Saturday, June 27, 2026

Harm Reduction: A Different Way of Seeing People

 Harm Reduction: A Different Way of Seeing People

I want to share something I came across through the work of the Peer2Peer Indigenous Society, an organization I follow on Facebook, because it speaks to something many people still misunderstand about harm reduction.

One of the biggest misconceptions is that harm reduction means “accepting addiction” or making drug use easier.

That is not what it is.

Harm reduction is a public health approach rooted in a simple truth:
People cannot change if they are not alive.

For too long, society has tried to use shame, punishment, and suffering as tools for change. But addiction is not a moral failure. It is a complex health condition shaped by trauma, brain chemistry, environment, poverty, mental health, and isolation.

Shame does not heal.
Stigma does not reverse an overdose.
Abandonment does not create recovery.

Connection does.

Harm reduction starts with a radical idea:
A person’s life has value before they are ready to change — not after detox, not after treatment, not after meeting someone else’s definition of “recovery,” but right now.

This is why harm reduction services matter.

Naloxone saves lives by reversing overdoses.
Fentanyl test strips help prevent accidental poisonings.
Syringe service programs reduce HIV, hepatitis C, and infection.
Wound care treats people who are too often ignored by the system.
Medications for opioid use disorder like methadone and buprenorphine reduce overdose risk and stabilize lives.
Housing support reduces harm by giving people safety instead of survival conditions.

These are not “enabling” services. They are survival services.

And survival is what makes recovery possible.

The person who is revived today may enter treatment tomorrow.
The person who is treated with dignity today may reconnect with healthcare.
The person who is not abandoned today may choose a different future.

You cannot shame someone into healing.
You cannot punish someone into wellness.

Harm reduction does not compete with recovery — it creates the pathway to it.

Because behind every person who uses substances is someone’s child, someone’s parent, someone’s friend. A full human life that still exists, even in struggle.

The goal is not to make addiction comfortable.

The goal is to reduce death, disease, and suffering — while keeping the door to change open.

Because the opposite of harm reduction is not recovery.
It is watching people die and calling it a lesson.


Mobile Wound Care & Outreach Services (Victoria, BC)

The Peer2Peer Indigenous Society is also providing Mobile Wound Care & Outreach support in Victoria for people experiencing homelessness and barriers to healthcare.

They are currently seeking healthcare professionals with wound care experience to volunteer with their multidisciplinary outreach team.

🩺 Wednesdays | 11:00 AM – 2:00 PM
📍 900 Block of Pandora, Victoria

They welcome Registered Nurses, Licensed Practical Nurses, Nurse Practitioners, physicians, and other qualified professionals with wound care experience.

📞 250-667-5756
📧 peer2peerindigenouscoalition@gmail.com

This is low-barrier, trauma-informed care focused on dignity, access, and human connection.


Reflective Questions

  • What does “deserving help” mean in society, and who decides it?
  • How does stigma influence whether people seek or avoid healthcare?
  • Can punishment and shame actually lead to long-term recovery? Why or why not?
  • What role does connection play in healing from addiction or trauma?
  • How might harm reduction change the way communities think about human value?
  • What would healthcare look like if saving lives came before judgment?
  • How do housing, poverty, and isolation shape substance use outcomes?
  • What responsibilities do we have to people who are still actively struggling?


#HarmReduction #PublicHealth #OverdosePrevention #NaloxoneSavesLives #TraumaInformedCare #AddictionRecovery #SubstanceUseSupport #HealthEquity #SocialJustice #CommunityCare #IndigenousHealth #HousingCrisis #EndStigma #CompassionInAction #MobileHealthCare #WoundCareOutreach #DignityForAll #HealthcareAccess #RecoveryIsPossible #PeerSupport

🕯️ The Execution of Lady Jane Grey — A Life That Never Got to Begin

 🕯️ The Execution of Lady Jane Grey — A Life That Never Got to Begin

When I look at the painting The Execution of Lady Jane Grey, I can’t just see history — I see a child.

A young girl, barely 16 or 17 years old, standing in a moment that no human that age should ever have to face.


 Execution of Lady Jane Grey


She could be your niece. 

Your younger sister. 

A girl you might see walking home from school, laughing with friends, still figuring out who she is becoming.

And yet, in 1554, Lady Jane Grey was led to her execution.

She briefly became Queen of England for just nine days, placed there by powerful adults and political forces far beyond her control. She did not seek power. She did not build armies. She did not choose the fate that was placed on her shoulders.

She was a teenager caught in a world where decisions were made for her — and where power mattered more than innocence.

What stays with me most is this:

She never had a chance to live a full life.

No adulthood shaped by her own choices.
No freedom to explore who she might become.
No chance to fall in love, to grow older, to become a mother if she had wanted that path.

Her story ends before it ever truly begins.

The painting captures her in a moment of vulnerability — blindfolded, reaching out, unsure of where to place her final steps. It is one of the most haunting reminders that history is not just made of kings and queens, but of real human lives.

When I stand in front of this image, I don’t just think about the past.

I think about how easily young lives can be shaped — and sometimes destroyed — by systems of power.

And I ask myself:

How many voices like hers were never heard?
And how many young lives today are still shaped by forces they cannot control?

Lady Jane Grey’s story is not just history. It is a reminder.

A reminder of innocence.
A reminder of power.
And a reminder of how fragile a single human life can be.


🤍 Reflective Questions 

How does it change your view of history when you see her as a teenager rather than a “queen”?

What systems today might still place pressure on young people in ways they cannot control?

Why do you think stories like hers still affect us emotionally hundreds of years later?

What does innocence mean in a world shaped by power?


#LadyJaneGrey

#HistoryThroughArt

#HumanStories

#NeverForgotten

#WomenInHistory

#ChildhoodInterrupted

#PowerAndPolitics

#EmpathyInHistory

#ArtAndEmotion

#ZipolitaBlog

#DigitalHorizonZ

#ReflectAndRemember

Are We Really So Different? Humans, Animals, and the Question of Violence

 “Are We Really So Different? Humans, Animals, and the Question of Violence”

People often think humans are separate from nature—but moments in the natural world challenge that idea.

Chimpanzees, for example, sometimes show violent behaviour, including infanticide in rare cases linked to dominance and survival. Orcas and other whales show complex social behaviour, cooperation, and even what looks like protection or grief.

When we see this, it raises a difficult question:

Are humans really that different?

In many ways, we are not separate from nature. We share instincts with other animals—fear, protection, aggression, bonding, and survival behaviour.

But humans also do something unusual: we reflect on it.

We don’t just act—we question:

Is this right?

Should this happen?

Can we do better?

That ability has led to both harm and healing. It has created war, but also human rights. It has created systems of control, but also systems of protection.

Peace, then, is not a natural permanent state—it is something we build. Through laws, education, relationships, and daily choices.

Even small things matter:

how we treat each other in conflict

how we raise children

how we design systems of fairness

how we respond to suffering when we see it

Peace is not one moment in history. It is a continuous effort to reduce harm and increase understanding.

And maybe the most important question is not just “how did we get here?” but:

How do we choose to move forward from here?


Reflective Questions 

What do we consider “acceptable” in society today that future generations might question?

How does history shape what we think is normal or normalised?

Where do you see systems today that create harm without anyone directly “choosing” it?

What does peace actually mean to you—absence of conflict, or something deeper?

How do fear and power influence decisions in societies, past and present?

In what ways do humans reflect both nature and something beyond it?

Can awareness of suffering lead to change, and if so, how?

What role do empathy and discomfort play in creating a more peaceful world?

How do media and storytelling influence how we understand violence and justice?

