Roy L Hales/ Cortes Currents - Marc Doll was a high school social studies teacher, a community specialist realtor and the president of a communities association back in Calgary. He, his wife Jen and two daughters left that life behind in 2016. Now Doll is regenerative farmer and volunteer firefighter on Quadra Island. He hopes to be elected Regional Director for Area C on Saturday, October 15, 2022. The tagline on his websites is ‘empower community’ and in the first of a series of articles exploring his positions, Cortes Currents asked what this means.
Doll was President of the Marda Loop Communities Association, which governs a community of 20,000 people in Calgary, for 5 years.
“That's really the experience that I'm probably using and drawing on the most for this campaign,” he said.
“What's amazing is when you get people behind a vision and you get the people in a neighborhood wanna be connected and have the drive to make things better it just absolutely is impressive what can be done. So in this particular instance, we took something that had just become a rental hall and turned it into a community hub where we rejuvenated an outdoor pool, got millions of dollars in grants for infrastructure renewal. Brought a board that was hardly populated into completely full and where every position had people volunteering for it. We started a farmer's market, the list goes on and on and on.
This is a model of the kind of change he'd like to see Islandbrought to Area C, especially to Quadra Island. Reed Island is already further down that road, thanks to the Surge Narrows Community Association (SNCA).
“They are getting things done that are absolutely mind blowing. They just received a $2 million grant for a foreshore rejuvenation project. They completed a gorgeous pavilion for community events. That's the type of thing that can get done when people are working together,” said Doll.
“Quadra is a community in and of itself, but doesn't operate so much as a community. It operates as a bunch of really motivated, organized people in silos. From a community development perspective, we need to bring them together.”
Doll gave the example of a $12,000 food security grant that he, the Quadra Garden Club, and Quadra ICAN worked on.
“We are realizing that there was a hundred thousand dollars that we didn't even know about, because we didn't have the organizational capacity to keep our head up to go looking for that food security and climate change type of grant.”
“There's also folded into that, a political narrative that the Strathcona Regional District [SRD] is what I call the absolute worst way of organizing around community.”
He said the 5 municipalities, 4 electoral areas and single treaty First Nation of the SRD are ‘almost in competItion,’ rather than working together. Worse, when it comes to budgetary matters, Campbell River is ‘governing Quadra, Cortes and all the other rural areas and on Vancouver Island.’
“There are 35 votes at the table. Most of which are held in the hands of the directors from Campbell River or the counsellors from Campbell River who are sitting on the regional district committees,” explained Doll.
“That means our islands don't really have the ability to act as individual communities. We are enveloped by a larger urban municipality. A lot of the decisions that we're looking at are going to be largely made by the 20 votes that come out of Campbell River instead of the one vote from Cortes, or the two votes from Area C (Quadra Island and the other Discovery Islands).”
He added, “We need to have an organization where Quadra Islanders can come together and focus on the vision for our future. How we want to deal with development? How we want our voice to be heard at the provincial table, and at the SRD table?”