winter prep
tuesDAY
KIMBERLEY RCMP
scouts ready
POLICE REPORT
Kimberley’s Boy Scouts have their sandbag program underway.
october 9, 2012
Goings-on at the local police detachment last week. See LOCAL NEWS page 3
See LOCAL NEWS page 5
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One fatality in Canal Flats accident BULLETIN Staff
A Calgary mother of two has died after an accident near Canal Flats on Friday, October 5, 2012. The accident occurred at 11:10 a.m. on the Kootenay River Bridge at Canal Flats when a southbound commercial truck with an unloaded low bed trailer passed a northbound Subaru Legacy. The East Kootenay Integrated Road Safety Unit and the Columbia Valley RCMP report that a rock approximately 12 inches by five inches was thrown from the dual wheels of the truck and struck the Subaru. The rock entered the passenger side through the front windshield striking the 37 year old female in the head. She succumbed to her injuries says Cpl. T. Brannigan from EK IRSU. The woman was from Calgary and on vacation with her husband and two small children. Police stopped and seized the commercial vehicle some time later. Investigation shows that the rock appeared to have been lodged between the dual tires of the trailer. The driver of the truck has been released with no charges, though further investigation is pending.
Local advocate says immigration conversation required
Photo courtesy Platzl Pics
A split over the weekend for the Kimberley Dynamiters as they lost to the Golden Rockets on Friday and won in overtime on Saturday. Above, Dynamiter Jared Marchi breaks away with Rocket Carson George in hot pursuit.
Species at Risk
Wildsight to challenge Feds in court
CAROLYN GRANT bulletin@cyberlink.ca
ANNALEE GRANT bulletin@cyberlink.ca
Immigration law has been going through a series of changes in the past four years. In fact a new report published by the Maytree Foundation, says that from 2008 to July 1, 2012, the federal government has made changes to every aspect of immigration policy, including the way in which reform is undertaken, and more changes are proposed.
Wildsight has announced it will take the federal government to court over its failure to meet its legal obligations under the Species at Risk Act. “We strongly believe the government must act for species, and believe that the court challenge is the best means to get action as the government’s failure is longstanding,” said John Bergenske, executive
See IMMIGRATION , Page 3
director of Wildsight. “We sincerely hope that this will spur action.” The lawsuit states that 188 recovery plans for species are well overdue, and as many as 87 are more than five years over their due date. “The Species at Risk Act (SARA) requires that recovery strategies for endangered and threatened species be created within certain timeframes, to ensure timely action towards their recovery,” Bergenske said. Wildsight has partnered with the Sierra
Club BC, the David Suzuki Foundation, Greenpeace and the Wilderness Committee to bring the issue to the courts. The groups have selected four species – Southern mountain caribou, the Pacific humpback whale, the Nechako sturgeon and marbled murrelet – to base the lawsuit on. Those species were selected due to their potential endangerment from the proposed Northern Gateway Pipeline.
See WILDSIGHT, Page 4
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daily townsman / daily bulletin
Page 2 tuesday, october 9, 2012
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Facts & figures Preschoolers and kindergartners are most likely to start these fires, typically by playing with matches and lighters, and are most likely to die in them. In 2005-2009, children playing with fire started an estimated 56,300 fires that were reported to U.S. fire
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daily bulletin
Local NEWS
tuesday, october 9, 2012
Page 3
Report says national conversation needed From Page 1 The report’s authors, Naomi Alboim and Karen Cohl, are urging a national conversation on immigration saying all these changes could have a dramatic impact on both the social and economic fabric of Canada and how the country is perceived by potential immigrants from around the world. Shauna Jimenez who has worked with the group Friends of Burma sponsoring many immigrants to the East Kootenay and Kimberley, and has also worked in refugee camps in Asia, agrees with the Maytree report and says Canada is losing its reputation as a welcoming and compassionate country. Jimenez says the recent changes to federal immigration and refugee policy are horrendously heartless, cruel and callous, from a social justice perspective. “It is true that the changes have been coming so fast that it is difficulty for the average citizen to keep up and understand all the implications. We must be mindful that all of us, except for First Nations
People, come from a long line of immigrants and refugees to Canada.” Jimenez outlined some of the changes causing her the greatest concern. “It is now proposed that to be eligible for the Canadian citizenship test, a newcomer must have level 4 benchmark of English. “The new citizenship test is very difficult and results in many failed attempts. Many of our new families will never be able to attain level 4, with the current level of ESL instruction available to them. This will prevent them from ever becoming Citizens of Canada. Although they will work, buy groceries, send their children to school and contribute to this country for their entire lives, they will likely never have citizenship. “It is now proposed that permanent residents (those who do not have level 4 English, or cannot pass the increasingly difficult citizenship tests) be deported for minor crimes, such as shoplifting. Imagine living and working in Canada
for twenty or thirty years, only to be deported if your child takes a candy bar one day.. “Health care for privately sponsored refugees was recently cut, transferring the cost of their health care to the private citizens of Canada, or denying newcomers access to the medicines, treatments and prosthetics they desperately need. “The new super-visa for parents to visit Canada only works for the rich. Immigration is focused on bringing rich, educated immigrants to Canada while attempting to limit our compassion and commitment to refugees by putting caps on the number of refugees through the private sponsorship of refugees program. Churches across the nation have spoken out strongly against this control mechanism as it denies communities the right to determine how many refugees they chose to support and welcome. Physicians across the nation have spoken out strongly against the cuts to medical care for refugees.” And the question is,
RCMP Report CPL. CHRIS NEWEL For the Bulletin
Road Checks Over the years I’ve been involved in hundreds of road checks. I find them an effective way to interact with the motoring public and deal with infractions that otherwise might be missed through regular patrols. Of course you never know what you might find while conducting a check. Drugs, cash, weapons, outstanding warrants are just some of things found. Over the past few weeks a number of checks were conducted in Kimberley. One vehicle checked had an odour of marijuana. A search was conducted and a small quantity of marijuana was located. There are differing opinions on marijuana, but it is still illegal to possess, in addition you can’t drive while under the influence of marijuana. But want made this disturbing is the young infant asleep in the back seat. I don’t believe many parents would appreciate their child inhaling marihuana fumes. At another check the officer again found the odour of marijuana. Tests were conducted and the driver was under the influence and given a 24 hour
driving prohibition. He had just come for work, although he claimed to have smoked after hours. And just a few nights ago officers set up on highway 95A. The driver of the first vehicle checked had consumed alcohol. He supplied a breath sample and found to be under the limit so he was allowed to proceed. Very shortly after a vehicle was seen turning off just before the check, this raises huge suspicion. I don’t believe the driver knew the road looped around right to where the officers were set up. He was checked for sobriety and blew a fail, which is over the legal limit. He was served a 90 driving prohibition and his vehicle has been impounded for 30 days.
RAils to Trails vandalism Recently a number of gates have been torn off at the Rails to Trails road crossings. I have heard from a number of cyclists that they find these gates awkward. But tearing them off is not the way to deal with it. I suggest that you become involved with the trail committee if you would like to see changes. If anybody has information about this vandalism please contact the trail society or the Kimberley RCMP.
Jimenez says, with all the changes would your grandparents have been eligible to enter Canada? “I urge people to listen to the concerns of the physicians, the sponsors, the families and the churches of Canada. We need to support them when they speak out against these changes to immigration and refugee policy. How many of our Grandparents would get in to Canada today with these new regulations? How many arrived with perfect English or French and fat wallets? If we are grateful that our relatives were allowed into Canada, we are obliged Photo submitted to pay attention to what is going on with Immi- Kristi McRae, owner and operator of One Love Hot Yoga presents Kimberley’s gration and Refugee newest refugee family, the family of Pwe Say, with donations raised through policy today and speak her outdoor summer yoga classes. up against these changes. Once again, thanks to on his government’s imall the dedicated volun- inclusive communities es and funding cuts.” Kootenay Columbia migration policy but at teers and kind residents for newcomers, despite of the East Kootenay the increasing difficul- MP David Wilks (C) was press time had not rewho provide welcoming, ties due to policy chang- contacted for comment sponded.
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Page 4 tuesday, october 9, 2012
Blair is Back Cranbrook Physiotherapy Clinic (28-11 Ave. S. opposite to the RCMP station) is pleased to announce the return of Blair Farish to part-time active practice. Treatment is available for all WCB, ICBC and private paying patients, referred and non-referred.
