Nanaimo News Bulletin, November 12, 2015

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THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 12, 2015

VOL. 27, NO. 53

Leash on life

Shadow, a 10-month-old all-Canadian Newfoundland, left, pauses for a picture with his owner Chris Rolls. Shadow was out for a walk with his buddy Rebus, a 10-year-old Irish spotted Newfoundland, and his owner Val Harvey in Maffeo Sutton Park on the Nanaimo waterfront Tuesday. CHRIS BUSH/THE NEWS BULLETIN

Deal reached to buy Wildwood Ecoforest

I

NON-PROFIT UPS offer to $900,000 for property. BY KARL YU THE NEWS BULLETIN

Pilot project shows success for rental subsidy BY TAMARA CUNNINGHAM THE NEWS BULLETIN

People struggling with chronic homelessness will be given a chance to rent under a formal Housing First strategy. The City of Nanaimo foot the bill for the past three years for a rent supplement pilot program, administered by the Nanaimo Region John Howard Society. Now it’s contributing $45,000 to a more formal Housing First

strategy. It’s part of a city initiative to house the homeless and has seen success, according to John Horn, the city’s social planner, who said most tenants have been able to stay in apartments, and in some cases have withdrawn from the program to manage the unit on their own. The idea, just like the city’s supportive housing complexes, is to provide stable housing for those who have previously struggled with homelessness so

they can address other issues like mental health and addiction. They are provided with outreach support and live in market housing, like townhouses and apartments. Tenants chip in $375 from their income assistance cheques and the city tops up the rent, tallying about $200 monthly for each unit. Six apartments have been supported to date. See ‘COUNCIL’ /4

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A deal has been reached that could see ownership of Wildwood Ecoforest in Cedar transferred from the Land Conservancy of B.C. to the Ecoforestry Institute Society. The non-profit conservancy holds the 31-hectare forested site in trust, but wants to sell due to multimillion-dollar debt. The society has eyed the property since fall 2013, and recently upped its offer to $900,000 from $600,000, said Kathy Code, society spokeswoman. The deal will need B.C. Supreme Court approval. In addition, an ecoforestry management plan must be approved by Herb Hammond, an ecoforester and impartial third party, according to Code, in order to make certain Wildwood continues to adhere to principles of Merve Wilkinson, former owner and sustainable logging pioneer. The plan will detail how the society will manage the forest. Wilkinson did it on a five-year basis and Code said it’s done through selective logging. “Our ecoforesters will go through the [31 hectares], they’ll identify those trees

then, looking at soil conditions, the light, the density, the other species that are around those trees, they’ll decide which ones can come out then to make room for new growth, or depending on other conditions in the forest, which ones they can afford to harvest without destroying the integrity of the rest of the forest,” said Code. Cathy Armstrong, land conservancy acting director of operations, said her group is happy Wildwood will remain in a non-profit’s hands. “Obviously this is a group that have looked after the property for us from the beginning, so it’s a known entity, it’s a non-profit entity that showed willingness to work with us to develop the covenant and management plan and that’s been the sticking point and why it took a little bit longer to get to a final resolution,” Armstrong said. Code said the $900,000 is from private donations – $110,000 will go toward conservancy creditor debt forgiveness, while the remaining $790,000 is in direct money. The deal calls for the land transfer to be completed by Dec. 11. reporter@nanaimobulletin.com

What do you think? Give us your comments by e-mail: editor@nanaimo bulletin.com.

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