A 4 minute documentary with a brief history of the Shuswap Environmental Action Society followed by a backgrounder on the upcoming campaign to purchase the property adjacent to the mouth of the Adams River and add it to Roderick Haig-Brown Park, with the goal to increase protection for the world famous Adams River sockeye salmon, improve the conservation values of the park and help boost the local economy. Includes historical and recent still photos and two video clips of the property. To learn more, visit www.seas.ca.
About The Author
Jim Cooperman
Author of the local best seller, Everything Shuswap, Jim Cooperman moved to the Shuswap in 1969 as a war resister and a back-to-the-lander, after receiving his BA from the University of California at Berkeley.
Over the succeeding years, Jim taught school, worked in construction and log building, operated a sawmill, and edited a provincial environmental journal, the BC Environmental Report. His local environmental work led to the protection of over 25,000 hectares of new parks in the Shuswap, which is documented in the book, Big Trees Saved, by Deanna Kawatski.
He has researched and written about local history and helped initiate and edit the local history journal, Shuswap Chronicles I and II. In 1993, he wrote the Chapter on Canada in Clearcut – The Tragedy of Industrial Forestry. And in 1998, he wrote Keeping the Special in Special Management Zones, A Citizens’ Guide, published by BC Spaces for Nature.
Jim lives with his wife, Kathleen, in a log home they built on 40 acres above Shuswap Lake, where they raised five children. His column, “Shuswap Passion,” appears every two weeks in either the Shuswap Market News or the Salmon Arm Observer.
Additionally, his YouTube channel has over 100 videos, including many that showcase live music, skiing and Shuswap geography.