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daily bulletin
Local NEWS
Wildsight challenges feds
From Page 1 “Southern mountain caribou were chosen as it is one of the key species at risk that the federal government has failed to implement a recovery program for,” Bergenske said. “The province has taken its own actions, but their program does not
include all the herds within the federal government’s Southern mountain caribou populations.” Bergenske said recovery strategies form a plan for a species at risk that includes habitat protection and actions. “An important first
Thank You The Harley Owners Group (H.O.G.) and the Salvation Army would like to thank the following for making the annual H.O.G./SalvatiOn army tOy run that was held on Saturday, September 15, 2012, a success. There was $800.00 raised plus a bunch of toys/gifts were collected, all of which was donated to the Salvation Army.
tHankS GO tO:
• All the Motorcycle Riders & Passengers who participated & donated;
• Others (non-riders/non-passengers) who made donations;
• Harley Davidson of the Kootenays;
• Jason for the Toy Run posters;
• Van Houtte Coffee for the coffee;
• Management & Staff of the Bull River Inn;
• Management & Staff of the Sullivan Hotel;
• Management & Staff of the Heritage Inn;
• Derek Kortschaga & B104 Radio
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step is mapping and designation of critical habitat,” he said. “The province has acted upon this locally, but within its own constraints.” For the caribou, the species has been on the list for a strategy for over five years, and Bergenske said it’s been far too long for action to go undone. “The requirement for a recovery strategy was a legislated requirement and has been overdue for over five years,” he said. The proposed Northern Gateway Pipeline would travel through significant wildlife habitat, and its risks far out way its benefits according to Wildsight. “The Northern Gateway Pipeline could seriously impact habitat critical for mountain caribou survival. Loss of habitat, particularly fragmentation and road building that changes predator use and pushes caribou into poorer habitat threatens herds long term survival,” Bergenske said. For Wildsight, the time is now for these recovery strategies to be conducted, and the group hopes the lawsuit will encourage the federal government to get on with it. “Environmental groups, including Wildsight, have repeatedly requested action on species at risk and the federal government has refused to execute recovery strategies – even several that we are told by government staff are completed and ready to be acted upon,” Bergenske said. “It appears the only way to get government to obey
“It appears the only way to get government to obey its own laws is a legal challenge of their failure to act.” John Bergenske
its own laws is a legal challenge of their failure to act.” Bergenske said the court challenge isn’t an attempt to drag the process through the courts, but instead a message for the government to do what they are legally required to do. “We sincerely hope that this will spur action. The government has the opportunity to bring forward recovery strategies and no longer be in violation of the law,” he said. “The intent is not a drawn out legal case, but legal pressure for enforcement of the law.” So long as the recovery strategies remain undone, Bergenske said the number of species requiring them continues to be added to. “The list of species that do not have recovery strategies within the legal time frames grows as the government fails to act.” The four species listed in the lawsuit are by no means the only species in need of protection under the Species at Risk Act. Bergenske said others include the boreal caribou, northern goshawk, olivesided flycatcher and the
common nighthawk. “All but the boreal caribou can be found at some season in the Kootenays,” he said. Two subspecies of badger have been on the list for a recovery plan for as long as six years. the proposed Northern Gateway Pipeline passes through ranges for four Southern mountain caribou herds and could disturb them further through infrastructure construction related to the pipeline. “Southern mountain caribou were chosen as it is one of the key species at risk that the federal government has failed to implement a recovery program for,” Bergenske said. “The province has taken its own actions, but their program does not include all the herds within the federal government’s Southern mountain caribou populations.” Bergenske said recovery strategies form a plan for a species at risk that includes habitat protection and actions. “An important first step is mapping and designation of critical habitat,” he said. “The province has acted upon this locally, but within its own constraints.” For the caribou, the species has been on the list for a strategy for over five years, and Bergenske said it’s been far too long for action to go undone. “The requirement for a recovery strategy was a legislated requirement and has been overdue for over five years,” he said.
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daily bulletin
tuesday, october 9, 2012
Local NEWS
Page 5
Two charged in car jacking For the Bulle tin
A 26 year old Port Coquitlam male and a 17 year old female also from Port Coquitlam, remain in custody as a result of the October 2. 2012 car jacking incident which occurred near Creston BC. Twenty six year old Nickolas John Bullock is facing charges of Robbery and Possession of Stolen Property. The 17 year old female is facing one charge possession of stolen property. On October 2nd 2012, at around 8:24 pm the RCMP emergency 9-1-1 center received a report of a car jacking which had
occurred in the Kitchener area just south of Creston. The victim reported to police that he had stopped to assist a man and woman who were hitchhiking. It is alleged that the man was pepper sprayed and physically kicked out of his vehicle and left roadside. The vehicle description and circumstances of the incident were relayed to the Creston, Cranbrook/ Kimberley and Elk Valley RCMP Detachments. Cranbrook/Kimberley RCMP officers set up a patrol perimeter just south of Cranbrook and shortly
after 10:00 pm (MST) the stolen vehicle was spotted by an on-duty Cranbrook RCMP officer. The officer attempted to pull it over just south of the city. The suspects failed to stop and continued into the city where they pulled into a private residential property in the area of 13 St S and 22 Ave, where the suspects were taken into custody. The police involved shooting related to this incident remains under investigation by the Independent Investigations Office of BC (IIO).
Photo contributed
The Scouting groups of Kimberley and Marysville are participating in their annual Sandbag fundraiser. This Saturday, at 9:00am, the bagging bee commenced and delivery to local supporting merchants got underway. Willing hands and enthusiasm make short work of a thousand bags. Local residents can purchase the bags at Kimberley Husky, Centex Mini-mart , Mark Creek Market, Kimberley Shell, Kimberley Building Supplies, The Country Store and Overwaitea (after Halloween). Sand supplied by Salvador Ready Mix. The bags are identified with the Scout Logo and are still $4.00, all the proceeds going to local scouting activities.
Selkirk news Clint Dolgopol For the Bulletin
We have had a great first month to the school year with a number of activities in September that will be highlighted in this newsletter. October will be another busy month with Photo contributed events like PicSenior students at Selkirk were fortunate on Tuesday, ture Day, Funderstorm, Oct. 2 to be able to learn more about the different prointerim re- grams at 7 different BC Post-Secondary Institutions ports, and our including SFU and UVIC from the Lower Mainland and first dance of the College of the Rockies and Selkirk College from the Kootenays. the year. As a school community, we continue to promote our misOctober 13 - Creative Writing sion of Community, Discovery, and Field Trip (Banff ) Empowerment. As a community October 15-17 - Early Dismissal we know that the more connected 2 pm. and valued students feel at the October 16 - Parent/Teacher school, the more likely they will be Conferences 6:30—8 pm successful at school. We have enOctober 17 - Parent/Teacher couraged all students to participate Conferences 2:30—4 pm in extra-curricular activities and to Interim Reports sent home with try their best in the classroom. We students also encourage all parents to be October 18 - MADD Assembly involved in your child’s education 8:45 /Gr. 9 Outdoor Ed trip– Dipper as we know that parental involve- Lake ment and support makes a big difOctober 19 - Non-Instructional ference in how our students do at Day/ Jazz Choir Concert school. Here’s to a great October! October 25 - Halloween Dance Selkirk Secondary School Calen- 6—10 pm dar of Events– October October 12 - Fine Arts Fort Steele trip
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PAGE 6
TUESDAY, OCTOBER 9, 2012
OPINION
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Trudeau is being underestimated
I
MICHAEL DEN TANDT Postmedia News
t is inevitable, Justin Trudeau said last week, that the furor around his run for the leadership of the Liberal party will fade. As winter sets in and the halls get smaller, media attention will drift elsewhere. It always does. He’s right: The attention paid to his first official campaign speeches - really variants on the same stump speech - was outrageous. The content of the speech, when viewed in the harsh light of day, is scanty. Correct? So his critics are right. The man is a shell with charm and good hair, peddling a pastiche of platitudes. He has nothing to say. Or does he? Here’s what interesting about Trudeau’s campaign team: It has brain power up the wazoo. His campaign director was a senior adviser in the Dalton McGuinty-Ontario government back when it was still popular. His day-to-day go-to man has two master’s degrees, one of them in economic history, and is a former director of the Liberal research bureau. His best friend on the campaign wrote the platforms with which McGuinty had his greatest electoral success. His brother understands foreign policy from up close, having travelled to and written about some of the nastiest trouble spots on earth. Trudeau can therefore draw on all the policy depth he wants, in excruciating detail, any time he wishes. Why, one wonders, is he sticking to a broad discussion of principles and values, even though this further exposes his flank as a weak policy hand? The first reason may be this: Trudeau can’t very well claim to lead a movement to “build, not rebuild” if he exits the starting blocks with a deck of detailed policies
already baked. More to the point, there would be risk in relying on veteran Liberal policy thinkers to generate such a plan. There could be no worse disaster, for the Liberal party, than for the putative leader of a ground-roots reform movement to trot out yet another rehash of Liberal platforms from days gone by. Through three election cycles, the federal Liberal party’s greatest weakness has been that it doesn’t listen. Conservatives had their ears to the ground across Canada, paid close attention to what they heard, and crafted policy to suit public opinion. Liberals developed policy they believed was worthy, then tried to sell it to an apathetic or even hostile public. The long-gun registry was a case in point. Rural Canadians, in overwhelming numbers, never liked it. They deemed it ineffective at controlling gun crime, insulting to their intelligence and a needless intrusion in their lives. The Liberal party paid them no mind and lost rural Canada as a result. That was 70 seats, give or take. Another example is multiculturalism. The Liberals long took support from new Canadians for granted. The Conservatives discerned that many immigrants come from countries where conservative values are the norm. They proceeded to work that turf, yielding them 32 of 47 seats in the Greater Toronto Area in 2011. Which brings us back to Trudeau, and his stump speech. The Post’s Tasha Kheiriddin notes the text appeals to both reason (“we will create policy based on facts”) and emotion (“I am in love with Canada”), and so appeals to both idealists and pragmatists. True. But there’s more to it than that, I think. The Harper government, having scrapped the mandatory long-form cen-
sus, can no longer credibly claim to be making policy based on facts. Nor can NDP leader Tom Mulcair express unabashed love of Canada: That would be off-putting to his formerly Bloquiste base. The rhetorical structure therefore creates a pie-sized wedge of territory between the NDP and Conservative positions, which Trudeau intends to stake out as his own. It’s clever. There’s evidence of this throughout the stump speech, most obviously in the middle-of-the-road treatment of resources and the environment: Here Mulcair and Harper - one openly hostile to the oil patch, the other narrowly extractivist - have created the opening themselves. Trudeau is simply gathering a gift they’ve given him. More fundamentally, though, his discussion of values probes chinks in both the Conservatives’ and New Democrats’ armour. Paeans to hard work and opportunity, with an added nod to liberty in Calgary, are not something you’ll typically hear from a Mulcair New Democrat. And earnest references to social and environmental responsibility, decency, respect and the high road, are not typical of Harper Conservatives, I think it’s fair to say. The speech, therefore, conflates these two sets of values, both of which appeal to the majority, and neither of which Canadians are accustomed to hearing in proximity of the other, lately. Subliminally that says this: You can have it all, you deserve it all, and why aren’t you getting it now? This was not something scratched together on the back of an envelope, in other words. It is not a spontaneous speech, nor is Trudeau entirely comfortable delivering it, yet. But he’ll get better. And it will resonate. It was crafted by people who know precisely what they’re doing.
