TUESDAY
< The winners are …
AUGUST 28, 2012
Arts on the Edge results | Page 2
SKINS NIGHT
Mandatory shots >
Every Sunday 2-5
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BC health care workers to be vaccinated | Page 3
Vol. 60, Issue 167
TOWNSMAN Proudly serving Cranbrook and area since 1951
1
$ 10 INCLUDES H.S.T.
www.dailytownsman.com
TREVOR CRAWLEY PHOTO
Chad Kletzel, new assistant coach for the Kootenay Ice of the WHL, puts some of the team’s veterans and alumni through warm-up exercises as the training camp for the 2012 season draws near. The camp’s official start is Wednesday, with rookies and prospects coming in from all across western Canada. See more on Page 8.
Macnair enters race Former Fernie mayor, current councillor to contest for Kootenay East NDP nomination SALLY MACDONALD Townsman Staff
A second person has stepped forward as a candidate for the NDP in the spring provincial election. Fernie councillor and former mayor Randal Macnair has entered the NDP nomination race for the East Kootenay. He joins Cranbrook teacher Norma Blissett, who announced in May that she is seeking to represent the riding in the May 14 election. Macnair has served on Fernie city council
Randal Macnair since 1999, first as councillor for one term, then as mayor from 2002 to
2008, and then as councillor again from 2008 to today. During his tenure as mayor, Macnair served on the Regional District of East Kootenay board of directors. “I have a track record as a leader who gets things done. I have the knowledge and experience to help our region use our natural advantages to build the diverse economy and thriving communities we need,” said Macnair.
See MACNAIR , Page 4
SCHOOL’S IN FOR THE WINTER, SEPT. 4
SD5 gets set to launch 2012/13 ANNALEE GR ANT Townsman Staff
It’s that time of year, when students across the district start to grudgingly prepare for back to school. For newly minted School District 5 superintendent Bendina Miller, it’s an exciting and busy time. “The focus, of course, continues to be on improved learning outcomes for our students,” she said.
Miller plans to spend the first few weeks of the school year touring each school in the district in an effort to get to know the administration and staff at each facility. That tour will begin this week and continue through September 12. This year, Miller said there is a great opportunity for staff to improve their skills with a number of training activities planned. It will be great year in a district that saw 12 administration
moves over the summer. Miller has already met with the leaders of each facility last week, and was happy to meet her team. “There’s very positive energy and very strong commitment to going back to school,” she said. Miller also got a chance to meet with the District Parent Advisory Council and said the district has a great team of parents behind it.
See SD5 , Page 3
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Page 2
tuesday, august 28, 2012
Local NEWS
Weather outlook Tomorrow 19 8
Tonight 11 POP 0%
Friday 7
Thursday 23 8
POP 60%
22
POP 10%
Saturday 24 8
Sunday 9
POP 0%
POP 30%
26
POP 0%
Almanac Temperatures
High Low Normal ..........................23.7° ..................9° Record......................33.3°/1972........1.1°/2000 Yesterday 29.4° 11.7° Precipitation Normal..............................................1.1mm Record.....................................8.4mm/1975 Yesterday ...........................................0 mm This month to date...........................9.8 mm This year to date..........................328.2 mm Precipitation totals include rain and snow
Tomorrows Sunrise: 6:55 a.m. Sunset: 8:31 p.m. Moonset: 4:49 a.m. Moonrise: 7:17 p.m.
Aug 31
Sept 8 Sept 15
Sept 22
Across the Region Tomorrow Prince George 16/6 Jasper 15/4
Edmonton 20/11
Banff 13/5 Kamloops 23/12
Revelstoke 17/8
Calgary 18/8
Kelowna 21/8 Castlegar 21/9
Vancouver 19/14
Canada
Cranbrook 19/8
today
Yellowknife Whitehorse Vancouver Victoria Saskatoon Regina Brandon Winnipeg Thunder Bay S. Ste. Marie Toronto Windsor Ottawa Montreal Quebec City Fredericton
p.cloudy rain showers p.cloudy sunny m.sunny sunny sunny sunny sunny p.cloudy sunny p.cloudy p.cloudy showers tstorms
The World
today
Atlanta Buenos Aires Detroit Geneva Havana Hong Kong Kiev London Los Angeles Miami Paris Rome Singapore Sydney Tokyo Washington
showers sunny sunny p.sunny tstorms p.cloudy cloudy p.cloudy p.cloudy showers rain sunny cloudy cloudy p.cloudy p.cloudy
tomorrow
19/12 9/4 21/14 20/13 30/16 31/17 31/17 30/19 23/10 21/12 25/13 26/16 23/11 24/12 23/10 23/9
p.cloudy p.sunny showers p.cloudy p.cloudy p.cloudy sunny sunny sunny sunny sunny sunny sunny m.sunny p.cloudy m.sunny
18/9 13/2 19/14 19/11 26/13 33/13 34/15 33/18 29/16 25/18 25/15 25/16 24/13 24/17 22/14 21/12
tomorrow
27/22 11/10 27/15 27/17 30/25 33/29 15/15 22/16 30/21 30/25 23/18 32/21 31/27 21/13 32/27 32/20
tstorms 26/21 p.cloudy 12/12 sunny 27/15 p.cloudy 30/19 tshowers 31/24 p.cloudy 32/29 p.cloudy 17/11 rain 21/15 p.cloudy 27/19 tstorms 31/25 sunny 23/15 sunny 34/21 cloudy 31/27 p.cloudy 23/17 p.cloudy 33/28 p.cloudy 28/20
©The Weather Network 2012
daily townsman / daily bulletin
Big winners at Arts on the Edge M i ke Re d f e r n
For the second year in succession Kimberley metal sculptor Rob Toller won 1st prize in the established artists category at the Arts on the Edge 2012 adjudicated exhibition in the Gallery at Centre 64. ‘Fusion 1’, his hanging sculptural panel combining sawn log sections with a steel framework, was selected by the jurors in a tight competition with Castlegar artist Mirja Vahala’s vivid acrylic painting of a waterfall entitled ‘Flow’ which received 2ndprize. 3rd prize went to Cranbrook photographer Neal Panton for his eye-catching portrait ‘Strange Kind of Beauty’. Five more cash prizes were awarded in the established artists category. They included Michael Flisak’s huge charcoal and graphite composition, ‘Warped Chair & Violin Neck’, Darlene Purnell’s shining fibreart landscape ‘Sundance’, Tony & Twila Austin’s lifelike repoussé steel sculpture ‘Grass Pickerel’, Angela Gillespie’s humorous acrylic painting ‘A Little Bit Coy Again’, and Sam Millard’s colorful assemblage of digital images from an original oil painting, ‘Perky Peacocks’.
‘Ruffled Feathers’ by Lynne Luker, first prize in the emerging artist category. The emerging artists category was dominated by a life-size acrylic painting of a heron, ‘Ruffled Feathers’ by Kimberley artist Lynne Luker, which received 1st prize, closely followed by a beautifully costumed whimsical figure sculpture by another Kimberley artist, Darcy Wanuk, which garnered 2nd prize. The third prize was awarded to a small, colourful photograph, ‘Footstep Vendor’ by young photographer Kristen Murrell. Four further cash
prizes went to Canal Flats’ artist Leslie Cartwright for her minutely detailed acrylic painting of a cat, Marmalade in the Morning, to a young painter Antonia Sullivan for her digital image ‘Japanese Sunset’, to LaVerna Peters for her whimsical clay and mixed media sculpture ‘Evening in Paris’, and to Darcy Wanuk for ‘Ebony & Ivory’, a black & white merino wool and silk drapery. The jurors were impressed by the overall quality of the 78 artworks entered in this
Key City Gymnastics Club
...building healthy futures through sport! A wide variety of programs are available for little ones taking their first steps through to adult classes!
310 1st Ave. S. Cranbrook, B.C. V1C 2A8 (250) 426-2090 keycity@telus.net www.keycitygym.
Key City Gymnastics Club, a parent operated, not-for-profit society is extremely pleased to announce that we will be moving into a brand new facility in the new year!
Registration Information! Tues., Sept.4 Tues., Sept 4
1:30—3:30 pm 5:30—8:30 pm
Key City Gymnastics Club Key City Gymnastics Club
Wed., Sept 5
6:00—8:00 pm
Community Registration at the Curling Centre
Thurs., Sept. 6 Thurs., Sept. 6
1:30—3:30 pm 5:30—8:30 pm
Key City Gymnastics Club Key City Gymnastics Club
All classes will begin the week of September 17, 2012 Please see our website www.keycitygym.ca for program information and registration forms *these forms will also be available at registration
Rob Toller’s ‘Fusion I,’ first prize in the established artists category year’s Arts on the Edge exhibition and particularly noted the high degree of technical mastery evident in the work displayed by several of the emerging artists. Members of the public still have a few days left to vote for the Peo-
ple’s Choice Award winner which will be announced following the close of the exhibition at 5 p.m. on Saturday, September 1. The Gallery at Centre 64 is open Tuesday through Saturday from 1 to 5 p.m. and admission is free.
daily townsman
tuesday, august 28, 2012
Page 3
Local NEWS Flu shots become mandatory for health care workers
EK Nurses’ Union says access is key Annalee Gr ant Townsman Staff
B.C. provincial health officer Dr. Perry Kendall announced on August 23 that all health care providers will now be required to get a flu shot each year or cover up with masks. The announcement made B.C. the first province in the country to make the annual influenza vaccines mandatory. Interior Health medical health officer Dr. Rob Parker said vaccination rates in the province have remained stagnant since education campaigns were launched in 2000. “Over that time, the rates really haven’t gone up,” he said. In the province about 40 per cent of all health care workers are vaccinated each year. Chair of the B.C. Nurses Union East Kootenay Region Patt Shuttleworth said the union has always encouraged those eligible for the vaccine to get it. “BCNU is concerned with patient safety first and foremost and have always encouraged our members to avail themselves of the flu vaccine,” she said. Parker said much of the workforce in the health industry are in great health and prime candidates for a flu shot, and there is a growing body of evidence that suggests the shot is 80 per cent effective against
influenza. “If they do get sick their symptoms will be reduced,” he said. Shuttleworth said providing a good opportunity for vaccination programs and access to masks should a worker not be eligible for the vaccine is key to the program’s success. “We hope that the health authorities make it easy for nurses to have access to the vaccine and that it is available in sufficient quantities,” she said. “For those who choose not to be vaccinated – and there are some legitimate reasons for this – masks will need to be readily available in sufficient quantities.” Shuttleworth said another great way to prevent the spread of influenza is for health care workers to stay home when they do catch something, but she worries about reprimands for missing a shift due to illness. “We also hope the employer will encourage nurses to stay home if they show any signs of illness and not enter them into their attendance programs for this,” she said. Parker said that those who receive a vaccine are much less likely to take time off work for illness and the risk of spreading the virus to a patient is greatly reduced. “It’s really about pa-
tient safety,” he said. Parker said the most effective solution is prevention, and the health authorities across the province use three methods: vaccination, followed by mask use and hand washing. “If you don’t get it, you can’t spread it,” he said. Parker said there are common myths about the vaccine, the most prominent being that it can actually cause illness. He said that simply isn’t the case with the flu shot. “The influenza vaccine is a killed virus vaccine, so it can’t give you the flu,” he stressed. “It’s biologically impossible.” The most common side effect of the shot is soreness in the arm. If an illness does appear shortly after the vaccine, Parker said the most common explanation is that the virus was already in the person’s body before the shot was delivered. He also said it takes about two weeks for the vaccine to kick in. “There’s lots of respiratory viruses out there,” he said. Some recipients of the vaccine do experience allergic reactions, and Parker said those people should obviously avoid getting it. “They certainly shouldn’t get the influenza vaccine or any other vaccine if they are
Mainroad, union in bargaining talks S a l ly M acD o n a l d Townsman Staff
Bargaining resumed Monday between Mainroad East Kootenay and locked out staff. The road maintenance contractor issued lockout notice on Sunday, August 19 to 95 staff at its seven maintenance yards in the East Kootenay. The Mainroad Group said that the local group is the only one in B.C.’s 28 maintenance service areas that did not sign an agreement earlier this year.
