Friday, May 22, 2026

Democracy Requires Accountability: Why So Many People Support the Recall Effort in Vancouver-Quilchena

Democracy Requires Accountability: Why So Many People Support the Recall Effort in Vancouver-Quilchena

Across British Columbia, many people are paying close attention to the recall campaign involving Dallas Brodie. For supporters of the campaign, this is about far more than politics. It is about accountability, reconciliation, public trust, and whether communities still have a meaningful voice when elected officials cause harm or division.

Many people felt deeply hurt by rhetoric and public comments connected to residential schools, Indigenous trauma, and reconciliation. In a province where so many families continue to carry intergenerational pain tied to colonial policies and residential schools, these issues are not abstract political talking points. They are lived experiences. For survivors, Indigenous communities, educators, students, and allies, words matter. Leadership matters.

Over the past year, public backlash grew significantly. Demonstrations took place at events and campuses, tensions escalated, and many residents began speaking openly about feeling unheard and disrespected. Critics argued that the rhetoric surrounding these issues contributed to polarization at a time when healing, empathy, and responsible leadership are desperately needed.

For many supporters of the recall campaign, this moment represents something larger than one politician. It is about restoring faith in democracy itself.

People are exhausted by feeling powerless. They are tired of watching outrage cycles come and go while communities continue carrying the emotional consequences. The recall process gives citizens a legal and democratic mechanism to respond when they believe an elected representative no longer reflects the values of the community.

And in British Columbia, recall laws are intentionally difficult. Organizers must collect signatures from a very large percentage of eligible voters within a short period of time. That means campaigns like this only gain traction when there is genuine grassroots frustration and widespread civic engagement.

Supporters of the recall say this effort matters because democracy cannot simply exist during election season. Democracy also depends on accountability between elections. It depends on citizens staying informed, speaking up, organizing peacefully, and refusing to normalize rhetoric that many believe causes social harm.

Many people also see this as part of a broader shift happening across Canada and North America. Communities are becoming increasingly concerned about political movements that rely on anger, division, fear, misinformation, or attacks on vulnerable groups. People are recognizing patterns of polarization and are asking important questions about the future they want for their families, schools, neighbourhoods, and democratic institutions.

For some, supporting the recall is not about revenge or hostility. It is about consequences. It is about drawing a line and saying leadership should bring communities together rather than deepen wounds or inflame tensions.

Others may disagree with the recall effort and argue that controversial speech should be addressed at the ballot box during regular elections. That debate itself is part of democracy. But regardless of political position, many people agree that citizens participating peacefully and lawfully in the democratic process is important.

Right now, volunteers are canvassing, talking to neighbours, sharing information, and encouraging civic participation. Whether the recall succeeds or not, supporters believe the movement is already sending a powerful message: people are paying attention, communities care about reconciliation and respectful leadership, and democracy still belongs to ordinary citizens willing to stand up and participate.

For many British Columbians, restoring trust in public institutions requires accountability, honesty, empathy, and a willingness to listen to the communities most affected by harmful rhetoric. They believe this recall campaign is one step toward rebuilding that trust.


  1. To politicians: At what point does rhetoric stop being “politics” and start causing real harm to communities already carrying trauma and division?

  2. To media organizations: Why do outrage-driven personalities often receive more coverage and attention than grassroots leaders trying to build solutions and healing?

  3. To wealthy donors and power brokers: How much influence should money have over democracy before ordinary citizens no longer feel represented at all?

  4. To universities and institutions: How do we protect free expression while also protecting students and communities from rhetoric many experience as harmful or dehumanizing?

  5. To social media companies: Why are algorithms still rewarding anger, fear, misinformation, and polarization when the social damage is becoming impossible to ignore?

  6. To elected officials: If public trust continues collapsing, what happens to democracy when people stop believing the system will ever hold anyone accountable?

  7. To ordinary citizens: Have we become so exhausted and divided that we no longer speak up until situations become extreme?

  8. To governments at every level: Why are housing insecurity, poverty, addiction, and mental health crises worsening while executive salaries, speculation, and corporate profits continue rising?

  9. To all of us: Are we building communities rooted in empathy, truth, and cooperation — or are we allowing fear and division to shape the future for younger generations?

  10. To people in positions of power everywhere: If leadership is not used to protect vulnerable people and strengthen communities, then what is power actually for?

#bcpoli #Vancouver #BritishColumbia #RecallCampaign #Democracy #Accountability #TruthAndReconciliation #CommunityVoices #IndigenousRights #CivicEngagement #GrassrootsMovement

El Niño, Atmospheric Rivers, and Why We Shouldn’t Ignore the Pattern Again

 🌧️ El Niño, Atmospheric Rivers, and Why We Shouldn’t Ignore the Pattern Again

Scientists are warning about a potentially strong El Niño developing, and for many people that might sound like just another climate headline that comes and goes.

But for those of us who have lived through it, or watched places we know get hit hard, it doesn’t feel abstract at all.

It feels familiar.

Because we’ve already seen what happens when the atmosphere lines up in a certain way—and then slows down.


We call them atmospheric rivers now, but most people just remember them as the storms that would not stop.

Rain that sits in one place.
Cloud systems that feel stuck.
Water that keeps coming long after the ground is already full.

And then the system gives way.


🌊 We’ve already seen this pattern

In British Columbia, we’ve seen how quickly things can change:

  • The Abbotsford floods turned farmland into an inland sea
  • The Coquihalla Highway washouts cut major transport routes through mountain valleys
  • Entire communities in the Fraser Valley learned how vulnerable they are when rivers rise too fast

And in Alberta, Calgary showed the same truth years earlier: a stalled system, heavy rainfall, and a landscape that simply couldn’t absorb it all at once.

Different places, same pattern.

Slow-moving water systems that suddenly become overwhelming.


🌴 And it’s not just here

In southern Mexico, Hurricane Agatha brought another version of the same story.

A powerful storm, rapidly changing intensity, and rainfall that turned steep terrain into flood pathways. Friends and communities there didn’t experience “weather” as an abstract system—they experienced it as water moving through homes, land, and memory.

Different climate zone, same vulnerability: when water arrives faster than the land can hold it.


🌍 Where El Niño fits into this

El Niño doesn’t create floods in a simple cause-and-effect way.

What it does is more subtle—and more important.

It shifts heat across the Pacific Ocean, which changes:

  • where storms travel
  • how much moisture the air can hold
  • how long systems linger in one place

And in a warmer world, that matters more than it used to.

Because warmer air holds more water.
And more water in the air means heavier rain when storms stall.

So when people say:

“It’s just El Niño, it comes and goes”

that misses the point.

It does come and go—but it reshapes the conditions that extreme events grow out of.


