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Election 2017 is over, My last thoughts and the desire for change and continuity.

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Election 2017 is over and a few surprises.
Our population as a whole decreased last year by 975,so one would expect fewer people to vote and the number of people voting went down to 20,247 from 20,364 in 2013.
The Mayor easily won re-election to serve a second term.
In regards to councillors the incumbents running for a second term, increased their votes, Tanya Handley 9,658/6,623, Lawrence Lee 8,784/8,406, and Ken Johnston 7,364/7,134. (2017 votes/2013 votes).
The incumbents running for their 3 or more terms faired less well. Dianne Wyntjes won but received 9,173/9,841, as did Buck Buchanan 7,430/8,435 and Frank Wong 6,284/8,019. Incumbent Lynne Mulder lost her seat as her vote fell 6,094/8,341.
New comers Michael Dawe and Vesna Higham will be the game changers this next term. Vesna Higham lives north of the river along with Frank Wong and Michael Dawe has written extensively about Red Deer’s history and the issues hounding the residents north of the river.
This election saw only one council incumbent retiring and it appears the residents demanded continuity but expected and wanted some turnover.
I expect to see a higher turnover next election as I expect, 1 councillor vies for the Mayor’s seat and up to 3 others retires. 4 vacancies in 2021.
The public school board had a race with all incumbents running and they also saw 2 new comers win seats and incumbents lose votes. Bev Manning won her seat with fewer votes, 5,609/6,754, as did Bill Stuebing 5,008/6,759, Dianne Macaulay 4,724/4,819, and Bill Christie 4,435/5,853. Incumbents Jim Watters lost his seat as his vote fell 4,077/4,943 as did Dick Lemke 3,608/4,823.
New comers Nicole Buchanan and Laurette Woodward will be the game changers this next term. They just might add their voices to building the next public high school north of the river.
The kicker comes from the catholic school board where 2 of the 5 incumbents retired leaving a 40% vacancy rate. The 3 incumbents increased their votes to ensure continuity with 2 new comers.
Adrianna Lagrange 3,716/3,274, Anne-Marie Watson 3,597/3,168 and Murray Hollman 3,230/2,056,
New comers Kim Pasula and Cynthia Leyson will be the game changer this next term.
For the next 4 years we will have 2 new faces on council, 2 new faces on public school board and 2 new faces on the catholic school board. Let us welcome them and see what they can bring to the table.
We have 15 returning faces and I hope they took notes and collectively hit the reset button on the issues raised over the campaign and I hope that the issues, raised during Election 2017, will not be shunted into a closet until the next election in 2021.
The issue of term limits came into play as those running for the umpteenth time saw a decline in support and I hope they remember that in 4 years. Till then. Thank you.
It was an interesting race, but I am glad it is over. Aren’t you?

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Opinion

Globally, 2025 had one of the lowest annual death rates from extreme weather in history

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Congratulations World!

Here at THB we are ending 2025 with some incredibly good news that you might not hear about anywhere else — Globally, 2025 has had one of the lowest annual death rates from disasters associated with extreme weather events in recorded history.¹

According to data from the Centre for Research on the Epidemiology of Disasters (CRED) at the Université Catholique de Louvain, Belgium (via Our World in Data), through October 2025, the world saw about 4,500 deaths related to extreme weather events.² Tragically, the final two months of 2025 saw large loss of life related to flooding in South and Southeast Asia, associated with Cyclones Senyar and Ditwah.

While the final death tolls are not yet available, reports suggest perhaps 1,600 people tragically lost their lives in these and several other events in the final two months of the year.

If those estimates prove accurate, that would make 2025 among the lowest in total deaths from extreme weather events. Ever! I am cautious here because the recent decade or so has seen many years with similarly low totals — notably 2014, 2015, 2016, 2018, 2021.

What we can say with some greater confidence is that the death rate from extreme weather events is the lowest ever at less than 0.8 deaths per 100,000 people (with population data from the United Nations). Only 2018 and 2015 are close.

To put the death rate into perspective, consider that:

  • in 1960 it was >320 per 100,000;
  • in 1970, >80 per 100,000;
  • in 1980, ~3 per 100,000;
  • in 1990, ~1.3 per 100,000;

Since 2000, six years have occurred with <1.0 deaths per 100,000 people, all since 2014. From 1970 to 2025 the death rate dropped by two orders of magnitude. This is an incredible story of human ingenuity and progress.

To be sure, there is some luck involved as large losses of life are still possible — For instance, 2008 saw almost 150,000 deaths and a death rate of ~21 per 100,000. Large casualty events remain a risk that requires our constant attention and preparation.

