A Buddhist butler mixed up in murder, a decade off grid on a remote island, and the journey to self publishing,
Midcoast Morning explores the experience of some of the many authors living in and around Nanaimo.
Read MoreRunning 28 minutes, Midcoast Morning covers local news and current affairs happening in Nanaimo and on the Salish Sea. Midcoast Morning focuses in on one big story per show, interviewing reporters about their stories, as well as those making news and those impacted by it. We also feature the curators and creators in our local arts and culture scene. Midcoast Morning broadcasts every Monday, Wednesday, and Friday morning at 8:30 A.M.. The podcast edition releases at the same time.
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Lauryn Mackenzie — Host and Producer.
Jesse Woodward — Executive Producer.
Arbie Fru — Technical Assistance.
And other contributors in our news department.
Have a lead on a story? Feedback regarding an episode? Drop us a line. We read all of our emails, and respond when we can.
A Buddhist butler mixed up in murder, a decade off grid on a remote island, and the journey to self publishing,
Midcoast Morning explores the experience of some of the many authors living in and around Nanaimo.
Read MoreIslands trust Council has approved this year’s budget following a quarterly meeting that took place in Nanaimo last week.
Among this year’s projects is a review of Gabriola Island’s official community plan. Gabriola Island Trustee Tobi Elliot speaks about that project and other issues relating to the community and the Islands Trust.
Read MoreNanaimo has announced the winners of its 2024 culture awards.
The prizes have been bringing awareness to the breadth and variety of cultural activity in Nanaimo since 1998.
This year’s winners include a world champion highland dancer, a member of Canadian Music Hall of Fame band Trooper, and someone who’s brought Banghra to Polish TV audiences and Nanaimo citizens alike.
Read MoreThe Islands Trust is a special form of government serving gulf islands in the Salish Sea.
It was created by provincial legislation in 1974, with a mandate to preserve and protect the environment and unique amenities of the gulf islands.
Multiple groups have raised concern after the trust released a document following an in-camera meeting in September.
The document said that Trust Council’s view is that the phrase “unique amenities” referred to in its mandate is broad-ranging and that such amenities may include issues such as, but not limited to, housing, livelihoods, infrastructure and tourism.
Ahead of a recent Islands Trust meeting in Nanaimo, the groups Friends of The Gulf Islands and Gulf Islands Alliance raised concerns that such an interpretation could undermine the trust’s mandated focus on environmental protection.
Read MoreOn Friday, federal NDP leader Jagmeet Singh was in Nanaimo as part of a tour of Vancouver Island.
He visited the CHLY studio, alongside Nanaimo-Ladysmith MP Lisa Marie Barron for a conversation touching on pharmacare legislation, Barron’s recent motion on electoral reform, Harewood Plains, and the next federal election.
Read MoreThe City of Nanaimo is bringing in bylaws around its electric vehicle(EV) chargers.
This week city council adopted new bylaws set to come into effect in June first that will see EV drivers pay two and a half cents a minute for the first two hours of charging at city owned stations.
Fees will increase to six cents a minute after two hours, as well as during overnight hours.
The show explores the new bylaws and the experience of driving an EV in Nanaimo in 2024.
Read MoreFinancial troubles at Vancouver Island University could mean the end of the school’s music programs.
The VIU Senate Planning and Priorities Committee voted to approve a proposal to phase out the University’s bachelor of music program, and cancel a jazz diploma program that was set to launch in September.
Vancouver Island University faces a deficit of more than 20 million dollars this year, and is aiming to return to balanced budgets by the 2026-27 year.
Music has been a part of the school’s educational offerings since 1969.
Read MoreIt’s mating season for Eagles on Vancouver Island.
Mike Yip says everybody recognizes the eagle, but not everyone is aware of what the raptors get up to month to month.
The Nanoose Bay based amateur photographer is getting ready to launch A Year of Eagles, a book he’s self publishing next month.
On today’s show we’ll spend more time learning about eagles and other raptors you can find around the island.
Read MoreA new hospital, a cardiology program, and more staff are all needed in Nanaimo according to Dr. David Coupland, head of the Nanaimo Medical Staff Engagement Society.
Plus how could the raft of housing announcements we’ve been hearing from the provincial government impact Nanaimo? Kaeley Wiseman who teaches at VIU and works in the non market housing space shares her thoughts.
Read MoreSophia worked at The Nanaimo Unitarian Shelter.
She died late last year from an infection, aged 23.
With her mother’s blessing, the shelter’s Executive Director Paul Manly is sharing Sophia’s story.