🌧️ The real risk isn’t just more storms

It’s this combination:

  • moisture-rich systems
  • slow movement or blocking patterns
  • already saturated ground or vulnerable terrain
  • infrastructure built for older climate expectations

That’s when flooding becomes not just possible—but sudden.

Not always widespread.
But intense, local, and fast.


🧭 Why “another warning” matters

There’s a tendency to normalize these alerts. We hear “atmospheric river,” “El Niño,” “extreme weather risk,” and it can start to feel like background noise.

But the communities that have lived through Abbotsford, the Coquihalla, or flooding in places like Oaxaca know something different:

Warnings are not about predicting exact disasters.
They are about recognizing conditions that have already produced disasters before.

And those conditions are appearing more often.


🌱 What this really asks of us

It’s not about panic. It’s about attention.

Attention to:

  • drainage systems that were never designed for this intensity
  • floodplains that are still being developed
  • mountain corridors where water and debris move fast
  • coastal and rural communities that carry the first impact

Because when systems slow down and dump water in one place, the question is no longer if it overwhelms something—

it’s what gets overwhelmed first.


🌍 Final thought

El Niño is not a headline to fear, but it is also not something to dismiss.

It is a reminder that the climate system doesn’t change evenly. It shifts, it concentrates, and it tests weak points in very specific ways.

And we’ve already seen those weak points.

So when another warning comes, the real question isn’t whether we’ve heard it before.

It’s whether we’ve learned enough from the last time it happened.


When Climate Language Becomes Political: What Happened at Vancouver City Hall

 When Climate Language Becomes Political: What Happened at Vancouver City Hall?

Today’s debate at Vancouver City Council left many people frustrated, confused, and concerned about the direction of climate policy in Vancouver.

At the center of the discussion was Mayor Ken Sim, Councillor Sean Orr, and a growing debate about whether our leaders are taking the climate crisis seriously enough.

The issue was not just about bylaws, natural gas, or building regulations. It was also about communication, trust, and whether politicians are willing to clearly speak about the reality of human-caused climate change.

Many viewers watching council proceedings online felt there was a disconnect between the urgency of the climate crisis and the responses being given at City Hall.

Why People Are Concerned

Vancouverites have lived through:

  • deadly heat domes,
  • wildfire smoke,
  • atmospheric rivers,
  • flooding,
  • highway destruction,
  • rising housing insecurity,
  • and growing anxiety about the future.

In British Columbia, climate change is no longer something abstract or far away. People have watched communities burn, roads collapse, crops fail, and insurance costs rise.

So when discussions around climate policy appear dismissive, vague, or politically rehearsed, people notice.

Today’s debate centered around proposed rollbacks or weakening of climate-related building policies, including measures tied to emissions reduction and natural gas use in new construction.

Supporters of the changes argue:

  • affordability matters,
  • construction costs are rising,
  • and residents need practical solutions.

Critics argue:

  • delaying climate action now will cost far more later,
  • infrastructure must adapt to a changing climate,
  • and politicians should not downplay the science.

The Bigger Issue: Fear, Confusion, and Political Messaging

One reason moments like this become emotional is because climate conversations are increasingly political.

Instead of calm discussions about science, infrastructure, resilience, and long-term planning, many debates now become polarized:

  • “alarmist” versus “denier,”
  • economy versus environment,
  • affordability versus sustainability.

But ordinary people are often stuck in the middle, simply trying to understand:

  • Why are floods worsening?
  • Why are summers becoming more dangerous?
  • Why does smoke now feel routine?
  • Why are food and insurance costs climbing?

People deserve honest conversations without fear-mongering or political theatre.

Questions We Should Be Asking

Instead of arguing in circles, perhaps these are the questions that matter most:

  1. How do we prepare cities for more extreme weather?
  2. Are developers and corporations influencing climate policy too heavily?
  3. How do we balance affordability with environmental responsibility?
  4. Why does climate communication often become so politically divisive?
  5. Are governments investing enough in flood protection and infrastructure resilience?
  6. What responsibility do cities have to future generations?
  7. How do we protect vulnerable people during climate emergencies?
  8. Why do some politicians avoid direct climate language?
  9. Are we building communities designed for resilience or profit?
  10. How can citizens stay informed without becoming overwhelmed or manipulated?

Moving Forward

Whether people agree or disagree politically, one thing is becoming difficult to ignore:

The weather patterns we once considered rare are becoming more common.

Citizens have a right to ask hard questions of leaders at every level of government.

And leaders have a responsibility to answer clearly, honestly, and respectfully — especially when discussing issues that affect the safety, health, and future of entire communities.


#Vancouver #ClimateCrisis #KenSim #SeanOrr #VancouverPolitics #ClimateAction #BritishColumbia #AtmosphericRiver #Sustainability #CityHall

Thursday, May 21, 2026

When Trust in Politics Starts to Fray

Recent reporting involving former federal MP and BC Conservative leadership candidate Kerry-Lynne Findlay has sparked concern and debate across British Columbia. 


According to reporting by Business in Vancouver, the federal election watchdog is investigating allegations connected to her 2025 federal campaign. The allegations have not been proven, and Findlay’s campaign has strongly denied wrongdoing.

This situation is a reminder of something much larger happening across Canada: many people are losing trust in political systems altogether.

For ordinary citizens struggling with rising rents, food costs, healthcare waitlists, and uncertainty about the future, stories involving political investigations, undeclared services, lobbying concerns, or questions around influence can deepen feelings that the system serves insiders better than communities.

At the same time, fairness matters. Allegations are not convictions.

 Investigations exist so facts can be examined properly rather than decided through rumours, social media outrage, or political attacks. In a democracy, due process matters for everyone, regardless of political party.

Still, these moments should encourage deeper reflection.

Why do so many people feel disconnected from politics today?

Why are citizens increasingly cynical about governments, corporations, and political leadership?

Why do communities across British Columbia continue struggling with housing affordability, homelessness, addiction, and environmental concerns while political energy often seems focused on power, fundraising, and party battles?

Many British Columbians are not asking for luxury. They want secure housing, clean water, affordable food, decent healthcare, meaningful work, and safe communities. They want honesty and accountability from leaders regardless of ideology.

This is also why independent journalism matters. Whether people agree or disagree with a political figure, investigative reporting plays an important role in democracy. Journalists asking difficult questions are not enemies of democracy; transparency is part of democracy.

At the same time, media consumers also have responsibilities:

  • avoid spreading unverified claims as facts,
  • read beyond headlines,
  • question all political parties equally,
  • and resist turning every issue into online hatred.

Canada is at a crossroads politically, economically, and socially. Many citizens feel exhausted and divided. But perhaps this is also a moment to ask what kind of society we truly want to build moving forward.

Do we want communities built around speculation, corporate influence, and endless political conflict?

Or do we want communities rooted in dignity, transparency, local resilience, environmental stewardship, and care for one another?

