Creston Valley Advance, June 25, 2015

Page 1

HOBBS PAINTINGS SELECTED FOR SHOWS / PAGE 3 KOOTENAY LAKE ART TOUR RETURNING / PAGE 12 ®

Find us on Facebook Badge

Visit us online at www.crestonvalleyadvance.ca

Discovery Real Estate

Tyler Hancock, ABR 250-428-9916

1.10

$

Bringing Buyers & Sellers together for 24 years

www.tylerhancock.ca Office: 250-428-2234 1013 Canyon St. Creston, BC

Personal Real Estate Corporation

CMYK / .eps

Volume 67, No. 26 | Thursday, June 25, 2015

PRICE INCLUDES GST

They made it!

The Lower Kootenay Band’s youth canoe team paddled ashore on Friday to camp overnight at Mayor Ron Toyota’s property before setting out again in the morning for their destination, Gambling Otter (known locally as Burden’s Cut) on Kootenay Lake. Ron Toyota photo

See us to find out how!

Environment minister says no to Jumbo BY LORNE ECKERSLEY Advance Staff

Kokanee Ford Serving the Kootenays since 1984

1241 Hwy #3 Creston BC 250-428-2206 • 1-800-262-7151 Dealer #7429

www.kokaneeford.com

We care about your hair loss

• Thinning hair or hair loss • Dandruff • Dry or oily scalp • Psoriasis and eczema • Chemotherapy and radiation therapy • Wigs and hair systems for men and women

CAPILIA

www.hairandscalpcentre.ca

250.428.0354 3019 Hwy 3, Creston

6

20252 00104 6

Michelle Mungall said on Friday that the decision to stop development of the controversial Jumbo Resort project was the right one. Earlier in the week, Mary Polak, provincial environment minister, announced that she has determined that developers had not made the “substantial progress” required by their environmental certificate. She declared that approval to proceed was now void. “I wasn’t surprised,” the MLA for Nelson-Creston said. “I felt it was the only way things could go if the Minister of Environment was doing her job.” "I have determined that the project, in my reasonable opinion, had not been substantially started by Oct. 12, 2014," Polak wrote in her 10-page decision. "While it is clear that some construction has been started, I am not convinced that the physical activity undertaken on the various components meets the threshold of a substantially started project." Jumbo Glacier Resort proponents first received an environmental certificate allowing the development, which had been in the planning stage since about 1990, in 2004. A five-year extension was granted in 2009. During that period, the provincial government worked to help the proj-

ect along by designating the unpopulated area as a municipality, appointing a mayor and council to take on responsibilities including creation of an Official Community Plan. The council has been receiving more than $200,000 annually to operate. “Not surprisingly, I am disappointed,” Jumbo Glacier Resort Mayor Greg Deck told the Invermere Valley Echo last week. “I would presume that the proponent will be meeting with the province to understand more fully the rational and the options, but I am not party to that process.” Deck said if negotiations between Jumbo Glacier Ltd and the province cease, the $1 million that has been allocated to his council over a fiveyear term will likely be reallocated elsewhere. “We exist to provide a municipal underpinning to the agreement between the province and Jumbo Glacier Resort, and if those necessary agreements are not in place, then our funding will be in question,” Deck said. While a spokesman said the development was far from dead, Mungall said that getting a new environmental certificate to proceed won’t be easy. “The environmental certificate that expired last fall was issued based on 20-year-old data that would not be approved today,” she said. “And it is important to note

What Moves You?

Michael Carpenter Sheldon Browell Broker/Owner

Tyler Hancock, ABR, PREC

Ingrid Voigt

Daryl Porter

Sara Malyk

Brad Burnett

that we are in an era of reconciliation and relationship-building with First Nations people. Jumbo is a sacred place to the Ktunaxa Nation and to approve the project now would not be in line with how Canadian governments are now moving forward.” Mungall was emotional when she pointed out the long fight against the proposed ski resort and residential development was waged by a number of area residents who have been tenacious in their opposition. “I give full credit to people of the Kootenays and First Nations leaders for standing up against the development for two decades,” she said. “I am proud to represent some of these amazing, amazing people.” She referred to one Invermere area resident “who drove up that road every day for years to monitor the developer’s activity and report his findings.” The next step for the provincial government should be to dispose of the municipal government. “The NDP caucus is calling for the government to rescind the order that created a fake town,” she said. “There should be no more waste of taxpayers dollars. Instead, let’s create a legacy for the Kootenays. Let’s start by addressing Johnston’s Landing. Those residents should get a buyout program similar to the one North Vancouver residents were given in 2005. Now is the

chance to do the right thing. Those people need their basic needs, including drinking water, met after three years in limbo.” Columbia River Revelstoke MLA Norm Macdonald, a member of the NDP caucus, has called for the removal of concrete work done by developers in an attempt to start the project. “When the proponent began to lay concrete slabs, the point we made was, is the government sure the proponent has the capacity to remove the mess they made? So now the Ministry needs to insist that happens so the valley can be returned to the state it was in.” Macdonald has been involved in the Jumbo proposal since he was Mayor of Golden in 1993. He has been the area’s MLA since 2005. “My perspective has always been that communities have a right to have significant say on what happens on the Crown land around them. In Golden, we had a referendum before Kicking Horse was developed and it indicated tremendous support. In the Columbia Valley, that support was never there. “Then there was the very clear First Nations interest. They were very clear on the importance of that area to them. It’s a huge victory for the people of this area. I have to think this is the end of it and we can move on.

Discovery Real Estate • 1013 Canyon St., Creston • 106 33rd Ave. S., Hwy. 3, Erickson

www.remaxcreston.com

Office 250-428-2234 • Toll Free 1-877-428-2234

For all the things that move you. 428-6594

428-6805

428-9916

402-3498

402-9339

435-0071

254-7911

Download the free RE/MAX Mobile App.

getmobile.remax.com


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.