In a post to the Unitarian shelter’s Facebook page titled Remembering Sophia, an open letter about the preventable loss of a community champion, Manly provided an account of Sophia’s difficulty accessing healthcare in Nanaimo, and how when she was eventually diagnosed with an infection and immunodeficiency, it was too late.
He visited the CHLY studio to remember Sophia.
Also on the program: CHLY reporter Lauryn Mackenzie gets a preview on L’Association Des Francophones de Nanaimo’s Maple Sugar Festival happening this weekend.
Read MoreThere’s a cloud of uncertainty hanging over many smaller media outlets around Vancouver Island and beyond.
A federally funded program to support civic journalism in under-served communities is set to expire at the end of next month, and there’s been no definitive answer one way or another about its future.
Called The Local Journalism Initiative or LJI, it provides funds to a number of not for profit organizations representing different segments of the news industry.
For example there’s one for print media, and one for community radio.
Those larger organizations administer the funding, giving money to news outlets to hire journalists.
There are different streams for different types of media, including print, community radio, and community television.
CHLY’s nonprofit newsroom receives Local Journalism Initiative funding for our news updates. Midcoast Morning is funded through a separate program.
The ambiguity around the LJI’s future has left more than 400 journalists across the country unsure whether or not they’ll have jobs come April.
Read MoreNanaimo Mayor Leonard Krog discusses the cancelled alternative approval process and the future of the public works yard project. Shoppers at Nanaimo’s Superette share memories of the store in the wake of the news that it’s up for sale.
Read MoreNanaimo has shelved an alternative approval process for the second time, after failing to follow the rules set out in provincial legislation.
To try and make sense of the situation, we spoke with Vancouver Island University Political Studies Professor Michael MacKenzie.
Read MoreLunar New Year falls on Saturday February 10th in 2024
An important holiday in the culture of many Asian nations, including China, Korea, Vietnam, and Indonesia,
Today we’ll be taking a look at some of the ways it’s being celebrated here in Nanaimo.
We’ll visit the Nanaimo Chinese Cultural Society’s Lunar New Year event, and we’ll hear the favourite traditions of a number of students at VIU.
Read MoreNanaimo’s nailed down five specific proposals it wants to see action on from the province
This week council approved the resolutions the city will bring before the Association of Vancouver Island and Coastal Communities.
We’ll be exploring what that means, what the resolutions are, how this all works, and why you should care.
Read MoreHousing has been a hot topic around town this week.
The provincial housing minister was in Nanaimo for an announcement, the province announced more funding for rent banks in BC, and the Canada Mortgage and Housing Corporation came out with its 2024 rental market report.
We’ll hear from housing minister Ravi Kahlon, and we’ll explore the Nanaimo housing scene with VIU Master of Community Planning professor Mark Holland.
Read MoreA pair of Vancouver Island Entrepreneurs have lost their space but not their vision.
Last Mother's day Sabrina Anderson and Whirly Bird launched Stray Coastal Moat Farm market, hoping to create community for island farmers.
They took over the building across from the Nanaimo Airport in Cassidy that’s hosted farm markets in one way or another since the 1970s.
In October, just as they were getting ready to put the finishing touches on their first year, the building was destroyed by fire.
In a recent Instagram post, Anderson and Bird said that their insurance adjuster found that their operations were not responsible.
They also said however that they won’t receive insurance to cover losses such as inventory or equipment.
As the pair take some time to regroup and decide what’s next, they stopped by the CHLY studio to reflect on their season at Stray Moat.
Read MoreThe Canada goose and the Vancouver Island marmot, two iconic species in very different situations.
We’re going to hear about a pair of efforts on today’s show, one to get our goose population under control, and one to bring marmots back from the brink.
Nanaimo’s launched a bid looking for contractors to do some Canada goose egg addling.
At the same time, The Marmot Recovery Foundation is hiring for a pair of positions this summer.
Read MorePaige Pierce is Nanaimo’s new Youth Poet Laureate.
The Vancouver Island University education student will spend a two year term raising awareness of poetry and the impact that literary arts can have on community life.
Pierce, 21, has published 7 books of poetry, the first of those coming when she was 15.
CHLY reporter Mick Sweetman spoke with her in our studio.
We also follow up with Nanaimo's Poet Laureate Kamal Parmar, who reflects on her two years in the role so far.
Read MoreFor the next two weeks It’s Dine About Mid-Island, as Nanaimo’s Food and Beverage festival returns for a second year.
During the event a variety of independent restaurants from Ladysmith to Qualicum Beach will be offering special menus.
Midcoast Morning is taking a look at the local food scene to mark the occasion.
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