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daily townsman / daily bulletin
Opinion/news
Skills training ‘our mission’, Dix declares
M
y column on skills training a couple of weeks ago gave short shrift to the NDP position: tax the banks and hand out grants for women’s studies, sociology and other worthless pursuits, while skilled jobs go begging. That’s a pretty crude caricature, so I sat down with NDP leader Adrian Dix in his legislature office last week to get a better sense of his thinking on the subject. Dix has been devoting a lot of time lately to skills training, in trades particularly. He meets frequently with business people now, and his recent speeches emphasize that every one of them talks about the growing shortage of skilled employees. Dix credits Premier Christy Clark and jobs minister Pat Bell with making some good moves recently, announcing equipment upgrades for vocational programs around the province. He says it’s because the NDP have been “pounding away at them for eight months” about freezing advanced education spending in their March budget. Dix calls that a crucial mistake and predicts the government will reverse it soon. “So I think, if we’re going to have a mission for four years as a government, if we’re elected, this is the mission: to start to
address the skills shortage,” he told me. In his speech to the recent municipal convention, and again at an NDP provincial council meeting, Dix zeroed in on B.C.’s apprenticeship system. Since the B.C. Liberals took it from trade unions and set up a Crown corporation called the Industry Training Authority in 2004, the completion rate for apprentices has fallen to 37 per cent, he said. Dix assured me he isn’t BC Views proposing to “blow up” the ITA, or hand control back to Tom unions. They will have “a Fletcher voice,” along with business. Speaking to the NDP executive, Dix referred to Phil Hochstein, president of the non-union Independent Contractors and Businesses’ Association, as the symbol of trades training decline. Not surprisingly, Hochstein has a different take. The 37 per cent figure is misleading, Hochstein said, because under the ITA there are currently 32,000 apprentices in the system, twice as many as when it was union controlled. Many drop out in the first year, and Alberta claims a better completion rate because they don’t start counting until the second year. And when Dix touts Alberta’s “mandatory” trade system, Hochstein said he means returning to a system where all work is restricted to journeymen or registered apprentices of that
trade. “What it does is impose union jurisdiction on the training system of the entire construction industry,” Hochstein said. “So multi-skilling, multi-tasking, organizing the work in the most efficient way is blown out of the water, and it’s stuck in the old craft system of training.” The marketplace has spoken on that restrictive system, he said, and unionized construction is down to about five per cent of the market, based on payroll. Hochstein said the NDP talks a great game about getting more young people into trades. But when unions have the upper hand, they will always favour seniority. A quota of two apprentices per journeyman means another one can’t be hired. Dix agreed with me that the public school system has over-emphasized university, to the detriment of not just industrial trades but lab techs, chefs and other skilled workers that are in short supply. As B.C. Federation of Labour president Jim Sinclair recently noted, tradesmen themselves often don’t encourage their kids, because they’ve been told all their lives that they are “tool monkeys” in a dead-end job. And would NDP student grants be targeted to need? Dix’s answer was a definite maybe. Tom Fletcher is legislative reporter and columnist for Black Press.
B.C. ranchers calling for wolf cull C am Fortems Kamloops Daily News
KAMLOOPS, B.C. — While many in the B.C. ranching industry are calling for a wolf cull, conservation officers are already targeting the animals under a provincial predator program. According to the latest numbers available, 146 predators were killed provincewide in the nine and a half months leading up to the end of 2011. That figure included 60 wolves. In the Thompson region, 21 wolves were killed. Terry Inskip said his family has ranched the area just north of Westsyde for decades without incident, until April of this year. “(Wolves) killed six yearlings in four days,’’ he said.
“They were here off and on all winter. They hadn’t bothered with anything but at the end of April, they started killing stuff.’’ The B.C. Cattlemen’s Association is calling for a provincewide cull, arguing their numbers are rising and cattle losses are mounting. According to recent reports, the last widespread wolf culls were done in the 1980s. More recently, wolves have been killed by trappers given bounties in order to protect endangered mountain caribou. Inskip said prior to this year, the last time a wolf was spotted on his property, which has been in the family for generations, was 1948. “Since then there’s never been a wolf,’’ he said. Ranchers will learn
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more over the next month about how this year’s losses to predators stack up. “They won’t know until they do round up,’’ said Barriere-area rancher and former B.C. Cattlemen’s president Ed Salle. “My experience is... at times they’ll take four, five, 10 without disruption.’’ Under the provincial predator program, ranchers are given 70 per cent of the value of livestock killed by predators. A kill must be verified by conservation officers, who then attempt to track and destroy the animal responsible.
Sadie Parr, of the conservation group Western Wolf Pact, said hunting and sterilization programs could make matters worse because they upset stable family units among wolves. Packs splinter and young wolves may not be able to learn hunting techniques needed to kill large ungulates like moose. “There is no evidence to show that indiscriminately killing wolves works as a longterm solution. Depredations occur in areas that have been practising lethal control for decades,’’ the group said in a statement.
In the case of Inskip’s losses, conservation officers found and killed one male wolf. There have been no losses since, but Inskip said he might learn more this month when cattle return home from the late summer range. Salle said he lives on the “wolf side of the North Thompson,’’ where wolves have roamed for decades. “Guys around us are on pins and needles. You won’t know what you lost until you know. (Wolves) get good at picking animals and not running the herd out of the country.’’
Police watchdog called in after drunk Vancouver man dies following arrest C ANADIAN PRESS
VANCOUVER — B.C.’s police watchdog is probing an incident in which an intoxicated Vancouver man died shortly after being in police care. Six members of the Independent Investigation Office will probe the events that began after 7 p.m. Saturday, when police arrested a 51 year old man who was causing a disturbance. Police say they learned he was barred from a local detox centre, so instead brought him to his home.
When they arrived, they found he had gone unconscious and so called an ambulance to take him to hospital, where he died shortly thereafter. Staff with the watchdog have been deployed to canvass the neighbourhood (at West 7th Ave., near Laurel St.), collect evidence and examine the police cruiser. The watchdog became operational in early September and is tasked with examining incidents where someone dies or there is serious harm done while under the watch of police.
tuesday, october 9, 2012
Page 7
What’s Up?
