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ѻýIѻým there to helpѻý: Sicamous bylaw officer prioritizes community education

Longtime resident John Moore worked with road rescue society and is passionate about public safety
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Sicamous bylaw enforcement officer John Moore has a passion for his community and prioritizes an education-first approach. (Rebecca Willson-Eagle Valley News)

For Sicamousѻý bylaw enforcement officer, education is the name of the game.

John Moore has lived in Sicamous for nearly 34 years and has held many titles, but everything he does he attributes to a passion for helping and educating his community.

Moore retired from the Eagle Valley Rescue Society after 27 years, he said, and switched careers paths just before the pandemic began. He was running his own first aid safety company and when the pandemic shuttered business, he lost many of his contracts. That was when he inquired about the bylaw officer position with the district.

After a six-month trial, he and the district felt he was a good fit for the job and heѻýs been the full-time officer since the summer of 2020.

ѻýI love being out and talking to people,ѻý said Moore. ѻýA lot of my careers were around education, either of crew members on site and teaching people how to do things properly and safely, making sure work rules were being followed, so this is just another fit.ѻý

Moore prides himself on making sure people understand the regulations and bylaws in place and informing residents so they can make their own decisions and ѻýbe on the same page.ѻý

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At the July 26 committee of the whole meeting, while sharing a bylaw statistics update, district staff said most infractions seem to be coming from people doing something just out of the scope of whatѻýs allowed without knowing or meaning to, and Moore agreed.

ѻýThatѻýs part of why the district and myself really press on the education portion of it, because there are so many people that donѻýt understand that what theyѻýve done is not permitted.

ѻýEducation is the best way for us to get the message across.ѻý

The district has seen traffic and good neighbour bylaw tickets mostly so far this year, for a total of 151 valued at $15,500. The value of fines and fees collected so far totals $3,100, and 2022ѻýs total was $27,733.50. Mayor Colleen Anderson commended Moore on a job well done at the meeting.

Bylaw enforcement sometimes begins with a ѻýknock and talkѻý house visit to discuss what Moore has noticed is out of line with a bylaw, he said, or a letter sent with contact information to the property owner. There are no penalties applied until a polite and informative conversation has been had, he emphasized.

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What Moore has been most impressed with is the youth of Sicamous.

Heѻýs mostly dealt with issues surrounding alcohol and narcotics use, safety and public cleanliness with the younger population, but he said he explains the bylaws to them and, for the most part, they understand the repercussions and change their ways or move along if he asks.

ѻýTheyѻýre maybe not always compliant, but they do respect it and theyѻýre really good about taking care of it. Theyѻýve also started cleaning up other peopleѻýs issues, just to assist so that it makes them look better and of course it makes Sicamous look better.ѻý

Sicamous has a different dynamic when it comes to what bylaw handles versus the RCMP, said Moore. He said most communities would have police respond first to an underage drinking call, but he has a good rapport with the local youth population and heѻýs able to have conversations with them that are working.

ѻýIt means our police resources can go to something of a more serious nature rather than dealing with a bunch of kids that are being loud and rambunctious,ѻý he said. ѻýI normally have a faster response time too, because the RCMP have such a larger patrol area.ѻý

The most worrisome thing on Mooreѻýs mind lately has been a shift heѻýs seen in society surrounding general public safety. For example, he now has to wear a bulletproof vest when he used to go out in a t-shirt.

ѻýWhile I do appreciate the safety requirement, it does sometimes make people feel itѻýs a more intimidating presence. The police are there, black and white, to enforce the regulations. Iѻým there to help.ѻý

Mooreѻýs passion for helping his community in emergencies continues to thrive although heѻýs taken a less active approach on the front lines. He remains vocal about memorial crosses along the Bruhn Bridge staying intact during the infrastructure project, because the crosses denote tragedies that rescuers werenѻýt able to prevent, despite best efforts.

ѻýSomebody vandalized one of the memorials we put up, and that was, to me, a very traumatic incident. Iѻým hoping that, when the new bridge goes in, the contractor will replaces the crosses, maintain them, just out of respect for the people that passed and made it necessary for us to get the replacement.ѻý

He also stressed both the rescue society and the local fire departments always need volunteers. Information about both organizations can be found on the .

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rebecca.willson@saobserver.net

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Rebecca Willson

About the Author: Rebecca Willson

I took my first step into the journalism industry in November 2022 when I moved to Salmon Arm to work for the Observer and Eagle Valley News. I graduated with a journalism degree in December 2021 from MacEwan University in Edmonton.
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