Now the two sides are meeting in bargaining talks, said Chris Bradshaw of the B.C. Government and Service Employees’ Union (BCGEU). “We had a date scheduled and both sides are showing up to that meeting. It remains to be seen whether we will be able to make some progress or not,” said Bradshaw. Since the lockout started last week, BCGEU members who are Mainroad staff took a strike vote. Over two days, Mon-
day, August 20 and Tuesday, August 21, the members voted 96.875 per cent in favour of striking if it becomes necessary. “When it became clear that the employer was going to lock out the workers, the bargaining committee decided that to protect itself and keep the bargaining process continuing, they would take a strike vote,” said Bradshaw. “We came out of that with over 96 per cent approval rate to take strike action if needed.”
uwindsor.ca
B.C. is the first province in the country to make the annual influenza vaccines mandatory for health care workers. truly allergic to it,” he said, adding that it is a rare occurrence. Each year the vaccine is modified to include different strains, and Parker said there is no risk getting it year
after year. In fact, with a yearly vaccine, recipients are actually improving the number of strains they are immune to. “You build up a greater panel of divers-
ity,” he said. “You’re actually getting more protections.” There have always been flu clinics offered to health care workers, and the vaccine has always been free for them.
Parker was unsure what the new program will look like, but said there is plenty of opportunity for health care workers to get their shot. “Health care workers just like the public can get it anywhere,” he said. “They’ve got lots of time to get it.” Health care workers can also access it in their own work place and they can get the vaccine while on shift, Parker said. The vaccine has been offered for free for the past 20 years. “Access is actually quite easy,” he said. Interior Health has not yet announced the 2012 flu vaccine clinic schedule, but the information will be listed on its website, www.interiorhealth.ca in the coming weeks.
Courtesy The Free Press
Bruce Milton sent in this photo to the Fernie Free Press of his wife, Jane, getting a surprise visitor while she was doing some gardening at home in Alpine Trails, Fernie on Sunday afternoon. “Jane was digging out some weeds behind our condo,” said Bruce. “Not hearing any noise, she casually looked up and then suddenly shouted to me, ‘Help, a moose!’ It was just out for a stroll behind our complex. My wife froze, we stayed still, quiet and watched.”
SD5 set to welcome back students Continued from page 1 “I think this is a great district where there is a very high expectation of student achievment,” she said. Registration began in the district on Monday, August 27. Miller is urging new families to the area or any that have young children entering kindergarten for the first time to get to their school this week and sign up. “We’d really hope that the families could get into the schools this week to register,” she said.
Information on registration is available online at www.sd5. bc.ca. For all students in Cranbrook, the first day of classes will be September 4, but the time varies between elementary, middle school and high school. All elementary students will be in classes from 9 a.m. to 11 a.m. Tuesday morning. At Laurie Middle School and Parkland Middle School, Grade 7 students will meet from 10 a.m. to 11 a.m. for orientation. Grade 8 and 9 students will
start at 9 a.m. for an hour. At Mount Baker Secondary School, students will be in session from 9 a.m. to 11 a.m. Classes will begin as usual the following day. At Laurie, students can expect a great week of fun. Grade 9 students will head to Rock Lake for an overnight teambuilding exercise on Wednesday. Grade 8 students will head to Wycliffe for a fun day as well, leaving the school to the Grade 7s as they get used to the middle school environment.
Page 4
tuesday, august 28, 2012
daily townsman
Local NEWS
Photo courtesy D. McLeod
Kimberley Mayor Ron McRae is pictured with students from Kimberley’s sister city, Annaka, Japan, in council chambers. The students were in town on a cultural exchange last week and spent their days engaged in morning English classes at Blarchmont Learning Centre and afternoons engaged in outdoor activities.
City of Kimberley Mark Creek Flume Flood Management & Stream Rehabilitation Project
Update Meeting Thursday, August 30th, 2012 7:00 pm North Star Room at the Kimberley Conference and Athlete Training Centre s "RIEF 0RESENTATION s 1UESTION AND !NSWER 0ERIOD s #OFFEE -INGLE
City of Kimberley Request for Quotation:
Alarm Monitoring For City of Kimberley Facilities The City of Kimberley is requesting quotations to provide alarm monitoring of 23 City of Kimberley Facilities. Request for Quotation Documents can be obtained from: City’s website: http://www.city.kimberley.ca under “What’s New” Quotations will be received at the Information Counter, Main Floor, Kimberley City Hall, addressed to Mike Fox, Manager, Operations and Environment Services (CONFIDENTIAL) 340 Spokane Street, Kimberley B.C., V1A 2E8, until 11:00 am local time on September 14, 2012. The City of Kimberley reserves the right to reject any or all proposals or to accept the proposal deemed most favorable to the interests of the City of Kimberley. For inquiries, please contact Mike Fox, Manager, Operations and Environment Services, City of Kimberley 250 - 427-6448. Email: mfox@kimberley.ca
Macnair to seek NDP nomination Continued from page 1 In addition to serving on council, Macnair is the owner and publisher of Oolichan Books. He decided to seek the NDP nomination to herald change in Kootenay East, Macnair said.
“Change is coming in British Columbia and the people of Kootenay East need strong representation in government come next spring. “I am excited to grow support for the NDP in this region as we build toward the provincial election next May and bring about the changes we
need in British Columbia. I look forward to working hard to ensure Kootenay East is part of that positive change,” said Macnair. The deadline for nominations for the riding has now passed. Members of the Kootenay East NDP Riding Association will vote to select a candi-
date on September 22. Meanwhile, the BC Liberals Kootenay East Riding Association will meet on Wednesday, September 5 to hold a candidate selection meeting. Current MLA Bill Bennett has announced he is running for reelection on behalf of the BC Liberals.
At the Cranbrook Public Library
We
have three new biographies this week: Christopher Andersen’s “Mick,” Lois Banner’s “Marylin: The Passion & the Paradox,” and Michael Korda’s “Hero,” which takes a fresh look at Lawrence of Arabia. In “The World’s Greatest Lion,” Ralf Helfer tells the true story of Zamba, who was not only the famous roaring lion used by MGM to open films, but also brought numerous animals to safety when the ranch they were housed at was destroyed by a flood. Please note that the library will be closed over the Labour Day weekend (September 1-3). Our brand new hours begin on Tuesday, September 4. Great news! Zinio is now free to all library members. Zinio is an online magazine service that delivers many your favourite magazines right to your home computer or mobile device, just as they were published in print, plus exclusive features like video, audio and live links. Everything from home, fitness, garden, news, art, design, politics and more and, you can download each issue for offline reading on any smartphone or mobile device. Part of the Cranbrook Public Library’s database collection, Zinio is available 24/7. Simply go to our website, www.cranbrookpubliclibrary.ca, click on
Mike Selby the E-Library link, and scroll down to the Zinio link. There are step-by-step instructions, as well as a video tutorial. On display this month is a selection of beautiful paintings by Cranbrook artist Gail Hourie. Adult Newly Acquired: The Golden Age of the Canadian Cowboy – Hugh A. Dempsey Reader’s Digest Unseen World Winner Take All – Dambisa Moyo Zoobiquity – Barbara Natterson-Horowitz From Renos to Riches – Ian Szabo Paradise Lost: Parallel Prose Edition – John Milton Business Transactions Guide – A. Paul Mahaffy The Canadian Labour Movement – Craig Heron Help Your Kids With Science The ACL Solution – Robert Gl. Marx When I Die: Financial Planning for Life and Death – Garry R. Duncan Alzheimer’s Disease: What If There Was a Cure
Letters to My Daughters – Fawzia Koofi Proof: Canadian Rules of Evidence – Paul Atkinson Earth Ponds – Tim Matson A Thoroughly Wicked Woman – Better Keller Bear Aware – Bill Schneider The Ice Pilots – Michael Vlessides Overdressed – Elizabeth L. Cline Flying Colours: The Toni Onley Story (bio) Marilyn: The Passion & The Paradox – Lois Banner (bio) Mick – Christopher Andersen (bio) Hero – Michael Korda (bio) Between You & Me – Emma McLaughlin (fic) 150 Pounds – Kate Rockland (fic) The Third Gate – Lincoln Child (fic) In the Shadow of the Banyan – Vaddey Ratner (fic) The Cryptos Conundrum – Chase Brandon (fic) Into the Darkest Corner – Elizabeth Haynes (fic) The Watch – Joydeep RoyBhattacharya (fic) Four Sisters, All Queens – Sherry Jones (fic) Seating Arrangements – Maggie Shipstead (fic) The Queen’s Vow – C.W. Gortner (fic) The Last Minute – Jeff Abbott (mys) Sweet Talk – Julie Garwood (mys)
Line of Fire – Stephen White (mys) Back Fire – Catherine Coulter (mys) Cast On, Kill Off – Maggie Sefton (mys) MI-5: Volumes 8 & 9 (DVD) Far From The Madding Crowd (DVD) Around the World: 52 Adventures (DVD) Gasland (DVD) Samantha Brown’s Asia (DVD) Wikisecrets (DVD)
Young Adult &Children’s” Dreamless – Josephine Angelini (ya fic) Ascend – Amanda Hocking (ya fic) Shadow Cast by Stars – Catherine Knutsson (ya fic) Sorta Like A Rock Star – Mathew Quick (ya fic) The Cardturner – Louis Sachar (ya fic) Struck – Jennifer Bosworth (ya fic) The Last Little Blue Envelope – Maureen Johnson (ya fic) Now – Morris Gleitzman (ya fic) The World’s Greatest Lion – Ralph Helfer (ya fic) Magical Monty – Johanna Hurwitz (j fic) TinkerBell and the Great Fairy Race (j DVD) Mike Selby is reference librarian at Cranbrook Public Library
daily townsman
NEWS/features
tuesday, august 28, 2012
Page 5
History of the CFUW, and Cranbrook’s Women of the Year Submitted
The Cranbrook Chapter of the Canadian Federation of University Women (CFUW) is proud to be celebrating its 30th anniversary on September 20, with a special event. It will begin at 7 p.m. at the Manual Training School attached to the Cranbrook Public Library. Refreshments will be served and the event is open to the public. Guest speaker Ghada Alatrash (Janbey) will speak on “Think of Others: Building Bridges between East and West.” Like many clubs, the CFUW is a non-profit organization. There are approximately 125 clubs across Canada working towards the goals of stimulating interest in cultural, social and political fields, developing sound concepts of educational value, awarding scholarships and bursaries, establishing good relationships with other organizations and using our own education for the benefit of the community in which we serve. CFUW is affiliated with the International Federation of University Women (IFUW), a global organization advocating for women’s
Cranbrook’s Women of the Year 1984 - Julie Roberts 1985 - Sophie Pierre 1986 - Jan Levang 1987 - Roberta Taylor,Harjinder Sheena (posthumous) 1988 - Susan Selby 1989 - Anna Mae Gartside 1990 - Pat Skordal 1991 - Sheilah Moore 1992 - Louise Stropky 1993 - Pat Townshend 1994 - Brenda Paul 1995 - Ann Rice 1996 - Mary Phillips 1997 - Elaine Fawcett, Cathy Fairclough, Mabel Chan (posthumous) 1998 - Susan Campbell 1999 - Ann Buckman 2000 - Daphne Hayden 2001 - Ruby Sinclair 2002 - Flo Reid 2003 - Mila Siquenza 2004 - Linda Abbott, Leona Gatsby 2005 - Karin Penner 2006 - Janyce Bampton 2007 - Janice Edwards 2008 - Joanne Wilton 2009 - Jayne Garner-Garlaneau 2010 - Sandy Zeznik 2011 - Velma McKay, Vicky Dalton 2012 - Sister Nina Glinski, CND rights, equality and empowerment through access to quality education and training up to the highest levels. In 1984 CFUW Cranbrook started an annual recognition program called
Woman Of The Year. Recipients of this award are very much admired and respected in the community and are often “unsung heroines”. Any woman in the East Kootenay region is eligible to receive the award based on the following criteria: her contributions to the education and/or advancement of women, and how she has inspired and enriched the lives around her by her endeavours. The recipients’ contributions and achievements may have taken place in the last year or over a period of time. Her efforts may have been part of paid employment, voluntary, or a combination of both. “Education” does not necessarily carry an academic meaning, but can be more widely interpreted to mean supporting and encouraging learning. CFUW Cranbrook has a wonderful scrapbook which has pictures and news articles about each recipient. Each page is artfully decorated in the new scrapbook methods of the day. It will be on display at our 30th anniversary celebration, with many recipients in attendance.