KIMBERLEY AND CRANBROOK COMMUNITY CALENDAR
UPCOMING October 10 Kimberley Garden Club is back on winter sessions. October program: Bulbs from Basement to Windowsill discussion. Selkirk High School Library 7-9 pm. New members welcome. For more info: Nola 250-427-1948. British Columbia Government Retired Employees Assoc., Rky Mtn Branch, will be holding their luncheon meeting at the Bavarian Chalet in the Sam Steele room, Oct 10, at 12 noon. Guest Speaker will be R.C.M.P. Const. Lisa Schlatter. Info: Jack Selman 489-5930. Take Back the Night March For women and children, Thursday, Oct 11. Gather at Spirit Square in Rotary Park. 5:30 sign making, March at 6:00. Call 250-426-2912 for more info The Cranbrook & District Arts Council next exhibit, Comtemporary and Impressionistic Art opens on Thursday October 11th and runs until Nov 7th. Please join us and the artists for the opening reception on October 11th from 7 - 9pm Laurie School Band students will be out collecting sponsors for their Garbathon. On Saturday, Oct. 13th they will be cleaning main areas of Cranbrook from 9:30am-12:30 pm. The students make an important contribution to the community while earning money needed for band trips and festivals. 2012 FREE FAMILY SWIM Wednesday, October 17th, 6:00-7:00 PM is sponsored by Shoppers Drug Mart - Kimberley. October 17, Wednesday Not your usual travelgue - Paddling the Columbia River Basin with Karen Proudfoot. 7:00 College of the Rockies Lecture Theatre. Hosted by Grandmothers helping Grandmothers in Africa. Admission by donation. Info: please call Norma at 250-426-6111. “Normal Christian Life” Conference, Oct.19-21 at House of Hope Church Cranbrook. Info. and Registration www.ihopecranbrook. ca or 250-421-3784 Calling all Seniors! Interested in shopping online, learning about Facebook or working with Photos? CBAL hosts a series of 1½ hour sessions on these topics at the Cranbrook Public Library. Next set begins Friday Oct 19th at 10:30am. All for free! Must be 60 years or wiser. To register call :Katherine 250-417-2896 or khough@cbal. org ONGOING ICBL-Duplicate Bridge–Senior Center in Cranbrook. Mon & Wed 7pm, Thurs & Fri 1pm at Scout Hall, Marysville. Info: Maggie 250-417-2868. Cranbrook Phoenix Toastmasters meet every Thursday, noon - 1:00 at Heritage Inn. Toastmasters teaches communication and leadership skills. Roberta 250-489-0174. 1911. toastmastersclubs.org. Breast Cancer Support Group meets at McKim Middle School Library, every 3rd Thursday of the month at 7 pm. Contact: Daniela @ 427-2562. SAVE – ALL summer clothing reduced! Bibles for Missions Thrift Store stays open Thursdays til 7pm. Reg hours: TuesSat: 10am - 5pm. 824 Kootenay St., Cranbrook. Come visit. Cranbrook Community Radio is a non profit local voice for Cranbrook and Kimberley heard online at www.ckcl.ca We welcome suggestions about local programming that you’d like to hear! Please call the station at 778 520-2020 or email us at cranbrookonline@ckcl.ca Learn-to-skate with us! The Cranbrook Skating Club is offering skating lessons for learners of all ages. Pre-CanSkate (for pre-schoolers), CanSkate (ages 4 & up), Intro-StarSkate (learn to figure skate), StarSkate (for advanced levels of figure skating), CanPowerSkate (skating skills for hockey players) and Adult lessons. Contact Kathy Bates (Registrar) at 250432-5562. Do you have 3 hours a week to give? Contact the Kimberley Health Care Auxiliary Thrift Shops at 250-427-2503 (Brenda) or 250-427-1754 Gayle) for volunteer opportunities: cashiers, sorters, after hours cleaners. “Keep Active“ on the Community Track located at College of the Rockies: free-of-charge. Track is always open through the small gate by the dormitory or during regular hours through main gate. Tuesday mornings (9 to 11) there will usually be people available willing to help you. CRANBROOK QUILTERS’ GUILD hold their meetings every 2nd & 4th Tuesday of each month at 7:15pm upstairs in the Seniors’ 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, Morning Time class Wed 10am- 12noon and Evening Time class Wed 7pm-9pm. All sessions held at the CBAL office 19 9th Ave S (next to the radio station). Childcare upon requet. All programs are FREE. FMI: Bruce 250-919-2766 or khough@ cbal.org Place your notice in your “What’s Up?” Community Calendar FREE of charge. This column is intended for the use of clubs and non-profit organizations to publicize their coming events — provided the following requirements are met: • Notices will be accepted two weeks prior to the event. • All notices must be emailed, faxed or dropped off in person. No telephone calls please. • Notices should not exceed 30 words. • Only one notice per week from any one club or organization. • All notices must be received by the Thursday prior to publication • There is no guarantee of publication. Notices will run subject to space limitations.
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Ice fall 5-3 as Raiders extend streak to six wins TRE VOR CR AWLEY Sports Editor
The Prince Albert Raiders showed why they are the hottest team in the WHL right now by coming into Western Financial Place on Sunday and plundering a 5-3 victory out of the Kootenay Ice on Sunday evening. That gives the Raiders a six-game winning streak as the team hasn’t lost a game in regulation yet this season, while the Ice ceded their second consecutive game and now hold a 1-4-0-0 record. The Raiders scored four unanswered goals before Ice forward Brock Montgomery responded with a quick pair roughly a minute apart late in the middle frame, but Kootenay couldn’t edge out a third period comeback. “That’s a bad start,” said Montgomery. “We
had a week off and we should’ve come mentally prepared. No one did that and the onus is on the veteran players to come out and lead the way for the younger guys and I don’t think our top forwards and D [defence] showed the younger guys the way there.” Ice stopper Mackenzie Skapski started the game, but was replaced with Wyatt Hoflin after the first period. Skapski allowed three goals in eight shots, while Hoflin made 11 saves. Andy Desautels stood in goal for the Raiders and made 26 stops during the contest. It was a flat first period that doomed the Ice, as Sawyer Lange scored first for the Raiders less than two minutes into the game on an early powerplay. Davis Vandane dou-
bled the lead seven minutes later, banging in a feed from the slot, and import Leon Draisaitl found the back of the net off an odd-man rush to increase the Raiders’ lead to three. The goaltending switch didn’t seem to faze the Raiders, as Shane Danyluk capitalized near the halfway mark after a few minutes of sustained pressure by Prince Albert in the Ice’s zone. However, with a few minutes to go in the period, the Ice woke up, as Montgomery went to work. Streaking down the right wing, Montgomery wound up and blasted the puck into the top corner over Desautels’ shoulder in a slap shot so well placed, it exploded the goaltender’s water bottle.
See ICE , Page 9
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Kootenay Ice goaltender Wyatt Hoflin stretches to make a save on a shot from Anthony Bardaro of the Prince Albert Raiders during a game at Western Financial Place on Sunday night.
Reach A Reader 6 Thursday, October 11
The Columbia The Townsman, Townsman, the the Bulletin Bullentinand andthe the ColumbiaBasin BasinAlliance AllianceforforLiteracy Literacyare are partnering on aa great great new eventevent for Cranbrook and Kimberley. partnering on for Cranbrook. On Thursday, October October 6, 11,some someofofCranbrook’s the area’s highest profi profile will be out on the le people people will with our our newspaper newspaper asking street with askingfor for donations donationstotohelp helpsupport supportliteracy literacyinitiatives initiatives in in our community. Along Along with with your your donation we will give you our you aa copy copy of of your yourcommunity community newspaper for newspaper for FREE FREE(plus (plusthere theremight mightbe beaafew fewextra extrapromos promostotogogoalong alongwith withthat). that). Absolutely all funds raised from the day will go CBAL and andall all funds funds will will stay stay in in go towards towards CBAL the community programs in in our our community. community. community in in which which they they are are raised to support support literacy programs Promote Literacy and Lifelong Learning Learning in Help Promote in our our Community Community. Help Promote Literacy and Lifelong Learning in our Community
daily townsman / daily bulletin
tuesday, october 9, 2012
Sports
Page 9
Nitros split weekend with Rockets Local boxers preparing for
weekend bout at Eagles Hall
Tre vor Cr awley Sports Editor
The Kimberley Dynamiters split their weekend action with the Golden Rockets in a home-and-home series, dropping a 6-2 decision at the Civic Centre, but pulling out a 4-3 doubleovertime win on the road the following night. The Rockets ran amok in the Nitros’ home barn, scoring five goals in the second period alone as they marched towards a victory on Friday, while Isaac Schacher lifted Kimberley to the win on Saturday with the OT goal. The Rockets got things started in Kimberley with a late first period goal by Jacob Bergeron, but the floodgates opened in the second period. Carson George scored twice, Blake Roney notched a goal, Bergeron potted another and Keith Wake pulled out a shorthanded marker as the Rockets devastated the Nitros’ defence in the middle frame. Kimberley starter Jeremy Mousseau was pulled halfway through the period on Bergeron’s second goal, replaced by Justin Miller who al-
Tre vor Cr awley Sports Editor
Trevor Crawle photo
Nitros player Adam Hodge (white jersey) brings the puck into the Rockets’ zone during their game at the Civic Centre in Kimberley on Friday night. lowed two goals in 14 shots. Mitchell Loose, a new acquisition for the Dynamiters, finally found the back of the net for his team on a power play late in the period, banging in a no-look backhand through his legs past Rocket’s net minder Danny Todosychuk. Connor Tetlock posted the other goal for the Nitros, scoring on a breakaway halfway through the final period. Schacher was the hero for the Dynamiters on Saturday night, notching the winner in
double-overtime to lift Kimberley to the win. Both teams scored twice in the opening period, but traded goals in the following two frames to force an extra period. Golden grabbed the lead for the second consecutive game, as Felix Larouche scored less than a minute in, while Bergeron posted a marker on the man-advantage roughly halfway through the frame. Sam Nigg put the Nitros on the board with just under five minutes to go, and Taylor McDowell found the equal-
izer in the final minute. Brett DeFrias scored the go-ahead goal in the second period, but Corson Johnstone responded in the third to force overtime. Kimberley now sits in second place in the Eddie Mountain Division, one point behind the Fernie Ghostriders and one point above the Columbia Valley Rockies. The Dynamiters will get back at it next weekend with a home-andhome series with the Creston Valley Thunder Cats.