Real change rarely begins in closed-door meetings. It often begins with ordinary people paying attention, asking thoughtful questions, supporting local communities, and refusing to become completely numb or cynical.

No matter where this investigation leads, one thing is clear: public trust is fragile, and once broken, it is very difficult to rebuild.

#BCPolitics #BritishColumbia #CanadianPolitics #Democracy #Accountability #Transparency #PublicTrust #InvestigativeJournalism #ElectionsCanada #SocialJustice #HousingCrisis #CommunityVoices #PoliticalReform #CivicEngagement #TruthMatters

Back to What Matters

Back to What Matters

There is something strange happening in the world.

The more technology grows, the more many people feel exhausted, anxious, disconnected, and disposable.

Today, giant corporations race to replace workers with artificial intelligence while ordinary people struggle to pay rent, buy groceries, or find a quiet moment of peace. Entire cities are filled with luxury towers while thousands sleep outside or wonder how they will survive another month.

We were told technology would free humanity.

Instead, many people feel chained to screens, algorithms, debt, noise, and endless competition.

Maybe the problem is not technology itself. Maybe the problem is what we chose to value.

What if success was measured differently?

What if the most important things were:

  • safe homes,
  • clean drinking water,
  • healthy soil,
  • fresh food,
  • community gardens,
  • trees,
  • elders cared for with dignity,
  • children growing up without fear,
  • time to breathe,
  • meaningful work,
  • and communities strong enough to survive together?

A tomato grown in a backyard garden may matter more to human survival than another app designed to keep people scrolling.

A clean river may be worth more than a billion-dollar stock valuation.

A neighbor who shares food during hard times may matter more than influencers selling luxury lifestyles online.

For generations, people knew how to grow food, preserve seeds, repair things, and rely on one another. Somewhere along the way, many societies became dependent on systems so large and complex that ordinary people no longer feel in control of their own lives.

Now AI is accelerating that feeling.

Workers are told they are “replaceable.” Communities are told endless growth is necessary. Nature is treated as a resource instead of a living system we depend upon.

But human beings do not actually need endless consumption to live meaningful lives.

Most people are not dreaming of yachts or private jets. They want:

  • stability,
  • purpose,
  • safety,
  • connection,
  • and hope for the future.

Perhaps the future should not be about building smarter machines alone.

Perhaps the future should be about building wiser communities.

Communities where housing is treated as shelter before investment. Where food systems are local and resilient. Where clean water is protected fiercely. Where technology serves humanity instead of replacing it. Where progress is measured not only by profits, but by well-being.

Maybe the real question is not: “How advanced can society become?”

Maybe the real question is: “How human can society remain?”


#SustainableLiving #CommunityGardens #CleanWater #AffordableHousing #FoodSecurity #HumanConnection #EthicalTechnology #LocalFood #ResilientCommunities #PeopleOverProfit #HousingForAll #ProtectNature #FutureOfWork #GrowYourOwnFood #DigitalAge


Is Using AI Still Authentic?

  Is Using AI Still Authentic?

One thing I’ve been thinking about lately is whether using AI somehow makes writing less authentic.

At first I worried about that too.

But the more I use these tools, the more I realize something important:

AI can generate words endlessly, but it does not decide what matters to me.

It doesn’t decide:

  • what I notice
  • what disturbs me
  • what connections feel meaningful
  • what memories surface
  • what questions keep me awake at night

That part is still human.

Two people can use the exact same AI system and produce completely different work because they bring different experiences, emotions, histories, and ways of thinking into the conversation.

Some people use AI for coding. Some use it for business. Some use it for schoolwork. Some use it to brainstorm. Some use it because they are lonely. Some use it to process difficult situations.

For me, the conversations often drift toward: technology, environment, human disconnection, housing, AI, colonialism, resource extraction, emotional exhaustion, and the strange feeling that society is accelerating faster than people can emotionally process.

The machine did not invent those concerns.

I brought them into the conversation.

AI helps me organize ideas, simplify complicated topics, explore questions, and sometimes find language for thoughts that already existed but felt difficult to express clearly.

In that sense, it feels less like replacing human thought and more like interacting with a mirror, collaborator, research assistant, and reflective surface all at once.

Maybe one of the real questions of this era will not be: “Did someone use AI?”

Maybe the more important question will become: “Did they still think deeply?”

Because technology can generate content.

But meaning still comes from people.

— Tina Winterlik / Zipolita

#ArtificialIntelligence #AIWriting #DigitalAge #TechAndSociety #FutureOfHumanity #Authenticity #AIethics #HumanConnection #WritingCommunity #DigitalHorizonZ

When Approvals Get Challenged—and Why It Matters Long-Term

 When Approvals Get Challenged—and Why It Matters Long-Term

Even when a project is approved by a city, that doesn’t always mean it is settled.

Legal challenges can still stop or delay it, sometimes significantly.

What can happen if approval is challenged?

If a court becomes involved, several outcomes are possible:

The project can be paused immediately through an injunction while the case is reviewed

The approval can be overturned if the court finds the process was flawed

The city may be required to redo hearings or reconsider the decision

Or the court can uphold the approval and allow the project to proceed

Even when a project is not fully blocked, legal uncertainty can cause major delays, financial pressure, or even cancellation.

Why this matters beyond one project

This is where it becomes bigger than one floating hotel.

Decisions made in public spaces like Coal Harbour don’t just affect the present moment. They can last for years—sometimes across different political leaderships, different priorities, and shifting public opinion.

That raises important questions:

If a city approves a major waterfront project today, what happens if future leadership disagrees with it?

Who carries responsibility when decisions outlast the term of the people who approved them?

Should temporary or experimental projects have built-in exit plans or expiry conditions?

How do we balance innovation with long-term public risk or cost?

And when things are reversed or blocked, what does that mean for public trust in the process?

In the end, waterfront decisions are rarely just about one project.

They become part of a much longer timeline—where today’s approval can still be debated, challenged, or reshaped years into the future.

Wednesday, May 20, 2026

Canada Wants to Power the World — But What Future Are We Leaving Our Children?

 Canada Wants to Power the World — But What Future Are We Leaving Our Children?


Watching the meeting between Mark Carney and David Eby, it feels like Canadians are once again being told that more pipelines, more mining, more expansion, and faster development are the only path forward.

“Energy security.” “Economic growth.” “Global demand.” “Prosperity.”

We have heard these promises for decades.

But many ordinary people are asking: If Canada is so wealthy in resources, why are so many citizens struggling just to survive?

Why are seniors choosing between rent and food? Why are young people giving up on ever owning a home? Why are people with disabilities trapped in poverty? Why are educated Canadians unable to find stable work while costs explode everywhere?

Canada keeps trying to help power the world while many people at home feel abandoned.

At the same time, governments speak about climate responsibility while pushing massive industrial expansion: Pipelines. Mining. LNG. Clearcutting. Mega-projects. Endless growth.

