Nonviolent Communication Clinic

Transform Your Workplace Conversations with NVC

Workplace culture is shaped by how we communicate.

Explore the practical tools of NVC with Anita Melin, a registered clinical counsellor with the BC Association of clinical counselors,

who has been operating a private practice counselling business in the Nelson BC area for more than 20 years at Open Door Communications.

She had the good fortune to meet and train with the developer of NVC, Marshall Rosenberg, when working in India supporting communication clinics for grassroots organizations.

Our Communication Clinic introduces practical tools from Nonviolent Communication (NVC), a proven framework that helps leaders and employees express concerns clearly, listen with intention, and navigate conflict without blame.

NVC shifts conversations from reaction to understanding — building trust, psychological safety, and stronger collaboration across teams.

Discover how NVC can transform the way your organization works — one conversation at a time.

NVC provides practical tools to:

  • Express concerns clearly without blame
  • Listen in ways that reduce tension
  • Understand underlying needs behind behavior
  • Respond rather than react under pressure
 Date :  March 28th, Saturday
Location : Nelson District Chamber of Commerce ( 91 Baker Street - Railway District)
Time: 9:30 - 12pm
Bring: note paper and pen
Coffee, Tea, Snacks provided
Cost: $50 (per person)

Radio Free Kaslo, August 16, 2024

Over a century ago, the Valley of the Ghosts connecting Kaslo with the booming silver/lead mining town of Sandon, teemed with thousands of men seeking their fortune in the rugged, mountainous terrain of the Selkirks.

When the price for silver dropped, the rationale for Sandon disappeared. Today, what's left of the town is populated by five permanent residents. Its remaining historic buildings include a fascinating museum, a general store, and a kiosk out of which Vida Turok somehow manages to produce some of the most delicious food and treats you're likely to come across anywhere in British Columbia.

But perhaps the most striking feature in Sandon is the Silversmith Generating Station. In continuous operation since 1897, Silversmith produces a reliable stream of the greenest possible electricity, 24/7, year after year. It was the first hydroelectric producer in western Canada to be awarded federal green certification, in 1999. In 2021, Silversmith became an inductee into the international Hydro Hall of Fame.

Yet for all that, the plant struggles to stay afloat, the victim of a political and bureaucratic landscape that seems to defy logic and common sense. After a recent visit to Sandon, Radio Free Kaslo host RG Morse reached out to Hal Wright, the man who has worked tirelessly to keep Silversmith running, to talk about the plant's history, its challenges, and its prospects going forward.

Fascinating listening for anyone interested in history, and the murky machinations of energy politics in British Columbia.

https://open.spotify.com/episode/12uWMaAaEPyIkMZPTNXnIx?si=wS4wls-ZQX6lN2fCPSYhvg