Latest news with #ColesBay

ABC News
09-07-2025
- Health
- ABC News
Tasmanian mobile breast cancer screening services halved after 30-year-old bus fails
Rachel has a family history of breast cancer, the most common cancer for Australian women. As a resident of the regional town of Coles Bay, on Tasmania's east coast, using services like the BreastScreen bus service is "very important" to her. "Because it will show the government that there is a need for these services in our area," she said. One of the two mobile BreastScreen Tasmania units, operated by the Department of Health, was pulled from service in April. The 32-year-old bus, dubbed 'Luna', sustained water damage that caused technical issues, leading to the cancellation of all future mobile appointments around the south and east coast until further notice. For Rachel, the news was "quite concerning". "If we miss this service, how many women are going to be missed? Last week, a government spokesperson said funding was committed for a replacement bus and that the "procurement process is underway". A tender was previously published online, inviting companies to bid for the right to supply the fully fitted-out replacement bus. The tender was withdrawn in February last year, 14 days into the 2024 state election campaign. That was almost 18 months ago and there hasn't been another tender published since. In April, the Department of Health said funding was committed to replace Luna and that the "project is ongoing". Last week, the department said that work was "underway to assess the viability of alternative arrangements moving forward — including how Ida [the other unit that operates in the north of the state] may be able to be redeployed". The department made changes to its website last week, removing multiple references to there being two breast screening buses. The department has been contacted for comment. Independent candidate for Clark, Kristie Johnston, said the department no longer intended to replace Luna due to budget constraints. "The actions of the government quite frankly are deceitful, they are not telling the truth when it comes to women's breast screening services across the state. "They cannot say that they are genuine in any effort to replace Luna as the breast screen bus if they're not going out to tender for it." She also criticised the changes made to the Department of Health website. "Breast screening is a lifesaving service, and when the government and the Health Department fail to provide this service, and are actively removing mentions of this service, then they are completely throwing women out at huge risk." Ms Johnston called on "whoever forms government next to be genuine and serious about women's health and preventative health and advertise within the first 100 days a tender for the replacement mobile breast screening service". Labor Leader Dean Winter said a replacement bus "needs to be a priority". "The tender needs to be let so we can support and provide more services to Tasmanian women," he said. On Wednesday, Tasmanian Liberal Leader Jeremy Rockliff said the replacement bus is, to his understanding, "on its way" as promised, but could not provide confirmation of its tendering or a timeframe for its delivery. Ms Johnston said that was "not good enough". "Early detection is critical. For the premier to dismiss the concerns of women in Tasmania as a bus will be coming sometime soon is simply irresponsible and quite frankly careless and heartless," she said. Kirsten Pilatti, chief executive of Breast Cancer Network Australia, said the health of Tasmanian women in regional and rural communities is not currently being prioritised. She said it's worrying a replacement bus has not been provided yet, as evidence shows "the further you live away from a major city, the worse your outcomes" when it comes to breast cancer. "What the Tasmanian women deserve is access to the very best screening programme in a timely manner to ensure that we can prioritise their health and catch breast cancer as early as possible. "The bus service has made a significant difference in the detection of early breast cancer right across the country. It's been really successful.