What small actions in daily life contribute to either conflict or peace?


#HumanHistory

#LadyJaneGrey

#PowerAndPolitics

#PeaceBuilding

#SocialJustice

#HumanRights

#HistoryMatters

#UnderstandingViolence

#NatureAndHumanity

#EmpathyInAction

#SystemicChange

#CriticalThinking

#IndigenousWisdom 

#ClimateAndPeace

#ReflectiveWriting

#TruthAndMemory


#DigitalHorizonZ


#ZipolitaBlog



How Did We Get Here? From History to Human Behaviour

 “How Did We Get Here? From History to Human Behaviour”

We often look back at history and ask how people could live with things like public executions, political killings, or the suffering of young people caught in power struggles—like Lady Jane Grey, a teenage girl who briefly became Queen of England before being executed in 1554.

It’s hard to understand from a modern point of view. But history shows us something important: societies don’t change overnight—they evolve through fear, power, belief systems, and survival thinking.

Back then, power was concentrated in a few hands. Kings and queens ruled without elections. Religion and politics were deeply connected. And survival often depended on removing rivals quickly, even when those rivals were children or teenagers.

What seems shocking today was once seen—by some—as “necessary.”

But this raises a bigger question:

How did we get here, and are we really that different now?

Today, we no longer see public executions in most places, but we do see large-scale systems that still create harm—war, inequality, environmental damage, and political conflict. The scale has changed, but the question of human behaviour remains.

The past isn’t just something behind us. It is a mirror asking us what we still accept today

Reflective Questions 

What do we consider “acceptable” in society today that future generations might question?

How does history shape what we think is normal or normalised?

Where do you see systems today that create harm without anyone directly “choosing” it?

What does peace actually mean to you—absence of conflict, or something deeper?

How do fear and power influence decisions in societies, past and present?

In what ways do humans reflect both nature and something beyond it?

Can awareness of suffering lead to change, and if so, how?

What role do empathy and discomfort play in creating a more peaceful world?

How do media and storytelling influence how we understand violence and justice?

What small actions in daily life contribute to either conflict or peace?


#HumanHistory

#LadyJaneGrey

#PowerAndPolitics

#PeaceBuilding

#SocialJustice

#HumanRights

#HistoryMatters

#UnderstandingViolence

#NatureAndHumanity

#EmpathyInAction

#SystemicChange

#CriticalThinking

#IndigenousWisdom 

#ClimateAndPeace

#ReflectiveWriting

#TruthAndMemory

#DigitalHorizonZ

#ZipolitaBlog


Friday, June 26, 2026

Hard Questions We Need to Ask Before the Next Heat Wave

 🔥 Hard Questions We Need to Ask Before the Next Heat Wave

If Europe can lose an estimated 80,000 people in a single heat event (2003), and BC already saw a deadly heat dome in 2021, then the real question is not if it could happen again — but what are we actually doing to stop it?

🏠 Housing & safety

  • Why are we still building and approving apartments that overheat to unsafe levels in summer?
  • How many rental buildings in Vancouver have no cooling system at all?
  • Why is “affordable housing” sometimes also heat-vulnerable housing?
  • Should indoor temperature safety standards exist the same way fire safety standards do?

🧓 People at risk

  • Who checks on elderly people living alone during multi-day heat events?
  • Why do so many deaths happen quietly in homes instead of visible emergency settings?
  • What happens to people with disabilities, chronic illness, or mental health conditions during prolonged heat?

⚡ Infrastructure & responsibility

  • Why is air conditioning still treated as a “luxury” in a changing climate?
  • Should cooling be considered basic infrastructure like heat in winter?
  • Are cities preparing for multi-day heat waves, or just one-day hot weather alerts?

🌆 Urban design

  • Why do so many neighbourhoods still act like heat traps (concrete, asphalt, glass)?
  • Where are the shaded public spaces that make it possible to survive extreme heat without money?
  • Are we designing cities for comfort — or for survival?

🧠 Public awareness

  • Why does extreme heat still feel “less serious” than storms or fires, even though it kills quietly?
  • Are people being told clearly enough that heat can be fatal inside your own home?
  • What would it take for society to treat heat waves like the public health emergencies they are?

🌍 Bigger climate reality

  • If Europe is seeing record-breaking heat now, what happens when these patterns shift more often toward North America?
  • Are we preparing for “rare events,” or for a new normal of repeated extremes?
  • Why do we keep treating climate adaptation as optional instead of urgent?

⚠️ The uncomfortable truth underneath all of this

Heat doesn’t usually kill dramatically.

It kills quietly:

  • in bedrooms at night
  • in apartments with no airflow
  • in people who “just didn’t recover” after a few days

That’s why the number matters. Not as a headline — but as a warning.

80,000 deaths is not a weather story. It’s a systems failure question.



extreme heat Vancouver, heat dome BC, climate change Canada, heat wave Europe 2026, Omega block weather pattern, urban heat island effect, indoor overheating apartments, climate adaptation housing, heat-related deaths, public health heat emergency, cooling centres Vancouver, vulnerable populations heat risk, climate resilience infrastructure


#HeatWave #ClimateChange #Vancouver #BCHeatDome #ExtremeHeat #ClimateCrisis #PublicHealth #HousingCrisis #UrbanHeatIsland #ClimateAdaptation #HeatSafety #EnvironmentalJustice #CanadaClimate #StayCoolStaySafe #ClimateResilience


When the Heat Doesn’t Leave the Apartment: A Vancouver Reflection on Extreme Heat Preparedness

 When the Heat Doesn’t Leave the Apartment: A Vancouver Reflection on Extreme Heat Preparedness

We often think of heat as something temporary — a hot afternoon, a beach day, a few uncomfortable hours before the evening cools everything down again.

But what happens when the heat doesn’t leave?

What happens when the temperature inside your home stays high through the night, and then rises again the next day, and the day after that?

This is not a theoretical question anymore. It is something Vancouver has already experienced, and something many places in the world are experiencing right now.

During the 2021 heat dome in British Columbia, thousands of people learned how quickly a “cool coastal climate” can become dangerous. Some homes became traps of accumulated heat. Some people went to bed in hot rooms and woke up still overheated. In many cases, it wasn’t just the daytime heat — it was the lack of nighttime cooling that made recovery impossible.

That is the part people underestimate.

The body relies on cooler nights to reset. When that doesn’t happen, stress builds. Sleep becomes shallow or impossible. Dehydration accumulates. Heat stops being a discomfort and becomes a physiological burden that compounds day after day.

In older or poorly insulated apartments, especially top-floor units or buildings without cross-ventilation or air conditioning, indoor temperatures can remain dangerously high even after sunset. Concrete and glass hold heat. Walls radiate it back into the room. Windows that were meant for light become heat collectors.

After a few days of that cycle, the body starts to feel like it cannot fully cool down anymore. Not because of fear — but because of biology.

This is where the question of preparedness becomes very real.

Vancouver is not a city built for sustained extreme heat. Many buildings were designed for mild summers, not prolonged heat events. While there have been improvements in emergency response and public cooling centres since the 2021 heat dome, the reality is that many residents still live in spaces that can become unsafe during multi-day heat waves.

This is especially true for people in apartments without air conditioning, people living alone, seniors, and anyone without easy access to cooler environments.

So we have to ask an uncomfortable but necessary question:

What happens if a Europe-style heat wave pattern — the kind that traps heat for days under a stalled weather system — becomes more common here?

For some people, the answer will be simple and immediate: they will have to leave.

Not because they want to, but because staying would not be safe. Sleeping elsewhere, finding cooler spaces, or creating informal cooling networks may become part of how people cope — especially during prolonged events.

