Whistler’s Answers: May 9, 1985Whistler’s Answers: May 9, 1985

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In the 1980s the Whistler Question began posing a question to three to six people and publishing their responses under “Whistler’s Answers” (not to be confused with the Whistler Answer).  Each week, we’ll be sharing one question and the answers given back in 1985.  Please note, all names/answers/occupations/neighbourhoods represent information given to the Question at the time of publishing and do not necessarily reflect the person today.

Some context for this week’s question: Property taxes in Whistler were increased by 9.4% in 1985. According to the municipality, this was in large part due to larger budgets for parks and trail maintenance and for village maintenance, with a 97.5% increase in park maintenance (totaling about $210,000) and 57.2% in the village (for about $152,000).

Question: What do you think of the 9.4 per cent tax increase?

Mark Sadler – Contractor – High Forest

I think they’re out of touch with the community. The increase shows there’s too much focus on tourism but not enough on the residents and taxpayers, and although I realize how much we need tourism I don’t think we now have a good balance between the tourism effort and the community effort. I’m just upset over the increase because taxpayers seem to end up paying for everything. I thought it was taxpayers, not tourists, who elected council.

Bob Brown – Surveyor – Whistler Highlands

I’m not happy with it but I think it’s probably required. Council does, however, have to stop somewhere with these tax increases. I think they could go up another 10 per cent and that should be it. I’m not in agreement with more money being spent on parks and trails*, but the village should stand on its own without the taxpayer paying for cleanup.

*In the next edition, a letter from Bob Brown pointed out that he had been misquoted and did agree with money spent on parks and trails because “this is the one place local residents receive equal or greater benefits than non-locals.” The Question made a note that a typo on their end changed the meaning of his answer.

Jim Bradley – Realtor – Emerald Estates

We have admittedly pretty high taxes here but I think we also have a situation that more or less demands that. Considering the increase and rise in popularity of Whistler I can’t say I’m terribly upset by the tax increase. I think we all benefit economically through tourism. If we are having tourists coming in and making our businesses work again, we have to service that.

Banking on WhistlerBanking on Whistler

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In February 1984, a “Whistler’s Answers” feature in the Whistler Question asked residents “Are your banking transactions made overly complicated because there’s no bank in Whistler?” Before the summer of 1984, there was no permanent financial institution located in Whistler, which could make banking more difficult than usual for residents and even visitors. Over time, we’ve heard many stories about banking (or not) in Whistler at the museum, such as the race completed by Whistler Mountain employees on payday to make it to Squamish before the bank there closed.

Two of the stories we’ve hear from longtime residents concern bank robberies, both occurring at the trailer that the Bank of Nova Scotia (now known as Scotiabank) operated near the base of Whistler Mountain for a time in the 1970s. It seems that the trailer operated as part of the Pemberton branch and, though it did not offer all the services one might expect to find at a bank, local residents could cash cheques there, avoiding a drive to either Pemberton or Squamish.

Historically, quite a few Whistler services and retail operations have been located in portable buildings, such as the Liquor Store in 1980. Whistler Question Collection, 1980.

According to one tale, one or two people in Vancouver who were acquainted with some Whistler residents decided that they were going to rob the bank. They drove up the highway, went into the trailer, held up the teller (though it is unclear what, if anything, they used as a weapon), and escaped with the money, though there was apparently at least one customer who recognized them. While it might have seemed like a simple robbery to plan, the thieves forgot to make a plan to get out of Whistler. With only one road in and out, the bank called the RCMP in Squamish who set up a roadblock on the highway and apprehended the thieves.

The second story of a bank robbery in Whistler was even more straightforward. As the bank was located in a trailer, someone reportedly decided to hitch it up to their truck and drive away with it. Unfortunately for them, there was no money kept on the premises and the bank was found abandoned but intact relatively close by.

Important elements of a financial institution are delivered to Village Square to be installed in the North Shore Community Credit Union. Whistler Question Collection, 1984.

Though the Bank of Nova Scotia did offer some services in the trailer for a few year, it was not until June 1984 that a financial institution opened an official branch in Whistler. The North Shore Community Credit Union (NSCCU; known today as Blueshore Financial) officially opened in the Blackcomb Professional Building in Village Square on Saturday, June 2, though they had already been accepting clients for almost month. Although credit unions are not the same as banks, the NSCCU provided residents with many of the same services, including chequing, RRSPs, mortgages, and loans. With four full-time and two part-time employees, the NSCCU planned to be open five days a week (Tuesday to Saturday) and was also planning to install an ATM. This was the seventh branch of the NSCCU to open and the first outside of the North Shore and West Vancouver. For visiting NSCCU members, the opening of a Whistler location was also very convenient.

The opening of a financial institution in Whistler was well received by the community. Businesses and organizations such as the Whistler Resort Association and both mountains took advertisements out to welcome the NSCCU and there was a very good turnout at the opening. The NSCCU also encouraged residents to become members by offering a chance to win either a season’s dual mountain ski pass or a summer’s windsurfing. Though all members from any branch were eligible to enter the competition throughout June, it was two Whistler residents, Fred Lockwood and Heather McInnis, whose names were drawn by Willie Whistler at the beginning of July.

Tony Tyler (NSCCU branch manager) and Linda Stefan (NSCCU employee) draw the winners of the NSCCU opening draw with the help of Willie Whistler. Whistler Question Collection, 1984.

