If his idea is true about you, you will experience major cascades of gratification in the coming months. I believe you will be extra expressive. And you will encounter more people than ever before who are interested in knowing what you have to express. To prepare for the probable breakthroughs, investigate whether you harbour any fears or inhibitions about being revealed— and dissolve them. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): November is Build Up Your Confidence Month. In the coming weeks, you are authorized to snag easy victories as you steadily bolster your courage to seek bigger, bolder triumphs. As much as possible, put yourself in the vicinity of people who respect you and like you. If you suspect you have secret admirers, encourage them to be less secretive. Do you have plaques, medals, or trophies? Display them prominently. Or visit a trophy store and have new awards made for you to commemorate your unique skills—like thinking wild thoughts, pulling off one-of-a-kind adventures, and inspiring your friends to rebel against their habits. PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): I’m glad we have an abundance of teachers helping us learn how to be here now—to focus on the present moment with gratitude and grace. I love the fact that books on the art of mindfulness are now almost as common as books about cats and cooking. Yay! But I also want to advocate for the importance of letting our minds wander freely. We need to celebrate the value and power of NOT always being narrowly zeroed in on the here and now. We can’t make intelligent decisions unless we ruminate about what has happened in the past and what might occur in the future. Meandering around in fantasyland is key to discovering new insights. Imaginative ruminating is central to the creative process. Now please give your mind the privilege of wandering far and wide in the coming weeks, Pisces. Homework: What is the kindest act you ever did? Care to do it again? Newsletter.FreeWillAstrology.com.
In addition to this column, Rob Brezsny creates
EXPANDED AUDIO HOROSCOPES In-depth weekly forecasts designed to inspire and uplift you. To buy access, phone 1-888-499-4425. Once you’ve chosen the Block of Time you like, call 1-888-682-8777 to hear Rob’s forecasts. www.freewillastrology.com
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Fairmont Chateau Whistler Resort is growing its Housing portfolio and sourcing additional Chalet and Condo Rental contracts for our Hotel Team Members. Our leaders are mature, career driven drivers that know the word respect. Contract terms for property Owners are stress free with no commissions and includes representation from our 4 person fulltime Housing Department working with you 24/7; maintaining all aspects of the tenancy including quarterly inspections. A great next move for Whistler property Owners that have tired with the Airbnb game or Property Fees. Let’s see if we can make a match and develop a long-term relationship here. General inquiries please email mark.munn@fairmont.com
Hi - We’re Sabrina & Harvey! We came into WAG’s care together, and that’s where we are most comfortable, with each other. We haven’t been here long and hope that we will find a loving home soon where we can relax and learn all things kitty. Breed: Domestic Shorthair Gender: Both Female Age: Sabrina (black) approx. 1-2 years, Harvey (grey tabby) approx. 6-12 months Size: Medium Visit whistlerwag.com for more information or to fill out an application
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.Updating kitchen cabinet ,Vanity .Repairs and Reno .Casing .Finishing .Painting .Custom Cabinet,Vanity,Furniture .Ikea stuff assembling .Installing kitchen cabinet 604-5187525 sekechin@gmail.com
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Antifreeze is highly toxic for pets – check for spills and keep safely stored away from pets.
Annual General Meeting
Ice melters can irritate paws – wipe off paws after walks to avoid dogs ingesting.
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White dogs are difficult to see in the snow – keep pets on leash as cars are not able to brake or react quickly in the winter weather.
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PEMBERTON FARMERS’ MARKET ASSOCIATION A.G.M. Friday November 3, 2023 5pm @ Pemberton Legion 7440 Prospect Street. Elections to be held, End of Season Food & Celebration! pfmmarketmanager@gmail.com
Warehouse Lien Act Alan Sidorov, unless $2,730.00 plus all costs of this action are paid the contents of your storage Unit G24 at Mons Holdings Ltd 8080 Nesters Rd.Whistler, BC will be sold at 10:00am October 31,2023 Abc Professional Bailiffs Ltd 604-618-1721 doug1413@gmail.com
Vacasa’s forward-thinking approach and industry-leading technology help set us apart as the largest full-service vacation rental company in North America. We are seeking individuals with a passion for providing exceptional vacation experiences for our Owners and Guests. We offer competitive wages and benefits: Travel allowance for Squamish/Pemberton-based employees OR Ski Pass/Activity allowance, Extended Medical, RRSP match, Fun & Safe Work Environment-Great Team, opportunities to grow and more.
