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Save Old Growth protester shatters hip during blockade

Trevor Mckelvie had surgery Tuesday afternoon after falling from a collapsed ladder following a confrontation at a Vancouver Island highway blockade Monday. GoFundMe screen grab

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A young man who fell from a ladder after it toppled during a protest against old-growth logging on a Vancouver Island highway was undergoing surgery for a shattered hip Tuesday afternoon.

Protester Trevor Mckelvie fell about 20 feet to the pavement when the ladder he was balanced on collapsed not long after an angry motorist held up by the blockade on the Patricia Bay Highway broke pieces off a support structure Monday morning.

The 26-year-old carpenter and volunteer firefighter, also known as Red, suffered a life-altering injury, said friend and Save Old Growth (SOG) organizer Sophia Papp.

He went in for what was expected to be a four-hour surgery on Tuesday afternoon at Victoria General Hospital, Papp said.

A police officer on scene examined video of the incident involving the driver, Papp said.

The young man had surgery Tuesday after falling from a collapsed ladder following a confrontation at a Vancouver Island highway blockade Monday. #BC #SaveOldGrowth

An RCMP spokesperson also told Canada’s National Observer Monday that there will be an investigation into the incident and cautioned frustrated motorists that police don’t condone illegal actions to bypass blockades.

A GoFundMe has been set up to help Mckelvie, who will likely remain in hospital for at least a week before needing months of recovery and rehabilitation, Papp said, adding it’s expected his injuries will make it impossible to return to carpentry work.

Trevor Mckelvie is expected to need months of recovery following surgery at Victoria General Hospital. GoFundMe screen grab

Protesters don’t want to risk their lives by inconveniencing people, but other efforts to save remaining old-growth forests as a means to curb the ongoing climate crisis have been ignored, she said.

B.C. has experienced the ravages of flooding, fires and deadly heat in the span of a year, she added.

“We are all walking into this climate catastrophe with eyes and ears open,” Papp said.

“And I cannot believe we have to resort to such scenarios … that it’s come to this to get people — either angrily or hatefully — engaged.”

It’s unlikely SOG protesters will reconsider the personal risks or the lengths they will go to try to get the public and province to respond to the climate crisis, she said.

“I think it would be a disservice to stop doing this. I truly do,” Papp said.

“I’m not asking for a car, house or pay raise,” she said.

“We’re doing this in service to humanity and the gravity of the climate chaos the world is in.”

The road blockades will continue until John Horgan’s NDP government passes legislation to end the logging of old-growth forests in B.C., SOG said in a statement.

On Tuesday morning, three SOG protesters were arrested for blocking traffic on the Trans-Canada Highway near the Horseshoe Bay ferry terminal after gluing their hands to the roadway.

Tuesday’s protest follows Monday’s launch of a daily disruption campaign that saw rush-hour road blockades at three locations and 14 arrests.

Despite acknowledging the frustration of inconvenienced motorists, Papp hopes serious injuries to SOG protesters won’t occur in the future. At past events, protesters took risks but weren’t badly hurt.

“This is definitely the first time where someone has sustained a permanent, life-changing injury,” she said.

“And I really, really hope it's the last.”

Rochelle Baker / Local Journalism Initiative / Canada’s National Observer

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