But make no mistake, 2025 is not unique, but part of a much longer-term trend of reduced vulnerability and improved preparation for extreme events. Underlying this trend lies the successful application of science, technology, and policy in a world that has grown much wealthier and thus far better equipped to protect people when, inevitably, extreme events do occur.

Bravo World!

Learn more:

Formetta, G., & Feyen, L. (2019). Empirical evidence of declining global vulnerability to climate-related hazardsGlobal Environmental Change57, 101920.

1

What is “recorded history”? CRED says their data is robust since 2000, as their dataset did not have complete global coverage and perviously many events went unreported. That means that the tabulations of CRED prior to 2000 are with high certainty undercounts of actual deaths related to extreme weather events.

2

Note that extreme temperature event impacts (cold and hot) are not included here — Not becaue they are not a legitimate focus, but because tracking such events has only begun in recent years, and methodologies are necessarily different when it comes to accounting for the direct loss of life related to storms and floods (e.g., epidemiological mortality vs. actual mortality). See a THB discussion of some of these issues here. My recommendation is to account for extreme temperature impacts in parallel to impacts from events like hurricanes, floods, and tornadoes — Rather than trying to combine apples and oranges.

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Business

Land use will be British Columbia’s biggest issue in 2026

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By Resource Works

Tariffs may fade. The collision between reconciliation, property rights, and investment will not.

British Columbia will talk about Donald Trump’s tariffs in 2026, and it will keep grinding through affordability. But the issue that will decide whether the province can build, invest, and govern is land use.

The warning signs were there in 2024. Land based industries still generate 12 per cent of B.C.’s GDP, and the province controls more than 90 per cent of the land base, and land policy was already being remade through opaque processes, including government to government tables. When rules for access to land feel unsettled, money flows slow into a trickle.

The Cowichan ruling sends shockwaves

In August 2025, the Cowichan ruling turned that unease into a live wire. The court recognized the Cowichan’s Aboriginal title over roughly 800 acres within Richmond, including lands held by governments and unnamed third parties. It found that grants of fee simple and other interests unjustifiably infringed that title, and declared certain Canada and Richmond titles and interests “defective and invalid,” with those invalidity declarations suspended for 18 months to give governments time to make arrangements.

The reaction has been split. Supporters see a reminder that constitutional rights do not evaporate because land changed hands. Critics see a precedent that leaves private owners exposed, especially because unnamed owners in the claim area were not parties to the case and did not receive formal notice. Even the idea of “coexistence” has become contentious, because both Aboriginal title and fee simple convey exclusive rights to decide land use and capture benefits.

Market chill sets in

McLTAikins translated the risk into advice that landowners and lenders can act on: registered ownership is not immune from constitutional scrutiny, and the land title system cannot cure a constitutional defect where Aboriginal title is established. Their explanation of fee simple reads less like theory than a due diligence checklist that now reaches beyond the registry.

By December, the market was answering. National Post columnist Adam Pankratz reported that an industrial landowner within the Cowichan title area lost a lender and a prospective tenant after a $35 million construction loan was pulled. He also described a separate Richmond hotel deal where a buyer withdrew after citing precedent risk, even though the hotel was not within the declared title lands. His case that uncertainty is already changing behaviour is laid out in Montrose.

Caroline Elliott captured how quickly court language moved into daily life after a City Richmond letter warned some owners that their title might be compromised. Whatever one thinks of that wording, it pushed land law out of the courtroom and into the mortgage conversation.

Mining and exploration stall

The same fault line runs through the critical minerals push. A new mineral claims regime now requires consultation before claims are approved, and critics argue it slows early stage exploration and forces prospectors to reveal targets before they can secure rights. Pankratz made that critique earlier, in his argument about mineral staking.

Resource Works, summarising AME feedback on Mineral Tenure Act modernisation, reported that 69.5 per cent of respondents lacked confidence in proposed changes, and that more than three quarters reported increased uncertainty about doing business in B.C. The theme is not anti consultation. It is that process, capacity, and timelines decide whether consultation produces partnership or paralysis.

Layered on top is the widening fight over UNDRIP implementation and DRIPA. Geoffrey Moyse, KC, called for repeal in a Northern Beat essay on DRIPA, arguing that Section 35 already provides the constitutional framework and that trying to operationalise UNDRIP invites litigation and uncertainty.

Tariffs and housing will still dominate headlines. But they are downstream of land. Until B.C. offers a stable bargain over who can do what, where, and on what foundation, every other promise will be hostage to the same uncertainty. For a province still built on land based wealth, Resource Works argues in its institutional history that the resource economy cannot be separated from land rules. In 2026, that is the main stage.

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