Planet-Friendly Wrapping: Folding Furoshiki for Sustainable Gift-Giving

New Books at the Law Library – 25/10/28

LAW LIBRARY reference room (level 2): KE452.A5 S56 2025
V.V. Shroff, Canadian Animal Law, 2nd ed (LexisNexis, 2025).

Bloedel Limited Fonds, Part 1: The Powell River Company

In 2016, we briefly explored the MacMillan Bloedel Limited Fonds and its predecessor, the Powell River Company, which you can read here.

A quick recap: MacMillan Bloedel Ltd. began in 1909 as the Powell River Paper Company Ltd. Over the years, it became one of the largest forest products companies in the world, producing newsprint, paper, lumber, panelboard, and containers. This collection offers a fascinating glimpse into the lumber industry from its earliest days.

Dispossession of Indigenous land
The story of the Powell River Company reflects a complex legacy, combining industrial innovation with the land dispossession of the Tla’amin people. The company’s growth was built on lands taken from Indigenous communities, leaving a lasting legacy deeply intertwined with British Columbia’s history of settlement, resource exploitation, and Indigenous displacement.

After the 1873 sale of Lot 450 and delayed government surveys, the Tla’amin were forced to relocate to the Sliammon Creek Village. Despite repeated protests to cease selling or leasing land from the Tla’amin First Nations and support from Indian Reserve Commissioner Gilbert Malcolm Sproat, the government largely ignored their concerns and allowed settlers and loggers to encroach on their lands due to the region’s valuable timber and mineral resources. When the new Commissioner Peter O’Reilly finally surveyed the land in 1888, the Tla’amin received only six small reserves and subsequent requests for surveys were denied, which left all Tla’amin lands outside the 6 reserves legally open to resources extraction. For further details, see the qathet Museum & Archives website.

“State-of-the-art” newsprint mill

Below are photographs illustrating the development of what was called a “state-of-the-art” newsprint mill in the early 20th century. They show evidences of workers on site, the wharf and dam construction, the paper processing, and machinery and supplies, all of which highlight the company’s rapid growth in a short period of time.

Making wood into chips, [not before 1900].

Photograph depicts an interior view of the Powell River Company Limited mill. The area shown seems to be that where wood is cut into chips; the chips, in turn, will be made into pulp.

Wharf worker, [not before 1900]

Photograph depicts one man working on the loading wharf or dock of the Powell River Company Limited mill. The man is directing, with a steel pole, a log from the water on a conveyor belt which brings the log up onto the docks for further processing.

Rolls of newsprint on the wharf, [not before 1900]

Photograph depicts three large rolls of newsprint supported by dollies on the wharf or dock of the Powell River Company Limited mill.

Dam, [not before 1900]

Photographdepicts the dam located near the Powell River Company Limited pulp and paper mill.

Paper processing machinery, [not before 1900]

Photograph is of a roller machine, made by Dominion in 1930, in the Powell River Company Limited pulp and paper mill.

Later development

The Powell River Company operated from 1909 to 1959, when it merged with MacMillan Bloedel in December 1959 to become MacMillan Bloedel & Powell River Ltd. The business continued to thrive. Visit the MemoryBC website for a brief timeline of the company’s later development.

In our next blog post, we’ll explore the Powell River Historic Townsite and what life was like working for the company.

For more early photographs of the company, explore UBC’s MacMillan Bloedel Ltd. Collection, which includes over 2,000 photographs documenting the early history of Canadian forestry. Explore more in the UBC Open Collection.

Reference:

Hamar Foster, “SPROAT, GILBERT MALCOLM,” in Dictionary of Canadian Biography, vol. 14, University of Toronto/Université Laval, 2003–, accessed October 3, 2025, https://www.biographi.ca/en/bio/sproat_gilbert_malcolm_14E.html.

“Powell River Company.” Qathet Museum & Archives, accessed October 3, 2025, https://qathetmuseum.ca/powell-river-company/

“Tiskʷat/ Townsite.” Qathet Museum & Archives, accessed October 3, 2025, https://qathetmuseum.ca/tisk%ca%b7at-townsite/

 

 

 

Climate Action Week 2025 at UBC Library

Overlaid text on a blue background that says Climate Action Week November 1 - 7, 2025.

Join us for Climate Action Week from November 1 to 7. UBC Library will be hosting events, activities, and displays alongside other libraries from across Canada. 

