Times Colonist

Comox Valley rescue in search of funds for new home

- CARLA WILSON

Comox Valley Search and Rescue volunteers have spent half a century slogging through snow and ice, scaling precarious cliffs and manoeuvrin­g canoes through rough waters to save lives in their rugged and diverse region.

But this time, it is the nonprofit organizati­on that is asking for help.

It wants to set up its own new operations centre but is short on funds needed for a 6,500-squarefoot, five-bay, post-disaster steel building.

Estimates put constructi­on costs alone at up to $1.8 million and likely more, given today’s rising prices.

Comox Valley Search and Rescue rents a building and does not have its own home, unlike other search and rescue operations located on public land.

Some of those groups pay minimal rent, leaving them with enough money to upgrade equipment and pay for training, said Paul Berry, past-president and informatio­n officer for the Comox Valley society.

A fundraisin­g expert met the Comox Valley group this past week to help plan a capital campaign on the organizati­on’s 50th anniversar­y, Berry said Friday.

The Comox Valley organizati­on is renting an increasing­ly expensive property on Moray Avenue from a private landowner. It has had no luck securing land from local or senior government­s or from the private sector.

The Comox Valley Regional District has stepped in with a promise of $100,000 per year for five years to help offset lease costs or a mortgage, Berry said.

“We are certainly very appreciati­ve of that support.” But it seems “almost impossible, given the land values” for the nonprofit to raise enough money to buy land and to cover constructi­on costs, he said.

Annual operating costs for the group are well over $200,000, Berry said.

The provincial government has started providing operating grants of $86,000 annually. But rent on its building has been about $70,000 a year and is expected to rise to between $75,000 and $80,000 for the coming year, he said.

Other significan­t costs include insurance, maintainin­g vehicles and licensing radios. Re-certificat­ions for volunteers working with helicopter­s can be $30,000.

The society has $600,000 in its building fund, he said.

“Most of that though, has not come through fundraisin­g. Most of that has come from belt-tightening on our part and tucking away money for the last three or four years to get to that point.”

The group is shut out of applying for B.C. Gaming grants because the project would have to come in no higher than $1.25 million, he said.

“So not only are we rent-poor, we are also prevented from accessing capital grants.”

It is also facing another challenge because the Canada Revenue Agency allows the society to hold funds for only up to three years — and that deadline is approachin­g this summer, he said. This might see the society buy a steel-frame building kit prior to obtaining the 1.5 to two acres of land it desires.

The team — often the busiest on Vancouver Island — has been negotiatin­g on and off with local government­s since about 2015, Berry said.

“We don’t need anything that’s architectu­rally stunning. We need functional. Our team has always been very frugal and wise in our purchases.

“We want something we can pay for outright … so we are not saddled with mortgage costs.”

One developer offered a piece of land but it was not central enough to suit their operations, Berry said. Because the search and rescue team members are first responders heading to medical emergencie­s, they have to be centrally located, he said.

Volunteers are not restricted to wilderness rescue, but could be called out in urban areas when someone with Alzheimer’s is lost, or be called out to search for a missing teen, or sent to recover someone who died alone from an opioid overdose in an encampment, Berry said.

As well, “Any time B.C. Ambulance can’t access their patient because they are offtrail, that’s a search and rescue task.”

The society’s territory runs from Oyster River in the north to Cook Creek Road (north of Qualicum Beach and near Deep Bay) to the south, west to Buttle Lake and east to the Georgia Strait, including Denman and Hornby Islands.

Call-out numbers can vary year-to-year. They surged when the pandemic arrived and people headed outdoors. Last year, the number declined to 66 calls, but “we are already ahead of that curve for this year,” Berry said.

This past weekend, teams were called to three separate medical cases. In one, a 77-yearold man tripped on a root in a provincial park and had a “pretty significan­t fall,” breaking several ribs and ending up with a partially collapsed lung. He was flown to Nanaimo hospital.

Volunteers devote more than 11,000 hours annually to responding to emergencie­s, education and fundraisin­g. Some have been with the group 50 years and remain active members, Berry said. “Not necessaril­y packing a stretcher up a mountain, but still active and significan­tly contributi­ng members.”

A recruiting drive has started, with the goal of taking on 15 to 20 volunteers for everything from rigorous rescues to helping maintain vehicles and computers. Anyone who is interested can attend the meeting on Monday, at 7 p.m. at 3001 Moray Ave.

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