We call ourselves “Super, Natural BC,” yet many ecosystems are under increasing pressure, wildlife habitats continue shrinking, and communities are becoming financially and emotionally exhausted.

And even when cleaner technology appears, humanity often just consumes more: More vehicles. More electricity. More devices. More AI infrastructure. More extraction. More waste.

At what point do leaders stop and ask: What kind of future are we actually building?

Because this is not only about economics anymore. It is about values. It is about limits. It is about whether future generations inherit a livable world or simply the leftovers of short-term political and corporate decisions.

Maybe both Mark Carney and David Eby need a serious reality check — not just about markets and investment, but about the growing disconnect between political messaging and the lived reality of ordinary people.


Reflective Questions

  1. If endless economic growth is the goal, where are the environmental limits?

  2. What happens to future generations if forests, water systems, and ecosystems are continuously sacrificed for short-term profit?

  3. Are we building a sustainable society — or simply a more technologically advanced version of overconsumption?

  4. If cleaner technology still requires massive mining and energy use, are we truly solving problems or shifting them?

  5. Why do so many citizens feel poorer and more insecure in one of the richest resource countries on Earth?

  6. Should governments focus more on housing, healthcare, affordability, and dignity at home before promising to “power the world”?

  7. What kind of emotional and environmental inheritance are today’s leaders leaving their children and grandchildren?

  8. If corporations profit while ordinary people struggle with rising costs, who is this “prosperity” really for?

  9. Can humans continue expanding consumption forever on a finite planet?

  10. Years from now, what will matter more: How fast projects were approved — or whether future generations still have clean water, healthy forests, stable communities, and hope?

#MarkCarney #DavidEby #BritishColumbia #PipelineDebate #CostOfLiving #HousingCrisis #ClimateCrisis #IndigenousRights #SustainableFuture #ProtectBC #ResourceDevelopment #FutureGenerations #EnvironmentalJustice #CanadaPolitics #SuperNaturalBC


Police Powers Under Review: What Counts as “Obstruction”?

 



This is what’s happening today in the Supreme Court of Canada.

A group called the Canadian Civil Liberties Association is asking the court to decide something very important about police powers.


🚓 What is “obstructing a peace officer”?

This is a criminal charge police can use when someone is said to be:

stopping, blocking, or interfering with police while they are doing their job.

For example:

  • refusing to give basic info when police are issuing a ticket
  • physically blocking an officer from doing their lawful duty
  • seriously interfering with an investigation

It’s meant for situations where someone is actually getting in the way of police work.


⚖️ What this case is about

The question is:

👉 Can police turn a small rule-breaking situation (like a city bylaw ticket) into a criminal arrest by saying someone “obstructed police”?


🧠 What the CCLA is arguing

1️⃣ Police must stick to the original rule

If a city or province law says:

“Break this rule → get a ticket or fine”

Then police should NOT be able to switch it into:

“Now you’re being arrested for a criminal offence”

They say police must use the enforcement method written in that law.


2️⃣ Arrests should only happen in real obstruction cases

Police can only arrest someone if:

  • the person is truly stopping them from doing their job
  • like refusing basic info needed to issue a ticket

And even then: 👉 arrests should be used carefully, not automatically.


🎯 Super simple summary

This case is about this idea:

👉 “If you break a small rule, you should get the punishment for that rule—not suddenly a criminal arrest—unless you are truly stopping the police from doing their job.”


📄 Source


#SupremeCourtCanada #CivilLiberties #PolicePowers #CriminalLaw #JusticeSystem #KnowYourRights #LegalAwareness #CanadianLaw #HumanRights #CommunityJustice

Who actually makes $5,300 a month?

 Policy Reality: What a Lifetime of Work Actually Looks Like

I started working when I was young. Over the years, I watched wages slowly rise — but stability never kept pace with the cost of living, housing, or basic security.

In the early 1980s, I earned between $3.75 and $5.00 an hour. By 1982 I was at $4.00, and by 1986 I was around $4.75 to $5.00. Later I reached about $9.00 an hour, then $12, but that job ended after an injury.

After that, I went back to school and took on student debt. What was meant to be a short program turned into years due to cancellations and disruptions — meaning more debt, more delay, and more uncertainty.

In 1995, I worked as a photographer on cruise ships, already carrying debt, even covering basic job requirements like uniforms. That same year I earned between $12 and $16 an hour scanning aerial photography, before being affected by downsizing.

By 2001, I was self-employed while pregnant and financially unstable. Like many people in precarious work, there was no safety net that covered the gaps between jobs, health, and life changes.

Over the years, I continued moving through different forms of work:

  • Around 2014, minimum wage was about $11/hour
  • I asked for a $1 raise and instead received a disciplinary letter, and I had to leave that job — and I couldn’t access EI
  • In 2018, I worked as a nanny starting at $20/hour, later $21 with occasional bonuses
  • During COVID, I worked in housekeeping and cleaning at around $20–$25/hour, but nothing was steady
  • I also experienced housing instability and being financially taken advantage of

More recently, work became even more unstable. One job ended and shifted into something completely different — effectively becoming nanny work for an elderly person and a dog for about $20 a day, compared to what was once $20 an hour.


This is the Policy Gap

When governments and city councils discuss “affordable housing” or “market rents,” they often assume a stable, full-time income that many people simply do not have.

But the reality for many workers is:

  • wages that rise slowly over decades
  • jobs that are part-time, temporary, or unpredictable
  • no benefits or paid sick time
  • and constant gaps between employment

At the same time, rents in cities like Vancouver have reached levels such as:

  • $2,400+ for a one-bedroom
  • $3,300–$3,800+ for a two-bedroom

This creates a basic mismatch between policy assumptions and lived reality.

Because even when hourly wages look “higher” than decades ago, what has changed is not stability — it is insecurity. Many people are not working fewer hours because they choose to, but because full-time, stable work is harder to find.


The Core Question

So when someone at City Hall asks:

“Who actually makes $5,300 a month?”

The deeper question is not just about income.

It is:

“What kind of economy are we designing — and who is it actually for?”

Because for a growing number of people, the issue is not willingness to work. It is whether work, in its current form, is still enough to guarantee housing, safety, and dignity.


Reflective Questions

  1. What happens to a system when full-time work no longer guarantees housing or stability?
  2. If your sister went through a divorce today, could she afford to rent a one-bedroom on her own in this city?
  3. What happens to a child when their parent is working multiple jobs but still cannot keep up with rent?
  4. What happens to a nephew or niece when one parent is absent and the other is overwhelmed, exhausted, or unsupported?
  5. What happens to families when grandparents can no longer age in place and must enter care homes because housing is unaffordable?
  6. How does a society function when seniors cannot afford a basic one-bedroom after a lifetime of work?
  7. What happens to LGBTQ2S youth when they are rejected by family and have no affordable housing safety net to fall back on?
  8. What happens to mental health when employment is unstable, unpredictable, and without benefits?
  9. What happens to community safety when people are forced into survival mode — juggling bartering, unstable work, and housing insecurity?
  10. Who benefits when policy discussions are based on ideal incomes that many people have never actually experienced?

