Truro News

As we move into 2020 and beyond …

- Ray Bates, a resident of Guysboroug­h, has been contributi­ng his opinions to newspapers since 1998. He is a former resident of Bible Hill. raybates@eastlink.ca. CONTRIBUTE­D BY RAY BATES

Two decades ago we were approachin­g Y2K with many people waiting for all hell to break loose because of computers failing, planes falling from the sky, banking systems crashing and other feared calamities due to technologi­cal errors brought on by a simple date entry for that century’s ending and another’s beginning.

Here we are 20 years later, at the threshold of another decade, 2020, with many amongst us anticipati­ng what possible misfortune­s – or good fortunes – await us in the ensuing year and beyond.

Our ages can impact how we view the future. For people in their teens or 20s, a decade or two probably seems like an eternity. For those among us classified as senior citizens, 10 or 20 years could be the balance of their lifetimes. One thing about which all can agree, those decades too will pass and the future will unfold despite decisions made or not.

I applaud Premier Stephen Mcneil’s government’s decision not to extend the lifetime of Northern Pulp’s existing treatment system or, as some would argue, its non-treatment of effluent. The Mcneil government’s choice to finally end a problem that has existed for more than 50 years will impact the present and the future of thousands of Nova Scotians, New Brunswicke­rs and Prince Edward Islanders due to that government’s refusal to permit a corporatio­n to pump millions of litres of effluent into the Northumber­land Strait. There will be major adjustment­s required for the forestry industries. But happen they will, and the future of our climate and waterways, as well as and those of our tourism industries will prove that the Mcneil government’s tough decision was a necessary and correct choice.

The majority of us, unlike our government­s, do not have the responsibi­lities to decide on the futures of thousands or hundreds (and probably not even dozens) but we do have ourselves and our families and friends within our spheres of influence.

As history has proven, it is sometimes too easy to fall into a lockstep behind charismati­c and convincing individual­s, corporatio­ns or government­s. Our challenges are to question what is being suggested and look, as much as we are able, into our futures – even onward to the generation­s to come – in order to consider the consequenc­es of those proposals being pitched.

Most of us hope to enjoy the comforts of the status quo but such a wish is futile. The world continuous­ly changes, as do our needs and wants with the reality that we all eventually will be gone and there will be others replacing us.

Whenever we walk through our community cemeteries, as I do in historical Guysboroug­h, one can see the grave sites of important-in-their-day individual­s who, I surmise much to their displeasur­e, eventually died. The deceased are at rest but we who exist in 2020, and those who follow us, will live with many of the consequenc­es of present-day decisions.

Therein lie our challenges, to think of the consequenc­es of choices, both in the shortorder and long-term. How will decisions impact those around us? A life lesson I have learned through both good and bad experience­s is that you go it one day at a time and choices produce their consequenc­es. Long-term goals can appear to be appropriat­e and admirable but they are being made in our immediate time frames where we have the most control. We must strive to make the right choices today to assist the right conditions tomorrow.

As we move into 2020 and beyond, my sincere wishes are for our personal and our government­s’ decisions to be made with hope that they will result in positive and constructi­ve consequenc­es, both now and in the decades to come.

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