Ice couldn’t recover from flat first period Continued from page 8 Montgomery scored again 1:06 later, capitalizing when Sam Reinhart fed him a pass while breaking into the Raiders’ zone on a power play. The Ice continued to make case for a comeback in the third period, when Jordyn Boyd notched his first goal in a Kootenay uniform, picking up the garbage just outside the crease in front of Desautels. “Our mental game came around, we got a couple goals and thats when we got excited,” said Montgomery. “I don’t think that’s when
we should be getting excited, we should be getting excited right from the first face-off.” Kootenay then spent the next four minutes looking for the equalizer, but it was the Raiders who scored, when Danyluk got his second of the game off an oddman rush. The Ice played the remaining three minutes of the game with a sense of urgency that was missing for most of the contest, but the Raiders held off the onslaught that came with an extra attacker when Hoflin was pulled.
Reinhart was in on all three Kootenay goals, while Jagger Dirk and Jaedon Descheneau picked up assists as well. Kootenay Ice utility man Jeff Hubic moved up into the forward ranks to cover the absence of Jon Martin, who served the first of a three game suspension as part of WHL discipline for a line brawl against the Lethbridge Hurricanes a week ago. A few minutes before Montgomery’s goals, Hubic showed the first signs of emotion from the Ice, dropping the gloves with Joey Santucci in a brief
scrap in the Prince Albert’s corner Ice defenceman Spencer Wand made it back into the lineup, as did forward Luke Philp, who both recovered from day-to-day injuries. Philp proved to be slippery out on the ice as he tried to weave in between the Raiders defence and dodged a hit, which cause the collision of two Prince Albert players. The Ice are back at it on Wednesday night to take on the Prince George Cougars, who will roll into town for the first of a three-game road trip.
Cranbrook boxing enthusiasts can get their fix next Saturday as the Eagles Hall will host a boxing event featuring local athletes on the fight card. Ryan Lindsay, Colin Adams, Tyler Gallinger and Shannon Ryan are representing the Eagles Boxing Club and have confirmed bouts set up for the event, which begins at 7 p.m. Boxing coach Bill Watson is also working on getting matches for two more of his students in Gage Duthie and Leah Saverie. Watson has fighters coming in from all over Alberta and Montana to participate in the fight, as the main event features Kenny Lally against Kenny Guzman. Lally is a three-time Canadian champion, while Guzman is a Montana State champion, which should make for an exciting finale for the evening. Ryan is in her second year in boxing, after joining last year to accompany a friend, who
Trevor Crawley photo
Shannon Ryan, 16, will be competing in her firstever bout on Saturday. was the only other regular girl with the club. She just turned 16 years old a week ago, and will get her first taste of a fight in the ring this weekend. “We had her ready to compete at the end of last year. She caught on really quick, she’s a real tough girl, throws her combinations really well and has pretty good defence,” said Watson. Ryan will face an bigger opponent out of Montana who only has
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one fight under her belt. “I’m nervous,” said Ryan. “I’m looking forward to being in my hometown—I have a lot of support. I’m excited.” Despite her inexperience in competitive fights, Ryan knows what she has to do. “Dip your head, duck and move because when those hands start coming, she’s a lot taller than me, she has a longer reach,” Ryan said. “Get low, get to the body and get out of there.”
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daily townsman / daily bulletin
Page 10 tuesday, october 9, 2012
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ARIES (March 21-April 19) Your fiery ways might ignite others into action if you are not careful. You also could provoke a great deal of brainstorming and unexpected ideas. Follow through on your chosen path, and remember that you are the director. Straighten out a misunderstanding before it becomes a problem. Tonight: A little fun never hurts. TAURUS (April 20-May 20) Your sense of humor allows others to relax around you. As people start to open up, you’ll gain helpful insights. Avoid a misunderstanding by clarifying facts and information. Being generous is a wonderful characteristic, and it will emerge today -- just honor your budget. Tonight: Hang in there. GEMINI (May 21-June 20) Initiate a conversation by helping the other party feel more comfortable. You might regret some of your prior judgments. Don’t live in the past; instead, update your thoughts for the present. A friend surprises you, and you will respond instinctively. Remain direct with a family member or loved one. Tonight: Chat away. CANCER (June 21-July 22) Sometimes you might overwhelm
people with everything that you do and seem capable of handling. Give someone the space to grow, as he or she needs to deal with a personal issue. Do some price comparison for the right Halloween costume or decoration. Tonight: Head home, but buy a little something for a friend on the way. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Get past a bad mood. A child or a lively conversation will help you to do just that. The unexpected has become routine, and yet somehow it still manages to surprise you. Look at today’s events, for example. Verify that you are on the same page as others. Tonight: Zero in on what you want. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) Defer to a more upbeat person. You might feel sluggish when dealing with an issue that you want to keep hush-hush. You could become irritated as well. Someone could act in a surprising way, just to get your attention. A friendship helps clear the air. Tonight: Take some private time. LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) Listen to news carefully. You can be quite intellectual and detached at times. When you get into this mode, you tend to gather a lot of information and discuss your feelings more
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easily. You’ll finally see how a misunderstanding occurred. Clear up your side of the issue ASAP. Tonight: Where the crowds are. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21) You don’t mind being complimented and admired, but the other side of the coin is that you must perform at 110 percent on a regular basis. Pull yourself out of a semi-tired state, and choose to be present. You could be surprised by what you hear. Be kind to a friend, even if doing so messes you up. Tonight: Burn the candle at both ends. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21) What you come up with in your mind could be the best-case scenario. Distance yourself and see if the potential exists to have this idea happen. If so, take the necessary steps. An intervention could occur through an unexpected twist. Others might become confused as a result. Clarify what is happening. Tonight: Help your mind relax. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) The unexpected occurs, and you could act on your frustration. Perhaps you feel as if there is no other way. Convinced that you have the answer, you might decide to take action. Unfortunately, many people will be confused. You’ll have to reverse a
misunderstanding quickly. Tonight: A cozy dinner and a chat. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18) You feel a strong sense of dedication to your friends, and they to you. Your ability to identify with others falls short with one person. Your words could have an unexpected effect. Try restating your idea in a simpler, less complicated manner. Tonight: Sort through invitations. PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20) Maintain a steady pace. News could be slow to arrive, if it comes at all. If you need some information, seek it out. Do not stand on ceremony. Your instincts will kick in; learn to follow them. Remain open, rather than allow someone to wonder what you’re thinking. Tonight: Get some extra R and R. BORN TODAY Songwriter/singer Jackson Browne (1948), musician John Lennon (1940), musician Sean Lennon (1975) *** Jacqueline Bigar is on the Internet at www.jacquelinebigar.com. (c) 2012 by King Features Syndicate Inc.