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Staff Accommodation, Perks & Benefits
WE’RE HIRING Whistler Olympic Park is hiring for the 2023–2024 season (November to April) We are one of the largest cross country skiing and snowshoeing venues in British Columbia, located in the beautiful Callaghan Valley, just south of Whistler.
Open positions: Nordic Ski Patrol $23/hr start wage Groomer $25/hr start wage
What we offer: STAFF HOUSING OPTIONS IN WHISTLER! Competitive wages Transport and carpool options to/from work Benefits package & perks, incl. health & wellness options Full time, part time and casual roles available WB season pass financing & more Whistler’s most unique & inspirational workplace!
APPLY NOW! whistlerolympicpark.com/careers
PLAY HERE
Manager, Safety and Compliance This position will provide leadership and compliance in the prevention of incident injury and illnesses across all operations and Venues for the Whistler Olympic Legacy venues
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Canadian Registered Safety Professional (CRSP) certification
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OFA III, (or equivalent) CPR / First Aid Certification
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Knowledge of BC regulatory framework of health, safety and environment
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Leadership: creative, innovative, demonstrates initiative and leads change
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Organizational management, partnership and community development skills
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Brand new affordable staff accommodation
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Competitive $70,000/year start wage plus benefits
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Lotus Spa & Lounge We are looking for friendly & professional candidates to join us!
Front Desk Agent
NOW HIRING! ASSISTANT MANAGER & SALES ASSOCIATE POSITIONS We are seeking reliable, self-motivated individuals who love to work with people. Good communication, memory recall, math and multitasking skills, are required. Must be able to lift 20lbs. What we offer: Fun work environment, competitive wage, monthly bonuses, Health & Wellness benefit, staff discounts, flexible schedule and the opportunity to work where you live. Save time and money ($3+ p/h) on your commute! An opportunity to grow with the business for the right applicant. $16.75 to $24.50 p/h depending on experience Shifts vary, Sales Associates: 2-3 days/wk; Assistant Manager: 4-5 days/wk.
Full Time or Part Time Minimum 1 year experience required
Previous retail and merchandising experience is preferred. Managerial, social media and website management skills would also be an asset. Will train the right applicant.
Masseuse
Full Time or Part Time Training provided
Lil’Wat Nation
Child and Youth Therapist- Maternity Leave Department: Special Needs Status: Contract Full-time
Extended health benefits, flexible schedule and a ski pass provided for full time employees.
Start Date: November 2023 End Date: June 20, 2024 Pay Grid: $57,330 to $80,080 per year.
Located in the Summit Lodge Boutique Hotel 4359 Main St, Whistler, BC V8E 1B5 Contact us on the info below or apply in person
Reporting to: School Admin team Summary of Duties: The Child and Youth Therapist works with students aged 4-18 within a school-based setting. The child and youth therapist uses trauma-informed and therapeutic modalities including narrative therapy, expressive arts, and CBT. The child and youth therapist will report to the school admin support team.
For more information, or to apply for this position please visit our careers page https://lilwat.ca/careers/
info@lotuswhistler.ca • lotuswhistler.ca • 604-938-8882
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Free Housing Join our team of Plumbers and Gas Fitters Hiring 3rd and 4th year apprentice or journeyman candidates with experience in service/repair work.
