Monday, May 6, 2024 - History, song, and making ends meet

šŸŒ§ High 11C | Your forecast

Good morning!

This is the first year Iā€™ve had the pleasure of experiencing the aggressive seeding of the pansy.

Last summer, I planted a couple sets of Superstore pansies in our front garden. They were smallā€”and frankly lucky to have survived my poor planting skills. But this year, spring arrived with the offspring of our old pansies, almost none of which are in the garden itself. Instead, they seeded themselves in the lawn, where they look like cheerful little rioters amidst the grass. It is delightful.

Theyā€™ve already survived two lawn mowings, and Iā€™m excited to see where their little rebel spawn end up next spring.

ā€“ Grace

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NEWS

On history, songwriting, and making ends meet

Mission musicians, like Patrick Anthony, have applied to a new project that will turn the cityā€™s history into song. šŸ“· Patrick Anthony; Grace Kennedy

Newspapers are the first draft of history. But when that history becomes trapped inside yellowing pages, musicians are the ones who can bring it back to life. Some, like songwriter Alex Rake, think now is the perfect time to do it.

ā€œThereā€™s a responsibility to share the stories of this town, especially as the population is growing,ā€ he said about Mission. ā€œPeople that arenā€™t from here are moving here, because itā€™s the only flipping way to afford life, without any context of where they are.

ā€œYouā€™re sharing [history] with the people living it.ā€

Rake is one of the local musicians who have applied for the City of Missionā€™s newest call for artists, which will see four songwriters work with the Mission Archives to turn old newspaper stories into songs. (You can read The Currentā€™s story on the program here.)

Related

Need to Know

šŸ‘ A Langley marriage commissioner sniffed out a wedding scammer [Langley Advance Times]

šŸ§³ Yarrowā€™s fantasy-inspired hotel is set to open next month [Daily Hive]

šŸ’ The Abbotsford Canucks are facing a home elimination game this week [The Province]

āš¾ A former Langley little leaguer is re-uniting with his opponent 12 years after they played against each other in Uganda [CityNews]

šŸ« An Abbotsford anti-SOGI group is promoting a Vancouver Island school districtā€™s distance-ed programā€”and the district doesnā€™t like it [Comox Valley Record]

šŸ Agassiz RCMP rescued a goat from an oncoming train last week [Agassiz Harrison Observer]

šŸš” A 25-year-old man was killed in Mission, and a suspect was arrested [CTV]

šŸ‘‰ Wilmaā€™s Transition Society in Chilliwack is suing two former employees for misappropriating $1.4 million [Chilliwack Progress]

šŸš‘ A man was stabbed at Kent Institution near Agassiz [Agassiz-Harrison Observer]

šŸ  A 10-unit strata townhome complex is up for sale in Chilliwack for $4.3 million [Redfin]

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The Agenda

Chilliwackā€™s existing primary care clinic on Evans Road will be home to the new urgent care centre temporarily. šŸ“· Grace Kennedy

Urgent and primary care centre finally open in Chilliwack

Six years after BC promised residents a new way to get after-hours healthcare, Chilliwack finally has an urgent care centre.

Back in 2018, BC announced it was launching a new primary health care strategy, which focuses in part on bringing urgent care to the province. The first facility in the valley opened two years later in Abbotsford, just before the start of the COVID-19 pandemic. Its roll-out was plagued by staffing shortages, and urgent care was originally offered only two days a week.

The Chilliwack urgent primary care centre is now the fourth in the Fraser Valley, joining the centres in Abbotsford and Langley, and a newly opened one in Mission. It is operating out of the same Evans Road building that houses the Chilliwack and Fraser Health Rural Primary Care Centre, which opened in 2022 without the urgent care services that accompanied new primary care clinics in other regions.

That Primary Care Centre is part of a care network that includes family doctors, Indigenous wellness services, and healthcare referrals. The new urgent care centre adds a walk-in clinic intended to alleviate the pressure on Chilliwackā€™s emergency room.

Open only during traditional off-hours, the urgent care clinic is meant for people who need medical attention within the day, but who donā€™t necessarily need to go to the ER. (Sprains, cuts, high fevers, and minor infections are all reasons to go to the new urgent care centre.) The urgent care centre will be available to people who do not have a family doctor, unlike the existing primary care centre, which only has appointments available for people who are patients of care providers in the clinic.

The urgent care centreā€™s current location is considered temporary; a health ministry official told The Current a permanent site is ā€œstill being confirmed.ā€ The facility only has limited hours to startā€”itā€™s open 4:30pm to 8pm, as well as weekends and holidays from 9am to 4pm. The province says hours and staffing will be increased when the centre moves to a permanent location. Abbotsfordā€™s urgent care clinic is open six hours a day on weekdays and 11 hours on weekend days.

šŸ¤ Now hiring

ā€¢ Family Wellness Specialist at the First Nations Health Authority in Chilliwack

ā€¢ Building Inspector at the District of Kent

ā€¢ Hairstylist at Sonuā€™s Hair and Beauty Lounge in Langley

ā€¢ Agriculture instructor at the University of the Fraser Valley in Abbotsford

Hiring in the Fraser Valley? Reply back and let us know!

šŸ—“ Things to do

C3: Seniors interested in art, culture, and history can go to The Reach for its weekly Culture, Coffee, and Cookies (C3) event. Participants will discuss a variety of topics through visual and literary arts. Meetings are on Wednesdays at 10:30am until May 15. Register online.

Peach play: F.G. Leary Fine Arts Elementary students will be performing James and the Giant Peach Jr. at the Chilliwack Cultural Centre from May 6 to 8. Tickets online.

Garden talk: The Langley Environmental Partners Society is hosting its spring garden seminar on May 11. The free event will showcase a number of speakers with gardening tips, and include lunch, prize draws, and a seed swap. Details online.

Have an event to tell us about? Fill out this form to have it highlighted here.

Catch up

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