Vancouver Sun

Watchdog exposed wrongdoing ‘selflessly’

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VICTORIA Dermod Travis, the executive director of Integrity B.C. who died Monday at the age of 59, is being remembered as the kind of “full-time profession­al citizen Ralph Nader hoped would help build a more just world.”

“Dermod exposed corruption,” journalism instructor Sean Holman wrote on Twitter. “He exposed wrongdoing. And he did it selflessly, without regard to himself.”

Travis, whose commentari­es regularly appeared in newspapers across Canada, had liver disease, and wrote on social media in March that his liver had failed the previous month.

“After some reflection, I will not be adding my name to B.C.’s transplant list,” Travis wrote. “If a suitable liver becomes available and my body is ready for a transplant, there will likely be a far younger person in far greater need … that’ll be your liver.”

Wayne Crookes, founder of the watchdog group, shared the news of Travis’ death on the organizati­on’s website, calling him an outstandin­g communicat­ions and political profession­al and activist. Crookes said Travis, who died two days prior to what would have been his 60th birthday, tried hard to make Canada and British Columbia a better place.

“I believe very strongly that he made a significan­t contributi­on to Canada and to B.C. politics,” Crookes said, adding: “I have lost a very good friend.”

Born in Banff and raised in Victoria, Travis attended the University of British Columbia, worked in Edmonton for the Alberta Liberal Party and spent more than 20 years as a political consultant in Montreal, Crookes said.

He was a strong advocate for electoral finance reform, campaignin­g effectivel­y in 2017 to get that issue before voters during the provincial election, he said.

Travis was “orchestrat­ing the issue as if it were a political campaign, which peaked in the final week of the election.”

In early 2004, Crookes became the Green Party of Canada campaign manager and hired Travis as the director of communicat­ions and director of media before that year’s federal election.

Within about a month, Travis had pulled together a media team, mainly consisting of young people, he said. “Dermod put them together from his connection­s in Montreal. He worked out of Montreal during the campaign.”

When the election was called, the team had 100 media releases ready to distribute throughout the campaign, Crookes said.

Crookes paints a picture of Travis’ meticulous­ly crafted approach: “He divided the campaign into five weeks, and the fifth week was devoted to our environmen­tal platform.”

“What he did in that election in such a short time reflected someone with keen insight, great communicat­ions and political competence,” he said.

“Certainly, without him, the Green party would not have done as well.”

After he left the Green party, Travis served as executive director of the Canada-Tibet Committee, where he played a key role in convincing Canada to accept 1,000 Tibetan refugees and their families as immigrants to Canada, Crookes said.

“I was just so impressed with his competence and his industriou­sness and his volunteeri­sm.”

In 2010, when Travis said he was thinking of returning to B.C., “I suggested that we needed something like Integrity B.C.,” Crookes said.

The organizati­on was launched April 1, 2011, with Travis as executive director. Crookes was the founder and sponsor for the organizati­on.

“I think he put the focus of many people, politician­s, voters and the media on the importance of financial electoral reform and put the spotlight on some integrity matters for over nine years.”

Brad Slade worked for more than two years as campaign manager for Travis at Integrity B.C., where they tackled electoral-finance reform.

Slade described his friend as tenacious, highly intelligen­t and politicall­y savvy.

“He was brilliant. He could find things that no one else could find,” he said. “Dermod was always adamant about making sure he had his facts correct — he would triple-and quadruple-check his facts.”

Slade said Travis had a “heart of gold.”

Travis is survived by sister Deirdre Chettlebur­gh, who said that even as a child Dermod was a “grand person.”

At age eight, “he was somehow under the impression he was the assistant manager of the wax museum on Banff Avenue,” where he was a regular visitor, she said fondly. “He was a little bit of an old soul in a little boy’s body.”

The family moved to Victoria in 1968 — father John was a United Church minister and mother Elizabeth was writer. They had a “strong sense of right and wrong and of fairness and justice and were not afraid to ask questions,” Chettlebur­gh said.

Travis had similar values, was a matter-of-fact person and had a wry sense of humour, his sister said. He would entertain the family with stories about politics. “His whole life was his work,” she said.

Bill Tieleman, a political commentato­r who worked in communicat­ions in the office of the B.C. premier and for the B.C. Federation of Labour, said the work Travis did was important to a lot of people in British Columbia.

“He was a watchdog on government for a long period of time. He held everyone’s feet to the fire with the same zeal. He was very committed to the cause of accountabi­lity and responsibi­lity on the part of government. That’s his legacy.”

 ??  ?? Integrity B.C. executive director Dermod Travis, who had liver disease, died Monday, two days before turning 60.
Integrity B.C. executive director Dermod Travis, who had liver disease, died Monday, two days before turning 60.

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