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46 NOVEMBER 3, 2023
• Short-term accommodation available free of charge. Long term housing options available as well. Send your resume to: Dough@spearheadsph.com
Lil’wat Nation
Employment Opportunities Ullus Community Centre • Social Worker($80,371.20 - $91,673.40 per year) • Financial Reporting Manager ($93,475.20 - $101,556 per year) • Accounts Receivable Coordinator ( $38,038 - $53,599 per year) • Family Enhancement Worker ( $38,038 - $53,599 per year) • Accounts Payable Coordinator( $38,038 - $53,599 per year)
Lil’wat Lands & Resources • Referrals Coordinator ( $38,038 - $53,599 per year)
CIVIL CONSTRUCTION AND SNOW SERVICES BUILDING AN EXCELLENT COMPANY, PEOPLE, RELATIONSHIPS, AND RESULTS
Xet’òlacw Community School • Child and Youth Therapist ($57,330 - $80,080 per year)
Lil’wat Health & Healing • Custodian ($17.10-$20.90 per hour) • Nurse Manager ( $59,878 - $99,717.80 per year) • Assistant Health Director ($93,475.20 - $101,556 per year) • Administrative Assistant to Health Director( $38,038 - $53,599 per year)
Ts’zil Learning Centre • Administrative Assistant - Culture Centre( $38,038 - $53,599 per year)
Benefits Pension Plan • Employee Assistance Program • Gym facility Extended Health Benefits • Professional Development Please visit our career page for more information: https://lilwat.ca/careers/
MASSAGE THERAPIST/ BODY WORKER
PROFESSIONALISM
RELIABLE AND HONEST
PROBLEM SOLVERS
ATTENTION TO DETAIL
STRONG WORK ETHIC
CAREER OPPORTUNITIES SNOWPLOW OPERATOR, Whistler - Valid Class 5 BC Driver’s Licence required. Must be available from November 15 through March 31. Prior work experience an asset but all those with a willingness to work hard and learn are welcome to apply; on-the-job training is provided. $28-$33 per hour. HEAVY EQUIPMENT OPERATOR, Squamish - Minimum 5 years or 5,000 hours operating experience on excavator. Full-time, Monday – Friday. $33-$42 per hour. ACCOUNTING & PAYROLL SPECIALIST - CPA, PCP or working towards certification preferred. Full-time, Monday – Friday. $28-$38 per hour.
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Four Seasons Resort and Residences Whistler is seeking a Massage Therapist / Body Worker • Competitive contractor wages • Flexible hours REQUIREMENTS: • Minimum of 2 years experience in a Luxury brand, or Spa • Canadian recognized Massage Course with 2200 hours or equivalent diploma If this exciting opportunity sounds like a fit for you, please email: robin.jewers@ fourseasons.com
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WE'RE HIRING STAFF HOUSING COORDINATOR (The pay range for this position is $24.00 to $26.50 per hour)
STAFF HOUSING AVAILABLE.COMPETITIVE RATES & BENEFITS.GLOBAL DISCOUNTS.GLOBAL CAREER.
Join the #1 Global Leader in Hospitality. Apply at Jobs.Marriott.com. Contact Adela.Celustkova@deltahotels.com for more information, or drop by and talk to us - we love to meet new people.
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WINDOW COVERINGS Whistler’s Source for Blinds since 1989
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CARPET CLEANING
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CLEANING
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TILE
PUZZLES ACROSS 1 6 10 15 18 19 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 31 33 35 36 37 38 40 41 42 44 45 47 51 52 53 55 56 57 58 60 62 63 65
Slip Quite a lot Tablets Caboose “Kung Fu --” Whittles Charged particle Kind of palm Take the stage Cantankerous Step Graceful horse Maven Natural talent Alma -In a slanting position Brown seaweed Trick Fossil resin Masterful John Quincy -Hex Comic Jay -Virus variety Discernment “The Lion King” villain Stinging insect Cause to fail Cringe Cherry-red “Matrix” protagonist Corrosive substances Fashioned Naval petty officer Prototype Cartoonist -- Goldberg Toronto’s country Whirl
66 67 68 69 71 73 75 76 77 78 81 83 84 85 87 90 92 94 95 96 98 99 100 101 103 105 106 108 109 110 111 113 114 115 118 119 120 124 125
Angry speech Stat. in baseball Whirlpool Track event Clumsy fellow Overhead railways Nonprofessional Fine violin, for short Costa del -Paddle -- donna Plant fiber In the way shown Society girl Ancient Spain Wharf Printer’s mistakes Singer -- -- King Nodule Aerosols Lummoxes Sticky stuff Blubber Less fresh Make into law Badger Approve (var.) Regrets Ordinary language Tease gently Morphology div. Insert mark Carried Twist together Fable’s lesson Jokes Adroit Childish jeers Wish for
