Loading...
Village Squire, 1980-09, Page 42P.S. All's not well in the new society "Frank," he said, "I've had it. I've got to get out." I'll never forget the day Sam told me that. We had just lost this case in court. Sam had taken to championing the cause of people caught in the red tape of modern society. His client had just got 30 days for stubbing his cigar butt on the city hall steps thereby violating Bylaw 1033 section B. Sure enough Sam did get out. He sold his house in the suburbs and put an ad in the personal section of the daily newspaper and soon he his wife and kids and 30 other couples had moved off to this island in Georgian Bay to set up an all new society. The one rule, he told me as he finished putting the last of his be- longings on a U -Haul trailer before heading north, was that there would be no rules in this new island paradise. Red tape would be banished. INVITED ME UP Sam invited me up to see how things were working out that first September. They'd been busy all summer getting the new society set up and it was quite impressive. These weren't your normal hippie, back-to-the-landers with woodstoves and herds of goats. These were refugees from the affluent, bureaucratized middle class who might want to do without red tape but not without electricity. They had some pretty delicious digs for people escaping from the horrors of modern world. For a minute there I thought 1 might escape myself but I had this thing going with a secretary back at the office and she wasn't the kind to hide out on an island. For that matter. neither was my wife. I didn't get a Christmas card trom Sam that year. They had decided to do without all that commercial fuss I think and besides, their little island nation didn't have a post office. The next time I heard about the new pioneers was about May 24th weekend the next spring when I went for a cruise on a friend's sail boat and decided to stop in. They looked like they'd survived the winter pretty well. Nobody seemed to have died of scurvy or frozen to death or murdered each other. One look at a lot of the women told me what they had done for winter recreation. NOT SO ROSY Still, things weren't quite as rosy as they had been when I left in September. It had started in October when one of the residents had decided to burn some leaves. His neighbour just down wind was a middle-aged lady who suffered from a respiratory problem. She asked him to stop. He said he wouldn't. She said there were laws against things like that. He said not anymore. One of the reasons he'd moved here was to get away from stupid laws. He liked the smell of burning leaves. If he liked them so much, the lady figured he might as well get a better smell than outside so she put a couple of bushels of leaves outside his patio doors and hooked up a fan to blow the smoke through his whole house. Problem is she also set fire to his patio deck. To stop the war Sam, as unofficial leader of the colony, had to step in. He called a meeting of all the adults. They decided that there had to be a rule set down that no one could burn leaves if it was going to blow smoke on the neighbour's yard and if there was a grievance like this in the future people weren't to try to settle it themselves but were to bring it before a council of all the adults in the community. FEWER SHOWED UP Well that worked pretty well for most of the winter but before long there ended up being fewer and fewer people showing up at the council meetings. Sam of course, duty bound as he was, always showed up but when he asked some of the others why they didn't come they told him they couldn't afford so much time away from home for nothing when they could be home doing . . . . well they left that to his imagination. but it was obvious that the little nation's population was about to spurt upwards. To solve the problem, by spring they had come up with an elected system for the council but some people didn't want to sit on the council while the others were home doing more creative things PG. 40 VILLAGE SQUIRE/SEPTEMBER 1980 so they demanded the councillors get paid. But to do that they had to take donations from everybody and every- body wasn't too sure they wanted to give so some people were paying a lot more to keep the council going than others. The councillors finally decided that something had to be done in the interests of equality so they decided that everybody had to give an equal amount to support the island council. A NEW CRISIS Early that summer a new crisis hit the community. Sadie Miller who had set up a store on the island usually bought all her produce from the islanders who had gardens and resold it to the islanders who didn't have gardens. A couple of the islanders didn't like the price she was paying them for zucchini so they decided to hold back. Since zucchini was a staple of the island economy (and diet zucchini soup, zucchini bread, zucchini pop tarts) something had to be done. Sadie brought in a boatland of zucchini from the mainland at less cost than she'd been paying before to the islanders. They protested to the council because, they said, if this offshore zucchini kept coming in at these bargain prices they'd go broke and have to leave the island. Well the council agreed so told Sadie she couldn't import zucchini any more unless she paid a tariff to the local council which would make it more expensive than the local zucchini. ZUCCHINI SMUGGLERS Well 1'd like to tell you more about what happened on the island where red tape was banished but 1 never made it back the next time I went to visit. You see they'd been having trouble with zucchini smugglers so the council fixed up this patrol boat to intercept. Unfortunately as I approached the island late one September night they thought I was a zucchini runner and opened fire. They fired a shot right through my mainsail but we escaped. There was more serious damage than that though. The secretary got scared and said I could either stop coming or I could do it with my wife. It was my choice. I wonder how Sam's getting along these days. p J