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Rhymes with Orange
By Hillary B. Price
Annie’s Mailbox by Kathy Mitchell and Marcy Sugar Dear Annie: I want to share my story of depression -- and hope -- so that it might help others. I’m nearly 50 now, but only recently did I recognize the depression that has plagued my life. I had the symptoms for decades: bursts of anger, loss of appetite, lack of interest in work and activities, avoiding people, constantly thinking about death. A few years ago, it hit me hard. For weeks, I couldn’t leave my bed, and suicidal thoughts filled my mind. I was a “dead man walking.” My emotions were burned away, and I saw no point in living. Finally, I began seeing a therapist on a weekly basis. Progress was slow, but each bit of relief was a stepping-stone out of the darkness. I learned that you have to look after yourself. Overworking, not eating right, lack of exercise, not enough sunshine and cutting yourself off from social situations all feed depression. If you can get out of bed and get out the door -- if only for a little while -- that’s a major thing. National Depression Screening Day is Thursday, October 11. I recently found out about it from a friend. I wish I’d known about it years ago and taken a screening. Readers can go to HelpYourselfHelpOthers.org and find a nearby screening location or take a free, anonymous screening online. They also can find out what to do next. I’m alive today because I managed to get help in time, but I lost years of real living before I understood that I had depression. I strongly urge anyone reading this who even suspects they might have depression to do a screening. Sincerely -- Mike Stephens Dear Mike: Thank you for sharing your story. Depression affects millions of Americans from all walks of life and all demographics. National Depression Screening Day can be enormously helpful for those who are concerned about depression. We hope our readers will check HelpYourselfHelpOthers.org to find out about a screening. Dear Annie: What do I tip when eating at a buffet where the server takes the drink orders but does nothing else? What about at a Japanese restaurant where the server takes our orders and serves the meal, but the sushi chef prepares the food? Our favorite Japanese place has a tip jar at the sushi bar. I feel a tip should be left for both the server and the chef, but I don’t know how to divide it. I was told that the sushi chefs keep their tips and the others are split. I’d appreciate some guidance. -- Liz Dear Liz: At a buffet, etiquette experts recommend a 10 percent tip (on the pre-tax amount) because the server takes drink orders and clears the table. If you sit at a sushi bar where the food is served directly to you, tip the chef on the food and the server on your drinks. If the server brings you the food, tip the server. Tip jars, whether at a sushi bar or a coffee shop, do not obligate you to leave anything. However, if the service (or sushi) was exceptional or complicated, or if you are a regular customer, you may wish to do so. Dear Annie: I would like to respond to “The Drunk’s Wife.” My 67-year-old husband came home many nights so drunk he could barely stand up. After putting up with this for 40 years, I finally had enough. I told him that I loved him, but the next time it happened, I’d be gone. Two weeks later, he came home toasted, and I packed a bag and left. He called all night, begging me to come back. The following day, we talked. I said I’d return, but there would be no more second chances. He knew I meant it. That was two years ago. He hasn’t been drunk since, and our marriage is better than ever. -- Stuck to My Guns 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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PUZZLES
Wednesday Afternoon/Evening Cbk. Kim.
Friend Friend Sunny Sunny Last Pict. Black Popoff Prince Prince Telejournal
October 10
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Maury Family ¨ ¨townsman KTLA Cunningham daily / daily bulletin Family News News Two
Isotoners
ASSTD. STYLES, COLOURS & SIZES SEPT 19 - OCT 5
New Fall Arrivals
I Have Moved! KRISTIN SMALDON would like to welcome all past and new clients.
4:00 4:30 5:00 5:30 6:00 6:30 7:00 7:30 8:00 8:30 9:00 9:30 10:0010:3011:0011:3012:0012:30
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Robes, P.J.’s, Nighties Slippers, Bras & Briefs Available in regular & plus sizes
Baker St. Mall 250.489.8464
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Page 11
2 1 0 4 B - 2 N D S T. S , C R A N B R O O K • 2 5 0 - 4 8 9 - 1 9 0 1
Seventh Annual
“The Magic of Autumn”
Door Prizes!
Artisan Market
Friday, October 19th 3pm - 8pm
Saturday, October 20th 9am - 4pm
at Bootleg Gap Golf Course Clubhouse, Kimberley, BC.
Handcrafted Creations
Entrance fee $1.00 to be split between the Kimberley Food Bank and the Clear View Digital Mammography. Soup & Sandwich Buffet: Saturday 11am - 2pm Wheelchair accessible
OVER THE LAST 6 YEARS WE HAVE DONATED $7,000.00 TO THE KIMBERLEY FOOD BANK!
Read the DAILY newspaper for local happenings!
250-426-5201 250-427-5333
This pristine acreage is wonderfully landscaped. The kitchen addition is only 5.5 years old! Relax on the 10x40 covered sundeck, U/G sprinklers, 6 stall barn, double detached garage and trailer for guests. MLS K215836 $409,000
250.919.9915
rob@ekrealty.com
East Kootenay Realty
INDEPENDENTLY OWNED AND OPERATED
City of Cranbrook Proclaims
October is United Way Month Give. Volunteer. Act. Every dollar you donate helps non-profits in our communities Our fundraising goal is $111,000
United Way
Friday’s answers ®
www.facebook.com/ourunitedway
Donate online:
www.cranbrook.unitedway.ca Cranbrook & 930 Baker Street, Cranbrook Kimberley Change starts here. 250-426-8833
CALL 426-3272 OR VISIT
PREVIOUS PUZZLE ANSWER
Fill in the grid so that every row (nine cells wide), every column (nine cells tall) and every box (three cells by three cells) contain the digits 1 through 9 in any order. There is only one solution for each puzzle.
www.tribute.ca
for this week’s movie listings
Friday’s
dailyTOWNSMAN/DAILY townsman / daily bulletin DAILY BULLETIN
Page 12 tuesday, october 9, 20129, 2012 PAGE 12 Tuesday, October
Share Your Smiles!
Your community. Your classifieds.
Dustin is smiling at the libary!
250.426.5201 ext 202
bcclassified.com fax 250.426.5003
INDEX IN BRIEF FAMILY ANNOUNCEMENTS COMMUNITY ANNOUNCEMENTS TRAVEL CHILDREN EMPLOYMENT BUSINESS SERVICES PETS & LIVESTOCK MERCHANDISE FOR SALE REAL ESTATE RENTALS AUTOMOTIVE ADULT ENTERTAINMENT LEGAL NOTICES
AGREEMENT It is agreed by any display or ClassiďŹ ed Advertiser requesting space that the liability of the paper in the event of failure to publish an advertisement shall be limited to the amount paid by the advertiser for that portion of the advertising space occupied by the incorrect item only, and that there shall be no liability in any event beyond the amount paid for such advertisement. The publisher shall not be liable for slight changes or typographical errors that do not lessen the value of an advertisement. bcclassiďŹ ed.com cannot be responsible for errors after the ďŹ rst day of publication of any advertisement. Notice of errors on the ďŹ rst day should immediately be called to the attention of the ClassiďŹ ed Department to be corrected for the following edition. bcclassiďŹ ed.com reserves the right to revised, edit, classify or reject any advertisement and to retain any answers directed to the bcclassiďŹ ed.com Box Reply Service and to repay the customer the sum paid for the advertisement and box rental. DISCRIMINATORY LEGISLATION Advertisers are reminded that Provincial legislation forbids the publication of any advertisement which discriminates against any person because of race, religion, sex, color, nationality, ancestry or place of origin, or age, unless the condition is justiďŹ ed by a bona ďŹ de requirement for the work involved. COPYRIGHT Copyright and/or properties subsist in all advertisements and in all other material appearing in this edition of bcclassiďŹ ed. com. Permission to reproduce wholly or in part and in any form whatsoever, particularly by a photographic or offset process in a publication must be obtained in writing from the publisher. Any unauthorized reproduction will be subject to recourse in law. ON THE WEB:
Announcements
Information
Are you r x e pecting o a ve a do you h t newborn a home? 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
email classifieds@dailytownsman.com
Business Opportunities NORTHERN ALBERTA clearing contractor seeks experienced Buncher and Skidder Operators for work in Northern Alberta. Subsistence and accommodations provided; Michelle@CommandEquipment. com. Fax 780-488-3002.
Career Opportunities 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
Help Wanted
Help Wanted
CHRIST the Servant Church is requesting bids on the snow removal for the parking area. Please submit inquiries to the parish office at (250)426-4266 or smpcts@yahoo.ca ESTHETICIAN REQUIRED for well established Hair Studio in Kimberley. Please call Pat, (250)427-5506
S.M. QUENNELL Trucking in Cranbrook, is looking for self/load log truck drivers, based in Cranbrook. Full time work, home every night. Excellent medical, dental, pension benefits, etc. Wages competitive with union rates. Fax resume and drivers abstract to: (250)426-4610 or call (250)426-6853
CLASSIFIEDS WILL SELL WHAT YOU WANT SOLD!
