Provincial government, industry promoting careers in trades amid labour shortage

The BC Road Show made a stop in Cedar, looking to get more young people interested in careers operating heavy equipment.

The roadshow is a trailer that contains simulators for various pieces of heavy equipment. It visits schools in the province in an effort to promote pathways into the construction industry.

Industry groups say there’s a shortage of labour in the construction right now. Midcoast Morning examines a local pathway into heavy equipment operation.

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Joe Pugh
Planning the future of Gabriola Island

The community on Gabriola Island is mapping out how it will move through the next 25 years.

Attempts to address Impacts from climate change, an aging population and a lack of diversity of housing options need to take into account environmental concerns specific to gulf islands.

Gabriola is in the midst of the first major revision to its official community plan since 1997.

Trustee Tobi Elliot spoke with Midcoast Morning about the planning process.

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Joe Pugh
New equipment coming to Nanaimo hospital following succesful fundraiser

Incubators for the neo natal unit and a new laser used to treat prostate cancer, are among equipment purchases enabled by fundraising from the Nanaimo and District Hospital Foundation.

The foundation announced this week it had exceeded its 1.5 million dollar goal for a recent fundraiser by over $600,000.

CEO Barney Ellis-Perry spoke with Midcoast Morning about how funding for new hospital equipment purchases works, and urologist Dr. Will Carlson shared information on one of the new pieces of equipment.

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Joe Pugh
Retiring McLean's Specialty Foods owner reflects on 33 years downtown

The owners of a downtown Nanaimo staple are stepping into retirement after more than three decades in the Old City Quarter.

Eric and Sandy McLean have announced the sale of McLean’s Specialty Foods to a quartet of local entrepreneurs.

The shop, known for its selection of cheeses and specialty foods from around the world, opened in 1992.

Eric McLean visited the CHLY studio to reflect on 33 years in business.

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Joe Pugh
Nursing union rep talks local concerns ahead of collective bargaining process

The province’s nurses union is flagging workplace safety concerns and staffing shortages as they get ready to head to the bargaining table later this year.

The BC Nurses’ Union’s (BCNU) collective agreement with the Health Employer’s Association of BC is set to expire at the end of March.

As the union gets ready to negotiate the next agreement, they’ve been having a series of regional bargaining conferences, including one in Nanaimo.

Midcoast Morning spoke with Kelly Charters, BCNU rep for Nanaimo and the North Island, about the issues nurses are facing locally.

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Joe Pugh
Vancouver Island Symphony explores unfinished and second guessed works in week

The Vancouver Island Symphony is bringing unfinished, unpublished, and underappreciated works to audiences in Nanaimo and Courtenay this weekend.

The program will feature music from Beethoven, Mendelssohn, Charles Ives, and the late Vancouver composer Jocelyn Morlock.

Midcoast Morning speaks with the symphony’s artistic director, and with composer John Korsrud, who was Morlock’s partner.

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Joe Pugh
8700 hours of increased bus service kicks in for Nanaimo

Upgrades to Nanaimo’s transit service have kicked in this week.

This year will see 8700 more hours of service on Nanaimo routes.

5000 of those hours are on the newly renamed route 1 Nanaimo rapid line, which goes between the Woodgrove Centre and Downtown. 

2700 new service hours are on an intercity route going from the Woodgrove Centre to Parksville and Qualicum Beach.

The other 1000 new hours are part of a restructured route to Lantzville.

Midcoast Morning explores the changes and the tentative plans for next year’s upgrades.

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Joe Pugh
Doc telling the story of Haida Gwaii anti logging protest coming to Nanaimo

The story of a 1985 anti logging protest on Haida Gwaii is coming to Nanaimo for a special screening

The Stand from filmmaker Christopher Auchter draws from more than a hundred hours of archival footage of the protest on Lyell island, footage recorded while the events were still unfolding

The documentary premiered at the Vancouver International Film Festival in September, and will be screening at the Vancouver Island Conference Centre this Sunday.

CHLY and CVOX reporter Heather Watson spoke with the filmmaker behind The Stand.

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Joe Pugh
Looking into the flying dutchman and the Trent River train disaster

A true crime story and a train disaster from the island’s past are being looked at through a new lens. 

Historian Dave Flawse wonders whether Henry Wagner aka the flying dutchman deserved his date with the hangman’s noose, and author Kim Bannerman explored the commemoration of the Japanese victims of the Trent River train disaster of 1898.