Julie Roberts is pictured accepting the inaugural Woman of the Year award from Rhonda Lakowski, Treasurer of the University Women’s Club, as it was then known, in 1984.
CORRECTION NOTICE: Mines Act: Notice of Works and Reclamation and Land Act:
Notice of Intention to Apply for Dispositions of Crown Land
Advertisement ran on July 10, 2012 and July 16, 2012 contained an error in the area under application. Golden Rock Products Inc. on behalf of the Ministry of Forests, Lands and Natural Resource Operations (MFLNRO) and Ministry of Energy and Mines (MEM), Kootenay Region, applied for Licenses of Occupation (Quarry & Road) and Notice of Work and Reclamation Program for the purpose of extraction of construction stone and rip-rap and road access situated on Provincial Crown land approx 9 km east of Kimberley, BC and containing 6.4 hectares more or less for the quarry and 0.5 hectares more or less for the road. The MFLNRO and MEM File Numbers for these applications are Lands file #s 4405226 & 4405244 and Mines file #1630077. Written comments concerning this application should be directed to FrontCounterBC, 1902 Theatre Road, Cranbrook, B.C., V1C 7G1 or email to: AuthorizingAgency.Cranbrook@gov.bc.ca. Comments will be received by FrontCounterBC until October 5, 2012. MFLNRO and MEM may not be able to consider comments received after this date. Please refer to our website http://www.arfd.gov.bc.ca/ApplicationPosting/index.isp > Search > Search by File Number: 4405226 and 4405244 for more information. These applications will be available for viewing at FrontCounterBC in Cranbrook. Be advised that any response to this advertisement will be considered part of the public record. For information, contact the FOI Advisor at the Ministry of Forests, Lands and Natural Resource Operations regional office in Cranbrook.
Submitted
Tanis, Tammy and Donna are taking a drive to announce the Denham Ford Test Drive fundraiser for United Way on Saturday, September 15, 11 a.m. to 4 p.m. in the Tamarack Mall parking lot. Ford will donate $20 for each test drive (one per household) to a maximum of $6,000. The community is invited to come out and help reach the goal of 300 test drives. Barbeque and fun activities on site.
Pilot from Edmonton area dead after small plane crash southwest of Calgary Canadian Press
NANTON, Alta. — A pilot who was patrolling pipelines over rugged terrain southwest of Calgary has died after his light plane crashed. Chris Krepski of the Transportation Safety
Board says the singleengine Cessna 172 went down Sunday afternoon near Chain Lakes Provincial Park. The 37-year-old pilot was the only one on board. RCMP say he was
from the Edmonton area. His name has not
been released. The cause of the crash is under investigation.
Correction
The phone number for contact for Monday’s “Fight For Jenna” fundraiser was incorrect. The correct phone number is 250-432-9513.
PAGE 6
TUESDAY, AUGUST 28, 2012
OPINION
DAILY TOWNSMAN / DAILY BULLETIN
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Studying projects to death
N
DP leader Adrian Dix has an- cial level, to go along with court cases and nounced that one of his first acts as direct-action protests. premier would be to withdraw B.C. Speaking of which, the frontal assault from the joint review of the Enbridge pipe- by agitators at the federal Enbridge hearline proposal from Alberta to Kitimat. ings has mostly petered out. After 4,000The two-year federal-led review will be odd people were signed up to speak, most mostly done by next May, didn’t bother, and some but Dix proposes to start a hearings were cancelled. new provincial assessment Apparently slacktivists such to examine the B.C. poras “Jonathan L. Seagull” BC VIEWS tion. He doesn’t know how and “Cave Man” didn’t Tom much it would cost, and make it out of their VanFletcher under questioning he all couver basement suites to but admitted the intention tell the panel oil is bad. is to study the pipeline to Professional environdeath. mentalists are now wringing their hands Fresh from a summer tour of the pipe- over Ottawa’s decision to leave smallerline route to reaffirm solidarity with its scale reviews to the province. This means, opponents, Dix is hardly in a position to for example, that there won’t be a dupliconsider anything but maximum resis- cate federal review of the urgently needed tance. As Premier Christy Clark did in her refit of the John Hart Dam on the Campshowdown with Alberta over benefits, Dix bell River. hinted that provincial permits for river One reader suggested that environand wildlife crossings would be made as mental pioneer Roderick Haig-Brown is expensive as possible, if not refused. still spinning in his grave over the damThe same fate awaits the Kinder Mor- ming of this legendary salmon river. Pergan plan to twin the existing Trans-Moun- haps, but that was in 1947. Does it make tain oil pipeline to Burnaby. Dix left the sense today to lard pointless bureaucracy impression that he would undo the years onto a reconstruction that replaces woodof work that have gone into bringing some en pipes and provides earthquake protecrational sense to environmental approvals tion, without expanding river impact? that can be, and have been, dragged out NDP environment critic Rob Fleming for years. hammered away at the B.C. Liberals about The B.C. hearings would provide an- this in the spring, reminding them that other platform for opponents, and more Auditor General John Doyle had exposed a complaints to justify refusal at the provin- lack of resources in the B.C. Environmen-
tal Assessment Office, even before Ottawa’s changes. Fleming makes it sound like a huge new burden has been dumped on B.C. False. Provincial assessment already must be done with the participation of Fisheries and Oceans Canada, Transport Canada, the provincial ministries of natural resources and energy and mines, and of course aboriginal communities. This is why it’s so long and expensive. And don’t be fooled into believing that a federal review would go out and count the tadpoles and caribou again. It’s only the desk jobs that have proliferated. There weren’t just two levels of duplicate review, but three. Earlier in their mandate, the B.C. Liberals exempted major projects such as mines and energy generation from local government control, citing the “provincial interest” similar to the federal authority over projects that cross provincial borders. I agree with the NDP that B.C. environmental assessment needs more resources, in particular to do the follow-up on approved projects, as called for by the auditor general. Forest management needs more money too. All the more reason not to waste resources on political gestures. Tom Fletcher is legislative reporter and columnist for Black Press and BCLocalnews.com tfletcher@blackpress.ca
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daily townsman / daily bulletin
Opinion/Events
tuesday, august 28, 2012
Page 7
The end of an American dream Whatâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Up? W
hen the first man on the Moon go beyond Earth orbit ... destines our nadied on Saturday, President Ba- tion to become one of second or even rack Obama tweeted: â&#x20AC;&#x153;Neil Arm- third rate stature.â&#x20AC;? strong was a hero not just of his time, but If NASA (the National Aviation and of all time.â&#x20AC;? Armstrongâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s final comment on Space Administration) wants to put an Obama, on the other hand, American into space now, was that the presidentâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s it has to buy passage on a policy on manned space Russian rocket, which is flight was â&#x20AC;&#x153;devastatingâ&#x20AC;?, currently over $50 million and condemned the United per seat. By 2015 the ChiStates to â&#x20AC;&#x153;a long downhill nese will probably be offerGwynne slide to mediocrity.â&#x20AC;? ing an alternative service Dyer That was two years ago, (which may bring the price when three Americans who down), and before long had walked on the Moon, Neil Armstrong, India may be in the business as well. But James Lovell, commander of Apollo 13, the United States wonâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;t. and Eugene Cernan, commander of ApolThere is likely to be a gap of between lo 17, published an open letter to Obama five and ten years between the retirement pointing out that his new space policy ef- of the Space Shuttle fleet last year and the fectively ended American participation in first new American vehicles capable of the human exploration of deep space. putting a human being into space. Even Armstrong was famously reluctant to then it will only be into low Earth orbit: give media interviews. It took something none of the commercial vehicles now as hugely short-sighted as Obamaâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s can- being developed will be able to do what cellation of the Constellation programme the Saturn rockets did 41 years ago when in 2010 to make him speak out in public. they sent Neil Armstrong and his colBut when he did, he certainly did not leagues to the Moon. mince his words. Armstrong was a former military officer â&#x20AC;&#x153;We will have wasted our current $10- who would never directly call the Presibillion-plus investment in Constellation,â&#x20AC;? dent of the United States a liar or a fool, he said, â&#x20AC;&#x153;and equally importantly, we will but his words left little doubt of what he have lost the many years required to recre- really thought: â&#x20AC;&#x153;The availability of a comate the equivalent of what we will have mercial transport to orbit as envisioned in discarded. For the United States ... to be the presidentâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s proposal cannot be prewithout carriage to low Earth orbit and dicted with any certainty, but is likely to with no human exploration capability to take substantially longer and be more ex-
pensive than we would hope.â&#x20AC;? In other words, donâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;t hold your breath. This is not a global defeat for manned exploration of the solar system. The Russians are talking seriously about building a permanent base on the Moon, and all the major Asian contenders are working on heavy-lift rockets that would enable them to go beyond Earth orbit. Itâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s just an American loss of will, shared equally by Obama and Republican presidential candidate Mitt Romney. â&#x20AC;&#x153;I know China is headed to the Moon,â&#x20AC;? Romney told a town hall audience in Michigan in February. â&#x20AC;&#x153;Theyâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;re planning on going to the Moon, and some people say, oh, weâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;ve got to get to the Moon, weâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;ve got to get there in a hurry to prove we can get there before China. Itâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s like, guys, we were there a long time ago, all right? And when you get there would you bring back some of the stuff we left?â&#x20AC;? Arrogant, complacent, and wrong. Americans went to the Moon a long time ago, but the point is that they canâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;t get there now, and wonâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;t be able to for a long time to come. Which is why, in an interview fifteen years ago, Neil Armstrong told BBC science correspondent Pallab Ghosh: â&#x20AC;&#x153;The dream remains. The reality has faded a bit, but it will come back, in time.â&#x20AC;? It will, but probably not in the United States.
Gwynne Dyer is a London-based independent journalist.