126 127 128 129 131 133 135 136 137 138 139 140 141 142
34 36 37 39 40 42 43 44 45 46 48 49 50
Blender setting Cry of disgust Golfer’s target Beethoven honoree Fairness Struck In the company of Provide food D.C. area airport Turner and Fey Pinch Lovers’ meeting Mimic Fashion
51 52
DOWN 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 19 20 22 28 30 32
Soliloquize Surgeon’s knife Secret findings JFK predecessor Corn unit Bother persistently “Sesame Street” regular Say with confidence Miles -- gallon Subdued color Bury Duplicitous one Ship’s record Sport shoes “A Christmas --” Wide open Like a judge Pillar Balance Looking unhealthy Delicate Competent Transgress
53 54 57 59 61 63 64 66 70 72 74 76 79 80 82 84 86 87 88 89 91 93
94 96 97 99 102 104 105 107 109 110 112 113 114 115 116 117
Celebratory event Church area Killed Raised platform Used a toothed tool Safe Like “Survivor” councils Right now Partly Auto part Forever -- -- day Pip Northernmost or southernmost region Challenge Sweet treat on a stick (2 wds.) Managed Send forth Title of respect Cut and run Pasta variety Singer -- Cruz Major road Oklahoma city Supply with guns Ruffians Nimble Cut the wool from “-- Fideles” Leaseholder Shreds Least little bit Keg contents -- facto Literary work Island near Tuscany Provokes Dinner item
Sewed loosely Fry Like a steak knife School in Philly Cut crosswise Holiday song Analyze grammatically Displayed fatigue Reduce Scores in golf Insect egg Hidden Cashless commerce Director -- Coen Model -- Campbell Spring flower
118 119 121 122 123 125 126 130 132 133 134
Hebrew prophet Cunning Lustrous black Kind of computer error “-- Boots are Made for Walkin’” Concrete jungle Flesh of fruit -- gibbon Sine -- non Rds. Sch. in Cambridge
LAST WEEKS’ ANSWERS
Enter a digit from 1 through 9 in each cell, in such a way that: • Each horizontal row contains each digit exactly once • Each vertical column contains each digit exactly once • Each 3x3 box contains each digit exactly once Solving a sudoku puzzle does not require any mathematics; simple logic suffices.
LEVEL OF DIFFICULTY: MEDIUM
4
1
1
5
9 4 1 7 6 8 3 7 8 1 9 2 5 9 8 6 5 4 9 5 6 8 MEDIUM # 29 Solution, tips and computer program at www.sudoku.com
8 4
9
1 3 2 5 9 5
8 6 MEDIUM
9 5
7
1 9
6 4
9 6 4 7 3 6 8
3
1 3 # 30
ANSWERS ON PAGE 48
NOVEMBER 3, 2023
49
MAXED OUT
Action4Canada doesn’t reflect the Whistler community “The sky is falling! The sky is falling!” -Chicken Little
AIN’T IT JUST? If you pay any attention to what’s going on in this country and the larger world, it’s pretty easy to believe the sky is, if not falling, certainly having trouble staying up. Brutal wars are being waged, notably in Ukraine and the Middle East, but conflicts we’ve long since grown tired of hearing about continue to take lives. Lookin’ at you, Syria. Strongmen nationalists and quasidictators are rising to power on fear-stoking campaigns promising to set matters “right,” generally at the expense of groups they can
BY G.D. MAXWELL point to as undesirable. The Orange Monster still wants to make America great again, perhaps better spelled “grate.” People are struggling to afford groceries. They’re struggling with higher interest rates than they’ve ever seen. Dreams of a home of their own are vanishing unless they want to move to places like Thunder Bay—no offence, TB. A third of all restaurants say they’re operating at a loss. But all those ills and many, many more, pale in comparison to the horror show that plays out on social media and the grey recesses of the internet. A group that finds very little right with modern life came to town last week to organize likeminded people to discuss—fight?