The NSCCU did not remain in its Village Square location for long. Over a weekend in December 1984, everything in the branch, (including the safe) was moved across Village Square before later making its move to its current location on the Village Stroll. Over the past forty years, other financial institutions have opened branches in Whistler, though none have been as portable as the Bank of Nova Scotia’s trailer.

Whistler’s Answers: May 2, 1985Whistler’s Answers: May 2, 1985

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In the 1980s the Whistler Question began posing a question to three to six people and publishing their responses under “Whistler’s Answers” (not to be confused with the Whistler Answer).  Each week, we’ll be sharing one question and the answers given back in 1985.  Please note, all names/answers/occupations/neighbourhoods represent information given to the Question at the time of publishing and do not necessarily reflect the person today.

Some context for this week’s question: We couldn’t find a specific story or incident that would have led to this question being asked in the spring of 1985, but if anyone remembers a problem with temporary business licences around that time we would love to know about it!

Question: Do you think it should be more difficult for someone to get a temporary business licence to operate in Whistler?

Doug Campbell – Gas Station Attendant – Brio

They should not be allowed to come up here and undercut everyone else. It’s not fair for those people here who are selling ski equipment.

David Monteith – Credit Union Teller – Whistler Cay

I think they should not just give out temporary business licences. If someone wants to start and run a year-round business, then it should be fairly easy to get one. If they want to operate just for a month or two at a time, it should be a lot more difficult.

Cherie Renville – Sportstop Clerk – Pemberton

Oh yes. I just don’t think it’s right for someone to come in and start selling merchandise at a lower price than what people here are already selling.

Ski Free by the BookSki Free by the Book

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In a recent look through the Whistler Museum’s reference section, we came across another book aiming to teach skiing through a combination of the written work and photographs. Unlike Toni Sailer’s instructional flip book from 1964, Greg Athan’s Ski Free targets those who already know how to ski and are interested in learning about the sport of freestyle skiing.

Greg Athans was a Canadian freestyle skier in the 1970s and 80s, as well as a 15-time national water skiing champion. Like many freestyle skiers, he had a background in downhill skiing and won a gold medal in 1971 Canada Games for the alpine slalom. In 1973, Athans became the first person to win gold medals in both the winter and summer Canada Games when he came first in water skiing. Among his freestyle skiing titles, Athans was the 1977 Labatt World Trophy Tour Champion, the 1978 World Ballet Champion and World Mogul Champion, and, as mentioned in a recent article about a very busy week on Whistler Mountain in 1980, Athans was crowned World Cup Freestyle Champion alongside Stephanie Sloan for the 1979/80 season.

Greg Athans at the Labatt’s World Cup Freestyle Championship on Whistler Mountain. Whistler Question Collection, 1980.

Competitive freestyle skiing was still a relatively young sport when Ski Free was published in 1978. The first flip on skis was recorded in 1907 and moves found in ski ballet can be traced back to the 1920s. Flips and spins were seen in skiing exhibitions and shows throughout the 1950s and 60s and, according to a brief history of freestyle skiing found in Ski Free, Doug Pfeiffer’s School of Exotic Skiing taught tricks such as the mambo, the Charleston and more from 1956 to 1962.

In the late 1960s, “trick skiing” demonstrations were caught on films such as Ski the Outer Limits and The Moebius Flip but it wasn’t until 1971 that the first professional competition took place in Waterville Valley, New Hampshire. Over the 1970s, competition circuits and freestyle camps became more popular, with freestyle skiing added to the Toni Sailer Summer Ski Camp on Whistler Mountain in 1973. Freestyle skiing was officially recognized by the International Ski Federation (FIS) in 1979, just one year after Ski Free was published.

Ski Free by Greg Athans, published in 1978.

According to Ski Free, freestyle skiing “offers the skier the freedom to do whatever he or she chooses and, possibly, to do what has never been done on skis before.” It begins, like Toni Sailer’s book, by instructing the skier on what type of equipment will be needed. Helpful notes and safety tips are also included, such as warning skiers not to have safety straps on their bindings for aerials as “a loose windmilling ski can be dangerous” and suggesting that when learning somersaults and flips a helmet might be a good idea. As helmets were not a standard piece of ski equipment at the time, a “well-fitting hockey helmet” was considered sufficient. Other equipment suggestions also place Ski Free at a certain time, as a “light mini-cassette recorder” and a fanny pack are described as useful for choreographing ballet routines.

Ski Free devotes a chapter to each of the three disciplines of freestyle skiing in 1978: moguls, aerials and ski ballet. With descriptions of techniques, common problem areas and solutions, and of specific tricks accompanied by photographs by Allan de la Plante, it would have been a great guide for those looking to learn more about the sport without today’s easy access to videos and film clips. Without the ease of looking up options on the internet, the book also provided a list of summer ski camps and off-season training programs for those looking for in-person instruction.

How to do an Athans’ Walkover, in five steps.

Freestyle skiing has changed a lot since Ski Free came out in 1978 and not all of the information is still relevant. Some of the tricks described are no longer so common (especially as ski ballet is no longer an official discipline), but for anyone wondering what is involved in a Legsbreaker Pivot, a Shea-guy, a Daiglebanger, or an Athans’ Walkover, the step-by-step instructions may prove very useful.