#HousingCrisis #IncomeInequality #WorkingPoor #PrecariousWork #AffordabilityCrisis #Vancouver #SocialJustice #RentBurden #LabourRights #CostOfLiving #Dignity #AffordableHousing #CommunityVoices


Vancouver at a Crossroads: When Police Become the Mental Health System

 Vancouver at a Crossroads: When Police Become the Mental Health System

After reading comments from Steve Rai about the growing violence connected to mental illness in Vancouver, I felt both saddened and strangely grateful.

Grateful because someone in leadership is finally saying publicly what many ordinary people have quietly seen building for years.

This is not simply about “crime.”

This is about a society under strain.

Police officers are increasingly being sent to situations involving:

  • mental health breakdowns
  • addiction crises
  • trauma
  • homelessness
  • despair
  • unpredictable behaviour
  • people falling through every crack imaginable

And yet police were never meant to become the primary mental health response system.

Years ago, especially in places like United Kingdom, police officers — “Bobbies” — were often seen more as community figures than militarized responders. Many carried only batons instead of firearms. The philosophy was “policing by consent,” where trust and relationship with the community mattered deeply.

Today, many officers are expected to walk into impossible situations with limited training in psychology, trauma, addiction, or de-escalation, while also carrying the weight of generations of mistrust and systemic failures.

That is a dangerous crossroads for everyone.

Because when affordable housing disappears, when psychiatric supports are overloaded, when people live in survival mode for too long, when loneliness and hopelessness grow — eventually the crisis shows up on the street corner, on transit, in emergency rooms, and in interactions with police.

And then society acts shocked.

Vancouver feels emotionally exhausted right now.

You can feel it in conversations, in public spaces, in the tension people carry. There is growing inequality beside enormous wealth. Mega-events and luxury developments promise prosperity, while many ordinary people struggle just to remain stable.

Meanwhile, frontline workers — including police, nurses, outreach workers, paramedics, and social workers — are being asked to absorb the consequences of problems much larger than any one profession can solve.

No city can police its way out of a mental health crisis.

No city can arrest its way out of housing insecurity, trauma, or despair.

What worries me most is not just the visible crisis, but the normalization of it. People are becoming numb to suffering that would have shocked society decades ago.

We need more than reaction.

We need dignity. We need prevention. We need affordable housing. We need long-term mental health support. We need human connection. We need leadership willing to speak honestly about what is happening.

Because this moment feels bigger than politics.

It feels like a warning about the kind of society we are becoming.


 #Vancouver #MentalHealth #HousingCrisis #Policing #SocialJustice #Homelessness #Trauma #PublicSafety #BCPolitics #HumanDignity

Floating Hotels, Waterfront Decisions, and Vancouver’s Coal Harbour

  Floating Hotels, Waterfront Decisions, and Vancouver’s Coal Harbour

A recent legal challenge is trying to block a floating hotel project in Coal Harbour. The Hotel Workers Union argues that the public was not given enough time to fully review new information before the city held its hearing and approved the project.

On the surface, this looks like a procedural disagreement about timing and process. But underneath it raises a bigger question about how decisions get made for Vancouver’s waterfront—and who they are really serving.

Because once you start looking at floating hotels, it’s hard not to think about what else is possible on the water, and what responsibilities come with approving permanent or semi-permanent structures in public space.

The bigger question

If we can approve floating hotels for tourism or development, it opens up a wider conversation:

What else could—or should—be placed on the waterfront?

Some people imagine more radical ideas, like using cruise ships or floating platforms as short-term emergency housing, especially during a housing crisis. In theory, something like this could provide:

  • immediate shelter
  • basic services like food and medical support
  • and a transition point toward permanent housing

A step-down system, rather than leaving people in crisis while waiting for long-term housing solutions.

But ideas like this quickly collide with reality.

Waterfront development is complex, expensive, and heavily regulated. And Vancouver has already seen examples of temporary or semi-permanent floating structures creating long-term issues when oversight breaks down or responsibility becomes unclear.

So the question becomes less about whether ideas are possible—and more about how they are governed.


Questions We Need to Start Asking About AI and Data Centers

 Questions We Need to Start Asking About AI and Data Centers

The conversation around artificial intelligence often focuses on excitement: faster systems, smarter tools, economic growth, and technological breakthroughs.

But beneath the excitement are difficult questions society still has not fully answered.

Questions like:

  • How much energy should humanity devote to AI?
  • How many data centers are too many?
  • Should communities have more say before giant facilities are built nearby?
  • Where will all the electricity come from?
  • Where will the cooling water come from?
  • What happens during drought years?
  • Will AI infrastructure compete with housing, agriculture, or public utilities for resources?
  • Who benefits most from this expansion?
  • Will the economic gains be shared fairly?
  • What happens to smaller communities when large-scale infrastructure arrives?
  • Are governments moving too quickly without long-term planning?
  • Are we building technology faster than we understand its consequences?
  • Can efficiency improvements actually reduce total consumption, or will they simply accelerate growth?
  • What happens when every country races to dominate AI at the same time?
  • Could future generations inherit environmental costs from decisions being made today?

These are not anti-technology questions.

They are responsible questions.

Technology itself is not the enemy.

The challenge is whether humanity can balance innovation with environmental limits, social responsibility, and long-term thinking.

Right now the world seems caught between two futures: one driven entirely by endless expansion, and another trying to find balance before resources become strained beyond recovery.

The debate is only beginning.

#ArtificialIntelligence

#AIInfrastructure

#DataCenters

#Photonics

#SustainableTech

#ClimateChange

#WaterCrisis

#FutureOfAI

#GreenTechnology

#DigitalHorizonZ

Tuesday, May 19, 2026

Vancouver’s Zero-Increase Budget: What Gets Lost When We “Save”

 Vancouver’s Zero-Increase Budget: What Gets Lost When We “Save”

There is a lot of discussion right now about Vancouver’s “zero means zero” property tax budget. On the surface, a 0% tax increase sounds simple, even responsible. But behind that slogan is a much more complicated reality that deserves closer attention.

To balance the budget without raising property taxes, the City is looking for roughly $120 million in savings and/or new revenue. That number does not exist in abstraction. It translates into real decisions about staffing, service levels, and the future of public spaces that residents rely on every day.

The language of “efficiency” vs. the reality of services

In official terms, the plan is framed around “efficiencies, restructuring, and service reviews.” But in practical terms, large-scale savings of this size cannot be achieved without impacts.