This is not alarmism. It is adaptation thinking.

Because the goal is not to panic. The goal is to recognize that heat is no longer just a seasonal inconvenience. It is becoming a sustained environmental condition that interacts directly with housing, inequality, and infrastructure.

And the most important shift may be this:

We stop thinking of heat as something we “tolerate” indoors, and start treating it as something we actively plan around — the same way we plan for storms, outages, or wildfire smoke.

The experience of heat is no longer just about weather.

It is about whether our homes can still keep us safe when the climate stops cooling down.

I Almost Became Part of BC's Earlier Brain Drain

 I Almost Became Part of BC's Earlier Brain Drain

Reading about the Vancouver Sun discussing a new brain drain in British Columbia made me stop and think.

Years ago, I had an opportunity to work in the United States scanning aerial photography. It would have been a completely different life. Instead, I made a different choice. I packed my bags and went to Mexico.

That one decision changed everything.

In Mexico, I met my child's father, and returned to BC and had my child here. 

I also had the opportunity to paint murals, travel, and immerse myself in a different culture. Becoming a mother led me to ask questions about where my family came from. That journey inspired me to research and learn more about both my Indigenous and European ancestry—something I might never have explored had my life taken a different direction.

Those experiences eventually led to years of photography, writing, blogging, and working on books about travel, history, social issues, and the environment.

Looking back, it's amazing how one decision can completely change the course of your life.

Today, we're hearing that many skilled people are once again leaving British Columbia because they can't afford to stay. Housing costs continue to rise, wages often don't keep up, and experienced workers are finding better opportunities elsewhere.

This isn't just about economists talking about a "brain drain." It's about real people making life-changing decisions. Behind every statistic is a person, a family, and a future that may unfold somewhere else.

How many artists, engineers, healthcare workers, tradespeople, researchers, teachers, photographers, programmers, and young graduates are wondering if they have a future here? How many have already left? And how many are standing at a crossroads, trying to decide whether to stay or go?

I almost became part of an earlier brain drain. Instead, I chose a different path, and that path gave me experiences, friendships, creativity, a deeper understanding of my heritage, and the greatest gift of all—my child.

Sometimes a single decision doesn't just change a career. It changes an entire life, and even future generations.

Have you ever made one decision that completely changed the course of your life?


Reflective Questions

  1. Have you ever made a decision that completely changed the course of your life?
  2. Do you think talented people are leaving British Columbia by choice or because they feel they have no alternative?
  3. How has travel or living in another place changed your perspective on life?
  4. What discoveries about your family history or ancestry have shaped your identity?
  5. What can governments and communities do to encourage skilled people to stay and build their futures locally?
  6. How do individual life choices influence future generations?
  7. If you had the opportunity to start over somewhere else, what factors would influence your decision?


Hashtags

#BrainDrain #BritishColumbia #Vancouver #LifeChoices #CareerJourney #Mexico #TravelChangesYou #Motherhood #FamilyHistory #Ancestry #IndigenousRoots #EuropeanHeritage #Photography #Murals #HousingCrisis #CostOfLiving #SkilledWorkers #PersonalJourney #CanadianStories #FollowYourPath


The Empty Condos Saga – Epilogue: Who Gets the Bailout?

 

The Empty Condos Saga – Epilogue: Who Gets the Bailout?

For years, we were told the market would solve everything.

Build more luxury condos. Foreign investment is good. Prices will keep rising. Developers know best.

Meanwhile, ordinary people watched housing become less affordable every year. Empty condos became symbols of speculation while homelessness grew, renters struggled, and young people wondered if they would ever own a home.

Now the market has changed.

Developers are slowing projects. Condo sales have cooled. Investors are nervous. And suddenly governments are talking about helping the development industry.

Many people are asking an uncomfortable question:

Where was this urgency when renters, seniors, people with disabilities, working families, and people experiencing homelessness needed help?

This isn't a simple issue. If developers stop building completely, future housing supply could shrink even further. Governments worry about construction jobs disappearing and projects being abandoned.

But many people feel frustrated because it seems like help arrives quickly when large financial interests are affected, while ordinary people often wait years for meaningful action.

At the same time, I recently had a hopeful conversation with a young Indigenous man from the Squamish Nation. Although he grew up in Eastern Canada, he is returning to attend UBC. Through his Nation he has access to housing, and he'll pay about $1,400 for a one-bedroom apartment.

That's still expensive, but it reminded me that there are different ways to approach housing. Indigenous governments, co-operatives, non-profits, municipalities, and private builders all have roles to play. The question is whether they can work together instead of pulling in different directions.

Right now, everyone seems to be fighting.

Politicians blame each other. Developers blame government. Governments blame the market. The public blames everyone.

Meanwhile, people still need somewhere to live.

Housing should never become just another financial product. It is the foundation of health, education, family life, and community.

Perhaps the next chapter isn't about empty condos at all.

Perhaps it's about finally building a housing system designed for people instead of speculation.

Because if we don't learn from the Empty Condos Saga, we'll simply repeat it under a different name.


Reflective Questions

1. Should housing be treated primarily as a human right or as an investment?

2. What responsibility do governments have when housing markets fail ordinary people?

3. Is it appropriate to provide financial support to developers if it leads to more housing, or should public funds be directed elsewhere?

4. How can Canada encourage new housing construction while ensuring homes remain affordable?

5. What lessons should Vancouver learn from the Empty Condos Saga?

6. What role can Indigenous housing initiatives, co-operatives, and community-led projects play in addressing the housing crisis?

7. How can citizens hold governments and the development industry accountable for housing outcomes?

8. What would a housing system designed for people, rather than speculation, look like?




#HousingCrisis #AffordableHousing #EmptyCondos #Vancouver #BritishColumbia #HousingForPeople #HousingJustice #Homelessness #RealEstate #Speculation #UrbanPlanning #TinyHomes #CooperativeHousing #IndigenousHousing #SquamishNation #CostOfLiving #CommunityHousing #MarkCarney #DavidEby #BuildHomesNotSpeculation #DigitalHorizonZ #TinaWinterlik #Zipolita

Dredging Burrard Inlet: More Oil Exports, More Tankers, and Growing Concerns for Whales and Marine Life

 Dredging Burrard Inlet: Why So Many People Are Upset

The approval to dredge Burrard Inlet at Second Narrows has left many British Columbians feeling frustrated, disappointed, and unheard.

The project is being presented as a way to improve shipping efficiency and allow larger oil tankers loading at the Trans Mountain Westridge Marine Terminal to carry more oil. Supporters argue it will strengthen Canada's trade and economy.

But for many residents, this isn't simply about trade. It is about the future of one of the most ecologically important waterways on the West Coast.

Many people feel they had little or no meaningful say in a decision that could permanently change Burrard Inlet. Once dredging begins, the environmental consequences may last for generations.

More Oil Tankers, More Risk

The purpose of the dredging is clear: larger tankers will be able to leave with fuller loads, increasing the amount of oil exported from Canada's west coast.

Every additional tanker travelling through Burrard Inlet raises concerns about:

  • Increased risk of oil spills.
  • Greater underwater noise.
  • More disturbance to marine life.
  • Higher greenhouse gas emissions from fossil fuel exports.

Even if spills are rare, the consequences of a single major accident could be devastating.

What About the Whales?

The Southern Resident killer whales are already struggling to survive.

Noise from ships interferes with their ability to communicate, hunt, and navigate using echolocation. Increased tanker traffic adds to an already noisy marine environment.

Other whales, porpoises, seals, sea lions, and dolphins also depend on healthy coastal waters.