All Week (November 1-7):

  • Add your thoughts to our giant felt board, pick up a book at the “Mystery date with a climate book” table, share a recipe at the recipe exchange board, and then spend some time at the puzzle table or create at the Lego Station challenge table. All activities are on the entrance level of Woodward Library.
  • Visit book, map, and historical materials displays related to climate change and action at the following UBC branches: Xwi7xwa Library, Okanagan Library, Law Library, Koerner Library, and the Woodward Library’s Memorial Room.
  • Check out our Climate Booklists 

Upcoming events:

FIRE Talk: Climate Action

Join us on November 5 in the UBC Library Research Commons as graduate students present their research on Climate Action focusing on the unequal impacts of climate change on marginalized or otherwise vulnerable populations. The FIRE Talks provide space for graduate students to present their research and connect with other graduate students around common research interests. Students present for a maximum of 5 minutes on their topic, and then the interdisciplinary panel discusses the topic from their disciplinary perspectives, sharing their thoughts and insights.

Date and time: Wednesday, November 5 from 12 to 1 p.m.
Location: Koerner Library, Research Commons Presentation Room 548 and 552
Learn more

Forest Walk in Pacific Spirit Park

How will forests adapt in the face of Climate Change, especially urban forest parks like Pacific Spirit Park that see a lot of human disturbance? Come join a discussion-based walk in Pacific Spirit for Climate Action week where we will discuss these questions and more. Learn how to identify native and non-native plant and animals. This walk will be led by Ryan Regier. Who is a volunteer and writer for Pacific Spirit Park Society, a member of the Nature Vancouver Botany Committee, and is also a UBC Collections Librarian.

Date and time: Wednesday, November 5 from 2 to 4 p.m.
Location: meet at Jim Everett Memorial Park
Learn more

Repair Café

Visit the Woodward Library repair cafe for help with sewing, darning, and reusable beeswax wrap making, and turning old scraps into useable rugs. Textile experts will be on hand to assist participants. Textile repairs can include helping with holes, tears, buttons, and patching. Hand sewing, darning, and sewing machine stations will be available. Please note that this is an event focused on learning and collaborative crafting, rather than an alteration or major repairs service. The Repair Café has the right to reject any items that are unclean or contain hazardous materials.
 
This is a drop-in event, and time with our repairers is first-come, first-serve. While you’re waiting for your turn at the repair table, you can try out your hand at making a sustainable beeswax food wrap at our crafting station, grab a treat, do a puzzle, check out our mending books, and more. We hope to see you there!

Date and time: Thursday, November 6 from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m.
Location: Woodward Library 

Learn more

UBC Zero Waste Market at Koerner Library

Stop by Koerner Library to find out more about the UBC Zero Waste Market and maybe pick up some reusable office supplies or stationary. The Market will be easy to spot in the Koerner Library lobby area when you enter the building.

Date and time: Thursday November 6 from 12 to 3 p.m.
Location: Koerner Library lobby

Learn more

Furoshiki Wrapping

Furoshiki are a planet friendly way to carry your things and are great for gift giving. Learn wrapping techniques for different purposes. Instructions for creating your own furoshiki will also be provided, though they will not be covered in the workshop.

Date and time: Coming Soon!
Location: Asian Library

All events and activities are part the national Climate Action Week for libraries.

 

View all upcoming events

 

Arts Multilingual Week: Fall 2025 at UBC

UBC Library will be hosting Multilingual Resources Pop-Ups and workshops from Oct. 27 to 31, as part of Arts Multilingual Week Fall 2025 at UBC.

Factiva: Excessive downloading incident

Due to excessive downloading, Factiva may impose a temporary restriction on downloading to one article at a time.

Factiva has reported multiple sessions of excessive downloading including several sessions where over 10,000 articles were downloaded.

We are investigating.

Please remember that most resources have limits on what can be downloaded during one session. Almost all vendors have internal benchmarks that make allowances for reasonable use – usually what a person can reasonably read. For Factiva, our licensing allows for 100 articles to be accessed/read/downloaded in a single session.

Open Access Week: Who Owns our Knowledge?

The word “OPEN” written in strings, connected with other strings to words including education, knowledge, research, sharing, potential, teaching, equality, bridging and more.

Photo courtesy: Hanne Pearce (CC BY-NC 2.0)

This year’s Open Access Week theme – “Who Owns Our Knowledge?” – speaks to the rapid and significant disruption underway in the current open access landscape, requiring nuanced discussion in regards to ownership, control, permissions, and equality.

Open UBC and UBC Library are offering numerous free events that host experts in open scholarship, and highlight open access efforts and supports at UBC. Explore sessions on creating, finding, using, and sharing open educational resources (as well as funding opportunities for doing so), along with helpful sessions on copyright and licensing, and podcasting. Open UBC has also highlighted some great events hosted by other institutions, including The University of Northern Iowa and Penn State University Libraries.

