North Saanich


The District of North Saanich is located on the Saanich Peninsula of British Columbia, approximately north of Victoria on southern Vancouver Island. It is one of the 13 Greater Victoria municipalities. The District is surrounded on three sides by of ocean shoreline, and consists of rural/residential areas, a large agricultural base and is home to the Victoria International Airport and the Swartz Bay Ferry Terminal.

History

In July 1905, North Saanich, then including the townsite of Sidney, was incorporated with the original Municipal Hall located in Sidney. Lacking population and a firm tax base, the municipality was dissolved in 1911. In 1940, the site of the present Victoria International Airport was selected as a military forces base and the area boomed with the influx of 10,000 military personnel, leading to incorporation for the Village of Sidney in 1952. Four years later, the residents of the North Saanich unorganized area, numbering 2,865, requested that letters patent be issued to form the "North Saanich Fire Prevention District" with power to own property, to tax and to borrow. In 1965, after a favourable public vote, the letters patent were withdrawn and the North Saanich Municipal District was established with offices at the present location on Mills Road.

Climate

North Saanich has a warm-summer Mediterranean climate.

Demographics

Fauna

The largest animal to be found in North Saanich is the cougar. Other native mammals include the black-tailed deer, mink, otter, raccoon, and deer mouse. Of introduced mammal species, the cottontail rabbit and gray squirrel are often seen. Common native birds include the northwestern crow, common raven, bald eagle, turkey vulture, American robin, varied thrush, Steller's jay, and several species of gull. Introduced birds are represented by the abundant common starling and the now declining Eurasian skylark.

Flora

The most common native tree in North Saanich is Douglas fir. The other common large conifers are Abies grandis and Thuja plicata. Tsuga heterophylla is occasionally found. Taxus brevifolia is a frequent understory tree. The Arbutus menziesii is a large broadleaf evergreen species. Large deciduous trees are Populus balsamifera, Acer macrophyllum, Alnus rubra, and Quercus garryana. Small deciduous species include Prunus emarginata, Rhamnus purshiana, Malus fusca, Cornus nuttallii, Populus tremuloides, Acer glabrum, Crataegus monogyna and Salix lucida.

Council and government

The 2018 - 2022 council is:
The next election is scheduled for October 15, 2022 following provincial law. All municipalities in British Columbia will also hold elections on this date. Voters will vote for councillors, school board trustees and the mayor on the same ballot.

Education

Public schools serving North Saanich residents are operated by School District 63 Saanich. These include ḰELSET and Deep Cove Elementary Schools, North Saanich Middle School, and Parkland Secondary School.

Transportation

North Saanich can be accessed by highway on Highway 17 from Victoria, Sidney or Vancouver. Victoria International Airport is also located in the municipality, which offers daily service to Calgary, Edmonton, SeaTac, San Francisco, Kelowna, Toronto and hourly service to Vancouver International from Air Canada Express. The airport also offers seasonal services to Mexico and Hawaii, with talk about expansion to Europe or Asia. North Saanich also has a floatplane aerodrome near the Institute of Ocean Sciences in Patricia Bay, the Victoria Airport Water Aerodrome. Formerly the hub for Pat Bay Air, the aerodrome is now served by Harbour Air Seaplanes, Kenmore Air, Ocean Air Floatplanes and Salt Spring Air, which offer scheduled and charter flights.
Public transport is provided by the Victoria Regional Transit System.
North Saanich has seven marinas, many of which can accommodate temporary visitors. The highest concentration of marinas is on the southern coast, between Curteis Point and McDonald Park Road, near Parkland Secondary School.

Neighbourhoods

North Saanich also surrounds two First Nations reserves, namely the Tseycum First Nation, located on the northeastern shore of Patricia Bay, and the Pauquachin First Nation, located on the southeastern shore of Coles Bay south of Ardmore. These First Nations are not, strictly speaking, part of North Saanich.

Attractions

, star of the television program “Family Affair”, had a summer home in the Deep Cove neighbourhood of North Saanich.