Many people wonder how expanding oil exports can be reconciled with efforts to protect endangered marine species.

Shellfish and the Marine Food Web

Burrard Inlet is home to shellfish, crabs, shrimp, sea stars, kelp forests, eelgrass beds, and countless organisms that form the foundation of the marine ecosystem.

Dredging stirs up sediments that have accumulated over decades. Those sediments can reduce water quality and disturb habitats used by fish and shellfish.

Healthy shellfish populations are not only important for wildlife—they also support Indigenous cultural practices and are part of the natural food web that keeps the inlet alive.

Indigenous Stewardship

For thousands of years, Indigenous Nations have cared for Burrard Inlet and relied upon its waters for food, culture, and ceremony.

Many Indigenous communities have consistently emphasized the importance of protecting these ecosystems for future generations.

The health of the inlet is about far more than economics—it is tied to history, identity, and responsibility.

Economic Growth vs. Environmental Responsibility

Canadians often hear that projects like this are necessary for jobs and economic growth.

But many ask another question:

At what cost?

Economic benefits today may be outweighed by environmental damage tomorrow if ecosystems are pushed beyond their limits.

Climate change, biodiversity loss, declining salmon populations, and endangered whales are already warning signs that our oceans are under increasing pressure.

Democracy Means Listening

One of the biggest frustrations expressed by many British Columbians is the feeling that major decisions affecting their environment are made without broad public support.

Whether people support or oppose the project, citizens deserve transparent decision-making, meaningful consultation, and confidence that environmental protection is more than just a promise.

Looking Ahead

Burrard Inlet is more than a shipping corridor.

It is home to whales, salmon, seabirds, shellfish, Indigenous cultures, recreational users, and communities that treasure its beauty.

Once habitats are damaged, restoration is difficult and sometimes impossible.

Many British Columbians believe that protecting healthy oceans is an investment in future generations—not an obstacle to prosperity.

As this project moves forward, Canadians will continue asking an important question:

Are we building an economy that works with nature, or one that continues to put it at risk?

Reflective Questions


1. How should Canada balance economic development with protecting marine ecosystems?

2. Do you believe local communities were given enough opportunity to influence this decision?

3. What responsibilities do governments have to protect endangered whales and other marine species?

4. How might increased tanker traffic affect future generations living around Burrard Inlet?

5. What role should Indigenous knowledge play in decisions affecting coastal waters?

6. If an oil spill were to occur, who would bear the greatest consequences?

7. What actions can ordinary citizens take when they disagree with major environmental decisions?

8. What does a healthy Burrard Inlet mean to you?


Keywords

Burrard Inlet, Second Narrows, dredging, Trans Mountain Expansion, TMX, oil tankers, Vancouver Harbour, Port of Vancouver, Vancouver Fraser Port Authority, marine conservation, Southern Resident killer whales, whales, orcas,  consultation, environmental advocacy

#BurrardInlet #SaveTheWhales #ProtectOurCoast #NoPipelinesNoTankers #StopTMX #MarineConservation #OceanProtection #SaveOurSeas #ProtectMarineLife #SouthernResidentOrcas #Orcas #Shellfish #Biodiversity #ClimateAction #EnvironmentalJustice #BritishColumbia #Vancouver #StandForNature #WaterIsLife #ProtectWhatWeLove #FutureGenerations #ActForNature #KeepItInTheGround #HealthyOceans #WestCoast

What kind of legacy do we want to leave for future generations—a healthier ocean filled with life, or one increasingly shaped by industrial expansion?



Thursday, June 25, 2026

Was My Songhees Great-Great-Grandmother Affected by the Indian Act?

 Was My Songhees Great-Great-Grandmother Affected by the Indian Act?

By Tina Winterlik (Zipolita)

Recently, while researching my family history, I came across a record for my second great-grandmother, Theresa Eliza (Songhees) Enos. According to the records, she was born around 1836 and was a Songhees woman from what is now British Columbia. In 1876, she married João (John) Ignacio d'Almada, a Portuguese immigrant, in Nanaimo.

At first glance, it seemed like a simple family history discovery. But the date immediately caught my attention.

1876 was the same year the Canadian government passed the Indian Act.

The Indian Act was not designed to preserve Indigenous cultures or protect Indigenous rights. It was created to control Indigenous peoples and encourage assimilation into Canadian society. One of the ways it did this was through rules that treated Indigenous women differently from Indigenous men.

For generations, if an Indigenous woman married a non-Indigenous man, she could lose her legal Indian status. Meanwhile, an Indigenous man who married a non-Indigenous woman kept his status, and in many cases his wife gained status through marriage.

This was not simply a bureaucratic change. Women lost legal recognition, community ties, rights, and sometimes even the ability to live in their own communities. Their children and grandchildren often became disconnected from their Indigenous identity in the eyes of the government.

As I looked at my ancestor's marriage record, I began to wonder:

Did Theresa lose legal status because she married a Portuguese man?

Were her children treated differently because of that marriage?

How many descendants were affected by laws designed to reduce the number of legally recognized Indigenous people?

These questions are especially relevant today because Indigenous women have spent decades fighting these discriminatory provisions.

One of the most prominent activists was Jeannette Corbiere Lavell, an Anishinaabe woman who challenged the Indian Act after losing her status when she married a non-Indigenous man in 1970. Although her initial court challenge was unsuccessful, her efforts helped build momentum for reforms.

In 1985, Bill C-31 restored status to many women who had lost it through marriage. However, it created another problem known as the "second-generation cut-off."

Under these rules, status could gradually disappear from future generations when descendants married non-status individuals. Critics argue that the second-generation cut-off functions as an "extinction clause" because it reduces the number of people recognized under the Indian Act over time.

Today, Indigenous leaders and activists continue to push for reforms to eliminate the remaining discriminatory effects of these laws.

Looking at my own family tree, I cannot help but wonder how many Indigenous families have similar stories buried in old records.

A marriage certificate from 1876 may seem like a small historical document. Yet behind it lies a much larger story about identity, belonging, family, and the long-term consequences of government policies.

My great-great-grandmother was Songhees. She married a Portuguese man. More than 150 years later, her descendants are still asking questions about how those laws affected our family.

Genealogy is often described as the study of names and dates. But sometimes it reveals something much deeper. Sometimes it reveals history itself.

Questions for Readers

  1. Have you discovered Indigenous ancestors in your family tree?
  2. Were any of your ancestors affected by the Indian Act or similar laws?
  3. How should Canada address the remaining inequalities in status registration?
  4. Should Indigenous identity be determined by communities rather than federal legislation?
  5. What role can genealogy play in uncovering forgotten histories?

Quick Quiz

  1. In what year was the Indian Act passed? a) 1867 b) 1876 c) 1901 d) 1985

  2. What happened to many Indigenous women who married non-Indigenous men under the Indian Act? a) Nothing changed b) They gained additional rights c) They could lose their legal status d) They automatically became chiefs

  3. What was Bill C-31 designed to address? a) Fishing rights b) Gender discrimination in status registration c) Taxation d) Immigration

  4. What is the second-generation cut-off? a) A census rule b) A treaty provision c) A registration rule that can eliminate status over generations d) A land claim process

Answers: 1-b, 2-c, 3-b, 4-c


#Songhees #SongheesNation #IndigenousHistory #FirstNations #IndigenousWomen #IndianAct #BillC31 #SecondGenerationCutOff #Decolonization #FamilyHistory #Genealogy #Ancestry #CanadianHistory #BCHistory #VancouverIslandHistory

Pet Care Is Real Responsibility, Not “Easy Money”

 Pet Care Is Real Responsibility, Not “Easy Money”

Lately I’ve been thinking about how often pet care gets undervalued.