Whether you can attend this year’s events or not, you can explore a selection of prior presentations from Open Access Week at UBC Library in cIRcle. You may also consider signing up for the UBC Open Newsletter, to keep up with upcoming event offerings and other updates related to open access efforts at UBC.

Additionally, UBC Library’s Scholarly Communications and Copyright Office publishes numerous reports about their efforts leading and supporting efforts in open access, open scholarship, and open education.  Read the latest Open Access Article Publishing at UBC Annual Report, which provides insight into recent open access publishing trends by UBC affiliated authors, as well as some of UBC’s financial conditions for enabling and supporting open access publishing efforts. The latest UBC Library Open Education Impact & Activity Report highlights UBC Library’s impact across both campuses on open educational practices.

Further Reading

Learn more about open access and available supports from UBC Library’s Scholarly Communications and Copyright Office

UBC’s Program for Open Scholarship and Education (POSE)

Meet Caitlin Lindsay, Access Services Librarian at UBC Library

Caitlin Lindsay joined UBC Library in 2022 as the Art Librarian (term) and has been the Access Services Librarian for one year. In this role, she is responsible for ensuring effective and consistent operations regarding circulation, physical course reserves, patron account management, overdue material, physical collections maintenance, and identity and access management. 

Prior to coming to UBC, she spent some time working in archives and records management, which included acting as an Archival Consultant and Records Clerk for the City of Richmond, as well as three years as a Librarian at Alexander College. In the year and a half between her Art Librarian contract role and her current role at UBC, she worked at Richmond Public Library as an Adult & Senior Services Librarian.

From Art to Access Services

One of the most interesting parts of her career at UBC Library was the opportunity to interact with Arts students and learn more about the artists they were researching.

“In my role as the Art Librarian I loved getting to learn more about artists from student research questions and collections projects! It was particularly fun to be involved with the 2023 Art + Feminism Wikipedia Edit-A-Thon, where I got to do some deep dives with students into several Iranian artists as part of the process of creating Wikipedia pages for them.”

As the Access Services Librarian, Caitlin receives a variety of interesting questions related to access from students, staff, faculty and community members.

“UBC has a vast network of researchers using library materials, and delving into access questions allows me to better understand just how many user groups rely on library materials for their research,” says Caitlin. “We have high-school students, partnerships with local entrepreneurs, specialized health-care programs, community knowledge holders, and so many others all conducting research with the library’s resources. Diving into different access questions allows me to become better acquainted with the range of programs and user groups attached to UBC.”

One of her favourite projects while working at UBC Library was updating hold periods so that all library materials are held for the same amount of time, across all branches. She is currently working on a variety of projects that range from ongoing and iterative work related to access decisions and documentation, to larger projects such as preparing for a new Library Management Platform (LMP).

A place to grow

Of the Library’s six aspirational values, Caitlin says Growth and Appreciation best describes her experience as an employee.

“My team members have gone out of their way to celebrate each other’s achievements,” she says. “I have also noticed a strong focus on growth in UBC, particularly as a new employee; in my role, I have been lucky enough to have multiple colleagues reach out and set up regular meetings in order to provide space for questions or to talk through access considerations. Having those folks take time away from their packed schedules to make space for those conversations is really meaningful!”

Caitlin appreciates the career growth opportunities at UBC Library while working in different roles. “UBC has allowed me to step into roles in a large institution with a lot of complexity; the access environment is wide-ranging and ever-evolving. A career at UBC offers the opportunity to continuously learn and grow.”

Her advice to new hires is to connect with other new employees, including through the “New Libs” group, which she credits as a great place to ask questions and make connections.

Outside of the Library, Caitlin enjoys hiking, biking and running. She also enjoys knitting and is working her way up to more complex knitting projects.

Learn more about working at UBC Library.

New Books at the Law Library – 25/10/14

LAW LIBRARY level 3: K2100 .O74 2025
K. O'Regan, Courts and the Body Politic (Cambridge University Press, 2025).
Online access: https://resolve.library.ubc.ca/cgi-bin/catsearch?bid=14278968

LAW LIBRARY learning commons (level 2): KF246 .B46 2025
M.M. Prince, Prince's Dictionary of Legal Abbreviations: A Reference Guide for Attorneys, Legal Secretaries, Paralegals, and Law Students, 8th ed (William S. Hein & Co., 2025).

LAW LIBRARY level 3: : KZ1262.C65 G83 2025
W. Guan, The Social Contract Rediscovered: Consent's Onto-Epistemological Integrity in the Late 20th Century (Routledge, Taylor and Francis Group, 2025).
Online access: https://resolve.library.ubc.ca/cgi-bin/catsearch?bid=14312391

Open Access Week 2025

Join us from October 20 to 26 for sessions on open access research and education, hosted by Open UBC.