COUNCIL NOTES

May 20th council meeting

On the agenda, the very important subject of Rogers Communications putting in a big, new 5G tower, which seals our town’s fate in terms of accepting the coming global control grid. Discussion was brief and all council members admitted, with some giggles, that they know nothing about technology.

Sam Quinlan from the Stewardship Center and HOOH, Harvesting of Organic Hops, spoke out against the tower for 2 minutes, citing the lack of public information, and the suggestion that council implement a cell tower protocol as several other Canadian towns and cities have done. A cell tower protocol would strengthen local authority within the federal framework and require Rogers to provide public information sessions. Council politely received the information, then passed the motion. The Rogers tower will proceed.  

The purchase of new bear-proof garbage cans, however, generated lengthy and spirited discussion around the idea of wrapping the bins with artful imagery.

See this post on NG911 for a fuller picture of what cell phone towers will bring.


Meet Maggie Hope Braun, the woman who’s transforming one local council at a time by exposing the global climate agenda infiltrating our Canadian towns and sucking millions of dollars out of fiscal budgets.

Sign up for Kiclei’s excellent substack at: https://kiclei.substack.com/


April 2025. Council Notes: “NG911”  Next Generation 911 is being introduced to our remote mountain town by the federal government. CAO Joe McCulloch reports in his published itinerary that on April 8th he updated the NG911 grant application. It was the only item on his itinerary for that day. Did he take the time to read the fine print? Let’s hope so. When I researched and tried reading the fine print and it was an exhaustive labyrinth of complex jargon. Trying to find normal-speak information was impossible—because the documents aren’t supposed to be readily understandable?

NG911 is offering up to $100K “free money” if we get it. They are simply buying a data market–and we are the data. Buried in the documents are sketchy groups calling themselves “the Coalition of the Willing” which is a military term, and the Windermere Group, base in the Bahamas, that notorious haven for shady business hiding ill-gotten gains from the law and taxes.

Full article posted here.


March 2025. BRLN reports that Council approved $100K expenditure to upgrade security in the municipal hall but this was inaccurate. LG queried CFO, Joni L’Heureux: “What specific upgrades are planned and who is doing the work?”

The Director of Public Works, Kam So, replied with the correction: “The security project is for camera’s and intrusion alarms for all District Assets including the Municipal Hall. Water Treatment Plant, Waste Water Treatment Plant, Municipal Yard, Water Booster Stations, Reservoirs. We have weekly security issues with all our assets.”  


For the political wonks who actually find this stuff fascinating (it can be!), a link to a catalogue of council Agendas–from today right back to 2007.


Yet another petition circulated by Transport Action BC to bring back the passenger train. And yet another slapdown by the provincial government. 😦

cartoon courtesy of the now-archived Terrace Daily news

A suggestion from Mayor Hopfl for protecting your home during a forest fire. Would this device actually work? Are gutters strong enough to hold the weight of it, plus the weight of the hose and water? Has anybody tried it?


Lillooet taxpayers pay the Chief Administrative Officer (CAO), Joe McCulloch, a generous salary. He makes monthly reports like this one for February 2025.


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