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Federal All-Candidates Forum focuses on Climate Crisis, Solutions

Contributor
By Contributor
October 3rd, 2019

Federal election candidates will have an opportunity to focus on issues around climate change and creating a healthier and more peaceful future at an all-candidates forum slated for the United Church (602 Silica Street) on Monday, October 7, at 7 p.m.

The forum, Safe Climate, Clean Energy, and Healthy Communities, is being organized by four non-partisan local organizations — the Nelson-West Kootenay chapter of Citizens’ Climate Lobby (CCL), the West Kootenay EcoSociety, Selkirk College’s Mir Centre for Peace, and the local Fridays For Future team.

“The climate crisis is a top issue of concern for Canadians this election season,” said Laura Sacks, who co-leads the CCL chapter, in a media release.

“We know there is similarly high concern in our community, particularly after several summers of wildfire and intense smoke.”

Invitations were sent to candidates from the four main political parties back in July. NDP, Green, and Liberal candidates are planning to attend both forums. Organizers could not say for sure if Kootenay-Columbia Conservative candidate Rob Morrison would be attending.

According to last year’s report by the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC), we need to cut greenhouse gas pollution in half in the next decade to keep global heating to the goals of the Paris agreement of 1.5 C. That report and other recent studies show that impacts on oceans, land and ice are rapidly accelerating, including here in Canada. These impacts are directly affecting human health and well being, and are expected to get much worse.

“We are clearly in a climate emergency,” says 16-year-old Jade Osecki, a leader of the local Fridays For Future movement. “Yet frustratingly, we are watching the future of today’s youth be sacrificed for short term gains.”

Montana Burgess, executive director of the West Kootenay EcoSociety said it’s is important to know what candidates’ views are for transitioning our communities and our country to 100% clean energy.

“We need to make this transition to have a safe and healthy today, as well as tomorrow for ourselves and our children.” Burgess said.

Jennie Barron, who heads the Mir Centre, agrees.

“Climate justice is about intergenerational, interspecies, interracial and indigenous justice. Those least responsible are suffering the worst impacts, and so far we have no signs that governments are taking the crisis seriously.”

Each of the four organizing groups is drafting a question for the candidates. Attendees will also have a chance to express their concerns on a board at the entrance to the forums, writing their own questions or voting up other questions. Several will be selected to ask the candidates, and all concerns will be summarized for the candidates as a follow up.

“Youth who can’t vote feel powerless” says Fridays For Future’s Osecki. “We rely on adults to become informed and vote for safe, healthy communities for us and for our kids.”

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