I’ve seen posts offering very low rates for dog walking and pet sitting—sometimes around $10–15 an hour, and even suggestions that children as young as 12 take on these kinds of jobs.

On the surface, it might seem simple: walk a dog, feed a pet, check in. But anyone who has actually cared for animals knows it’s much more than that.

You’re responsible for a living being that depends on you for safety, control, and good judgment. That can include handling strong or reactive dogs, navigating traffic, dealing with unexpected situations, and making quick decisions if something goes wrong.

And things can go wrong. Dogs can get loose, react to other animals, or be put in situations their walker isn’t prepared for. I’ve seen cases where lack of experience or poor judgment led to serious accidents and heartbreaking outcomes.

This isn’t about blaming anyone—it’s about awareness. When we ask someone to care for our pets, we are also asking them to take on responsibility for safety, not just a casual task.

Fair pay matters because it reflects the seriousness of that responsibility. Good care costs something, but poor care can cost much more.


Reflective Questions


What do I actually expect a pet caregiver to handle when I’m not there?


Am I valuing pet care as a skilled responsibility, or treating it like casual help?


What level of experience would I want someone to have before trusting them with my own pet?


Have I considered what could go wrong in unexpected situations (traffic, other animals, emergencies)?


Does the pay I offer reflect the level of trust and responsibility I’m giving someone?


How do low wages in care work affect the quality and safety of services overall?


Where is the line between “helping out” and “professional responsibility” when it comes to animal care?




#PetCare #DogWalking #PetSitting #AnimalWelfare #ResponsiblePetOwnership #FairWages #CareWorkMatters #DogSafety #UrbanPets #VancouverPets #WorkEthics #CommunityCare


Keywords


pet care responsibility, dog walking safety, fair pay care work, pet sitting risks, animal welfare awareness, responsible dog ownership, reactive dogs safety, gig work wages, urban pet services, trust in pet care, professional pet sitter, pet safety planning

Tuesday, June 23, 2026

When Getting on the Bus Became a Financial Decision

 When Getting on the Bus Became a Financial Decision

I remember when my child was younger and taking the bus wasn’t simple—it was a calculation.

There was a time when children were charged fares starting around six years old. For a while, I tried to navigate it any way I could. I remember once thinking I could still get her on under the rule, just until things were clearer or easier. We were getting ready for something special that day—both of us dressed up, everything feeling important in a quiet, ordinary way.

But the bus driver looked at my kid and asked me to pay.

It wasn’t dramatic in the way policy debates are dramatic. It was small, immediate, and final. A rule applied in real time, at the door, in front of everyone. But the impact didn’t feel small. It turned a simple trip into another moment where survival and dignity had to be balanced against money I didn’t really have.

Years later, I was still doing the same math.

During my kid's high school years I had to come up with about $50 a month just so my child could get to high school.

That might not sound like much in policy terms, but for me it created real pressure. It was another fixed cost in a life where nothing else was fixed.

Even now, I still feel it. I clean once a week in Surrey and get $50 for the job. The bus alone costs over $11 round trip. Before anything else—before food, before savings, before anything unexpected—that money is already partially gone.

When Enforcement Replaces Understanding

Last year, I saw transit officers board a bus in Surrey—three at the front, three at the back—checking everyone. I saw people being flagged, and I heard about fines that now sit around $173 for fare evasion under Metro Vancouver transit enforcement policies.

It felt less like “catching offenders” and more like a system tightening around people who are already stretched thin.

What stood out wasn’t just the enforcement. It was the sense that the system assumes a level playing field—that everyone has the same ability to pay, plan, and comply. But that isn’t the reality for many people using transit every day.

Students, workers, newcomers, people between paychecks—transit isn’t optional for them. It’s how life happens.

The Question We Keep Avoiding

There’s a bigger question underneath all of this:

Is transit a service you purchase when you can afford it, or is it essential infrastructure like roads, water, and emergency access?

Because right now it sits in between those two ideas. And when systems sit in that middle space, enforcement becomes the default way to manage inequality instead of solving it.

I don’t think most people “choose” not to pay. I think a lot of people are trying to choose between paying and something else that can’t be delayed—rent, food, childcare, or just getting through the week.

And that’s where the tension lives.

Not in the rules themselves, but in what it means when basic movement through a city becomes something that can tip a household over the edge.


Reflective Questions

What does “fair access” to a city mean when transportation has a cost attached to every trip?

At what point does a transit fare stop being a small fee and become a barrier to basic participation in daily life?

How does enforcement (like fare checks and fines) feel differently for people with stable income versus people living week to week?

Should essential mobility—getting to school, work, or medical appointments—be treated like a paid service or a public right?

What alternatives could exist so that transit funding doesn’t rely so heavily on individual fares?

How do small, repeated costs (like $10–$20 per day) shape long-term inequality in a city?

What role should governments play in ensuring that children and students can move freely and safely through the transit system?

When we see fare evasion, are we seeing “rule-breaking,” or are we seeing a system that is mismatched with people’s realities?

Keywords (comma-separated)

transit affordability, public transportation, fare enforcement, Metro Vancouver transit, TransLink, social inequality, low income commuting, student transportation costs, housing and mobility, urban poverty, transit fines, accessibility, essential services, cost of living crisis, Surrey transit, social justice, lived experience, transportation policy, economic stress, everyday survival, BC public services

Hashtags

#TransitJustice #AffordableTransit #PublicTransportation #CostOfLivingCrisis #MetroVancouver #TransLink #SocialJustice #HousingAndMobility #SurreyBC #StudentLife #WorkingPoor #UrbanInequality #EssentialServices #AccessibilityMatters #EverydayStruggles

The Giants of the Fraser: Why Are We Catching Ancient Sturgeon?

 

The Giants of the Fraser: Why Are We Catching Ancient Sturgeon?

By Tina Winterlik aka Zipolita

Growing up near the Fraser River, I always knew there were giant sturgeon living beneath the surface. They seemed almost mythical—creatures from another time that had somehow survived into the modern world.

One memory has stayed with me for decades. Someone called my father's tow truck company because a massive sturgeon needed to be moved. I was young and don't remember all the details, but I remember the sense of awe. This wasn't just a fish. It was something extraordinary.

Recently, I read an article about a gigantic white sturgeon that reportedly needed two tape measures to determine its length. According to the story, had it been weighed, it might have shattered existing records. The fish was released alive, and many celebrated the catch.

But I found myself asking a different question:

Why are we catching these ancient giants at all?

White sturgeon have existed in forms similar to today for millions of years. They survived ice ages, floods, predators, industrial development, pollution, and dramatic changes to our rivers. Some live for more than a century. A fish caught today may have been swimming in the Fraser River before many of our grandparents were born.

Supporters of catch-and-release sturgeon fishing argue that it contributes to conservation. Anglers help fund research, fish are tagged and monitored, and guides depend on the industry for their livelihoods. These are important points and deserve consideration.

Yet another perspective exists.

What does the fish gain from being caught, handled, measured, photographed, and released?

If these animals are truly rare, vulnerable, and ancient, should recreation be part of their story?

In recent years, social media has encouraged people to seek bigger catches, bigger photos, and bigger stories. Sometimes I wonder whether we are celebrating the fish or celebrating ourselves.

There is also a deeper question about our relationship with nature.

Do we value wildlife because it entertains us? Because it generates tourism revenue? Because it provides content for social media?

Or do we value it simply because it has a right to exist?

The Fraser River sturgeon are part of British Columbia's natural heritage. They are survivors from another age. Living fossils. Witnesses to history.

