A modest proposal for the future of Cranbrook
“Perceptions” by Gerry Warner
As the shockwaves subside from the Disunited Kingdom
voters’ decision to separate themselves from the European Union (EU) it seems
there will be no end to the madness.
No, I’m not talking about Quebec, where separatist
flames are barely flickering or Catalonia breaking away from Spain, or for that
matter, Scotland ditching not-so-great “Great” Britain for the EU.
I’m talking about a separatist movement much closer to
home. No further away then just off the Left Coast in fact where a new
political party has sprung up wanting to make Vancouver Island Canada’s
eleventh province.
No kidding!
This week saw the launch of “VIP,” the Vancouver
Island Party led by a former MP in Joe Clark’s Progressive Conservative
government and a Harvard economist at that. Robin Richardson wants to run
candidates in all 14 Vancouver Island ridings in the May 2017 provincial
election and have an Islanders-only vote on becoming Canada’s 11th
province in 2021, the 150th anniversary of BC joining Confederation.
“Our beloved Island’s distinct way of life is
under threat from severe climate change, federal and provincial government
indifference and economic, environmental and social injustices,” the party’s website
says. Its platform includes lower ferry fares and free university
tuition. “Our motto is Island first and proud of it,” said Richardson in a CBC
interview.
Whew! Maybe the VIP leader also wants to turn water
into wine and lead into gold? It’s certainly a very ambitious platform. But
after all, we are dealing with BC politics.
Say what you want though, these VIP’ers are serious.
They’ve even designed a flag that looks startlingly like the Red Ensign. It
features a circular white badge with the trident of Neptune and the wand of
Mercury representing the sea and trade, a pine cone representing the forest –
though a chainsaw might be more accurately symbolic – and a beaver to represent
the fur trade or maybe all the furry critters in our wildlife-rich
province.
Whatever the case, these super-patriotic Vancouver
Islanders got me to thinking. If a chunk of terra firma as small as Vancouver
Island could become a province, why not the Kootenays? After all, we’re bigger
than The Island and much bigger than Prince Edward Island. We’re a long way
from our provincial capital in Victoria and often ignored by it. And we’re
unique in many ways. We have historic Nelson, one of the mellowest cities in
the country with its Victorian architecture, laid-back lifestyle and the
shaggiest, ‘60s-era hippies you’ll find north of San Francisco. There’s Trail
with the biggest lead/zinc smelter in the world and some of the best Italian
cuisine to be found East of Italy, Kimberley with the only power-generating
“sun mine” in the province, Fernie with its legendary skiing and fishing. And
then, of course, there’s Cranbrook with its lively, if much maligned “Strip”
and its unique Sam Steele Festival dedicated to the man that brought peace to
the valley between the invading settlers and the indigenous Ktunaxa who were
being pushed off their land after more than 10,000 years of successful
settlement.
What better example is there of peaceful co-existence
and learning to get along? And what better community than Cranbrook to be
capital of this new province? We are, after all, the “Key City” of the Kootenays.
Surely if Scotland can separate from England after
more than a thousand years, as is being talked about now, why couldn’t the Kootenays
separate from BC, an arrangement less than 150 years old? Think about it
because there’s only one other logical alternative for separation.
Join Alberta!
Gerry Warner is a retired journalist, who’s been known to write
tongue-in-cheek on occasion.
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