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No tubing, no tunes: Plug pulled on Cowichan Lake river-floating, music festivals this summer

If you were planning on catching some rays floating down the Cowichan River this summer, or maybe catching a celebrated crooner at the town'sSunfestCountry Music Festival, think again.

Town council has banned tourist draws for the 2020 season due to COVID-19 concerns

Town council in Lake Cowichan has banned river tubing this summer due to COVID-19 but the owner of a local tube-rental company says the decision was made prematurely. (Sarah Senkow)

If you were planning on catching some rays floating down the Cowichan River this summer, or maybe catching a celebrated crooner at the SunfestCountry Music Festival, think again.

The Town of Cowichan Lakeon Vancouver Island swells in the summer with touristseager to ride a rented tube down the river or attend one of the two popular music festivals Sunfest and Laketown Shakedownthrown in the community every year.

This is exactly what Mayor Rod Peters wants to avoid this year.

The festivals werecancelled by organizers because of COVID-19 safety measures and recently town council passed a motion to shut down river tubingthis season.

"We are of the idea in our small community that we are going to protect ourselves," said Peters in an interview on CBC'sAll Points West.

Sunfest Country Music Festival and Laketown Shakedown are held annually in Cowichan Lake and will not be happening this year due to COVID-19. Both events plan to return again in 2021. (Sunfest Country/Twitter)

Peters said on any given day in July or August there can be up to400 people coming into town to rent river tubes and that means the parking lot where they pick them up would be too packedfor customers to practise safe physical distancing.

"We have to do this in order to stay safe and get throughthis pandemic," said Peters.

Aaron Frisby, owner of inner tube rental company, TheTube Shack, says he thinks council should have waited a bit longer to see how the pandemicprogresses before banning the activity that keeps his business afloat.

"To call it this early, just knowing the impact that it is going to have on all local businessesin Cowichan, we think it is a bit premature,"Frisby toldAll Points West.

He said council's decision makes sense right now, and he will adhere to whatever council wants, but there are ways to operate safely.

"We could really control the flow of it," said Frisby, explaining most of his rentals happen online and he could stagger pickup times to avoid the parking lot crowding Peters is concerned about.

The mayor of Lake Cowichan says there can be hundreds of people in town on a summer day renting river tubes and the crowds could increase the risk of spreading COVID-19 in a town of just over 3,000 residents. (Sarah Senkow)

Frisby also has a dozen summer employees whom he says depend on thatincome to see them through the year. He said if they cannot do that this season, he would like to work with the town to find alternative jobs for them.

But with the town's two festivals cancelled, local campgrounds closedand many local businesses unsure what the foreseeable future holds, it is hard to say what other job prospects there will bein a townwith an economy greatly dependent on summer visitors.

The mayor's request for those visitors to stay away does not extend to people with summertime homes in Lake Cowichan, who tend to arrive on the May long weekend, he said.

"They are part of our summertime community and I have no problem with them," Peters said.

To hear the complete interviews with Rod Peters and Aaron Fribsy on All Points West, tap the link below:

If you have a COVID-19-related story we should pursue that affects British Columbians, please email us atimpact@cbc.ca.

With files from All Points West