Imagine being over 100 years old. You survive countless challenges, only to be repeatedly caught so that humans can take photographs beside you.

Would we consider that respect?

I don't claim to have all the answers. Conservation is complicated, and reasonable people can disagree. But perhaps it is time to have a broader conversation about how we treat these remarkable creatures.

Because once they are gone, no amount of photographs, measurements, or world records will bring them back.

Perhaps the greatest trophy is not catching the largest sturgeon.

Perhaps it is ensuring that future generations can still find them swimming free in the Fraser River.


Reflective Questions

Should catch-and-release fishing be allowed for ancient species such as sturgeon?

What responsibilities do humans have toward wildlife that can live longer than many people?

Does conservation justify recreational fishing of vulnerable species?

How has social media changed the way we interact with nature?

What does it mean to respect wildlife?

Are there better ways to support conservation than catching and releasing animals?

How can future generations benefit from protecting sturgeon today?

Should some species be completely off-limits to recreational fishing?


#FraserRiver #WhiteSturgeon #BritishColumbia #Conservation #WildlifeProtection #CatchAndRelease #NatureEthics #ProtectWildlife #EnvironmentalAwareness #Zipolita #DigitalHorizonZ #LivingFossils #SaveOurRivers #BCWildlife 

A Timeline of Recent Global Unrest

 A Timeline of Recent Global Unrest

2022 — Sri Lanka Economic collapse, fuel shortages, and soaring inflation led to massive protests. Demonstrators occupied the presidential palace and government buildings, forcing the resignation of the president.

2024 — Bangladesh Student-led protests over government hiring quotas grew into a nationwide movement. Violent clashes erupted, government buildings were stormed, and Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina left the country.

2024 — Kenya Youth-led protests against tax increases and rising living costs resulted in demonstrators storming parliament. The government was forced to withdraw the controversial finance bill.

2025 — Nepal Pro-monarchy protests in Kathmandu turned violent. Buildings and vehicles were set on fire, clashes with police left people dead and injured, and many observers were shocked by the scale of the unrest.

2026 — Albania Protests over development projects on protected coastal lands expanded into broader concerns about corruption, accountability, environmental protection, and foreign investment.


A World Growing Restless

One thing I have noticed in recent years is that major protests are occurring in countries that many people rarely think about until a crisis makes international headlines.

At first glance, these events may appear unrelated. Different countries. Different cultures. Different political systems.

But beneath the surface, many share common themes:

  • Rising costs of living
  • Housing affordability concerns
  • Youth unemployment
  • Growing inequality
  • Distrust of institutions
  • Perceived corruption
  • Concerns about the concentration of wealth and power

Many people feel that while economies may be growing on paper, the benefits are not reaching ordinary citizens.

Social media allows us to see these frustrations unfolding in real time. A protest in Kathmandu, Tirana, Nairobi, Dhaka, or Colombo no longer remains a local story. Images and videos travel around the world within minutes.

History shows that periods of widespread dissatisfaction often emerge gradually. The warning signs appear long before major political changes occur.

That is why it is important to pay attention.

Not because every protest leads to revolution, but because protests can reveal problems that governments and institutions may have ignored for years.

When people take to the streets, they are often sending a message:

"We feel unheard."

Whether leaders choose to listen may determine what happens next.

As more countries experience social and economic pressures, it may be useful to keep a record of these events. Looking back years from now, we may discover they were not isolated incidents at all, but part of a larger global story.

Reflective Questions

Are protests becoming more common around the world, or are we simply seeing them more because of social media?

What issues seem to unite protest movements in different countries?

When citizens feel unheard, what options do they have besides protesting?

How should governments respond to growing public frustration?

What lessons can Canada learn from events unfolding in other countries?

Hashtags

#GlobalProtests #Nepal #Albania #Bangladesh #SriLanka #CostOfLiving #HousingCrisis #Accountability #SocialChange #Democracy #CitizenVoices #EconomicJustice #FutureGenerations #Zipolita #DigitalHorizonZ


Albania Is Not for Sale: When Citizens Push Back

 Albania Is Not for Sale: When Citizens Push Back

By Tina Winterlik (Zipolita)

Thousands of people have taken to the streets in Albania in what some media outlets are calling the largest protests the country has seen in years. What began as opposition to luxury resort developments on protected coastal lands has grown into something much larger: a debate about who benefits from development and who gets left behind.

At the center of the controversy are plans to develop portions of Albania's coastline, including environmentally sensitive areas that are home to flamingos, pelicans, and other wildlife. Supporters argue that tourism investment will create jobs and bring economic growth. Opponents fear that once protected lands are handed over to private interests, they may be lost forever.

The protests have adopted a simple but powerful message:

"Albania is not for sale."

That slogan resonates far beyond Albania.

Around the world, citizens are asking similar questions. When governments approve major projects, who benefits? Are local communities consulted? Are environmental protections being respected? Is the wealth generated staying within the country, or flowing elsewhere?

These questions are not unique to Albania.

In Canada, many people have expressed concerns about housing affordability, foreign ownership, resource development, and the privatization of public assets. Whether the issue is housing, forests, mining, energy, or waterfront property, the same underlying concern often emerges: are decisions being made for the public good, or primarily for investors?

Economic development is important. Communities need jobs. People need opportunities. But development without transparency can create distrust. When citizens feel they have no voice in decisions affecting their future, frustration grows.

The Albanian protests remind us that democracy is more than voting every few years. It is about participation, accountability, and ensuring that public resources are managed in a way that benefits current and future generations.

Environmental concerns have also played a major role in the demonstrations. The wetlands involved support important ecosystems and migratory bird populations. Once natural habitats are destroyed, they are often impossible to fully restore.

This raises another important question:

How do we balance economic growth with environmental stewardship?

The answer may differ from country to country, but the discussion itself is essential.

What is happening in Albania serves as a reminder that people everywhere care deeply about the places they call home. Whether it is a coastal lagoon in Albania, an old-growth forest in British Columbia, or affordable housing in Vancouver, citizens want a say in decisions that shape their communities.

The protests are ultimately about more than a resort project. They are about ownership, accountability, transparency, and the future.

As the demonstrations continue, the world will be watching to see whether leaders listen to the concerns being raised or simply move forward regardless.

One thing is certain: many Albanians have made it clear that they believe their country is worth protecting.

And that is a conversation every nation should be having.


Reflective Questions

1. Who should have the final say when major developments affect public lands?

2. Can economic growth and environmental protection coexist?

3. What responsibilities do governments have to consult citizens before approving large projects?

4. Should certain natural areas be permanently protected from development?

5. How can citizens hold governments accountable for decisions involving public resources?


#Albania #Protests #Environment #Accountability #PublicLand #TourismDevelopment #Democracy #CitizenVoices #FlamingoRevolution #Transparency #Sustainability #SocialJustice #Housing #CommunityRights #Zipolita

Monday, June 22, 2026

$16 million-How will this money be spent?

 The Province has announced $16 million to address chronic property offending.

Before we celebrate or criticize the announcement, I'd like to see accountability.

How will this money be spent?

How much will go to administration?

How much will go directly to services?

What measurable goals have been set?

A year from now, will the public be told:

• How many people were helped?

• How many found housing?

• How many entered treatment?

• How many stopped reoffending?

• How many businesses saw reduced theft and vandalism?

Taxpayers deserve transparency.

Communities deserve results.

People struggling with addiction, mental health challenges, and homelessness deserve programs that actually work.

Whether you support more enforcement, more social supports, or a combination of both, surely we can all agree on one thing:

If $16 million is being spent, British Columbians should be able to see where every dollar went and what it accomplished.