CTV News
05-06-2025
- Politics
- CTV News
B.C. First Nation builds small island, fisheries officials check for habitat damage
An excavator is seen on the shores of Coles Bay, B.C., where it was used to help build a small island and a land bridge. May 30, 2025, handout photo. THE CANADIAN PRESS/HO-Richard Smith, *MANDATORY CREDIT* VICTORIA — A British Columbia First Nation has built up a small artificial island in the tidal shallows of Coles Bay off Vancouver Island, triggering an investigation by fisheries officials into whether it involved habitat destruction and if authorization should have been required. Two yellow excavators could be seen at work last week in the bay, heaping up stones and gravel on top of an existing rock outcrop, in a project the Department of Fisheries and Ocean said was linked to a 'clam garden.' Nearby resident Richard Smith said he watched dump trucks carry loads of rock to the shore, where the excavators hauled it into the bay, also building a temporary land bridge during the construction process. He said the rock outcrop was previously visible at low tide, but the island is now exposed at all times after the construction, which lasted from May 26 to May 30. The Canadian Press watched the excavators at work on May 30, then saw that they had left the scene later that day. That afternoon, about 20 workers, some wearing outfits with the logo of the Pauquachin First Nation, were on the bay's mud flats spreading what one described as 'shell hash.' The worker declined to be identified. Shell hash, made of finely ground sea shells, is used in some aquaculture operations to promote growth of mollusks, such as clams. The Department of Fisheries and Ocean was asked by The Canadian Press about the construction last Friday, and on Tuesday the department said in a statement it was 'aware of work being undertaken involving excavators and dump trucks to move and stockpile rocks in Coles Bay, B.C., to facilitate construction of a clam garden,' a traditional form of aquaculture. It said fisheries officers and biologists visited the site on Monday to evaluate the work. 'Assessment of the work will determine whether there has been any harmful alternation, disruption or destruction of fish and fish habitat that would require authorization under the Fisheries Act,' the statement said, adding that 'it would be premature to comment further at this time.' Work above the high-water mark occurred on Pauquachin territory, maps show. The First Nation did not respond to questions about the work. But it had previously announced an event in August to build a 'traditional sea garden' in Coles Bay, with guests invited to help construct a 250-metre long wall on the tidal flats using 'mindfully sourced and prepared rocks' from a quarry. 'A traditionally designed sea garden will nurture clam beds, welcome the return of numerous sea life, provide food sustainability, awaken sleeping traditional teachings, harvesting practices and sharing to future generations,' a description says on a Pauquachin First Nation website. Shellfish harvesting in Coles Bay was prohibited in 1997 on health grounds because of pollution from septic systems. The Pauquachin First Nation of 423 people along the western shore of the Saanich Peninsula has said the prohibition represents an 'infringement' of traditional fishing rights granted under an 1852 treaty. Chief Rebecca David said in a June 2023 letter to the provincial government that government-authorized septic systems represent the 'primary source of pollution,' calling on Ottawa and Victoria to fulfil obligations under the 1852 treaty by cleaning up the bay so shellfish harvesting can resume. The University of Victoria's Environmental Law Centre said in a report attached to David's letter that the closure of shellfish harvesting had deprived families of a critical food source and 'failure to redress the pollution' represents 'a grievous breach of treaty rights.' David's letter calls for the decontamination of Coles Bay to serve as a 'pilot project for developing a systemic approach to decontaminating shellfish beaches in British Columbia.' The Ministry of Water, Land and Resource Stewardship said in a statement the province 'has supported Pauquachin's efforts to rehabilitate shellfish harvest in Coles Bay through regularly scheduled meetings and other technical support.' It did not respond directly to questions about the construction in Coles Bay. The lack of public information about the work has frustrated Smith, who said he is a 'big supporter of reconciliation' and supports 'anything that we can do to assist, co-operate and partner' with First Nations in almost any sphere. 'My frustration is really with the enforcement people or the people that are supposed to be governing this, who provide me with no information at all,' he said. Smith said this uncertainty is weighing heavily on him given the environmental stakes. 'It's the ocean and we all have to protect the ocean,' he said. 'That's part of our lives … theirs (the First Nation's), everybody's, and I'm constantly out on the beach, cleaning it, pulling tires out of the water.' North Saanich Mayor Peter Jones said on Tuesday that neither he nor the council received any notice about the work, but would have to confirm whether the First Nation contacted the municipality. 'I know for myself, I have not been contacted,' he said, adding the municipality has a 'very, very positive and very open' relationship with the First Nation. Jones said he does not know what the First Nation is doing, but said it has been working for a long time with Victoria, Ottawa and the Capital Regional District on restoring clam beds. 'This council is very, very hopeful that the (First Nation) can, in fact, restore the clam beds to a level that would make them very, very useful to them,' he said. 'Again, I hope they are successful, and with regard to what's happening there right now, council and I have no idea.' This report by The Canadian Press was first published June 4, 2025. Wolfgang Depner, The Canadian Press