Obituaries
Obituaries
Sympathy & Understanding Kootenay Monument Installations
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PLAYFUL, SEXY, sweet, seductive 24 year old. In-calls and out calls Paige (778)963-0356
2200 - 2nd Street South Cranbrook, BC V1C 1E1 250-426-3132 1885 Warren Avenue Kimberley, BC V1A 1R9 250-427-7221 www.mcphersonfh.com
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End of Life? Bereaved? May We Help?
2PTILYSL`
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Lost & Found
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 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
Employment
Help Wanted
The College of the Rockies is a learner-centered institution. We invite all qualified applicants who value high quality program delivery and customer service excellence to apply forâ&#x20AC;Ś
$X[LOLDU\ $GPLQLVWUDWLYH $VVLVWDQW Kimberley Campus
Please quote competition numbers: 12-CU-32
Ph: 250.426.6006 Fx: 250.426.6005 2104D 2nd Street S. Cranbrook, BC theďŹ&#x201A;owerpot@shaw.ca
For a full description of these job postings and instructions on how to apply visit:
OUR CLIENT, a well established Cranbrook based business to business and service operation, requires a full-time General Manager to: t 1SPWJEF MFBEFSTIJQ BOE WJTJPO UP UIF PSHBOJ[BUJPO t &OTVSF BOE FOIBODF POHPJOH QSPýUBCJMJUZ t &TUBCMJTI ýOBODJBM SFTPVSDJOH UFSSJUPSJBM BOE DVTUPNFS development plans t &WBMVBUF FTUBCMJTI NFBTVSF BOE FWBMVBUF DPSQPSBUF BOE TUBGG HPBMT and objectives t 1SPWJEF NBOBHFNFOU PG TBMFT BOE TFSWJDF EFQBSUNFOUT t -FBE DPSQPSBUF CVTJOFTT EFWFMPQNFOU JOJUJBUJWFT t 1SPWJEF DVTUPNFS BOE DPNNVOJUZ SFMBUJPOTIJQ MFBEFSTIJQ The successful candidate will be able to demonstrate relevant experience in and will possess: t 1SPWFO MFBEFSTIJQ BCJMJUJFT t 4BMFT NBOBHFNFOU FYQFSJFODF t 1SPWFO UFBN NBOBHFNFOU BOE EJSFDUJPO BCJMJUJFT t 5IF BCJMJUZ UP XPSL JOEFQFOEFOUMZ JO B TFOJPS DBQBDJUZ t &YQFSJFODF JO EFWFMPQJOH BOE JNQMFNFOUJOH CVTJOFTT TUSBUFHJFT t 1SPCMFN TPMWJOH BOE DPOÞJDU NBOBHFNFOU TLJMMT Our client offers a competitive remuneration package complete with FNQMPZFF CFOFýU QMBO BOE QFSGPSNBODF CPOVT TUSVDUVSF 1MFBTF GPSXBSE XSJUUFO SFTVNFT UP .S #SVDF )SZDJVL '$(" )SZDJVL (BMMJOHFS $FSUJýFE (FOFSBM "DDPVOUBOUT #BOLFS 4USFFU $SBOCSPPL #$ 7 $ " &NBJM JOGP!IH DP DPN 0OMZ TIPSUMJTUFE DBOEJEBUFT XJMM CF DPOUBDUFE
In times of grief, these caring professionals are here to serve and comfort your family.
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FOUND: Set of Walkie Talkies, on the main road in Marysville. Call John to identify. (250)432-5839
Travel
Community Newspapers
www.cotr.bc.ca/hrd/postings.asp
>HSSPUNLY (]LU\L 2PTILYSL` )* ;LS!
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WE ARE LOOKING for LPNâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s or Care Aides to join an energetic team of health care providers caring for a ventilator dependent quadriplegic. Excellent pay and interesting work! Please send your resume to quadriplegiccare@hotmail.com
IN-HOME CONSULTATION OR VISIT OUR SHOWROOM
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Granite & Bronze Memorials, Dedication Plaques, Benches, Memorial Walls, Gravesite Restorations, Sales & Installations
PU HZZVJPH[PVU ^P[O :[LPKS 2HTILP[a 3H^ *VYWVYH[PVU
:\P[L ;OPYK (]LU\L -LYUPL )* ;LS!
Help Wanted TWO FULL time position available immediately for Chrysler/Dodge/Jeep dealership in Salmon Arm, BC. â&#x20AC;&#x153;Dispatch /coordinatorâ&#x20AC;?-Applicant must possess automotive mechanical knowledge-strong work ethic, organizational skills and can multi task. â&#x20AC;&#x153;Journeyman Technicianâ&#x20AC;? -Applicant must have good attitude, quality workmanship. Both applicants must be able to produce in a fast paced environment. Excellent wage and benefit package. Please send resume: pat@brabymotors.com
(PSOR\PHQW 2SSRUWXQLW\
CALL: 426-5201 EXT. 202
Obituaries
Drop off your photo and name(s) of subject at the Cranbrook Townsman or Kimberley Bulletin office or email your high-resolution jpeg to bulletinprod@ cyberlink.ca. Photographs will appear in the order they are received.
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.
EMAIL your smile to - bulletinprod@cyberlink.ca
Share Your Smiles! Harrison is smiling because of his brother.
daily townsman / daily bulletin DAILY TOWNSMAN/DAILY BULLETIN
Pets & Livestock
Real Estate
Health Products
Feed & Hay
Houses For Sale
GET 50% off - Join Herbal Magic this week and get 50% Off. Lose weight quickly, safely and keep it off, proven results! Call Herbal Magic today! 1-800-854-5176.
HAY FOR Sale. Wycliffe; $125./ton; $32./bale-500lbs. 65% Alfalfa. (250)426-7668
Financial Services DROWNING IN debts? Helping Canadians 25 years. Lower payments by 30%, or cut debts 70% thru Settlements. Avoid bankruptcy! Free consultation. www.mydebtsolution.com or Toll Free 1 877-556-3500 IF YOU own a home or real estate, Alpine Credits can lend you money: It’s That Simple. Your Credit / Age / Income is not an issue. 1.800.587.2161. M O N E Y P R OV I D E R . C O M . $500 Loan and +. No Credit Refused. Fast, Easy, 100% Secure. 1-877-776-1660.
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Legal Services CRIMINAL RECORD? Don’t let it block employment, travel, education, professional, certification, adoption property rental opportunities. For peace of mind & a free consultation call 1-800-347-2540.
Contractors
NOTICE
BLACKTOP NOW! NO JOB TOO SMALL
Driveways & Parking Lots 1-888-670-0066 CALL
421-1482
FREE ESTIMATES!
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POWER PAVING
SERVING ALL THE KOOTENAYS
(*30
s #ONSTRUCTION s 2ENOVATIONS s 2OOlNG s $RYWALL LARGE OR SMALL s 3IDING s 3UNDECK #ONSTRUCTION s !LUMINUM 2AILINGS 7E WELCOME ANY RESTORATIONAL WORK
Merchandise for Sale Firewood/Fuel FIREWOOD, DRY Pine. $160/cord, delivered. Phone after 6pm (250)427-7180.
Furniture MOSS-GREEN couch and loveseat, $500. Solid oak TV stand, sofa table, end table and curio cabinets, $1200. (250)427-5464 or (250)4274440.
Misc. for Sale
ARE YOU MOVING?
BOXES
FOR SALE Only
20 Boxes
10
$
00
LIMITED QUANTITY! OFFER ENDS SOON
pick up at 822 Cranbrook St. N.
Ph: 426-5201
Selling Hankook 225/65/17 Winter Tires with over 90% tread life remaining. Tires are mounted on Steel Rims, 5 x 4.5” bolt pattern. Paid $1500, used less than 10,000km over one season. Asking $800. Phone: (250)919-2340
Open Houses
3000 sq. ft., 5 large bedrooms, 2½ baths, on 1 acre. Out of town taxes. New roof, upgraded septic system, 2 car - carport.
419,500
$
(250) 919-1011 FOR Sale! Mark Creek Crossing 1/2 duplex with cherry hardwood, large deck, finished basement, 3 bedrooms, 3 bathrooms. (2767 Rotary Dr) Asking $359,900. Tara Sykes, Royal LePage East Kootenay Realty, 250-427-0070, 250427-6496 cell. www.tarasykes.com
Real Estate RIVERFRONT RESORT, Southern BC. Lots available as low as $61,900. Year round park, indoor pool & spa. Low maintenance fees. Inquiries: Jan 250-499-7887; Caroline 250-499-4233; www.riversidervparkresort.com
Other Areas BUY LAND in Belize - English Commonwealth country in Central America. Caribbean Jungle lots - 3 miles from sea Starting at $11,000. All types available. For information call Patrick Snyder 778-403-1365.