—their own sky-killing maladies. Their list of current issues with which they take exception is long and brings to mind the entertaining song of Professor Wagstaff of Huxley College, played by Groucho Marx in the film Horsefeathers: “(Whatever it Is) I’m Against It!” If their positions on many issues didn’t have traction in some quarters, they’d be hilarious. But they’re not. Instead, they show a profound distaste for both science and social order and they’re woefully out of step with both the country and this community. Action4Canada claims to be “a grassroots movement reaching out to millions of Canadians and UNITING our voices in opposition to the destructive policies tearing at the fabric of this nation,” its website reads. “[W]e educate, equip and empower citizens to take action. We are committed to protecting... FAITH, FAMILY and FREEDOM.” It doesn’t take long to figure out the things they want to protect is their faith, their family and their freedom. Not yours if you happen to disagree with them. They’ll happily crush yours if it doesn’t mesh with theirs. They are social conservatives who seem to long for a simpler time. A time when more of the country was white, Anglo-Saxon, JudeoChristian. It goes without saying they’re anti-abortion. They also believe climate change is a bogus conspiracy with no grounding in
50 NOVEMBER 3, 2023
SCREENSHOT / ACTION4CANADA FACEBOOK PAGE
science. They’re convinced—and fighting in court to prove—that Canada’s response to Covid was ill-conceived, heavy-handed, and illegal. The Canadian body count, 54,498, and world deaths, 6.9 million, were apparently insufficient to impinge their personal liberties. Childhood vaccines? Dangerous poison, a crippler of body and brain. Medical assistance in dying, also known as MAID? Acts of murder. The United Nations? Canada should pull out... now. But it’s the intolerance of many of their social positions that strike at the very structure of the Canadian experiment. They argue critical race theory—the study of how society’s laws and social structures are shaped by conceptions of race and ethnicity and ways to level the playing field—is a “dangerous and harmful Marxist agenda intended to destroy the foundation of our nation which is built on Judeo-Christian principles.” This polemic fits well with their belief multiculturalism is a “failed experiment that is destroying the fabric of our nation.” It gets worse. They’re convinced LGBTQ+ activists have infiltrated schools and are forcing their deviance on innocent children. They consider SOGI—Sexual Orientation and Gender Identity—an element of the curriculum in School District 48, to not be about treating everyone with dignity and respect and making schools a safe place for all students, but instead to be insidious indoctrination to confuse children about
issues of gender orientation. They call for and support efforts to ban all books from school libraries they have deemed “pornographic” that touch on the subject. They believe the entire concept of the 15-minute city impugns the law of God—their God, of course—and is a ruse to monitor and control all aspects of life, establish a surveillance state, restrict freedom of movement, outlaw property and car ownership and establish a social credit score for right-thinking people, one that will punish those who refuse to go along with the groupthink. I can’t begin to touch on all the positions this group takes. You can see for yourself if you enjoy a good horror story: action4canada. com/current-issues. I’m heartened by the miserly turnout Thursday evening. Only six people attended... and one reporter. This is not a group who reflects our community. It is a group who would embrace a theocracy based on their own religion of exclusion, fear and hatred of those who don’t see the world the way they do. Their founder and leader, Tanya Gaw, is reported to have posted on X on Oct. 12: “ It’s time to pull the plug and end the charade of the Truth and Reconciliation witch hunt. The graves are empty and indigenous violence is their own doing.” Locally, Lil’wat representatives are appalled the Catholic church in Whistler would host an organizing meeting for Action4Canada. They’ve conveyed this
