That's just the thing though. It's not "our island". Anyone who wants to live here can live here. I don't have a problem paying a "toll" if you will but the price we pay to live here and to leave here is ridiculous. Thank goodness our airport is expanding because it probably won't be that much more expensive to just take a flight and be on the mainland in 15 min. rather than 2 hours or 1.5 depending on the point of Departure. It's even worse for you Talloola because you have to drive to my city before you even get to the ferry. Taxslave and Kreskin as well. At least Juan and my self just have a ferry terminal to go to. I heard a man say oneday that he wondered why so many people on this Island owned travel trailers but never left the Island. Obviously he never paid to take a truck and a trailer to the mainland. For those who don't know - the cost is by the length of the vehicle when you are pulling a trailer or something similar like driving a semi.
That is a personal feeling of many islanders, 'our island', it is special, and I
don't have any problem getting to and from the ferry, I hardly ever take it, I
live here, do almost everything here, I have no need to go back and forth, so
I don't even think about it.
If a bridge was built, the trucks would be charged a high toll to cross as well.
Anyway I don't have to worry about it, by the time anyone decides to build a
bridge, I will be long gone, I plan to be around here for another 30 years, and
I'm sure the ferries will still be crossing then.
The expression 'our island' isn't a feeling of ownership, it is a feeling of love
for the island, we moved here 30 years ago from the mainland, where we both were
born and raised, and the move to the island was the best decision we have ever
made, and if there had been a bridge at that time, I'm sure we would have thought
otherwise, probably would have gone north to some smaller city, because the island
would not have had the interest for us, because it probably would have been much
more populated and crowded, just like the mainland, because a bridge will do that.
There used to be lots of work on the island for loggers and mill workers, but the
government brought that to an end by allowing raw logs to be sold south to the
u.s., gradually brought the industry to it's knees, now it is almost gone, there
was no thought for any of the workers here on the island, or anywhere else in b.c.