An inside analysis of the HST debacle
As
campaign director for the B.C. them they were dreaming in Technicolor.â&#x20AC;? Liberals in the 2009 provincial But upon reflection - and there is a lot election, Martyn Brown presided of that in the book - Brown sees where the over the partyâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s bald declaration that har- Liberals went fundamentally wrong. monization of the sales tax was not on the â&#x20AC;&#x153;The HST was an issue of such broad radar screen. public importance that it should never â&#x20AC;&#x153;It was a decision that have been imposed withwas never contemplated as out any prior consultation, part of the election plan,â&#x20AC;? let alone only weeks after writes Brown in a book an election, and in direct published electronically contradiction to the govthis week. â&#x20AC;&#x153;I was so utterly erning partyâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s stated posiVaughn certain about that fact, that tion. It rep-resented such a Palmer I personally expressed that significant shift in the tax position, on behalf of the burden from businesses to party.â&#x20AC;? individuals that it was not on a scale that He saw no need to check with anyone would have ever been right to impose it as before putting out the statement. Succes- a done deal.â&#x20AC;? sive B.C. governments had opposed harMoreover the shift ran counter to evmonizing the provincial sales tax with the erything the Liberals purported to stand much broader federal goods and services for with the electorate. base, fearing to lose control of tax policy â&#x20AC;&#x153;The last thing British Columbians exand anger consumers. pected from the Camp-bell government, Brown, the longtime chief of staff to which had made personal income tax rethen premier Gordon Campbell, couldnâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;t lief - and household tax relief - so central â&#x20AC;&#x153;fathomâ&#x20AC;? that the position would change. to its vision, was a tax shift that would inBut within weeks, the re-elected Liber- crease their tax burden, especially in the als did reverse the position Brown had ex- midst of a recession. pressed on their behalf. Confronted with â&#x20AC;&#x153;Most taxpayers viewed it as a contraâ&#x20AC;&#x153;an unanticipated budget deficit that was dictory assault on their pocketbooks, on growing worse by the day,â&#x20AC;? Campbell and their house-hold finances, and on their his colleagues made a cash grab for â&#x20AC;&#x153;a one- ability to make ends meet in a time of setime federal payment of $1.6 billion to vere economic duress. Most taxpayers did help defray the impacts of transitioning not believe it would make them better off. from the PST to the HST.â&#x20AC;? They believed it would do the opposite.â&#x20AC;? The decision would be the ruin of both Brown scoffs at those who blame the Campbell and his party, a development defeat of the tax on a failure to communithat Brown telegraphs via the title of his cate. book, Towards a New Government in B.C., â&#x20AC;&#x153;The decision itself was wrong. It was available for $6 from amazon.com. wrong because of the governing partyâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Not that he claims to have foreseen the stated position against the HST, before outcome at the time he was helping the and during the election. It was wrong to Liberals to bring in the HST. â&#x20AC;&#x153;If anyone impose the HST as an economic and fiscal had suggested to me that that would be imperative on the heels of an election in the death knell for Premier Campbell and, which the HST was not an issue and was very likely, for his party, I would have told never discussed.â&#x20AC;?
He acknowledges a second, no less fatal miscalculation. â&#x20AC;&#x153;The government too readily dismissed the populist appeal of Bill Vander Zalm. It never imagined that he, of all people, would be able to rally and organize public opposition to achieve what was thought to be impossible: conducting a successful initiative that met the legislated thresholds for forcing a binding plebiscite. The arrogance of power? Brown thinks so. He also disputes that the governing partyâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s sin was discharged by the departure of Gordon Campbell. â&#x20AC;&#x153;Premier Campbell did lead the charge, â&#x20AC;&#x153;says Brown. â&#x20AC;&#x153;But he stood with an entire team, who commanded the confidence of the legislature and who purported to vote for the HST out of the conviction that it was a politically painful but necessary action that needed to be taken in the public interest. Those individuals deeply underestimated the social licence they had, or could build, for the HST - just as they woefully under-estimated the political price that they would pay for their personal support. For most government MLAs, that day of reckoning has yet to come.â&#x20AC;? Indeed, one of the central messages of the book is that Campbellâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s successor, Christy Clark (who fired Brown in one of her first acts), has failed to repair the breach of public trust arising out of the HST debacle. He doesnâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;t like her chances to turn things around in the time remaining before the May 2013 election: â&#x20AC;&#x153;At this point, it would take a near miracle for the B.C. Liberals to form the next government.â&#x20AC;? Rough stuff from one who was there through it all in the capacity of (to quote his memorable characterization) both â&#x20AC;&#x153;a fly on the wall and a fly in the ointment.â&#x20AC;? Vaughn Palmer is a columnist with the Vancouver Sun.
KIMBERLEY AND CRANBROOK COMMUNITY CALENDAR
UPCOMING Air Cadets - 552 Squadron Cranbrook is holding an Open House and Welcome Back - August 28 from 6-8 pm. Regular Cadet evenings start on Sept. 4th at 6:00 at Cadet HQ, 308 - 10 Ave. S, 2nd Floor. Info: Capt. Bott at 250-426-3685 or Kim MacBride at 250-426-0131. email trainingdesk552@gmail.com Are you an organization that does fall registrations? Contact College of the Rockies Kimberley Campus to sign up for a Community Registration Day. Call 427-7116 x3752 or email kimberley@cotr.bc.ca 2012 FREE PUBLIC SWIM Wednesday, Sept 5th, 5:00-6:00 PM is sponsored by Robert Apps Personal Law. Kootenay Rockies ATV Club - Next Meeting - Wednesday, Sept 5th, 7:00 pm - Days Inn. Cranbrook Curling Centre: Fall Community Registration, 6-8 pm, Wed. Sept 5th at the Curling Centre. Clubs & Organizations: register NOW at Leisure Services. Come & see what Cranbrook has to offer for active living & leisure. Something for everyone - kids, youth, adults and seniors. 250-489-0220 www.cranbrook.ca Motorcycle Toy Run, September 9th. Starting at Higher Ground Coffee Shop, stops in Lake Louise, Golden and ending in Invermere at Lakeside Pub for dinner. 9:30am meet at Higher Ground, departing at 10:30am. Please bring a toy or money donation for the Christmas Bureau. All proceeds are distributed to Families in Need at Christmas time in the Valley. More info: contact 250 341-5646. Bibles for Missions Thrift Store has â&#x20AC;&#x153;Back to School/Collegeâ&#x20AC;? supplies, clothing, and shoes. Some high end brands at huge savings ! Watch for our Grand Opening Week: Sept. 11-15, 824 Kootenay St. N. Tues. â&#x20AC;&#x201C; Sat. 10-5. Thurs.-7pm. 2012 FREE FAMILY SWIM Wednesday, Sept 19th, 6:00-7:00 PM is sponsored by Kimberley Fellowship Baptist Church. Free - or a donation to the refugee family of Pwe Say - yoga classes at Blarchmont field, Kimberley on Mondays 9:3010:45am and Wednesdayâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s 6:30-7:30pm. Runs until Sept. 26 The Canadian Federation of University Women is celebrating the 30th anniversary of the Cranbrook club with a special event on Thursday, Sept 20, 7:00pm at Cranbrook Public Libarary (Manual Training Centre). Ghada Alatrash (Janbey), writer, educator and translator, will speak on building bridges between East & West. Everyone is welcome. ONGOING The BFM Thrift Store, 824 Kootenay St. N. recycles your donations to benefit Cranbrookâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s population and people in third world countries. Volunteers making a difference! Call 778 520 - 1981 Open Tues. â&#x20AC;&#x201C; Sat. 10 â&#x20AC;&#x201C; 5 & Thurs. â&#x20AC;&#x201C; 7pm. Kimberley Food Bank Bingo, every Monday (except holiday Mondayâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s) 6:30 PM Sharp at the Kimberley Elks. CHOOSING WELLNESS. Senior Exercise Class; Mondayâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s 10:3011:30am. Bring a bag lunch. Cranbrook Seniors Centre. Grandmothers Helping Grandmothers meet last Monday of every month. We raise money to help Grandmothers in Africa raising their grandchildren and the village grandchildren. 7:00 pm, College of the Rockies. We are a very welcoming group of ladies who would love you to join us. Info: call Norma at 250-426-6111. Moyie High House Museum & St. Peterâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Church, open Sundays 1-3pm, July & August or for viewing phone Barbara, 250-829-0770 / Bobby 250-829-0500. Would you like to know how others with Parkinsonâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s deal with their daily problems? You and your care givers are invited to attend our friendly informative meetings held at the Heritage Inn, Cranbrook, 7pm every 3rd Thursday. Discussions are enlightening and strictly confidential. There will be no meetings during July & August, 2012. The new Bibles for Mission Thrift Store invites you to become a volunteer! Please come visit us any time at 824 Kootenay St. North. Store hours: 10am-5pm Tues-Sat. Call Diane (manager) with any questions: 778 520-1981 looking forward to meeting you. CRANBROOK QUILTERSâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;GUILD will be holding their meetings every 2nd & 4th Tuesday of each month at 7:15pm upstairs in the Seniorsâ&#x20AC;&#x2122; Hall, 125-17th Ave. S. Everyone welcome. Info: Betty at 250-489-1498 or June 250-426-8817. ESL: CBAL hosts Conversation Cafe Tues 7-9pm @ Family Connections; Morning Time class Wed 9-11:30am @ Steeples Elem; Evening Time class Wed., 7-9pm in Rm#152 COTR. Childcare upon request. All programs are free. FMI: Bruce 250-919-2677 or khough@cbal.org Whist at Seniors Centre, Cranbrook, every Thursday night at 7:00pm. New players welcome. Mark Creek Lions meet 1st & 3rd Wednesday of each month (Sept-June). Meet & Greet between 6:00 & 6:30pm at the Western Lodge., supper to follow. All welcome. Info: 250427-5612, 250-427-4314. Place your notice in your â&#x20AC;&#x153;Whatâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Up?â&#x20AC;? Community Calendar FREE of charge. This column is intended for the use of clubs and non-profit organizations to publicize their coming events â&#x20AC;&#x201D; provided the following requirements are met: t /PUJDFT XJMM CF BDDFQUFE UXP XFFLT QSJPS UP UIF FWFOU t "MM OPUJDFT NVTU CF FNBJMFE GBYFE PS ESPQQFE Pò JO QFSTPO /P UFMFQIPOF DBMMT QMFBTF t /PUJDFT TIPVME OPU FYDFFE XPSET t 0OMZ POF OPUJDF QFS XFFL GSPN BOZ POF DMVC PS PSHBOJ[BUJPO t "MM OPUJDFT NVTU CF SFDFJWFE CZ UIF 5IVSTEBZ QSJPS UP QVCMJDBUJPO t 5IFSF JT OP HVBSBOUFF PG QVCMJDBUJPO /PUJDFT XJMM SVO TVCKFDU UP TQBDF MJNJUBUJPOT
CRANBROOK TOWNSMAN & KIMBERLEY BULLETIN COMMUNITY CALENDAR
%SPQ Pò $SBOCSPPL 4U / t %SPQ Pò 4QPLBOF 4USFFU & NBJM CVMMFUJOQSPE!DZCFSMJOL DB t 'BY
PAGE 8
TUESDAY, AUGUST 28, 2012
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KOOTENAY ICE
Veterans lace up skates for first ice session TRE VOR CR AWLEY Sports Editor
Training camp hasn’t officially begun, but Kootenay Ice veterans hit the Ice for a session at Western Financial Place under the direction of assistant coaches Chad Kletzel and Jerry Bancks on Monday. A few alumni also joined the returnees as Brayden McNabb, Adam Cracknell and Nathan Lieuwen also laced up the skates to get some time in before heading off to their respective pro camps in the AHL. Petr Vesely and Jakub Prochazka, the two Czechs selected by the Ice in the CHL Import Draft, also made an appearance, and while their hockey abilities were sharp, it will take a little bit to develop their English-speaking skills. Kletzel was the point man on the ice, leading the team through drills and Bancks helped out while head coach Ryan McGill watched from the bench and the stands. Drew Czerwonka, the current captain and one of five returning 20-year-olds, did not join his teammates, but
watched from the bench due to an undisclosed injury. While camp hasn’t officially begun, the atmosphere is certainly primed for it, especially for the five overagers who will be fighting for a spot. Joey Leach, Dylen McKinlay, Elgin Pearce, Brock Montgomery and Drew Czerwonka— who’ve become part of a fraternity that can only be created inside a dressing room—will be competing amongst each other for three spots on the club roster. Kootenay Ice general manager Jeff Chynoweth confirmed that he will head into camp with those five players and will release two of them after their performance in the preseason and consultations with his new coaching staff. “Since they’ve got to town, we’ve had lots of meetings, trying to get the coaches as much information as we can on the returning players, the prospects, anyone who has a potential to make our hockey club,” said Chynoweth. “Ryan’s been in contact with head scout Garnet Kazuik as well and from
TREVOR CRAWLEY PHOTO
Kootenay Ice head coach Ryan McGill (left) confers with his assistant, Chad Kletzel, during a veteran practice at Western Financial Place on Monday. his end, he wants to gather as much information as he can so he can get a bit of a picture for each player.” Chynoweth also added that a potential NHL lockout won’t affect Max Reinhart, the Kootenay sniper who will likely stick with the Abbotsford Heat of the AHL this season. It was the first on-ice session with a WHL
team for Kletzel, the replacement for Todd Johnson, the former assistant who left to coach university hockey. He ran the veterans through a number of exercises late Monday morning, manning the whistle and stopping the play a couple times to seize some teaching moments. “Being my first practice, [I was] just making
sure the practice went well and we got something accomplished. I think you can see that there are some guys that have experience in this league, guys that know each other and there’s some compete there, which is good,” said Kletzel. “But we need to make sure that rises as we go through camp and into exhibition to
be ready for what the Western Hockey League level of play and compete is going to present us when the regular season starts.” Czerwonka, one of the five 20-year-old candidates, has been with the Ice since his rookie season four years ago and will be looking to stick for his fifth and final campaign. Chynoweth and his staff will have to make the two decisions before a cutoff date in October. “It’s going to be really tough for us 20-yearolds,” said Czerwonka. “We’re all friends, all five of us, so it’s going to be a tough time but you just gotta work hard everyday and come ready to work and it’ll all play out itself.” Teammate Brock Montgomery agrees, noting that cuts are a part of the game and that the five just have to put their heads down and work hard to prove themselves to management. “Coming back as a 20-year-old this year is a lot different,” said Montgomery. “Last year, you come in and gotta make the team out of 22 guys—you have a better
chance, but now you’ve only got three spots, so it’s a little bit different for the 20-year-olds. “It’s kind of tough to think that two guys will be leaving, but then again, it’s our job, it’s our career, we know it’s what’s going to happen. “We’re all fighting for a job, this is what we want to do for a living so everyone is giving it their all.” Montgomery had a banner year last season, notching 44 points with 22 goals and 22 assists and was named the team’s most improved player at the year-end awards ceremony. The prospects have been trickling into Cranbrook over the last few days and will join the veterans for fitness testing tomorrow at Western Financial Place. Prospects will also have some ice time available in the morning. Training camp officially begins on Wednesday and will conclude on Sunday with the annual Blue White Charity Intrasquad game at noon, which is admission by donation with funds going to the United Way.