Reflective Questions 

1. What does government accountability mean to you?

2. Should all publicly funded programs publish annual results?

3. How can citizens determine whether a program is successful?

4. What outcomes should be measured when addressing property crime?

5. Should housing and treatment programs be judged by long-term results rather than yearly numbers?

6. How much of a public program's budget is reasonable to spend on administration?

7. What information should taxpayers have access to regarding government spending?

8. Are governments more likely to fund new programs than evaluate existing ones?

9. What role should local communities play in monitoring publicly funded initiatives?

10. If you were auditing this $16 million program, what questions would you ask first?


#Accountability #Transparency #BCPolitics #PublicSpending #TaxpayerDollars #GovernmentAccountability #CommunitySafety #HousingSolutions #MentalHealthSupport #CrimePrevention #SocialPolicy #BritishColumbia #FollowTheMoney #PublicInterest #ResultsMatter

That question—"What if we had acted sooner?"

 Looking at all the boarded-up windows and murals that appeared during and after COVID, I can't help wondering: what if we had focused just as much energy on housing, mental health supports, addiction treatment, and poverty prevention years earlier?

The province is now investing millions to deal with repeat property offenders. Yet many of these individuals are also struggling with housing instability, mental health challenges, and substance use.

Businesses deserve protection. Communities deserve safety.

But if we only focus on the consequences and not the causes, are we really solving the problem?

The fentanyl crisis was declared a public health emergency in B.C. back in 2016. Ten years later, many communities are still struggling with the same issues.

What do you think would have made the biggest difference: more enforcement, more prevention, or a better balance of both?

Are we spending enough on prevention, or are we mostly paying for the consequences?


Reflective Questions

1. What do you believe is the main cause of increasing street disorder in many B.C. communities?

2. Could earlier investments in affordable housing and mental health services have prevented some of today's challenges? Why or why not?

3. How should governments balance public safety with compassion for people experiencing addiction, homelessness, or mental illness?

4. Do you think enforcement alone can reduce property crime? Explain your answer.

5. What impact do repeated thefts and vandalism have on small business owners and their employees?

6. Why do some people become trapped in cycles of poverty, addiction, and criminal activity?

7. What role should communities play in supporting vulnerable individuals before they reach a crisis point?

8. How might the fentanyl crisis have changed if more treatment and recovery services had been available ten years ago?

9. What lessons should governments learn from the social challenges that became more visible during COVID-19?

10. If you were responsible for spending $16 million to address street disorder, how would you allocate the funds?



#BritishColumbia

#BCPolitics

#HousingCrisis

#MentalHealthMatters

#FentanylCrisis

#CommunitySafety

#AffordableHousing

#AddictionRecovery

#SmallBusiness

#SocialIssues

#StreetDisorder

#CrimePrevention

#PublicSafety

#PovertyAwareness

#SupportNotStigma


When Heat Becomes a Silent Emergency: What’s Happening in Europe — and What We Can Do in BC

 When Heat Becomes a Silent Emergency: What’s Happening in Europe — and What We Can Do in BC

Right now, Europe is experiencing extreme heat that would have been almost unthinkable a generation ago.

In France, temperatures have pushed past 40°C in some regions. There are confirmed tragic deaths, including two young children found in a car, and multiple drownings as people try to escape the heat in rivers and lakes.

These are not abstract climate statistics. These are real lives, real families, and real communities suddenly overwhelmed by conditions that used to be rare.

And it brings a difficult truth into focus:

What is happening in Europe is not “far away.” It is a preview of what heat can do anywhere.

Many people in British Columbia still remember the 2021 heat dome — a period when hundreds of people died, many of them elderly, isolated, or living without cooling. That event changed how we understand summer here. It showed that extreme heat is not just uncomfortable. It can be deadly.

We grieved those losses. And yet, as the climate continues to warm, we are now seeing similar patterns repeat across the world.

The question is no longer whether extreme heat will happen again.

The question is: how prepared are we when it does?


What We Can Do in Vancouver and BC — Right Now

These are practical, community-level actions that actually reduce harm during heat events:

1. Check on people who are most at risk

  • Elderly neighbours
  • People living alone
  • People with chronic health conditions
  • Renters without air conditioning
  • People experiencing homelessness

A simple knock, phone call, or message can save a life.


2. Create “informal cooling networks”

Heat safety doesn’t have to be formal.

  • Invite someone to your home if it’s cooler
  • Share fans or portable AC units
  • Identify the coolest building nearby (community centres, libraries, malls)

Community cooling is one of the most effective responses we have.


3. Know the warning signs of heat illness

  • Dizziness or confusion
  • Headache, nausea
  • Hot, dry skin or heavy sweating
  • Rapid heartbeat
  • Sudden fatigue

Heatstroke is a medical emergency. Call for help immediately if someone becomes confused or collapses.


4. Change daily routines during extreme heat

  • Avoid outdoor activity during peak afternoon hours
  • Shift errands to early morning or evening
  • Rest more than usual
  • Hydrate before you feel thirsty

Small changes reduce risk significantly.


5. Protect homes before heat arrives

  • Close blinds during the day
  • Open windows at night when cooler
  • Use fans strategically (cross-ventilation)
  • Reduce indoor heat from ovens and dryers

For many people, homes are the most dangerous place during heat if they overheat.


6. Pay attention to children and vehicles

The tragedy in France involving children in a car is a reminder that vehicles heat up dangerously fast.

Even on a mild day, cars can become lethal within minutes.

Never leave children or pets unattended in vehicles — even briefly.


7. Look out for people “disappearing quietly”

One of the most dangerous aspects of heat is isolation.

People don’t always ask for help.

If someone is:

  • not answering messages
  • withdrawing
  • or living alone without cooling

…it is worth checking in.


A Shared Responsibility

Extreme heat is often described as a “weather event,” but its impacts are social.

Who survives a heatwave is shaped by:

  • housing quality
  • income
  • social connection
  • access to cooling
  • and community awareness

That means prevention is not only personal. It is collective.


A Final Thought

What is happening in France right now is painful to read. It reminds us how quickly extreme heat can turn dangerous, even in places that once considered themselves moderate climates.

But it also shows something important:

Most heatwave deaths are preventable.

Not by one big system alone — but by many small actions: checking in, sharing space, noticing vulnerability, and acting early.

We already know what extreme heat can do. BC has lived it.

The challenge now is whether we respond as isolated individuals — or as connected communities that look out for each other when temperatures rise.


Reflective Questions

1. What did extreme heat feel like to you during the 2021 BC heat dome, and how has your sense of “normal summer weather” changed since then?

2. Who in your life would be most at risk during a prolonged heatwave, and how often do you actually check in on them?

3. How prepared is your home or building for several days above 35°C without relief?

4. What barriers might prevent someone from staying safe during extreme heat (housing, cost, isolation, disability, mental health, mobility)?

5. Do we treat heatwaves as “weather events” or as public health emergencies — and should that definition change?

6. What would a truly “heat-safe” neighbourhood look like in your community?

7. How can we make cooling resources (libraries, community centres, shaded spaces) more accessible to everyone, not just those who know where to go?

8. After seeing what is happening in France, do you feel your community is ahead, behind, or unprepared for similar events?

