Half of new conservation fund’s $400,000 to go towards Park Rill property

PENTICTON – The initial round of projects for the new regional district’s South Okanagan Conservation Fund have been selected.

Seven regionally significant environmental projects totalling more than $400,000 will be presented to Regional District of Okanagan Similkameen’s board of directors at the Jan. 4 regular meeting for board approval.

Two projects involve land purchases, including a $200,000 contribution to The Nature Trust of B.C.’s Park Rill Creek infill project, and $57,755 towards the purchase of up to 2.29 hectares of lowland and wetland habitats on locatee lands on the Penticton Indian Reserve, to be controlled by the band’s En’owkin Centre.

The amount requested for the Park Rill property equals roughly 21 per cent of the property’s value, appraised at $960,000.

Other projects selected by the conservation fund’s Technical Advisory Committee include:

  • Reconnection of floodplain in Penticton Creek and enhance fish spawning areas ($40,260) in the Okanagan River, negatively affected by channelization of the riverbed in the1950s, in partnership with the Penticton Indian Band and the Okanagan Nation Alliance
  • Reconstruction of the sediment catchment basin of Ellis Creek to allow year round fish passage up a four kilometre length of  Ellis Creek ($50,000), partnered again with the Okanagan Nations and Penticton Indian Band
  • Habitat stewardship and enhancement in the South Okanagan by providing residents with training, information and technical assistance that will empower them to take on conservation and stewardship projects in their neighbourhoods ($38,000),with the Okanagan and Similkameen Stewardship Society
  • An invasive-free certificate program to promote and integrate invasive plant prevention and management into the practises of horticulture and landscape companies in the South Okanagan ($6,415), in partnership with the Okanagan and Similkameen Invasive Species Society
  • An eco-management project to reduce threats to important species at risk in the workplace in activities such as pest control and other industries ($7,841) partnered with the Okanagan Similkameen Conservation Alliance

The South Okanagan Conservation Fund was established in 2016 to provide local financial support for environmental projects that will contribute to the conservation of the South Okanagan’s natural assets. This year’s selected projects come from this year’s first intake of applications for the new fund, which is expected to generate $500,000 annually, through an average regional district taxpayers’ contribution of $10, based on an assessed property value of $343,000.


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Steve Arstad

I have been looking for news in the South Okanagan - SImilkameen for 20 years, having turned a part time lifelong interest into a full time profession. After five years publishing a local newsletter, several years working as a correspondent / stringer for several local newspapers and seven years as editor of a Similkameen weekly newspaper, I joined iNFOnews.ca in 2014. My goal in the news industry has always been to deliver accurate and interesting articles about local people and places. My interest in the profession is life long - from my earliest memories of grade school, I have enjoyed writing.
As an airborne geophysical surveyor I travelled extensively around the globe, conducting helicopter borne mineral surveys.
I also spent several years at an Okanagan Falls based lumber mill, producing glued-wood laminated products.
As a member of the Kaleden community, I have been involved in the Kaleden Volunteer Fire Department for 22 years, and also serve as a trustee on the Kaleden Irrigation District board.
I am currently married to my wife Judy, of 26 years. We are empty-nesters who enjoy living in Kaleden with our Welsh Terrier, Angus, and cat, Tibbs.
Our two daughters, Meagan and Hayley, reside in Richmond and Victoria, respectively.

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