Blog

Gotta get going!

Watching and following sports is a pressure release valve for the politics. However, as the pressure increased recently, my favourite hockey team the Toronto Maple Leafs have had a disappointing first 20 games. They are a lousy distraction right now. My first communications and public relations gig was in earliest days of the Victoria Salmon...

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PODCAST: Week 3 with Nick Gilchrist

Episode Summary In Week 3, Nick Gilchrist and Adam Olsen discuss the past week in Saanich North and the Islands and British Columbia politics. The conversation covers a range of topics starting with the brand new opening music sequence that Nick created and that he really does not like. For the past three weeks the Saanich School district has...

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Families need support through labour disruption

The past three weeks have been incredibly challenging. I have heard hundreds of stories about all aspects of the state of public education in our local school district. Most recently, the message is crystal clear that families on the Saanich Peninsula are desperate. The cost of this languishing labour disruption on their budgets that are already...

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Hands raised to the creek-walkers

This week I have been writing, talking and thinking a lot about schools: public education schools.Those aren’t the only schools I have focused on in my time as an MLA. The other is salmon schools. That’s the well that I’m drawing inspiration from today.There was a time in the 20th century when the provincial government invested in fisheries. We...

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What did our ancestors do?

On Tuesday I posted about public education. Teachers across the province are still without a deal. Closer to home, the Saanich School district is locked horns with their support staff, represented by CUPE 441. In offices a little further south, in downtown Victoria, people in fancy outfits are having a staring contest. Who will blink first? This...

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A trip down memory lane

We had Star Wars: The Empire Strikes Back on in the background of dinner the other evening. It’s not often that we have the television on during dinner but it's Ella’s introduction to Star Wars and she is very excited! Emily got to reminiscing and was telling us that before moving to Canada from New Zealand in 1990 she had only seen four movies...

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Prioritizing public education in British Columbia

Last week I posted about the day my son came to work with me. He is in grade 7 at Bayside Middle School and has spent a lot of time over the past two weeks sitting on the sidelines waiting for resolution to the labour dispute in the Saanich schools. I hear with crystal clarity how the disruption is deeply impacting families in my riding. Families...

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Never forget

Today I will mute my pen in honour of those who made the ultimate sacrifice so that we may enjoy the freedoms our former Prime Minister describes.“I am a Canadian, a free Canadian,free to speak without fear,free to worship in my own way,free to stand for what I think right,free to oppose what I believe wrong,or free to choose thosewho shall...

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PODCAST: Week 2 with Nick Gilchrist

Week 2: 11/10/2019 Welcome back to The Public Circle Podcast. In this episode I return with my brother-in-law Nick Gilchrist to pick up our weekly discussion about life in British Columbia politics. I enjoy these conversations and I think we are finding a nice mix of information and entertainment. We start this episode by talking about the B.C....

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Gulf Island communities leading sustainability

Thinking back to my first campaign to be the Member of the Legislative Assembly for Saanich North and the Islands, it was a brief introduction to life on the Southern Gulf Islands. In the time between my first run and my second run my awareness grew. It's only after my election and two years as the provincial representative responsible for the...

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Recognizing Indigenous leadership

One year before I was elected to the Central Saanich Council table in 2008, my sister Joni was elected to the Tsartlip Council table. She was the first in our family to be elected to a governance table. 12 years later, Joni's name is back on the Tsartlip ballot. It will be her seventh election. That's right: seven elections in 12 years. We elect...

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Improve government or make them look silly?

In a recent podcast with my brother-in-law Nick Gilchrist, we discuss the process for bringing a Bill forward, the formal Legislative steps it goes through prior to adoption and the role of the opposition in the process.He asked me if the role of the opposition is to just simply oppose everything the government does?His question highlights an...

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Fish Farm Files: A tale of two coasts

Fish farms have been a flashpoint issue in British Columbia for much of the past decade.There is a growing movement to get open-net operations off the west coast. It’s not just environmental activists and actors, the business community is also demanding action.As I have written before, as extensively as any subject on this blog, there is a hugely...

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Introducing Silas Olsen

Last week, my son Silas spent a day shadowing me. He was available because the schools in our district are shuttered due to a labour dispute. Tuesday evening I made the executive decision that if he was not going to learn at school then I would broaden his experience by letting him see first hand what I do on a daily...

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PODCAST: Week 1 with Nick Gilchrist

I suddenly stopped publishing new episodes of The Public Circle Podcast shortly after launching the "second season" in September. Producing this podcast takes some effort and as we started the Fall sitting of the Legislature my workload increased dramatically. Something had to give - it was the podcast. My brother-in-law Nick Gilchrist works in...

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Defending quality public education in Saanich schools

I have spent each morning last week on the picket line listening to members of CUPE 441 and Saanich teachers.In Question Period, I asked the Education Minister about the labour disruption in School District #63 and have subsequently written him a letter seeking further clarification with respect to his responses.There is a great deal of...

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More on forestry and water… we know better

Earlier this summer, I wrote about forestry and watershed protection. It was inspired by a visit to the Comox Valley and a number of meetings with concerned citizens and community organizers about the impact of resource harvesting on the drinking water for all the people living in the valley.I pointed to how costly it is likely going to be should...

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Creating certainty

Bill 41, The Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples Act, is a critical change for the future of British Columbia.For the first time in the history of our province, we move from the perspective of the denial of Indigenous rights to rights recognition.It’s 2019 and long past due.When the Bill was introduced on Thursday, many of the...

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Stricken with the sickness

Every now and then our household is stricken with the sickness. It’s difficult to determine who was the first to bring it home, but it’s safe to say that everyone yearns for wellness. Each of us is hit differently. Yet, there is always one of us who seemingly makes it through without being taken down. Ella is the lucky one in this round. For the...

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