Prospects ready to shine TRE VOR CR AWLEY Sports Editor
SUBMITTED PHOTO
The Cranbrook contingent in the Spartan Race poses for a picture after the event in Calgary.
Athletes brave tough conditions in obstacle race TRE VOR CR AWLEY Sports Editor
Cranbrook athletes fought through muddy obstacles designed to test their endurance and triumphed at the Spartan Race in Calgary on August 18th.
Lisa Johnson, a trainer with Train Hard, Live Easy, recruited 26 clients to run the race with her, all of whom completed by crossing the finish line. “We were really proud of them,” John-
son said. “Most of them have never tried anything like that in their lives before, some of them have never done a run or a race before.” The 26 participants had to battle between 12-15 different obstacles
which included running chest-deep through puddles of mud, crawling a distance under barbed wire and climbing eight-foot walls.
See SPARTAN , Page 9
It’s no secret that the Kootenay Ice will be a younger squad this year, with as many as seven or eight 1995- or 1996-born players on the roster, according to GM Jeff Chynoweth. Those young guns will be doing everything they can to earn a spot on the roster when training camp begins on Wednesday. Luke Philp, Tanner Faith, and Jesse WoodSchatz all spent time with the Ice last year as call ups and will be looking to become permanent additions this year. Other noteable names include Collin Shirley, Kootenay’s firstrounder in the 2011 draft, and Matt Murray, a defenseman taken
Wednesday, August 29 9:15 am – 10:30 am — Prospect Session 10:45 am – 12:00 pm — Veterans Practice 2:00 pm – 3:00 pm — Goalies Session 3:30 pm – 5:30 pm — Prospect Session Thursday, August 30 9:15 am - 10:30 am — Team Blue Practice 11:00 am – 1:00 pm — Team White vs. Team Black 5:00 pm - 6:15 pm — Team White Practice 6:45 pm – 8:45 pm — Team Blue vs. Team Black Friday, August 31 9:00 am - 10:15 am — Team Black Practice 10:45 am – 12:45 pm — Team Blue vs. Team White 3:00 pm - 4:00 pm — Goaltenders Specialty Session 6:00 pm – 8:00 pm — Team Black vs. Team Blue Saturday, September 1 9:00 am – 11:00 am — Team White vs. Team Black 2:30 pm – 4:30 pm — Team Blue vs. Team White Sunday, September 2 12:00 pm – 2:30 pm — United Way Intrasquad Game two rounds later. Roughly 64 skaters will be making an appearance at camp, as
intrasquad games will feature teams comprised of veterans and prospects.
daily townsman / daily bulletin
Sports
NHL talks set to resume Chris Johnston Canadian Press
The battery of lawyers and sprawling negotiating committees are being relegated to the sidelines. As the NHL’s collective bargaining talks resume in New York on Tuesday, they’ll do so with only four men at the table: NHL commissioner Gary Bettman and his deputy, Bill Daly, on one side; NHL Players’ Association executive director Donald Fehr and his top assistant, Steve Fehr, on the other. “Both sides agree that this, at this point in time, might be a productive way for us to try and get some traction,” Bettman said when negotiations broke last week. There’s been very little evidence of traction over the last two months. While the parties have met face-to-face every week since the end of June, they’ve made very little headway on the framework that will shape the next agreement. That prompted the first small session with just Bettman, Daly and the Fehrs in Toronto last week, and led to the scheduling of another one with the talks shifting back to New York. The sides are in need of anything that might encourage progress with a Sept. 15 deadline looming for a lockout. “When you get into discussions like this sometimes things can become more or less cumbersome depending on the nature of the group and what you’re
NEW YORK - Olympic gold medallist Andy Murray overcame early breaks in the first two sets Monday to win his first-round U.S. Open match 6-2, 6-4, 6-1 over Alex Bogomolov Jr. of Russia. The third-seeded Murray won the final
THE CANADIAN PRESS/Chris Young
Gary Bettman (left) Commissioner of the NHL and Bill Daly, Deputy Commissioner and chief legal officer of the NHL, will resume negotiations with Donald Fehr and the NHLPA on Tuesday. talking about,” said son’s revenues, every Donald Fehr. “And, you percentage point lost find a way to satisfy ev- would cost the players erybody’s comfort level $33 million. After caand go on. If you try it pitulating in the last one way and that round of negotiations doesn’t really work you and hiring Fehr to lead go try it another way. them in this one, that “If that doesn’t work group appears ready to you try it a third way.” fight against significant The biggivebacks. gest issue In fact, holding up “Hopefully we’ll be Fehr detalks is find- productive when we clared last ing agreeweek that ment on get to it. We have a “the players how the afraid lot to do. I have aren’t league’s revof a locke n u e s always believed that out.” should be For an there is enough agreement split up. time.” Players reto be made, ceived 57 something Donald Fehr per cent will have to under the give. Bettexpiring man has CBA and the league made it clear that he wants to see that num- believes the owners are ber reduced consider- paying out too much ably. money. The NHL’s initial “The players have offer involved cutting done very well under the amount to 43 per this deal,” said Bettcent, although it has man. “The average salindicated a willingness ary has gone from $1.45 to negotiate off that million (in 2005-06) to number. $2.45 million, and I Based on last sea- think if given their dru-
Continued from page 8 event based in Vancouver—with a few clients last year. “We had a hoot and thought it was fun and so we decided, after we looked at a few races, saw Spartan and saw that it was in Calgary nice and close,” Johnson said. “We talked to our clients and just said we thought they could do it.”
Johnson said the event was an easy pitch, as the pictures from Warrior Dash seemed to get her clients fired up. “After they saw the pictures and we told them about crawling through mud and jumping over fire and stuff like that, it kind of got their attention.” These racers weren’t greenhorns to pushing their physical limits as Johnson had been training some for as long as six months prior to the event. “These guys are pretty used to hard training
thers - and they’ve said publicly - they’d be happy to keep playing under this deal even while we negotiate. ... “My sense is that they prefer to keep things the way they are, and so that slows up the process.” The sides have looked like competing hockey teams at the conclusion of previous negotiating sessions, with the number of well-dressed attendees often unable to fit together in one elevator. The gathering will be decidedly smaller on Tuesday as the leaders of the NHL and NHLPA try to push talks in a positive direction. “Hopefully we’ll be productive when we get to it,” said Fehr. “We have a lot to do. I have always believed that there is enough time. “If there is a mutual will to do that, I still believe there is enough time to do that before the expiration of the contract.”
so we just added some more strength stuff like pull ups, box jumps, power moves and sprinting,” said Johnson. Johnson is already planning on organizing another trip to a Spartan Race in Kalispell as more people have come up to her expressing interest in participating in obstacle racing. She is also planning on taking a few of her more hardcore clients to Tough Mudder, a longer and more extreme obstacle race based in Whistler.
Page 9
Gold medallist Andy Murray sharp in first win at US Open Associated Press
Tough obstacles don’t stop local racers All the challenges the racers had to face were spread out over a fivekilometre course, according to Johnson. Each Cranbrook athlete had to compete with 2,225 other racers in the event, which was completed—on average—in under an hour. Johnson got the idea after going to Warrior Dash—a similar type of
tuesday, august 28, 2012
five games of the first set and the last four games of the second after falling behind early to the 73rd-ranked Bogomolov. Murray, who won the gold in his home country earlier this year, is trying to become the first man to win the Olympics and the U.S.
Open in the same year. He finished with seven aces and 46 winners as he wore down Bogomolov, who was born in Moscow but moved to Miami and competed as an American until this year, when he switched to play for Russia in the Davis Cup.
Defending champ Stosur starts US Open with straight-set win Rachel Cohen Associated Press
NEW YORK - Back at the site of her greatest victory, Samantha Stosur looked like a champion again, not the player who has often struggled this year. The Australian began the defence of her U.S. Open title Monday with a dominant win, needing 51 minutes to beat 64th-ranked Petra Martic 6-1, 6-1 in the tour-
nament’s first match at Arthur Ashe Stadium before rain suspended play. The last time Stosur played on this court, she stunned Serena Williams in the 2011 final at Flushing Meadows for her first Grand Slam title. But in so many ways, that 6-2, 6-3 victory was starting to feel as if it happened much more than a year ago. In 2012, Stosur had
lost in the first round in front of the home fans at the Australian Open. She lost in the second round at Wimbledon, then again in the first round at the London Olympics. Sandwiched in between, she made a run to the semifinals of the French Open, but fell apart by committing 21 unforced errors in the third set of her loss to Sara Errani.