Extreme heat, climate change, heatwave, public health, Europe heatwave, France weather crisis, BC heat dome, 2021 heatwave, climate adaptation, community safety, vulnerable populations, seniors safety, housing and climate, urban heat, emergency preparedness, environmental justice, cooling centers, wildfire risk, global warming impacts, climate resilience

#Heatwave #ClimateChange #ExtremeHeat #GlobalWarming #ClimateCrisis #PublicHealth #ClimateAdaptation #BCHeatDome #BritishColumbia #Vancouver #France #EuropeHeatwave #EnvironmentalJustice #CommunityCare #UrbanHeat #EmergencyPreparedness #ClimateResilience #StaySafe #HumanImpact #ActOnClimate

Common Financial Regrets of Retirees” — and what the article leaves out

 



“Common Financial Regrets of Retirees” — and what the article leaves out

CTV recently published an opinion piece outlining “10 common financial regrets of retirees,” framed around the idea that most retirement insecurity comes from individual financial mistakes: not saving enough, not investing early, relying too much on CPP/OAS, carrying debt, and not planning properly.

On the surface, it reads like standard financial advice. But underneath it sits a much bigger assumption: that most people had equal access to stable income, affordable housing, and enough financial surplus to “optimize” their lives in the first place.

That’s where the disconnect starts.

The hidden assumption: everyone had room to “save more”

The article repeatedly returns to one theme: people regret not saving enough during their peak earning years.

But this assumes there were meaningful “extra” earnings to begin with.

For many Canadians—especially in places like BC—those so-called peak years were defined by:

  • rising rent and housing costs consuming most income
  • stagnant wages that didn’t keep up with inflation
  • debt loads that weren’t optional (housing, education, emergencies)
  • caregiving responsibilities for children or aging parents

In that context, “you should have saved more” often translates to “you should have had more disposable income in a system that didn’t provide it.”

CPP and OAS are not the problem

The article also frames reliance on CPP and OAS as a regret—suggesting people mistakenly expected too much from government programs.

But CPP and OAS were never designed to fully replace income. That part is true.

What’s missing is the policy reality: many people were pushed into relying on them because workplace pensions disappeared and stable long-term employment became less common.

So for a large portion of retirees, CPP and OAS weren’t a “fallback plan.”

They were the only plan that existed.

“Start investing early” ignores who was excluded from investing

Advice like “invest early, even small amounts” assumes:

  • spare income after essentials
  • access to financial literacy and guidance
  • stability in employment and housing
  • confidence in long-term markets while living paycheck to paycheck

For many people, especially lower-income workers, single parents, and those in precarious work, investing early wasn’t a missed opportunity—it wasn’t accessible at all.

Debt in retirement is rarely just a “bad choice”

The article treats carrying debt into retirement as a preventable mistake.

But in reality, debt often reflects:

  • housing costs that rose far beyond wages
  • supporting adult children through an expensive housing market
  • unexpected health or life disruptions
  • lack of retirement security in earlier systems

Labeling this as simple mismanagement flattens a much more complicated economic reality.

The missing centre of the conversation: housing

One of the biggest gaps in the article is housing.

In Canada today, retirement outcomes are heavily shaped by:

  • whether someone bought property early
  • how much mortgage debt remains
  • whether they rent in a rising market

This single factor often outweighs all the “financial habits” discussed in the article.

From personal blame to structural reality

The overall tone of the piece is subtle but consistent: if retirement is difficult, it is largely the result of individual choices.

But that framing leaves out decades of structural change:

  • wage stagnation
  • housing becoming a commodity
  • decline of workplace pensions
  • increasing precarity of employment
  • rising cost of living across essentials

When those factors are removed from the conversation, retirement insecurity becomes a moral issue instead of an economic one.

A more honest way to frame it

A more grounded version of this discussion would say:

Retirement outcomes are shaped by both personal decisions and the economic conditions people lived through—conditions that have shifted dramatically over time.

That distinction matters.

Because it moves the conversation away from quiet blame, and toward understanding how systems and individual lives actually interact.


Reflective Questions

When people say “you should have saved more,” what assumptions are they making about your income, stability, or life circumstances?

What parts of your life were shaped by choice, and what parts were shaped by necessity?

How has the cost of housing changed your ability to plan long-term?

Did you ever have a “safe window” where saving or investing felt realistically possible?

What financial pressures came from caring for others (children, parents, family) that aren’t often acknowledged?

How do we define “good planning” when wages and costs change unpredictably?

What support systems actually existed when you needed them most—and what was missing?

If retirement security depends on timing (housing, jobs, markets), how fair is it to frame outcomes as personal success or failure?

What would a more humane retirement system look like in your experience?

Whose stories are missing when we only hear financial “success” narratives?


#RetirementReality #CostOfLivingCrisis #HousingCrisisCanada #IncomeInequality #SocialPolicy #FinancialStress #LivingPaycheckToPaycheck #BCHousing #AgingInCanada #EconomicReality

Unobtainium and the Question of Who Owns the Future

 

Unobtainium and the Question of Who Owns the Future

When I hear discussions about LNG, minerals, oil, and other major resource projects in Canada, I sometimes think of the film Avatar. In that story, a powerful outside force arrives on a distant land to extract a highly valuable resource called “Unobtainium.” The resource is rare, profitable, and strategically important—but the people living on the land are pushed aside in the process.

Of course, real life is not a movie. But metaphors often exist because they help people express something they are trying to understand.

In today’s world, Canada is being positioned as a major supplier of energy and critical resources. Liquefied natural gas (LNG), metals, forestry, and other exports are often described in terms of global demand and economic opportunity. The argument is that these industries bring jobs, investment, and stability, especially when global supply chains are disrupted by war or geopolitical tensions.

But alongside that narrative, there is another set of questions that many people are asking.

Who actually owns these projects? Who benefits most from the profits? How much of the wealth stays in local communities, and how much flows to international investors or corporations? And perhaps most importantly—what kind of long-term future is being built?

There is also a growing concern that in a globalized economy, countries can become shaped by external demand. When resources become highly valuable, they can attract intense competition, investment pressure, and political interest from beyond national borders. Even when everything is legal and regulated, the feeling of losing local control can still exist.

This is where the Avatar metaphor becomes powerful. Not because it is literally the same situation, but because it captures an emotional truth: the fear that land and resources are being viewed mainly as commodities, rather than as part of a living community with history, culture, and future generations to consider.

At the same time, the reality is more complex than any single metaphor. Canada is not a fictional world, and governance structures do exist. Environmental assessments, Indigenous rights frameworks, taxation systems, and public consultations all play a role in shaping how projects move forward. There are also many Canadians who see resource development as a necessary and positive part of economic life, especially in a world that still depends heavily on fossil fuels and raw materials.

The real tension is not simply “development versus no development,” but rather: development under what conditions, and for whose benefit.

If a resource project generates billions of dollars, how should that wealth be shared? How should environmental risks be managed? How do we ensure communities are not left behind while global markets benefit? And how do we balance immediate economic opportunity with long-term sustainability?

These are not abstract questions. They sit at the center of debates about housing, affordability, sovereignty, climate policy, and the future of work.

The challenge going forward is not just about extracting resources—it is about deciding what kind of society those resources are meant to support.


#LNG #CanadaResources #BCPolitics #ResourceDevelopment #EnergyDebate #ClimateJustice #ForeignOwnership #EconomicSovereignty #IndigenousRights #EnvironmentalPolicy


Reflective Questions

Who ultimately benefits from large-scale resource development projects?

How much control should a country retain over its natural resources?

What does “economic growth” mean if local communities don’t feel its benefits?

Can resource extraction ever be fully sustainable, or only less harmful?

How do global conflicts influence local development decisions in places like BC?

What balance should exist between foreign investment and national sovereignty?

Are we repeating patterns of dependency on a single industry or export?

How do we measure the true cost of resource development—beyond money?

What role should Indigenous rights and stewardship play in these decisions?

What kind of future are we building for the next generation through these choices?