Miscellaneous

Playing the Party Game for the 2009 BC Election

by Delores Broten

Download a pdf of the Party Chart

With a provincial election coming up on May 12th, the Watershed Sentinel decided to do its civic duty, and a simple run-down on the party platforms for the environment. Of course, it turned out to be anything but simple, although each party did reveal its nature in the responses to our questions. Actually, our questions consisted of an entirely unscientific list of topics of eco-concern, with the questions, "What are you promising to do about it?" And "Is there anything else you want to add?"

STV - Voting Reform Made in BC For BC

compliled by Delores Broten

To download a pdf of this article, click here

The most important outcome of the May 12th BC provincial election will not be which party forms the government, but the results of BC's second referendum on changing to a proportional voting system.

 A very similar referendum question, in 2005, was very narrowly defeated, with "yes" coming in at 57.69% of the total valid votes cast instead of the required 60%. The rules also required at least 48 of 79 electoral districts to approve the change by more than 50%, and in 2005, 77 out of the 78 ridings did so. The results were so close to passing that Premier Gordon Campbell decided that BC's Single Transferable Vote (STV) should have a second chance, in the 2009 election.

Afghanistan and Iraq: It's the Same War

by David Orchard and Michael Mandel

Four years ago the US and Britain un­leashed war on Iraq, a nearly defenseless Third World country barely half the size of Saskatchewan.

For twelve years prior to the invasion and occupation Iraq had endured almost weekly US and British bombing raids and the toughest sanctions in history, the “primary victims” of which, according to the UN Secretary General, were “women and children, the poor and the infirm.” Ac­cording to UNICEF, half a million children died from sanc­tions related starvation and disease.

The Case of the Missing Bees

by Anne Sherrod

According to the Canadian Association of Profes­sional Apriculturalists, Canada lost 29 per cent of its honeybees last winter. The previous aver­age national loss was 15 per cent. There have been many claims in Canada that these losses are not from Colony Collapse Disorder (CCD), the mysterious malady that wiped out tens of billions of bees in the US last winter. However, some Canadian beekeepers have reported losses on the order of 50-80 per cent, and some of them say they are seeing symptoms of CCD.

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