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ARIES (March 21-April 19) You might want to think carefully about someone’s lack of warmth and generally irritating personality. Let go of this observation in order to avoid getting into an argument. Deal with financial matters directly, but do not expect easy agreements. Tonight: Where your friends are. TAURUS (April 20-May 20) Move forward and read between the lines with an associate who seems to be holding back. Do not start up or play into a combative partner’s beliefs. This person is bound and determined to have others agree with his or her views, even to the point of nearly being a bully. Tonight: A force to be dealt with. GEMINI (May 21-June 20) Reach out to others, yet be fully aware that your charm might not work. Instead, use sincerity to get better results. Even when you’re stressed, you can count on authenticity being effective. You are building a better network and understanding others’ needs as
well. Tonight: Surround yourself with music. CANCER (June 21-July 22) Understand that you can’t do anything to move others into your way of thinking. Remember, you can control no one. Though this might be a depressing thought, keep pushing to find a solution. It is yours to have. Tonight: Let your hair down. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Your intentions might be right on; however, others have their own agendas. You easily are distracted, as you tend to be more interested in what others are up to. Do not let your frustration get the best of you. Maybe you can squeeze everything in. Tonight: Sort through different ideas. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) You might want to focus on your ideas and how to make them come to life. Many of you will enjoy yourselves so much that you won’t notice anything else. Do not let your temper get out of control. Employ self-discipline to keep your finances under control. Tonight: All smiles. LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22)
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Tension builds, no matter what you do. Fatigue marks your perspective. In fact, you could be too tired to jump on the bandwagon in order to enjoy what is going on. You might want to give someone more support, but you also need to detach from a personal situation. Tonight: Lighten up. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21) Use the morning, when you seem more verbal or direct. In the afternoon, you might become befuddled by a personal matter, or simply not want to use self-discipline. A conflict could emerge from out of nowhere, and quite suddenly at that. Tonight: Head home. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21) Opportunities appear if you simply answer your phone, open your email or respond to the knock at your door. Be careful if you find your anger rising. You might want to understand what is going on within yourself. Slow down, and avoid saying “yes” to the first invitation. Tonight: Out and about. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) Use the early part of the day to the max. You could discover that your appraisal of a financial matter is
off. You might be really uncomfortable with what you hear about the situation. A friend pushes for what he or she wants. Tonight: Temper, temper. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18) If you discover that someone is being unresponsive, try to get him or her to open up. Be sure to honor this person’s mood, though, and say something appropriately nice yet reserved. Let the other party come forward when he or she is ready. Tonight: Detach from someone’s anger. PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20) Make an important call first thing in the morning. You might want to maintain more distance from others as the day goes on. Someone could see you as provocative, or maybe it’s the other way around. Do not become a victim of impulse. Tonight: Not to be found. BORN TODAY Writer Johann Wolfgang von Goethe (1749), actor Jack Black (1969), singer LeAnn Rimes (1982) ***
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Annie’s Mailbox by Kathy Mitchell and Marcy Sugar Dear Annie: My 81-year-old mother lives alone, drives her own car and manages her own finances. Between savings, retirement income and inheritance, she is well fixed. What worries me is that Mom has been enrolled in ballroom dance lessons for several years. These lessons are exorbitantly expensive, costing in the six figures annually. There are multiple lessons each week, as well as competition trips. The instructors, managers and owners of the club flatter Mom and tell her what a wonderful dancer she is. But, Annie, I’ve seen her performances, and she looks lost, doesn’t remember the steps and has no clue what to do next. I believe this dance studio is taking advantage of her. I spoke to management, but they said it’s none of my business. Mom used to be quite frugal, and I worry that she no longer has the judgment to manage her money. Yet I can’t do anything about it other than wring my hands. She won’t listen to a word I say. Mom never visits the grandchildren. She has no interest in family activities and has abandoned the things she used to do before she discovered dancing. She had a small stroke two years ago, and her doctor has made numerous appointments with a neurologist, but she always finds a reason to cancel. If Mom burns through her resources, I will not have the means to help when she can no longer live independently. I am hurt that she lies to me when all I want is to see that she is provided for. -- Only Child in Music City Dear Music City: We’re glad Mom enjoys her dance lessons, and it’s good exercise, but it sounds as if this dance studio may be guilty of financial abuse. Call the Better Business Bureau in your city and find out whether complaints have been registered. Also contact the National Center on Elder Abuse (ncea.aoa.gov) and the Eldercare Locator (1-800-677-1116) and ask for assistance. Then, when your mother has her next doctor’s appointment, ask if you can go along. Alert the doctor’s office in advance, and request a more extensive exam. Dear Annie: My father-in-law loves going to yard sales and likes to buy sale items for our home and our four sons. The problem is that we have limited space and don’t need all this junk. The toys tend to have a missing part or be partially broken, and the clothes have stains or holes. My husband wants to simply accept the items because my father-in-law would otherwise be offended. But it upsets me that they give us so many used items. We just got back from a weeklong visit and were barraged with bags of these things. -- Tired of Used Stuff Dear Tired: Even used junk is a gift that requires a “thank you.” Please accept your father-in-law’s yard sale items with graciousness. He means well. Then throw them away as soon as you see a garbage can, give them to charity, fuse them into a garden sculpture or do whatever else you wish with them. Dear Annie: “Frustrated in the Midwest,” who doesn’t want her parents to attend her children’s school events, comes across as very self-absorbed. I am 63 and was reared in a generation where we enjoyed our families. We included our parents in our lives. I cherish the memories of them sharing our children’s activities. I have first-hand knowledge of this “new generation” attitude. My oldest son and daughter-in-law have banned me from seeing my grandchildren. My youngest daughter-in-law is downright rude to me. “Family time” is a thing of the past. If a Grandma wants to show love and concern, she is meddling. Merely calling to see if everyone is OK is intrusive. My generation will be passing away soon, and sadly, these kids will wake up too late, if at all. -- One Frustrated Grandma Annie’s Mailbox is written by Kathy Mitchell and Marcy Sugar, longtime editors of the Ann Landers column. Please email your questions to anniesmailbox@comcast.net, or write to: Annie’s Mailbox, c/o Creators Syndicate, 737 3rd Street, Hermosa Beach, CA 90254. To find out more about Annie’s Mailbox and read features by other Creators Syndicate writers and cartoonists, visit the Creators Syndicate Web page at www.creators.com. COPYRIGHT 2012 CREATORS.COM
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tuesday, august 28, 2012
daily townsman / daily bulletin
NEWS
Quebec student protesters back to action, not class
Andy Bl atchford and Jonathan Montpetit Canadian Press
MONTREAL — The calm of summer was shattered Monday with the return of school to Quebec universities, where some classes were disrupted as protesters disobeyed the back-to-school law. Chaotic scenes, reminiscent of those seen across the province in the spring, suddenly flared up at two Montreal universities after a relatively quiet summer. The province passed an emergency law, known as Bill 78, to set stiff fines for people who prevent students from attending class. A tumultuous standoff erupted in the corridors of Universite de Montreal between security guards and masked protesters. The demonstrators were trying to spring seven of their comrades who had been detained by officials in a fourth-floor classroom. Two protesters, their faces covered with clothing, warned a news photographer at the school that he had better not try taking pictures of them: ``Be careful,’’ a woman told him. ``They’re going to take care of you.’’ Meanwhile, across town, masked demonstrators entered Universite du Quebec a Montreal and disrupted classes. Protesters also blocked cameras and one person taunted a journalist. ``It’s voyeurism,’’ the demonstrator muttered at the reporter. The vast majority of Quebec’s students have voted to end their strikes, and the student unrest has hardly been an issue in the current provincial election campaign. The return to junior college in recent
THE CANADIAN PRESS/Paul Chiasson
Masked demonstrators march through the hallways of the Universite de Montreal as they block the entrance to classrooms Monday, August 27, 2012 in Montreal. Some classes are being disrupted during the return to school of Quebec universities as students disobey the back-to-school law. weeks was peaceful, but Monday’s events, as universities reopened, were a flashback to events that captured international attention last spring. During the showdown at Universite de Montreal, lines of guards stood shoulder to shoulder to block a hallway. They kept a couple of dozen protesters, most wearing masks, from getting close to the classroom where detained demonstrators were being held. The guards faced a barrage of shouts and a couple of plastic garbage cans were
tossed in their direction. At one point, the protesters held a vote about whether to charge the line of guards. The group decided against rushing the line after not enough people in the huddle raised their hands in agreement. Moments later, word spread that riot police had entered the building. The protesters scattered, knocking over garbage cans and chairs in their wake. A fire alarm was also pulled, its sound wailing even into classrooms in departments not involved in the conflict.
Senator’s wife distraught, witness says C ANADIAN PRESS
SASKATOON — A passenger says a senator’s wife charged with causing a disturbance on a flight was upset her husband was experiencing tightness in his chest, but she wasn’t threatening. Scott Wright, a former ambulance attendant, said he volunteered last Thursday when the crew on the Ottawa to Saskatoon flight asked for anyone with medical experience to help Sen. Rod Zimmer, who wasn’t feeling well. He said Zimmer’s wife, Maygan Sensenberger, 23, was emotionally distraught by her husband’s condition. Wright said Zimmer, 69, started feeling better after he was given some oxygen, but Sensenberger was still upset and the couple were fighting with each other over Zimmer’s condition. ``I never at any time felt threatened,’’ Wright said Monday. ``And all of the frustration she expressed while I was there was targeted around the medical condition and the health of her husband.’’ Sensenberger was charged with endangering the safety of the aircraft and causing a disturbance. On Monday, a Saskatoon provincial court judge released her on the condition that she have no contact with her husband. Zimmer sat in the front row of the courtroom during the hearing. Wright said he and several other passengers were doing their best to help. He
said the crew asked him if he believed they needed to land early, but when Zimmer began to feel better, the decision was made to continue on to Saskatoon. ``She saw us doing the primary work so she was continuing to speak out. She was continuing to say, ‘What’s happening? Is he OK? Tell me he’s going to be OK. Why aren’t you doing more? Why aren’t you doing something?’’’ Wright said. ``She did pause to yell at one or two of the other passengers who were peering over or trying to see what was going on,’’ he continued. ``There was the odd profanity offered.’’
No one was injured in the incident and police say the safety of the aircraft was not compromised. Wright said the only physical conflict that he saw was between Sensenberger and Zimmer when he was trying to calm her down, although he said he didn’t see anything that may have transpired before he was asked to help out. ``The only grabbing and pushing I saw was between her and him as he was trying to calm her and nudge the hand over and settle her down. I saw none with other passengers. I didn’t see any with passengers or airline personnel,’’ Wright said.
B.C. mountie charged in 2011 pedestrian death C ANADIAN PRESS
VANCOUVER — A White Rock, B.C., Mountie whose actions allegedly led to the death of a pedestrian last year faces criminal charges following an investigation by the Vancouver Police Department. The department says Const. David Bickle failed to follow guidelines regarding police pursuits and is charged with dangerous driving causing death and bodily harm. A news release from the department
says that just before 10 p.m. on May 18, 2011, Bickle allegedly continued pursuing a driver who refused to stop and ultimately collided with another vehicle. The driver then went through a red light and struck a 56-year-old woman who died of her injuries. In February, the driver pleaded guilty to four charges and is scheduled to be sentenced in September. Immediately after the collision, the RCMP asked Vancouver Police to investigate Bickle’s role in the incident.
B.C. Briefs
Hearing begins in Delta teen murder C ANADIAN PRESS
SURREY, B.C. — A young man accused of murdering a 15-yearold girl in a Vancouverarea park two years ago has started a preliminary inquiry ahead of his trial. The 19-year-old man, who cannot be named because he was 17 at the time of the alleged crime, is charged in the death of Laura Szendrei. Szendrei was beaten at a park in Delta, south of Vancouver, in September 2010, and the accused was charged with murder
the following February. The teen appeared in court in Surrey today, at times looking down as the Crown outlined its case against him, details of which are banned from publication. The girl’s parents were in court for the start of the hearing, and at one point Szendrei’s father walked out in tears. Police have said Szendrei was on her way to meet some friends, who ran to her when they heard her screams.