Across public reporting and union concerns, there is growing worry that hundreds of full-time positions could be affected, including roles connected to recreation, parks, planning, engineering, and sanitation.

While the City has not confirmed specific layoffs, it also has not clearly explained how such significant savings will be achieved without changes to staffing or service delivery.

That uncertainty matters.

Because when budgets are reduced or frozen in real terms, the effects rarely stay invisible. They show up in longer waitlists, fewer program offerings, reduced maintenance, and stretched frontline staff.

What a “zero increase” really means

A 0% property tax increase is often presented as protecting affordability for residents. And affordability is a real concern in Vancouver.

But budgets are not static. Costs rise each year due to inflation, wages, and infrastructure needs. A zero increase does not mean “no change.” It often means absorbing rising costs internally.

That raises an important question:

If costs go up but revenue does not, what gets adjusted?

In most public systems, the answer is staffing levels, service scope, or deferred maintenance.

The long-term cost question

One of the least discussed aspects of short-term budget restraint is long-term cost.

When cities reduce investment in preventative services—whether that is maintenance, planning capacity, recreation programs, or community services—the result is often delayed costs elsewhere.

A broken system does not disappear. It accumulates repair bills.

This is not an argument against fiscal responsibility. It is an argument that “saving money today” can sometimes shift costs into the future in less visible, more expensive ways.

The people behind the budget

It is easy to talk about budgets in numbers. Millions saved. Percentages adjusted. Targets met.

But behind every line item are people:

  • recreation staff running community programs
  • sanitation workers maintaining public spaces
  • planners and engineers shaping safe, livable streets
  • library and community centre staff supporting daily life in neighbourhoods

These are not abstract roles. They are the systems that make a city feel functional and human.

The bigger question: what kind of city are we building?

This budget debate is not only about accounting. It is about priorities.

Vancouver is growing, and its challenges are not getting simpler—housing pressure, climate resilience, public space maintenance, and social infrastructure all require ongoing investment.

So the question is not only: “Can we afford to spend more?”

It is also: “What happens if we don’t?”

A call for transparency and honest conversation

Residents deserve clarity on what “$120 million in savings” actually means in practice:

  • Which services are changing?
  • Which departments are affected?
  • What level of service is considered acceptable moving forward?

Without that transparency, it becomes difficult to have a meaningful public conversation about trade-offs.

Because ultimately, a city budget is not just a financial document. It is a reflection of values.

And those values deserve to be debated openly, not hidden inside technical language like “efficiencies” and “realignment.”



Reflective Questions for Mayor Ken Sim and Council

  1. What specific services will be reduced or restructured to achieve the $120 million in required savings?

  2. How many full-time positions are expected to be affected, and in which departments?

  3. What level of service reduction, if any, do you consider acceptable for recreation, libraries, parks, and sanitation?

  4. How will a 0% property tax increase account for inflation and rising operational costs without reducing services?

  5. What evidence supports the assumption that these savings can be achieved without meaningful impacts to frontline staff or service delivery?

  6. Has the City conducted a full public impact assessment on how these changes may affect vulnerable residents and neighbourhoods?

  7. What safeguards are in place to ensure that cost-cutting today does not lead to higher long-term costs in maintenance, infrastructure, or social services?

  8. How will residents be informed in advance if service levels are reduced, rather than discovering changes after they occur?

  9. What alternative revenue options were considered before committing to a zero-increase tax policy?

  10. What does a “well-served, livable Vancouver” look like under this budget, and who gets to define that standard?


#Vancouver #CityBudget #ZeroPercentTax #PublicServices #CivicEngagement #CommunityMatters #UrbanPolicy #FrontlineWorkers #LocalGovernment #SpeakUpVancouver

AI, Data Centers, Water, and the Illusion of Efficiency

 AI, Data Centers, Water, and the Illusion of Efficiency

One thing I keep thinking about is this:

Just because technology becomes more efficient does not automatically mean society consumes less.

Sometimes the opposite happens.

Companies like POET Technologies are developing impressive technologies that may lower power consumption and improve the efficiency of AI infrastructure.

That’s a good thing.

But history shows us something important: when systems become cheaper and more efficient, humanity often expands usage instead of reducing it.

We saw it with:

  • highways
  • plastics
  • fossil fuels
  • consumer electronics
  • internet bandwidth
  • cloud computing

Efficiency often fuels growth.

Now we are entering the AI era, where giant data centers are being built all over the world to power machine learning, automation, and cloud services.

These facilities require:

  • massive electricity
  • enormous cooling systems
  • water
  • land
  • minerals
  • constant expansion

Canada is often viewed as a “safe” place for data centers because of hydroelectricity and cooler temperatures.

But Canada does not have unlimited water.

No country does.

And many regions are already experiencing:

  • drought
  • wildfires
  • shrinking snowpacks
  • water restrictions
  • climate instability

At some point we have to ask: how much infrastructure growth is sustainable?

Because even if each individual data center becomes more energy efficient, total demand may still explode as AI expands globally.

That is the part people are struggling to keep up with.

This is not simply about one company or one technology.

It is about the larger direction of civilization.

Do we use innovation to reduce pressure on the planet?

Or do we use every efficiency gain as permission to consume even more?

That may become one of the defining questions of our time.


#ArtificialIntelligence

#AIInfrastructure

#DataCenters

#Photonics

#SustainableTech

#ClimateChange

#WaterCrisis

#FutureOfAI

#GreenTechnology

#DigitalHorizonZ

Monday, May 18, 2026

Mount St. Helens, Ash in the Air, and the Stories Beneath the Mountains

 Mount St. Helens, Ash in the Air, and the Stories Beneath the Mountains

I do not remember every detail about the eruption of Mount St. Helens in 1980, but I remember enough to know it changed the feeling of the Pacific Northwest.

I graduated that year.

I remember working on a strawberry farm, and I remember the berries being bad that season. There was too much rain, strange weather, and ash in the air from the eruption. Even when you were not directly near the volcano, people felt it. The atmosphere itself felt unsettled.

That is what many younger people may not understand about large natural events. They do not only affect one mountain. They ripple through agriculture, weather, work, transportation, tourism, and even memory itself.

More than four decades later, people are still rebuilding roads and bridges around Mount St. Helens because the landscape never truly stopped changing after May 18, 1980.

The recent rebuilding work along the Spirit Lake Memorial Highway after the 2023 landslide is a reminder that nature is still reshaping that region. We often think disasters end when the headlines stop, but volcanic landscapes continue evolving for generations.


A Mountain with Older Names

Long before settlers called it Mount St. Helens, Indigenous peoples already knew the mountain well.

Among some Nations, one traditional name is Lawetlat’la or Loowit, often connected to stories of a smoking mountain and powerful spiritual forces.

These mountains were never viewed simply as scenery. They were living beings, teachers, warnings, and part of a larger relationship between people and the land.