message, stating, “Providing a platform for a group that denies the well-documented atrocities of residential schools is unbelievable. This even was flagged with Our Lady of the Mountains Catholic Church, who responded that Action4Canada is ‘a parents’ rights group that focuses on moral teachings.’” (See related story on page 15.) They have called upon the leaders of Whistler to examine tax exemptions for the church in light of their actions. When I asked about the church’s position in providing space for the meeting, Father Andrew L’Heureux responded, “I don’t think these are settled issues. We definitely haven’t seen any debate among experts to make up our own minds. These are issues that are about the good of humanity. If the only way you can hold your position is to not talk about it, it seems to me that is not freedom but more entrenchment of ideology.” Say what? This seems to fit a pattern. It wasn’t that long ago the local church was embroiled in controversy because of their alignment with the Napa Institute, a traditionalist Catholic lobby group that seems to share many of the same beliefs espoused by Action4Canada. I can only take solace in the reality that so few people in town would bother to come out for this event. And I join with the Lil’wat people in their hopes the muni will re-examine their policy around permissive tax exemptions for this and other churches. ■
LD SO
7208 Spruce Grove Circle: Charming duplex in a private setting close to the Village. 4 Bedrooms, 2.5 Bathrooms plus Family Room. Primary bedroom with vaulted ceilings & mountain views. Modern updates throughout. Features sundecks, walkout yard, patio, storage & garage. $2,799,000 Rachel Allen 604-966-4200
#19 - 2200 Taylor Way : 3 bdrm plus loft beauty lovingly cared for by original owners. Enjoy comfort and style with modern updates, double garage and walking distance to Creekside Village, Gondola and Alta Lake. $2,399,000
9112 Corduroy Run Court: Best priced lot in Whistler + great views & privacy. Over 1 acre, a size that is usually unavailable in this town. Build an up to 5,920 sq.ft. dream home + large coach house. $1,325,000
Suzanne Wilson PREC*
Ken Achenbach
#324 – 3309 Ptarmigan Place: 324 Greyhawk. 2 bedrooms plus loft, 2 baths. South facing. 1,470 square feet. Excellent views of Blackcomb Mountain. Phase 1 zoning allow for nightly rentals. Covered Parking, Hot Tub, Sauna. $1,995,000 Javier Hidalgo
778-320-2426
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#314 - 4368 Main Street: Fantastic location, stroll to shops, retaurants & free village bus to ski slopes in winter. Top Floor cozy studio with 2 storage areas & balcony. Enjoy this condo as your Whistler getaway or rental investment option, great bike storage / UG parking. $799,000 + GST Kathy White PREC* 604-616-6933
604-966-7640
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604-966-8454
3359 Osprey Place: Located on one of the best streets in Whistler in the favourable Blueberry neighbourhood is a fantastic option for your Whistler escape! Views, location, flexible zoning & privacy - 4 very important aspects of any home and 3359 Osprey Place has it all! $7,900,000 Maggi Thornhill PREC* 604-905-8199
7471 Urdal Road, Pemberton: Nestled in the heart of Pemberton, this remarkable 10-acre property boasts a prime location, convenience, breathtaking 360-degree views, and endless possibilities. $6,495,000
1360 Collins Rd, Pemberton: Custom 4,404 sq ft home with stunning views & mature landscaping on 10 acre retreat. Zoned for garden nursery, horse riding academy, green housing, brewery/cidery, agritourism, B&B, home business and limited weddings. $3,790,000
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Carmyn Marcano & Suzanne Wilson PREC* 604-719-7646 / 604-966-8454
604-902-3335
38049 Keel Way, Squamish: An Unmatched Gem in Sea and Sky! Brand New 4 Bed, 3 Bath with extensive upgrades. Enjoy the ultimate coastal lifestyle in this oceanfront community, boasting a soon-to-be-completed 17,000 SF amenities center in 2024. $1,225,000 Jody Wright *PREC 604-935-4680
On October 13th, 2023, our Whistler team came together for 60 minutes of physical activity to raise an outstanding $2,530.00 CAD, benefitting Special Olympics chapters across the Americas. We earned the #1 spot in Canada and ranked in the Top 10 across the Americas. Engel & Volkers is a proud supporter of the Special Olympics and would like to send a special thank you to all our donators!
ENGEL & VÖLKERS WHISTLER Whistler Village Shop
Squamish Station Shop
36-4314 Main Street · Whistler BC V8E 1A8 · Phone +1 604-932-1875
150-1200 Hunter Place · Squamish BC V8B 0G8 · Phone +1 604-932-1875
whistler.evrealestate.com
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*PERSONAL REAL ESTATE CORPORATION. ©2023 Engel & Völkers. All rights reserved. Each brokerage independently owned and operated.
#5 - 4201 Sunshine Place
9480 Emerald Drive
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