Hells Angels raid nets drug charges C ANADIAN PRESS
VANCOUVER — A senior member of the Hells Angels motorcycle gang who was acquitted of drug charges four years ago has been charged with drug trafficking and conspiracy to import cocaine. RCMP say David Giles, vice president of the Angels Kelowna chapter, as well as six others, were arrested on the weekend after a 20-month investigation that spanned several countries, including Mexico and Panama. Police say searches were conducted in
Kelowna, Osoyoos and the Lower Mainland on Saturday, and Giles was arrested at a Burnaby casino. Mounties say they seized assault rifles, handguns, and $4 million in cash during the searches. In 2008, Giles was found not guilty of possessing cocaine, but his two co-accused each received jail sentences after police seized cocaine in several locations as part of a crackdown on the motorcycle club. Giles is expected to make a court appearance in Vancouver today. Elaine Marie Pelletier 1945 - 2012
It is with great sorrow that the family of Elaine Marie Pelletier announces her passing on Thursday, August 23, 2012 in Cranbrook, British Columbia at 67 years of age. Elaine was born on February 6, 1945 in Kimberley, British Columbia She was a good friend to many who loved to laugh and was cherished by all who knew her. She leaves to mourn her passing her loving husband Pete Pelletier; children Cindy Jones, Cara Picton (Chris Nakahara), Deb Pelletier, Sandi (Dick) Phillips, Linda Pelletier (Christopher Harvey) and Richard Pelletier; grandchildren Shawn, Nicole, Kristen, Jordan, Sam, Colleen, Jennifer, Shelby, Taylor and Tianna; brother Robert (Beatrice) Krottner and sister Irene (John) Dee. She was predeceased by her first husband Gabe Picton, father George Krottner, mother Eugenia Krottner, Josephine Taylor and brother Ted Krottner. A memorial service for Elaine will be held on Tuesday, August 28, 2012 at 2:00 pm at the Wasa Community Hall. In lieu of flowers, donations in Elaine’s honour can be made to the: Canadian Cancer Society, 19 - 9th Avenue South, Cranbrook, British Columbia, V1C 2L9. Arrangements entrusted to McPherson Funeral Service. Condolences for the family can be offered at: www.mcphersonfh.com
DAILY TOWNSMAN/DAILY BULLETIN
Tuesday, August 28, 2012
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Information
Information
Coming Events WIN A TRIP TO CANCUN Join us - World Ventures Travel - on Wednesdays from 7:00pm until 8:00pm at the Gasthaus in Kimberleryâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Platzl. For fun and information on world travel! For more information, call Rob (250)520-0180.
Have your say. Get Paid.
Are you r expecting o a ve a h do you newborn at home?
Voice your opinion on issues that matter and receive cash incentives for doing so.
Also, participate to win one of 10 prizes totalling $1000! www.yourinsights.ca
Personals FANTASY GIRLS New location Quiet, clean, comfortable.
Lets You Live Life. Information Dee & Chris Johnson are proud to announce the
Weâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;d like to welcome your new baby with various gifts and local information! Cranbrook and Kimberley 250-426-1015
www. welcome wagon.ca
Opening of
Trade Your Treasures
Chanel:24 Asian Filipino Bentley:22 New girls coming soon. (250)421-6153 GET PAID To lose weight. $5,000 For Your Success Story. Personal Image TV Show. Call to qualify: 1-888-7717607. AVA@mertontv.ca www.mertontv.ca. GIRL NEXT DOOR. Pretty Amy - 30â&#x20AC;&#x2122;s, independent, private, sweetie pie, fit & curvy.
CONSIGNMENT
Sept. 4, 2012 Tues-Sat. 10am-5pm Now accepting
Time guarantee.
-ENS s ,ADIES s #HILDREN #LOTHING IN GOOD CONDITION
Trade Your Treasures #2 101 - 7th Ave. S., Cranbrook
Obituaries
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Obituaries
Granite & Bronze Memorials, Dedication Plaques, Benches, Memorial Walls, Gravesite Restorations, Sales & Installations IN-HOME CONSULTATION OR VISIT OUR SHOWROOM
6379 HIGHWAY 95A TA TA CREEK, B.C. 1-800-477-9996
www.kootenaymonument.ca
End of Life? Bereaved? May We Help?
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*Paris - Tall, slim, beautiful playmate-23 *Mia- Exotic, tanned beauty, slim-30 *Crystal-Pretty brunette, legs for days-25 (250)417-2800 in/out calls daily Hiring MEET SINGLES right now! No paid operators, just real people like you. Browse greetings, exchange messages and connect live. Try it free. Call now 1-888-744-3699 PLAYFUL, SEXY, sweet, seductive 24 year old. Paige (778)963-0356
Travel VISITING ARIZONA for the Winter? Meridian RV Resort. Good Sam-Trailer Life Top 100 RV Resorts in America. Check us out at: www.meridianrvresort.com or call 1-866-770-0080.
Children Daycare Centers FULL-TIME or part-time spot available in Registered Daycare for children aged 0-5years. Please call (250)581-1328
Lost & Found LOST. BLACK MALE Neutered cat-missing from Highlands area. Ocho is very friendly. Black with small white marking on chest, 1.5 yrs old, slender build, has a kink in top of tail(can only be felt, not seen.) MUCH loved and desperately missed! Please call (250)417-7055
Employment Automotive 1999 Toyota 4 runner SR5, one owner, great condition, $5500 Call 250-342-5309
LEARN FROM Home. Earn from home. Medical Transcriptionists are in demand. Lots of jobs! Enroll today for less than $95 a month. 1-800-466-1535. www.canscribe.com admissions@canscribe.com
Kootenay Monument Installations
96*20,: 3(> J V Y W V Y H [ P V U
KOOTENAYâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;S BEST ESCORTS *For your safety and comfort call the best. *Quality and V.I.P Service Guarantee *Licensed studio
Timeshare CANCEL YOUR Timeshare. No risk program. Stop mortgage and maintenance Payments today. 100% Money back guarantee. Free consultation. Call us now. We can help! 1-888-356-5248.
MEET SINGLES right now! No paid operators, just real people like you. Browse greetings, exchange messages and connect live. Try it free. Call now 1-888-744-3699
Sympathy & Understanding 1885 Warren Avenue Kimberley, BC V1A 1R9 250-427-7221 www.mcphersonfh.com
Personals
Call (250)421-6124
Obituaries
2200 - 2nd Street South Cranbrook, BC V1C 1E1 250-426-3132
Drop off your photo and name(s) of subject at the Cranbrook Townsman or Kimberley Bulletin ofďŹ ce or email your high-resolution jpeg to bulletinprod@ cyberlink.ca. Photographs will appear in the order they are received.
Education/Trade Schools
Hot summer specials.
250-417-2019
Ph: 250.426.6006 Fx: 250.426.6005 2104D 2nd Street S. Cranbrook, BC theďŹ&#x201A;owerpot@shaw.ca
In times of grief, these caring professionals are here to serve and comfort your family.
PAGE 13
Help Wanted
Help Wanted
Education/Trade Schools
COMMERCIAL BEEKEEPING Certificate Program. GPRC Fairview Campus, Alberta. Extensive study of beekeeping, Queen rearing and honey business. Paid work experience. Affordable on-campus residences. Starts January 7, 2013. 1-780-835-6630; www.gprc.ab.ca/fairview
TRAIN TO Be an Apartment/Condominium Manager at home! We have jobs across Canada. Thousands of graduates working. 31 years of success! Government certified. www.RMTI.ca or 1-800-6658339, 604-681-5456.
Help Wanted BANNISTER HONDA Maintenance Technician Looking for a motivated, reliable, quality person to perform maintenance on Honda and other manufacture vehicles. Please apply with drivers license and drivers abstract. Attn: Grant Kitzman, 6425-Hwy 97N, Vernon, B.C. 250-545-0531 gkitzman@bannisterhonda.com BUSY RESTAURANT hiring full and part-time staff. Experienced only. Submit resume to Box â&#x20AC;&#x2DC;Aâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;, c/o Cranbrook Daily Townsman, 822 Cranbrook St. N., Cranbrook BC., V1C 7C3.
DOMINOS PIZZA is now hiring delivery drivers and in-store personnel. Earn $12$15/hr. Paid cash daily. Please apply to 1000B, Cranbrook St. N.
Reporter Full Time The Free Press, Fernie, BC The Free Press newspaper has an immediate opening for a full time reporter. We are looking for someone with a journalism degree/ diploma and at least one year of newspaper experience. The qualiď&#x192;&#x17E;ed applicant must have experience with Indesign and Photoshop and will be expected to work independently, reporting to the Editor. We are seeking that true journalist who loves to cover everything from the seniorsâ&#x20AC;&#x2122; bake sale and city council to junior B hockey and school plays. The reporter is expected to work ď&#x192;&#x;exible hours, including weekends, and must own a car and be prepared to travel across the Elk Valley. The successful candidate will receive a very competitive salary, car allowance, and an excellent beneď&#x192;&#x17E;t package. Black Press has over 170 community newspapers across Canada and the United States and for the proven candidate the opportunities are endless. If you have an interest in the community, excellent writing skills and experience in journalism, and the ability to work to strict deadlines, please send a cover letter, resume, and examples of your writing and photography work to: Angela Treharne Editor The Free Press 342 Second Avenue Box 2350 Fernie, BC V0B 1M0 Fax: (250) 423-3110 Email: editor@thefreepress.ca Only those selected for interview will receive a response.
Weâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;re on the net at www.bcclassiďŹ ed.com
PAGE 14
DAILY TOWNSMAN/DAILY BULLETIN
Tuesday, August 28, 2012
Employment
Employment
Help Wanted
Help Wanted
FULL-TIME/PART-TIME at Kimberleys Regalane Bowling Centre. Please apply between 6:30 and 9:00pm. For further questions, please call (250)427-2722 evenings or (250)427-0183 days.
LOCAL COMPANY seeking skilled trades people in the Cranbrook area for the following full-time positions: -Commercial/Transport Mechanic -Welder/Fabricator -Millwright Competitive salary and benefit package, weekday shifts. Submit resume with references to: Box ‘E’, Cranbrook Daily Townsman, 822 Cranbrook St. N., Cranbrook, BC. V1C 7C3
Business/Office Service
NiRA RESOURCE
MANAGEMENT INC. is looking for the following positions: Machinists,Planners with Piping experience,Carpenters,Pipefitters,Masons, Scaffolders,Equipment Operators,Millwrights, Welders,Labourers, Safety Officers. We encourage you to apply in confidence to info@niraresources.com with your resume, identifying the position title in the subject line. NiRA clients offer a comprehensive and competitive salary and benefits program. Only those candidates who meet our qualifications will be contacted for an interview.
Business/Office Service
Employment
Employment
Services
Help Wanted
Trades, Technical
WE require a semi retired couple for the position of a live on site manager for a mini storage. Require knowledge of Simply Accounting program and capable of some minor repairs and maintenance. Lovely 1200 sq ft apartment is supplied as part of the package. Interested parties please contract Bob or Darlene @250426-7366
We’re on the net at www.bcclassified.com
Trades, Technical ALBERTA BASED Company looking for qualified & experienced: Equipment Operators, Mulcher, Feller Buncher & Processor Operators. Out of town & camp work. Safety tickets & drivers abstract required. Email resume: jobs@commandequipment.com Fax 780-488-3002.
Business/Office Service
SERVICES GUIDE Contact these business for all your service needs!
