Bowen Island Undercurrent May 20 2021

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bowenislandundercurrent.com

REAL ESTATE EDITION: See what’s for sale on Bowen Island STARTS PAGE 9

$1.50

Thursday, May 20, 2021 • A1 inc. GST

THURSDAY, MAY 20 , 2021

CHOIR CONCERT

VOL. 47 NO. 20

BIUndercurrent

BowUndercurrent www.bowenislandundercurrent.com

How was the May 8 event possible? SEE PAGE 16

Clear waters AFTER 24+ YEARS OF EFFORT, COVE BAY WATER TREATMENT PLANT IS COMING ONLINE

BRONWYN BEAIRSTO

Editor@bowenislandundercurrent.com

ERIN NEIL / RE: UNITED PHOTO

ON BOWEN: Filming started last weekend in the Bowen Bay area for Re: Uniting, an independent “irreverent drama”

set and filmed on Bowen. It stars the island’s own Michelle Harrison (pictured above) and features a slew of other local talent. See the story on page 20.

Bowen/Lions Bay COVID data released

59% OF ADULTS IN AREA HAVE HAD FIRST DOSE BRONWYN BEAIRSTO

Editor@bowenislandundercurrent.com

For the first time, we have local(ish) COVID-19 details.

As of last Wednesday, the BC Centre for Disease Control started releasing community health service area-level data. This means that instead of having only general West Vancouver data,

there’s data for the combined region of Bowen Island, Bowyer Island, Hutt Island, Passage Island, Brunswick Beach and Lions Bay. As of the 2016 census, this area had a population of 5,090 people.

There’ll be many Snug Cove residents raising a glass this week – a glass of clear, non-yellowy, water. Cove Bay Water System’s new $9.3 million water treatment plant is set to come online later this week for the 600-odd connections in the water system. This is a quiet launch with Bowen Island Municipality planning to hold a grand opening later in the summer. Back in 2014, Vancouver Coastal Health informed BIM that the Cove Bay system treatment was susceptible to pathogen contamination and that it didn’t meet watershed protection requirements. (The Greater Vancouver Regional District also identified the need for Cove Bay water treatment in 1997.) This week, the new plant replaces a dilapidated shed a few hundred metres away from Grafton Lake – the Cove’s water source. Until now, water from the lake has gravity fed into the shed, had dirt and debris screened out, been injected with chlorine for disinfection and then has flowed its way to Covians’ taps. Chlorine can kill a lot, but there are still pathogens – like the diarrhea-causing Cryptosporidium parvum – that can slip through. The province advises that people with compromised immune systems boil water from ground or surface sources that hasn’t been boiled, filtered, distilled or treated with UV. This ceramic membrane ultrafiltration system does away with any boiling need for Cove Bay, said BIM’s director of engineering, Patrick Graham. In water systems, there’s ideally a double barrier – in this case filtration and disinfection (chlorination). In the new system, after the water’s fed from the lake through the filters, it’s chlorinated and pumped into the giant reservoir beside the building.

CONTINUED ON P. 3

Your private 4-acre park–with a hiking trail! Award winning design with heavy timbers and vaulted wood ceilings. Oversize French doors open to a south-facing patio with a sports pool and hot tub. Three levels, 4 bedrooms, and 6 baths, plus 2 bedrooms in the cottage. Walking distance to the ferry, shopping, schools, and beaches.

527 COLLINS ROAD

CONTINUED ON P. 21

Live above the fray with captivating views from every room across the Queen Charlotte Channel. Very private and lovingly maintained. 4 bedrooms, 3-1/2 baths, 2-car garage, detached artist’s studio. Suite potential.

$4,489,000.

Timothy Rhodes REALTOR®

604-341-9488 rhodesonbowen.com tim@rhodesonbowen.com

722 CHANNELVIEW DRIVE

$2,213,000.


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