Today, scientists increasingly recognize that Indigenous oral histories may preserve memories of real geological events stretching back centuries or even thousands of years.

That matters.

Because for a long time, Western society dismissed these stories as myths.


Spirit Lake and a Changed World

One of the strangest places left behind is Spirit Lake.

When the volcano erupted, the side of the mountain collapsed in the largest landslide in recorded history at the time. The blast flattened forests and sent entire hillsides crashing into the lake.

Millions of trees were ripped from the earth.

Many still float there today in giant drifting log mats, decades later.

The lake itself was physically lifted higher by the debris avalanche. Engineers have spent years trying to manage drainage systems because flooding and mudflow risks remain.

It feels almost symbolic.

Humans rebuild highways and bridges, while the mountain quietly reminds everyone that nature still decides the final shape of the land.


The Earth is Still Alive Here

Living in British Columbia, we sometimes forget how geologically alive this coast really is.

Around Vancouver, we are surrounded by mountains that appear ancient and permanent, yet many are part of active volcanic systems.

Mount Baker still releases heat and steam.

Mount Garibaldi, Mount Meager, and Mount Cayley are all part of the volcanic story of the Pacific Northwest.

Scientists say the larger immediate risk for our region is likely the Cascadia Subduction Zone — the massive fault line off the coast capable of producing earthquakes and tsunamis.

Yet Indigenous peoples along this coast already carried stories about great floods, rising waters, and survival by canoe long before modern geology explained these events.


The Canoe Stories

I have often thought about the flood stories shared among Coast Salish peoples, including stories connected to the Squamish region.

Some describe people escaping rising waters in canoes and tying them to mountaintops.

People sometimes compare these stories to Noah’s Ark, but they are their own teachings, rooted in this land, these waters, and these mountains.

What fascinates me is that these stories may not only be spiritual — they may also be memories.

Memories of tsunamis. Memories of earthquakes. Memories carried across generations through oral tradition.

In modern society, we often assume written records are the only true history, but perhaps stories carried around fires and through families preserved knowledge in ways we are only beginning to understand again.


What I Remember Most

What I remember most from 1980 is not panic.

It is atmosphere.

The feeling that nature was bigger than us.

The feeling of ash, rain, damaged crops, uncertain skies, and realizing that mountains are not frozen objects in the distance. They are part of an ongoing living system.

And maybe that is why the story of Mount St. Helens still matters today.

Not only because of destruction, but because it reminds us that the Earth is still changing beneath our feet — and that people who lived closest to the land often understood that long before modern science caught up.

While We Are Busy Surviving, The Future Is Being Decided

While We Are Busy Surviving, The Future Is Being Decided

Most people are not spending their days debating artificial intelligence policy.

They are trying to survive.

Trying to find affordable housing. Trying to keep a job. Trying to pay rent and buy groceries. Trying to raise children in an increasingly uncertain world. Trying to care for aging parents. Trying to navigate dementia, illness, addiction, burnout, grief, and exhaustion.

And while ordinary people are overwhelmed with daily survival, powerful decisions about the future of technology are quietly being made around the world.

Not just in one country. Everywhere.

Governments, corporations, military agencies, and tech companies are rapidly building systems that could fundamentally reshape human life.

Artificial intelligence is no longer science fiction.

It is already influencing:

  • employment
  • education
  • healthcare
  • policing
  • surveillance
  • warfare
  • social media
  • insurance
  • banking
  • housing systems
  • public opinion
  • creative industries

But how many ordinary people truly have time to study AI policy while trying to hold their lives together?

That may be part of the danger.

Historically, some of the biggest societal changes happened while populations were distracted by economic hardship, instability, fear, or exhaustion.

People often do not fully understand the consequences of major systems until those systems are deeply embedded into everyday life.

The internet evolved this way. Social media evolved this way. Data collection evolved this way.

Most people did not consciously agree to become products inside surveillance-based advertising systems. It simply happened slowly while life carried on.

Now AI may be accelerating that process dramatically.

And around the world, countries are responding very differently.

Some governments are moving toward stricter regulation. Others are prioritizing corporate innovation and economic competition. Some are investing heavily in AI surveillance and state control. Others are struggling just to keep up technologically.

At the same time, global inequality raises another uncomfortable question:

Will poorer and struggling populations become testing grounds for technologies controlled elsewhere?

Who benefits from these systems? Who profits? Who is protected? Who becomes disposable?

And while experts debate innovation, regulation, and market dominance, many ordinary people are simply trying to survive another month without falling behind financially or emotionally.

That reality matters.

Because democracy weakens when people are too exhausted to participate meaningfully in shaping the future.

A parent working two jobs may not have time to read AI legislation. A caregiver dealing with dementia may not have energy left to study digital ethics. A young person drowning in rent and student debt may not have the capacity to challenge systems being built around them.

Yet these technologies may profoundly shape all of their futures.

So perhaps one of the most important questions is not simply: “What kind of AI are we building?”

But: “What kind of society are we becoming while it is being built?”

Are we creating technologies that genuinely support human dignity, community, health, and fairness?

Or are we building systems that increase inequality, surveillance, dependence, and social fragmentation while ordinary people are too overwhelmed to resist or even notice?

Technology itself is not inherently evil. It can help people tremendously.

But history repeatedly shows that without strong ethics, transparency, and democratic accountability, powerful systems often end up serving concentrated power first.

The future is not only being shaped by programmers and billionaires.

It is also being shaped by public silence, exhaustion, distraction, and survival.

And perhaps that is the part we should be discussing far more honestly.

When Technology Moves Faster Than Ethics

 The conversation around AI just took a darker turn.

Recently, controversy erupted after reports that OpenAI supported legislation that critics say could limit liability for catastrophic AI-related harm. Some headlines simplified it into: “AI companies want immunity if 100 people die.”

That is not exactly what was said.

But the bill reportedly defined “critical harm” as events involving mass casualties or massive economic destruction, while also creating legal protections for companies under certain conditions.

And maybe that is the bigger issue.

Not the sensational headline.

But the normalization of discussing mass harm scenarios as acceptable legal categories before society has even decided what ethical boundaries should exist around AI in the first place.

We are moving incredibly fast.

Faster than public understanding. Faster than regulation. Faster than education. Faster than our emotional and moral adaptation to these systems.

And now we have to ask harder questions.

If an AI system causes catastrophic harm, who is responsible?

The programmer? The corporation? The investor? The government that failed to regulate it? Or the public that continued to normalize and depend on it?

Should companies creating technologies capable of affecting millions of lives receive liability protection before long-term consequences are fully understood?

What happens when AI becomes deeply integrated into transportation, healthcare, policing, warfare, employment decisions, social services, and education?

If an algorithm denies housing, medical care, employment, parole, insurance, or emergency response incorrectly — who carries the human cost?