• DRILLERS • BLASTERS • POWDERMEN • CONCRETE LABOURERS VK MASON Local Union Underground Contractor is seeking experienced labor for remote camp job near Kitimat. Looking to hire immediately! Please contact Ashley Halden at 778-724-2500 or ashley.halden@ vkmason.ca Journeyman Mechanic Do you love the outdoors? OK Tire in Terrace, B.C. NOW HIRING! Excellent renumeration for successful applicant. Fax resume to (1)-250-635-5367 Attn. General Manager or Email: momack@citywest.ca QUALITY CONTROL Person experienced with Piping & Structural Welding needed for a growing Northern Company. Competitive wages & benefits. Please email resume to: info@torqueindustr ial.com. Fax 250-775-6227 or apply online: www.torqueindustrial.com
Services
Health Products CASH BACK- $10 for every pound you lose. Lose weight quickly and safely and keep it off, results guaranteed! Call Herbal Magic today! 1-800854-5176.
To advertise using our “SERVICES GUIDE” in the Cranbrook Daily Townsman, Kimberley Daily Bulletin and The Valley, call us at 250-426-5201, ext. 202.
A & A ELECTRIC “At your Service” Licensed and Bonded We specialize in service work and service upgrades. Call for a quote. (250)427-7819 (250)581-1200
BEAR NECESSITIES HOME WATCH SERVICE Going on holiday & need your home checked on? Lawn mowing, watering, p/u mail, cat care & more. BONDED & INSURED For Peace of Mind Home Vacancy. (250)464-9900 www.thebearnecessities.ca
CONCRETE WORKS!! All aspects of concrete work done from start to finish. Any finish available (stamped, polished, etc.) Mini Excavator and Dump Truck Service. No job too big or too small. For free quotes call Jason (250)464-5595
CUSTOM CLADDING No More Painting Custom cladding is a Maintenance free Pre-coloured Aluminum Product, formed & fit to beautify & protect the exposed wood on your home, for years to come.
DUSTAY CONSTRUCTION LTD Canadian Home Builders Association Award Winning Home Builder Available for your custom home and renovation needs. You dream it, we build it! www.dustayconstruction.com (250)489-6211
KEN THE HANDYMAN (Ken Bettin)
Since 1997 as your Cranbrook Renovation Specialist in Bathrooms, Hardwood, Floors, Tiles, Basements, Decks & More. ph:(250)417-0059 cell: (250)421-0372 email: fkbetken@telus.net
LEIMAN
CUSTOM HOMES IS YOUR COMPUTER SLUGGISH OR HAVING PROBLEMS? It’s time for a tune-up! Why unplug everything, send away & wait when SuperDave comes into your home? Specializes in: *Virus/Spyware Removal, *Troubleshooting, *Installations, *PC Purchase Consulting. SuperDave offers affordable, superior service & most importantly; Honesty. SuperDave works Saturdays & evenings too!
AND RENOVATIONS
Established custom builder for over 30 years. Certified Journeyman Carpenters Reliable Quotes Member of the new home warranty program. www.leimanhomes.ca
Call SuperDave (250)421-4044
Kevin 250-421-0110 Krister 250-919-1777
www.superdave consulting.ca
TIP TOP CHIMNEY
Join an elite preschool setting. The Little Acorn is offering limited spots for September registration. Ages 32 months to Kindergarten. Subsidies welcome. Call Shirley Jowsey or Doreen Lethbridge (250)426-4318.
-Window & door frames. -Patio & deck, beams/ columns/stairs. -Wood trims & fascia. -Decorative’s & shutters. -Functional vents. -Over 20 colours to choose from.
R.BOCK ELECTRICAL
Call Ken (250)919-2566. kmtapp@shaw.ca.
*Licensed*Bonded*Insured*
Contractors welcome.
Residential, Commercial Service Work No Job Too Small! (250)421-0175
For reliable, quality electrical work
SERVICES
“Sweeping the Kootenay’s Clean”
Chimney Sweeping Fireplace & Woodstove Servicing Visual Inspections and Installations Gutter Cleaning Available Call for Free Estimate from a W.E.T.T Certified Technician Richard Hedrich (250)919-3643 tiptopchimneys@gmail.com
Classifieds Get Results!
Financial Services DROWNING IN Debt? Helping Canadians 25 years. Lower payments by 30%, or cut debts 70% thru Settlements. Avoid bankruptcy! Free consultation. Toll Free 1 877-5563500 www.mydebtsolution.com M O N E Y P ROV I D E R . C O M $500 Loan and +. No Credit Refused. Fast, Easy, 100% Secure. 1-877-776-1660.
Legal Services CRIMINAL RECORD? Don’t let it block employment, travel, education, professional, certification, adoption, property rental opportunities. For peace of mind and a free consultation call 1-800-347-2540.
Classifieds Get Results!
Merchandise for Sale
Real Estate
Contractors
Furniture
For Sale By Owner
(*30
2 BEDS. 1 queen (1.5 yrs) and 1 king. Both in Perfect condition! $500./each. Please call Margaret (250)426-3222.
s #ONSTRUCTION s 2ENOVATIONS s 2OOlNG s $RYWALL LARGE OR SMALL s 3IDING s 3UNDECK #ONSTRUCTION s !LUMINUM 2AILINGS 7E WELCOME ANY RESTORATIONAL WORK
NO JOB TOO SMALL
Driveways & Parking Lots 1-888-670-0066
2 Bdrms, 2 baths, open concept. Windows on all sides makes this home bright. A motivated seller. Call for a viewing, agents welcome to show.
CALL
(250-489-3739)
421-1482
FREE ESTIMATES! CALL NOW!
322,500
$
CRANBROOK
POWER PAVING
FOR SALE BY OWNER
SERVING ALL THE KOOTENAYS Misc Services
Own one of Baker Hill’s nicest Heritage Homes. Lots of character, tastefully decorated. 3 bdrm + den, 2 bath, heated shop/garage. New windows, furnace, hw tank, wiring, plumbing, security system, sprinkler system, beautiful gardens and much much more. Must be seen to be appreciated.
DO YOU HAVE A special talent?
~Crafting~Quilting~Nails~ Catalogue Sales, etc. Calling all home based businesses. We have an opportunity to showcase your talents at very affordable prices. Let everyone in the Kootenays know what you have to offer and expand your customer base. Call Marion at (250)426-5201 ext 202 for all the details, then get ready for some new revenue!
Pets & Livestock
Feed & Hay HAY FOR Sale. Wycliffe; $125./ton; $32./bale-500lbs. 65% Alfalfa. (250)426-7668
We’re on the net at www.bcclassified.com
SALE! $2 When you book any classified ad into any of our East Kootenay papers, you can place the same ad into any additional paper for only t 5IF 'SFF 1SFTT 'FSOJF 250-423-4666
t $SBOCSPPL %BJMZ 5PXOTNBO 250-426-5201
t $SFTUPO 7BMMFZ "EWBODF 250-427-5333
BY OWNER
BLACKTOP NOW!
Classified
t ,JNCFSMFZ %BJMZ #VMMFUJO
FOR SALE
NOTICE
Super Summer
250-428-2266
Misc. for Sale
BUNGALOW
* per p
aper
t *OWFSNFSF 7BMMFZ &DIP 250-342-9216
t (PMEFO 4UBS 250-344-5251
t 5IF 7BMMFZ
349,900
$
232 10th Ave. S, Cranbrook, B.C. For viewing phone: 250-426-5745 or 250-919-5970. FOR RESTLESS or cramping legs. A fast acting remedy since 1981, sleep at night, proven for 31 years. Mon-Fri 8-4 EST 1-800-765-8660 www.allcalm.com
GOLD CREEK ACREAGE
MOVING SALE: Larger, likenew washing machine, beautiful coffee tables, area rugs, beautiful oak dining set, medium size wall unit, console T.V.,(in good working condition) and lots more. To arrange viewing, (250)426-2609
1500 sq. ft., 5 large bedrooms, 2½ baths, on 1 acre. Out of town taxes. New roof, upgraded septic system, 2 car - carport.
STEEL BUILDINGHuge Clearance Sale! 20x24 $4,658. 25x28 $5,295. 30x40 $7,790. 32x54 $10,600. 40x58 $14,895. 47x78 $19,838. One end wall included. Pioneer Steel 1-800-668-5422. www.pioneersteel.ca
419,500
$
(250) 919-1011
RV Sites Misc. Wanted Private Coin Collector Buying Collections, Silver Coins etc. Available now: 250-863-3082
AVORADO RESORT. Beautiful waterfront RV Resort. New Sites For Sale ($63,900). All season, full amenities, clubhouse & beach access. Co-op Resort w/Lifetime Ownership! www.avorado.com Call 250-228-3586.
Open Houses
Open Houses
OPEN HOUSE Wednesday August 29 6:00 to 7:00 pm 310 - 27th Ave. S. $329,900 3+1 bdrm, 2½ bath, new windows & doors, open floor plan. Beautifully landscaped, just under 1/2 acre lot. K215016 Jeannie Argatoff
250-426-5201
Est. 1898
Call us for more details!!!
BLUE SKY REALTY
250-426-8700 1111 Cranbrook St. N. www.blueskyrealty.ca www.mls.ca
Each office independently owned and operated.
DAILY TOWNSMAN/DAILY BULLETIN
Rentals Homes for Rent BEAUTIFUL NEWER HOUSE FOR RENT IN THE SLOCAN LAKE AREA. AVAILABLE OCT 1st • 4 Bedroom-2 Bath on 2 Acres • Red Mtn. Road above SILVERTON w/ Valhalla views + quiet privacy • N/S , Open to keeping animals • 10 min. drive to Slocan Lake and Village amenities • Storage, treehouses, good access all year round • Minimum 1 Yr Lease • W/D Hookups, F/S plus Earth -Woodstove • $1250 negotiable with proper care of house, land + gardens • References Required • Secure Income Essential • Serious Inquiries Only Call: 250-362-7681 or Mobile 250-231-2174 Email: monikas_2010@ hotmail.com
Tuesday, August 28, 2012
Rentals
Transportation
Transportation
Homes for Rent
Cars - Domestic
FOR RENT in Canal Flats. 3bedroom home with 2vehicle detached garage, N/S, small pet okay. Available Aug.1st, $900/mo plus utilities & DD. Phone (250) 349-5306 or (250)489-8389.
Suites, Upper FURNISHED STUDIO suite in Kimberley. $495./mo. Free laundry, internet, basic cable and utilities. Call Peter (250)908-0045. Sorry, no pets. Highland Property Management.
Transportation
Cars - Domestic 1987 PONTIAC Sunbird Convertible, 5-speed, 63,000km. Burgundy with black poweredtop. Cassette/CD player. $3,900. (250)489-8481
Small Ads work!
FOR SALE
1998 NEON SEDAN Auto, 155,000 km, winter tires inc.
1750
PAGE 15
Transportation
Transportation
Cars - Domestic
Motorcycles
Trucks & Vans
Trucks & Vans
2009 FORD FOCUS SES
1980 YAMAHA ‘Beluga’ scooter, 700 original km., $650. 1981 Yamaha 80, $550. Both good condition. (250)489-3766
1997 FORD F150 4X4
1998 DODGE quad cab, 4 x 4. Low kms. $5500./obo (250)426-3092
2 door, built in Bluetooth, fully loaded, 44,000 km
$
$
250.417.3164
250-417-3808
13,500 obo
W/CANOPY INCL.
Excellent Condition! One owner, 166,000 km Asking
7000
$
250.426.3586
Transportation
Boats MUST SELL!! 1992 16ft Vanguard open-bow ski boat. 85HP Yamaha motor. Lots of extras, fish finder, tow ropes, knee board, tube, air pump. First reasonable offer takes it. Asking $3000./obo (250)417-5813
Page 16
tuesday, august 28, 2012
daily townsman / daily bulletin
High Country Sportswear
Summer Clothing
40-70 % OFF Plus, up to 40% off summer footwear
and lots of other specials too!
HELD OVER UNTIL SEPT 8th! 11, 10th Ave S Cranbrook, BC M-S 9:30-5:30 Fri 9:30-6:30 250-489-4661
www.highcountrysports.ca