Raven Coal Mine Editorial: Jobs Yes, But Not at Any Cost

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From the Comox Valley Record – April 23, 2011

Should people in Courtenay be dismayed about living in only the
93rd-best city in Canada or glad about being rated above 87 others?

We’re more likely to be OK with being 93rd (up from
100th last year) of 180 cities with at least 10,000 residents than
Campbell River (175th) or Port Alberni (172nd).

Considering Courtenay is rated behind 85th-place Cold
Lake, Alta., and 76th-place Greater Sudbury, maybe we should shrug off
the annual report by MoneySense magazine.

A report like this is only as good as its methodology.
The magazine factored in factors such as weather, air quality and the
percentage of people who walk or bike to work with the more traditional
MoneySense criteria of unemployment, housing costs, household income,
discretionary income and population growth.

Factor in other things like taxes, health professionals, crime, transit, culture and amenities, and out comes the list.

With no disagreement that all these considerations
contribute to quality of life, the survey does not weigh unquantifiable
factors like awe-inspiring vistas of mountains and oceans, clean water,
locally grown food and numerous hiking opportunities not far from any
local town.

What we’re really getting at here is that various values mean different things to different people.

The opportunity to work for a living and to feed our
families is  crucial us. While an awesome place to visit and even to
inhabit, the Comox Valley is not a Mecca for high-paying jobs. We have
trouble attracting and keeping young singles and families.

Read original article

The economy of any place is crucial to its health and
desirability, making the largest Costco on Vancouver and a coal mine
overlooking Baynes Sound seen attractive.

The coal mine, especially, has such potential downside,
though,  that makes anybody without a jobs-at-all-costs mentality
ambivalent or outright opposed.

We need jobs, and good-paying ones, but not any jobs at any cost.

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About Damien Gillis

Damien Gillis is a Vancouver-based documentary filmmaker with a focus on environmental and social justice issues - especially relating to water, energy, and saving Canada's wild salmon - working with many environmental organizations in BC and around the world. He is the co-founder, along with Rafe Mair, of The Common Sense Canadian, and a board member of both the BC Environmental Network and the Haig-Brown Institute.