And perhaps the hardest question:

Are we slowly accepting a future where human suffering becomes statistically manageable collateral damage in exchange for technological progress and corporate profit?

History shows us that society often adopts technologies first and asks ethical questions later.

Industrial pollution. Asbestos. Lead gasoline. Social media algorithms. Data harvesting. Opioid marketing.

Again and again, profits moved faster than caution.

So now we stand at another crossroads.

AI can absolutely help humanity. It already does in many ways.

But should the companies building these systems be asking for legal shields before society has democratic oversight strong enough to protect ordinary people?

That question belongs to all of us — not just politicians, billionaires, or tech executives.

Because once systems become too embedded into everyday life, it becomes very difficult to say no later.



#ArtificialIntelligence #AIethics #Technology #OpenAI #HumanRights #DigitalRights #Accountability #Ethics #FutureOfAI #SocialJustice #CorporateResponsibility #AIRegulation #Democracy #CriticalThinking #TechPolicy

What Does POET Actually Do?

 What Does POET Actually Do? A Simplified Explanation of Chip-Scale Photonics

Lately I’ve been seeing more discussion about companies building the next generation of AI infrastructure. One company that caught my attention is POET Technologies.

At first glance, their website sounds extremely technical — optical interposers, semiconductorization of photonics, 1.6T optical engines — enough to make most people tune out.

So here’s the simplified version.

POET is developing technology that allows computers and AI systems to move information using light instead of relying only on traditional electrical connections.

This matters because artificial intelligence systems and massive data centers are becoming incredibly power hungry. The more AI grows, the more information has to move between servers, chips, and storage systems at extremely high speed.

Traditional systems:

  • use large amounts of electricity
  • generate enormous heat
  • require expensive cooling systems
  • take up space
  • become harder to scale

POET’s technology attempts to solve some of these problems by integrating electronics and photonics together on a tiny chip-scale platform.

Photonics basically means communication using light.

Their main invention, called the POET Optical Interposer, acts like a miniature high-speed optical highway connecting components together far more efficiently.

The company claims this could lead to:

  • lower energy consumption
  • smaller hardware
  • reduced heat
  • faster AI communications
  • lower manufacturing costs
  • easier scaling for future AI systems

They are designing systems capable of 400G, 800G, 1.6T and even 3.2T communication speeds — the kinds of speeds required for giant AI clusters and hyperscale data centers.

In simple terms: they are trying to make the digital nervous system of AI faster and more energy efficient.

And honestly, that part is impressive.

But it also raises bigger questions.

Because every time humanity creates more efficient technology, we often use that efficiency to expand even faster instead of slowing down consumption.

That’s where this conversation becomes much larger than one company.

It becomes a conversation about energy, water, resources, and the future direction of AI itself.


#ArtificialIntelligence

#AIInfrastructure

#DataCenters

#Photonics

#SustainableTech

#ClimateChange

#WaterCrisis

#FutureOfAI

#GreenTechnology

#DigitalHorizonZ

Saturday, May 16, 2026

When a Treaty Becomes a Broken Promise: The Robinson Treaties and Canada’s Reckoning

 When a Treaty Becomes a Broken Promise: The Robinson Treaties and Canada’s Reckoning

A recent Supreme Court of Canada decision has sent shockwaves through legal, political, and Indigenous communities. At the centre is a long-standing dispute over the Robinson Treaties, agreements signed in 1850 between the Crown and the Anishinaabe of what is now northern Ontario.

The Court’s message was unusually direct: Canada and Ontario acted “dishonourably” and made a “mockery” of their treaty obligations by failing to honour the spirit of the agreement for more than 150 years.

This is not just legal language. It is a moral indictment from Canada’s highest court.

A Promise Frozen in Time

Under the Robinson Treaties, the Anishinaabe agreed to share vast territories rich in natural resources. In return, the Crown promised annual payments (annuities), hunting and fishing rights, and reserve lands.

Most importantly, the payments were meant to increase if the land became more valuable.

And it did.

Over the following century and a half, northern Ontario became a major source of wealth through mining, forestry, hydroelectric development, and transportation infrastructure. Billions of dollars were generated from lands covered by treaty.

Yet the annuity payments were effectively frozen at $4 per person in 1875.

While resource wealth grew exponentially, the treaty payments did not.

The Court’s Ruling: Honour Was Missing

In the decision, Supreme Court Justice Mahmud Jamal wrote that the Crown had failed to act “diligently, honourably, liberally and justly” in its obligations.

The Court emphasized that treaties are not historical artifacts. They are living agreements that require ongoing responsibility and renewal.

Instead, the Court found that governments treated the treaty obligation as something to be minimized rather than honoured.

A Systemic Pattern, Not an Isolated Case

For many Indigenous communities, this ruling is not surprising—it is confirmation of what has been experienced for generations.

The issue goes beyond one treaty or one region. It reflects a broader pattern in Canada’s history:

  • resource extraction without fair benefit sharing,
  • delayed or denied compensation,
  • and legal systems that often required decades of litigation to acknowledge treaty violations.

The Robinson-Superior First Nations are seeking compensation that may reach $126 billion, though the Court did not set an amount. Instead, it ordered Canada and Ontario to negotiate a settlement within six months.

If negotiations fail, the matter returns to court.

Why This Matters Beyond Money

While the financial figures are significant, the deeper issue is relationship and trust.

Treaties were meant to establish a nation-to-nation relationship between Indigenous peoples and the Crown. The Court’s language suggests that this relationship was not simply strained—it was fundamentally disregarded in practice.

The ruling reinforces a key legal principle: the Crown must act honourably in all treaty dealings. That duty is ongoing, not historical.

A Turning Point or Another Delay?

The next six months will be critical. Canada and Ontario must now negotiate directly with the Robinson-Superior First Nations.

This raises difficult questions:

  • What does fair compensation look like after 150 years?
  • How do you quantify lost opportunity and resource extraction?
  • And can financial settlement truly address the deeper harm of broken trust?

For many communities, this is about more than settlement figures. It is about recognition that promises were real, binding, and too often ignored.

The Larger Reflection

This case forces a broader reflection on Canada’s identity and history. The wealth of this country was built in part on lands governed by treaty relationships. When those agreements are not honoured, the consequences are not just legal—they are intergenerational.

The Supreme Court has now made one thing clear: treaties cannot be treated as symbolic or optional.

They are binding commitments. And they matter.


#RobinsonTreaties #SupremeCourtOfCanada #IndigenousRights #FirstNations #Anishinaabe #TreatyRights #ReconciliationCanada #LandRights #JusticeCanada #IndigenousJustice #TruthAndReconciliation #CanadaLaw #TreatyViolation #ResourceJustice #NorthernOntario #HistoricalInjustice #CrownIndigenousRelations #LegalNewsCanada #HumanRightsCanada #Decolonization