CTV News
05-06-2025
- Business
- CTV News
B.C. First Nation builds small island, fisheries officials check for habitat damage
An excavator is seen on the shores of Coles Bay, B.C., where it was used to help build a small island and a land bridge. May 30, 2025, handout photo. THE CANADIAN PRESS/HO-Richard Smith, *MANDATORY CREDIT* VICTORIA — A British Columbia First Nation has built up a small artificial island in the tidal shallows of Coles Bay off Vancouver Island, triggering an investigation by fisheries officials into whether it involved habitat destruction and if authorization should have been required. Two yellow excavators could be seen at work last week in the bay, heaping up stones and gravel on top of an existing rock outcrop, in a project the Department of Fisheries and Ocean said was linked to a 'clam garden.' Nearby resident Richard Smith said he watched dump trucks carry loads of rock to the shore, where the excavators hauled it into the bay, also building a temporary land bridge during the construction process. He said the rock outcrop was previously visible at low tide, but the island is now exposed at all times after the construction, which lasted from May 26 to May 30. The Canadian Press watched the excavators at work on May 30, then saw that they had left the scene later that day. That afternoon, about 20 workers, some wearing outfits with the logo of the Pauquachin First Nation, were on the bay's mud flats spreading what one described as 'shell hash.' The worker declined to be identified. Shell hash, made of finely ground sea shells, is used in some aquaculture operations to promote growth of mollusks, such as clams. The Department of Fisheries and Ocean was asked by The Canadian Press about the construction last Friday, and on Tuesday the department said in a statement it was 'aware of work being undertaken involving excavators and dump trucks to move and stockpile rocks in Coles Bay, B.C., to facilitate construction of a clam garden,' a traditional form of aquaculture. It said fisheries officers and biologists visited the site on Monday to evaluate the work. 'Assessment of the work will determine whether there has been any harmful alternation, disruption or destruction of fish and fish habitat that would require authorization under the Fisheries Act,' the statement said, adding that 'it would be premature to comment further at this time.' Work above the high-water mark occurred on Pauquachin territory, maps show. The First Nation did not respond to questions about the work. But it had previously announced an event in August to build a 'traditional sea garden' in Coles Bay, with guests invited to help construct a 250-metre long wall on the tidal flats using 'mindfully sourced and prepared rocks' from a quarry. 'A traditionally designed sea garden will nurture clam beds, welcome the return of numerous sea life, provide food sustainability, awaken sleeping traditional teachings, harvesting practices and sharing to future generations,' a description says on a Pauquachin First Nation website. Shellfish harvesting in Coles Bay was prohibited in 1997 on health grounds because of pollution from septic systems. The Pauquachin First Nation of 423 people along the western shore of the Saanich Peninsula has said the prohibition represents an 'infringement' of traditional fishing rights granted under an 1852 treaty. Chief Rebecca David said in a June 2023 letter to the provincial government that government-authorized septic systems represent the 'primary source of pollution,' calling on Ottawa and Victoria to fulfil obligations under the 1852 treaty by cleaning up the bay so shellfish harvesting can resume. The University of Victoria's Environmental Law Centre said in a report attached to David's letter that the closure of shellfish harvesting had deprived families of a critical food source and 'failure to redress the pollution' represents 'a grievous breach of treaty rights.' David's letter calls for the decontamination of Coles Bay to serve as a 'pilot project for developing a systemic approach to decontaminating shellfish beaches in British Columbia.' The Ministry of Water, Land and Resource Stewardship said in a statement the province 'has supported Pauquachin's efforts to rehabilitate shellfish harvest in Coles Bay through regularly scheduled meetings and other technical support.' It did not respond directly to questions about the construction in Coles Bay. The lack of public information about the work has frustrated Smith, who said he is a 'big supporter of reconciliation' and supports 'anything that we can do to assist, co-operate and partner' with First Nations in almost any sphere. 'My frustration is really with the enforcement people or the people that are supposed to be governing this, who provide me with no information at all,' he said. Smith said this uncertainty is weighing heavily on him given the environmental stakes. 'It's the ocean and we all have to protect the ocean,' he said. 'That's part of our lives … theirs (the First Nation's), everybody's, and I'm constantly out on the beach, cleaning it, pulling tires out of the water.' North Saanich Mayor Peter Jones said on Tuesday that neither he nor the council received any notice about the work, but would have to confirm whether the First Nation contacted the municipality. 'I know for myself, I have not been contacted,' he said, adding the municipality has a 'very, very positive and very open' relationship with the First Nation. Jones said he does not know what the First Nation is doing, but said it has been working for a long time with Victoria, Ottawa and the Capital Regional District on restoring clam beds. 'This council is very, very hopeful that the (First Nation) can, in fact, restore the clam beds to a level that would make them very, very useful to them,' he said. 'Again, I hope they are successful, and with regard to what's happening there right now, council and I have no idea.' This report by The Canadian Press was first published June 4, 2025. Wolfgang Depner, The Canadian Press