Transportation

July 03, 2008

Big Ideas We Need Now — #12 & 13

Inspired by This Magazine's feature "40 ideas We Need Now," we invited some of Okanagan Life's regular contributors, along with other notable Valley residents to give us a big idea whose time has come, for the Okanagan and for the world. Sadly, more than 90 per cent of those we invited said they were simply too busy. Perhaps, then, the first big idea is that we should all slow down so that we actually have the time to contemplate how to collectively make a better future. Still, we managed to receive a diverse array of ideas that are sure to make you think, make you laugh, make you angry or even make you want to put in your own two cents. Well, here's your chance. Comment on these ideas, or add your own by emailing us. In the meantime…

ORT and the Messiah
by Rick Cogbill

I know I should be content, but there’s one thing big cities like London, Tokyo and Vancouver all share in common, and it makes me jealous. For the price of a single ticket, you’ve got a window seat on the cheapest city tour you’ll ever find. I’m talking Light Rapid Transit.

Here in the Okanagan, communities from Vernon to Osoyoos are all on the “invaded communities list,” and whether it’s caravans of out-of-province sun seekers looking for the perfect summer vacation or locals commuting to work, thousands of people and their attendant automobiles flow in and out of our towns every day. That’s why we need ORT  — the Okanagan Rapid Transit system.


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January 09, 2008

The Future of the Okanagan: A Round Table Discussion Worth Responding To

Compelling conversations don't get much better than this one (available as a text transcript or audio recording), held at the Rotary Centre for the Arts this past November. Okanagan Life Magazine invited some of the Okanagan's best minds and important players to sit down and talk about the Valley's future, as well as options for its sustainability. What we heard at this discussion left us determined to learn more about the issues and with a new mandate to help get the Okanagan's residents involved and participating in a broad exchange of ideas.

Listening to this discussion, it becomes very clear that our shared future is being shaped right now, and if we all go along with the status quo, we may be in for a great deal of unpleasant consequences. Now is not the time to be apathetic.

Hear what a development manager, a wine industry consultant, an organic farmer, an aquatic biologist, a technology expert, a registered architect, a business consultant to First Nations, and three UBC-O professors (from the schools of economics, engineering and sociology) have to say on issues such as the impacts of global factors on the Okanagan, growth and development questions, and the impacts that absentee homeowners have on our communities.

This blog has been set up to share news, views, reviews and interviews on the subject of the Okanagan's future and it's sustainability. I encourage everyone to make comments on anything we post here, beginning with your thoughts and reactions to this round table discussion. Don't leave the important ideas and debates to back room meetings. Get involved and voice your opinions so that our leaders cannot ignore you.

January 08, 2008

Fresh Outlook Foundation CEO, Joanne de Vries: Sustainability in the Okanagan

When we were doing background research to prepare for the round table discussion that would become the backbone of our Okanagan Life magazine feature story, A Jolt From the Blue ... The Future of Our Valley (January/February 2008), we came across word of a conference that was to be held in Kelowna (November 2007) - the Building Sustainable Communities Conference. We immediately signed up and were bowled over by the quality of the presentations we attended.

This was the second annual conference, hosted by an Okanagan NGO called the Fresh Outlook Foundation, a social marketing organization dedicated to the "development and delivery of programs that enable and encourage sustainable behaviors in people’s home, workplaces, and recreational activities throughout British Columbia."

Fresh Outlook was founded by Joanne de Vries, who describes herself as a communications consultant who has worked 15 years "helping local governments in BC educate and consult with their publics, primarily about sustainability issues such as water use efficiency, solid waste management, energy efficiency, transportation demand management also some strategic and official community planning."

In an interview about the conference, we asked her some of the questions that we planned to pose at our round table discussion. Here's what Joanne had to say.

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Aquatic Biologist Darryl Arsenault on Sustainability in the Okanagan

As an engineering consultant and also director of the BC Lake Stewardship Society, sustainability issues are part of Darryl's everyday life. When we interviewed him for a sidebar in Okanagan Life's feature story A Jolt From the Blue...the Future of Our Valley (Jan/Feb 2008), we wanted to hear his thoughts on some of the questions posed at the round table discussion that was the core of the feature. Here's what Darryl said:

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