Thursday 13 October 2011

Wildwood residents rally to save themselves - October 12 Edition

Courtney Taylor
Cariboo Advisor

The determination of a mother should never be underestimated, or in this story, a mother who is also a Wildwood resident.

“One way or another, even if I have to dig the dirt myself, that rink is going in this year,” said Denise Thompson, showcasing the community’s commitment to building an ice rink in the rural community for this coming winter.

Thompson has been a Wildwood resident on and off for the past 18 years and her two children went to the local elementary school to Grade 7. Thompson is now the Treasurer of the Wildwood Community Association and she is determined to get things done and revitalize the community in the process.

Residents were alerted to fragile state of small, rural communities last spring when the School Board considered closing the local elementary school. The school was partially saved; it lost Grades 4-7 due to declining enrollment and now functions as a K to Grade 3 school.

Spurred on by the Wildwood School being scaled back, Thompson and Wildwood residents have begun to fight back. 

“Children and families, that’s what keeps a community together,” said Thompson, who lives behind the Wildwood School and can’t imagine what the community would be like without the school.

And what better way to bring and hold the community together than with a good old-fashioned hockey rink.

The rink has been in the works for the past six or seven years, and it has been with Thompson’s drive and determination that it is finally coming to life.

CRD Area ‘D’ director, Deb Bishoff echoes Thompson’s feeling on having kids in the community. 

“Kids make a community,” she says. “If the school closes, the community will survive but it won’t be the same.’
“It’s phenomenal, what (Thompson) has done in less than a year, what the community has been working on for years,” said Bishoff.

The rink is being built on the Wildwood School field this year, and the project for next year is a disc golf course to be put beside the fire hall according to Thompson.

“We want to bring affordable, fun, and safe family activities to the community,” said Thompson.
According to Thompson, the school is the centre of the community and if it ever closes it would be devastating to the community.

She knows first-hand the difficulty of working in town, and having kids in school out in Wildwood, so she understands why a lot of kids are bussed into town.

“Next I think we need to encourage an after school program and daycare at the school,” said Thompson.

Bishoff agrees with Thompson saying that having daycare is one of the reasons the 150 Mile Elementary school is doing so well. 

Bishoff said Thompson and the rest of the people working with her have all worked hard to bring this rink to the community.

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