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Opinion

LETTER: Bird feeder design prize?

LETTER: Bird feeder design prize?

Editor: Living in bear country as we all do, purchasing a bird feeder and hanging it from a tree is setting up potential trouble. Such an installation becomes an open invitation to bears and other dangerous mammals.
LETTER: Gibsons has odour issue

LETTER: Gibsons has odour issue

Editor: Recently the Town of Gibsons put out a request for prioritizing monies from developers for improving “quality of life for a community.
LETTER: Key issues need solutions

LETTER: Key issues need solutions

Editor: I love so many things about living here on the Coast, including the laid-back attitude most folks have about most things. It’s lovely. Yet, I suggest that there should be limits to what we put up with.
Survey finds mediocre marks for B.C. MPs heading ministries

Survey finds mediocre marks for B.C. MPs heading ministries

Four cabinet ministers’ popularity trails that of Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, according to poll
Opinion: Trudeau pawns PM credibility for pandemic political opportunism

Opinion: Trudeau pawns PM credibility for pandemic political opportunism

An election is expected to be called on Sunday, Aug. 15.
LETTER: ICBC for bicycles too?

LETTER: ICBC for bicycles too?

Editor: Bicycles and motor vehicles travelling on the same roads is a dangerous thing. Adjustments need to be made for more protection for both cyclists and drivers.
LETTER: Manipulation of process

LETTER: Manipulation of process

Editor: R. Bryan’s letter (“ AAP stacked against us ,” Aug. 6) in support of not having water meters inspired me to write. The so-called vote was a sham.
LETTER: Highway needs ignored

LETTER: Highway needs ignored

Editor: Re: “ Sechelt’s multi-use trail network gets a $3.2-million funding boost ,” July 23. Yet another overt spending spree from the feds and provincial government. Over $3 million to “improve” a bicycle path.
LETTER: Pickleball gets short end

LETTER: Pickleball gets short end

Editor: I moved to Sechelt six years ago from small-town Ontario where I played pickleball year-round on six public courts in the gymnasium of the local rec centre.
How the return to work could impact Canada's real estate landscape

How the return to work could impact Canada's real estate landscape

With many workers returning to the office for just a few days a week to start, there will also be a continued interest in renters and buyers needing spaces with home offices.