Volunteer
Plenty of ways to give time to Silvermere. Some are formal, some are informal, all of them are how this town runs.

Council and committee service
Three City committees include resident members appointed by Council:
- Advisory Planning Commission, advises Council on planning, land use, zoning, and development applications.
- Board of Variance, an independent body with authority to grant minor variances to the Zoning Bylaw.
- Abilities Awareness Advisory Committee, advises Council on physical accessibility under the Accessible BC Act.
Other Council committees (Community Wellness, Cultural and Civic Pride, Finance & Corporate Services, Municipal Services) are made up of councillors only. See council committees for the current list and the City's Council Appointment Policy.
Tip
When committee seats open
Paid-on-call firefighters
The Silvermere Fire Department uses a combined model of career and paid-on-call firefighters. Paid-on-call firefighters respond to the Fire Hall when electronically called and attend structure fires, motor vehicle incidents, and other emergencies.
The training commitment is significant: weekly two-hour training sessions, with a minimum of 50 hours of training and 50 hours of calls per year. Recruits complete the Fire Service training program. Paid-on-call firefighters receive financial compensation for training and emergency responses.
For full details and the current application process, see the City's Fire Department recruitment page or contact the Fire Hall at 250-555-0130.
Community organizations
Most volunteer life in Silvermere happens through community groups, not the City directly. The local groups with regular needs include:
- Silvermere Lakelight Festival Society needs ambassadors and event volunteers each season.
- Silvermere WildSafe Silvermere (Bear Smart) runs neighbourhood education and Harvest Match programs in bear season.
- Silvermere & District Public Library (1005 3rd Street) takes program volunteers (literacy, tech help, children's programming).
- Silvermere Beautification Society takes volunteers for community planting and seasonal tidy-up events.
- Silvermere Chamber of Commerce and Destination Silvermere coordinate business and tourism volunteer roles.
- Silvermere Youth Action Network and Silvermere Community Response Network support youth and adult community-safety programs.
- Silvermere Hospice Society trains volunteers for client and family support.
- Silvermere Community Harvest Food Bank relies on volunteer drivers, sorters, and event help.
- the Silvermere School District Parent Advisory Councils (PACs) at each Silvermere school always need parent volunteers.
- Local sports and recreation associations (minor hockey, soccer, baseball, swim) rely on volunteer coaches and board members. Silvermere & District Recreation (RDWH) is a starting point at 250-555-0100.
Good to know
New to town? Start at the Library
Event support
City and partner events throughout the year often need volunteer support: setup and teardown, parking marshals, info booths, photography. Events that show up regularly on the City's calendar include:
- Lakelight seasonal launch and ongoing ambassadors (organized by the Silvermere Lakelight Society).
- Silvermere Beautification Society planting days and seasonal tidy-up.
- Canada Day at Lantern Bay Park (100 5th Street), organized by Mayor and Council.
- Silvermere Lakeshore Days (organized by an independent community group, with a City-coordinated fireworks display at Lantern Bay Park).
- Remembrance Day services coordinated with the Royal Canadian Legion.
Watch the news section for specific calls and follow City social media for current opportunities. For Lakeshore Days and Lakelight volunteer roles, contact the organizing societies directly.
Why this matters
Silvermere punches above its weight on community programs for the same reason every small Highlands town does: residents show up. Volunteer firefighters answer the page at 2 a.m. Committee members read 200-page agenda packages on a Tuesday night. Lakelight ambassadors give walking tours in 32-degree heat. None of this happens without people choosing to give time. The City keeps a record of all the active programs, but the actual work is yours.
Common questions
How do I get on a Council committee?
What's the time commitment for a paid-on-call firefighter?
Do volunteers get paid?
I'm under 18. Can I volunteer?
Do I need a criminal record check?
Can my employer help me volunteer?
I'm new to Silvermere. How do I find out about opportunities?
What to do next
Council committees
Advisory bodies, current openings, and how to apply.
Fire Department
Paid-on-call volunteer firefighter program.
Lakelight
Volunteer with the Lakelight Society.
Bear Smart Silvermere
Silvermere WildSafe neighbourhood patrols.
Latest news
Where City and partner volunteer calls get posted.
Careers
Looking for paid work with the City instead?
Still need help?
Talk to City Hall
- Phone
- 250-555-0100
- Hours
- Monday to Friday, 8:30am to 4:30pm
- In person
- City Hall, 100 Lakeshore Avenue, Silvermere, BC V0X 1S0
Faster than calling for non-urgent issues. We respond within one business day.