Both stories appeared in the book A Place Called Cumberland, released by the Cumberland Museum and Archives.

Midcoast Morning previously brought you some info on that collection, but didn’t have time to delve all the way into the stories. 

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Joe Pugh
Turning a Christmas classic into a live radio play

A Christmas classic is going to be transformed into a live radio play free for all to attend this Saturday night at VIU.

The school’s Malaspina theatre will host a locally penned adaptation of It’s a Wonderful Life, the 1946 film directed by Frank Capra starring Jimmy Stewart.

Midcoast Morning spoke with some of those involved with bringing the production to life.

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Joe Pugh
Part 2: The Nanaimo SPO on coordinating the community's response to homelessness

The Nanaimo Systems Planning Organization (SPO) exists to provide research, data, analysis, education and information related to the community's homelessness response. It began operating in April 2023.

In part two of a conversation around the SPO’s work, its board chair, executive director, and research and mobilization lead discuss the role of non market housing, and landowners willing to offer spaces for its creation as a measure to address homelessness.

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Joe Pugh
Nanaimo's SPO provides data around homelessness in the community

An average of 29 people are coming into homelessness every month in Nanaimo, according to the Systems Planning Organization (SPO).

The SPO exists to provide research, data, analysis, education and information related to the community's homelessness response. It began operating in April 2023.

Midcoast Morning spoke with a trio of those involved with the organization about the data around homelessness in Nanaimo.

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Joe Pugh
The journey towards new skateparks in Ladysmith and Qualicum Beach

Ladysmith and Qualicum Beach are both in the process of getting new skateparks for their towns. An open house Wednesday night will provide residents of Ladysmith the chance to way in on different proposed designs for a new skatepark, while in Qualicum Beach, shovels are set to go in the ground for a park that could open as soon as next summer, after organizers were tasked with raising $300,000 to make the project happen.

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Joe Pugh
Decision points for Nanaimo's budget

Nanaimo city council is going to be deciding Friday whether or not a number of projects will get funding in next year’s budget.

It’s been a week full of conversations around the budget, with an e-town hall taking place Monday, and a special finance and audit committee meeting Wednesday, ahead of Friday’s meeting.

Right now the city is forecasting a property tax increase of eight point seven per cent, though that number will change by the end of the day depending on council’s decisions.

Today on the program we’ll share some information on what those decision points are, and bring you up to speed on where the city is in its budgeting process.

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Joe Pugh
Searching for the essence of Cumberland in tales from its past

A shoot out with a pirate, A train disaster, a chow mein that’s been passed down to generations that were forced to move away - these are just some of the stories you’ll find in A Place Called Cumberland.

The new book from the village’s museum and archives brings together twelve different tales from Cumberland’s past, that cover topics from labour organizing, to a first hand account of growing up in Chinatown, to the story behind the bike trails that play a big part in the community’s identity today.

Midcoast Morning speaks with some of the contributors to explore what the past has to say about the ethos of Cumberland.

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Joe Pugh
‘Bad in every way' says VIU prof of GST holiday

The federal government is one step closer to putting a temporary pause on GST, after a vote in the house of commons Thursday night.

Legislation to exempt a number of items from GST between December 14th and February 15th passed a vote in Ottawa, with support from the liberals and NDP.

Among the items included in the proposed exemption are children’s clothing, a number of food items and toys and video game consoles.

People in BC will not need to pay the 5 per cent federal GST on qualifying items during the two month period.

Speaking with Midcoast Morning, VIU professor of political studies and Jarislowsky Chair in Trust and Political Leadership Michael MacKenzie called the measure “bad in every way.”

Nanaimo-Ladysmith MP Lisa Marie Barron also spoke with Midcoast Morning about why she supported the measure.

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Joe Pugh
Meeting Nanaimo's new poet laureate/The lost intersections of Nanaimo's Chinatowns

It’s a good time for productive outrage, says Nanaimo’s new poet laureate.

Neil Surkan is getting ready to start a two year term in the position on December 1, he spoke with CHLY reporter Lauryn Mackenzie.

And Jackie Wong’s new temporary public art project Lost Intersections will appear next spring, and bring attention to the sites of the city’s former Chinatowns . She spoke with Midcoast Morning host Joe Pugh.

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Joe Pugh