Misc Services
Page 13 13 PAGE
Misc Services
OPEN HOUSE Wednesday Oct 10 5:00 to 6:00 pm #4, 2508 - 12 St N, Cranbrook $150,000 Better than renting! 2 bdrm, 2 bath townhouse, central location, bright unit, balcony, very well cared for, immediate possession! K212075 Waunita Mackintosh
250-426-8700 1111 Cranbrook St. N. www.blueskyrealty.ca www.mls.ca
BLUE SKY REALTY
Each office independently owned and operated.
FACT Garage Sales
Garage Sales Flyer Distribution Standards Association
Your ad will REACH over
1MILLION HOMES in BC alone!
It’s easy to advertise in HUNDREDS of community and daily newspapers in B.C. and across the country. Incredible coverage, great price: Starting from $260
To advertise using our “MARKET PLACE” in the Cranbrook Daily Townsman, Kimberley Daily Bulletin and The Valley, call us at 250-426-5201, ext. 202. 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!
WATKINS PRODUCTS
Watkins Associate Loretta-May (250)426-4632 www.watkinsonline.com/ lorettamaystewart or at Woodland Grocery.
Biodegradable Environmentally Friendly Kosher Spices Personal Care Products Ointments/Linaments, etc **Since 1860**
CALL SHOP LOCALLY
With one phone call to us you can reach over 3 million ESTATE SALE.the Oct 5 & 6, 9-3 homes across nation!
(no early birds please) 86 Little Van Horne St S off Wattsville Rd. Power & hand tools, art & drafting supplies, quilting fabric, men’s clothing, household items, kayak and more.
250-426-5201
MARKET PLACE
A healthy local economy depends on you
Our classified ads are on the net! Check it out at www.bcclassified.com
250-427-5333
Business/Office Service
250-426-5201
Business/Office Service
Business/Office Service
Business/Office Service
SERVICES GUIDE Contact these business for all your service needs!
Rentals Apt/Condo for Rent
Private Coin Collector Buying Collections, Accumulations, Olympic Gold & Silver Coins + Chad: 250-863-3082 in Town
Art/Music/Dancing
Art/Music/Dancing
PIANO LESSONS to improvise , Learnaccompany,
read music and play by ear.
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. 25 YEARS experience in
DRYWALL at your service.
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tuesday, october 2012 Tuesday, October 9, 9,2012
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 DENIED CANADA Pension plan disability benefits? The Disability Claims Advocacy Clinic can help. Call Allison Schmidt at 1-877-793-3222. www.dcac.ca
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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. -Window & door frames. -Patio & deck, beams/ columns/stairs. -Wood trims & fascia. -Decorative’s & shutters. -Functional vents. -Over 20 colours to choose from. Call Ken (250)919-2566. kmtapp@shaw.ca. Contractors welcome.
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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! Call SuperDave (250)421-4044 www.superdave consulting.ca 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.
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WEILER
PROPERTY SERVICES Trees and shrubs Hi Folks It’s that time of year to trim your trees and shrubs which will help them grow into healthy stronger plants. Give us a call for an appointment. David and Kim ~Arborculture and Horticulture training ~Over 25 years experience ~Local family business ~10% senior discount David Weiler, Kimberly Hartling Forest Technologists (250)427-4417
Page 14 tuesday, october 9, 20129, 2012 PAGE 14 Tuesday, October
Rentals
Transportation
Apt/Condo for Rent
Recreational/Sale
LIONS MANOR, Kimberley. Seniors living, 55+. 1bdrm apartment: $450./mo plus utilities & DD. N/S, No pets, no parties. Available Nov.1/12 (250)427-2970. Radium - Two units Pinewood W building. 2 bdrm, 2 bath, underground parking, nicely, fully furnished. All inclusive. Avail now. $900/mth/$1100/mth. Call Lina @ 403-239-6389 or 403-264-2782
Duplex / 4 Plex
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Combination Truck & 5th Wheel RV
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Sport Utility Vehicle
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950 /month
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Homes for Rent FOR RENT in Canal Flats. 3 bedroom home with 2 vehicle detached garage, newly renovated, N/S, pet negotiable. Available Sept.1st, $900/mo plus utilities & DD. Phone (250) 349-5306 or (250)4898389. SKI HILL Home. Kimberley. Flexible term rental. Double garage, fireplaces, 4 bedrooms. $1000./mo + utilities. References and DD required. 1 (403)931-1088
Suites, Lower #43 717 21rst AVE N. Upgraded 2bdrm. lower unit. Complete with stainless steel appliances, hardwood flooring and W/D. Storage included. $750./mo. plus utilities. N/S, N/P. Call (250)421-2590
Transportation
Auto Services
WINTERâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;S COMING! 2005 Ford
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NEWS
dailyTOWNSMAN/DAILY townsman / daily bulletin DAILY BULLETIN
â&#x20AC;&#x2DC;Fearless Felixâ&#x20AC;&#x2122; set to skydive from 23 miles up, breaking record Jeri Cl ausing Associated Press
ROSWELL, N.M. â&#x20AC;&#x201D; Experienced skydiver and extreme athlete Felix Baumgartner hopes to take the leap of his life on Tuesday, attempting the highest, fastest free fall in history. If he survives, the man dubbed â&#x20AC;&#x153;Fearless Felixâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;â&#x20AC;&#x2122; could be the first skydiver to break the sound barrier. If he doesnâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;t, a tragic fall could be live-streamed on the Internet for the world to see. Rigged with cameras, the 43-year-old former military parachutist from Austria is scheduled to jump from a balloon-hoisted capsule 23 miles near Roswell on Tuesday morning. He wants to break the record set in 1960 by Joe Kittinger, who jumped from an open gondola at an altitude of 19.5 miles. Kittingerâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s speed of 614 mph was just shy of breaking the sound barrier at that height. Baumgartner, who has been preparing for the jump for five years, has made two practice runs from the Roswell area, from 15 miles high in March and 18 miles in July. And while he and his team of experts recog-
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nize the worst-case scenarios â&#x20AC;&#x201D; including â&#x20AC;&#x153;boilingâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;â&#x20AC;&#x2122; blood and exploding lungs â&#x20AC;&#x201D; they have confidence in their built-in solutions. Those solutions are something NASA is watching closely. The space agency is interested in the potential for escape systems on future rocket ships. Baumgartnerâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s top medical man is Dr. Jonathan Clark, a former NASA flight surgeon whose wife, astronaut Laurel Clark, died in the space shuttle Columbia accident in 2003. Clark is dedicated to improving astronautsâ&#x20AC;&#x2122; chances of survival in a high-altitude disaster. The No. 1 fear is a breach of Baumgartnerâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s suit, which could cause potentially lethal bubbles to form in his bodily fluids, a condition known as boiling blood. There are also risks he could spin out of control, causing other problems. This death-defying venture is being sponsored by energy drink maker, Red Bull, which has funded other extreme athletic events. The projectâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s team of experts has a plan for almost every contingency. The spacesuit and capsule were tested in the early skydiving prac-
AP Photo/Red Bull Stratos, Jay Nemeth
In this Thursday, March 15, 2012 photo provided by Red Bull Stratos, Felix Baumgartner prepares to jump during the first manned test flight for Red Bull Stratos over Roswell, N.M. tice runs. The company wonâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;t say how much the project, called Stratos for
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stratosphere, is costing. But whether Baumgartner can make what he vows will be his final jump depends on the weather. A cold front that brought winds to the area this weekend prompted the team to move the planned Monday jump to Tuesday. Even the Albuquerque International Balloon Fiesta, 200 miles to the north, was forced to cancel its opening mass ascension of more than 500 balloons on Saturday morning because of the high winds. Those balloons took off Sunday, but winds in the 9 mph range and above remain in the forecast for Roswell all week, and the jump can only be made if winds on the ground are less than 2 mph. Still, Baumgartnerâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s team remained optimistic about getting the mission off the ground. â&#x20AC;&#x153;From what we are looking at so far, we are on schedule (for Tuesday),â&#x20AC;&#x2122;â&#x20AC;&#x2122; meteorologist Don Day said at a media briefing Sunday.
Weather permitting, Baumgartner will be lifted into the stratosphere around 7 a.m. MDT by a helium balloon that will stretch 55 stories high. Once he reaches his target altitude, he will open the hatch of his capsule and make a gentle, bunny-style jump. Any contact with the capsule on his exit could break open the pressurized suit that will protect him from temperatures as low as minus 70 and a lack of oxygen. He hopes to reach a speed of 690 mph to break the sound barrier. Baumgartner, who has made more than 2,500 jumps from planes, helicopters, landmarks and skyscrapers over the past 25 years, promises this jump will be his last. He says he plans to settle down with his girlfriend and fly helicopters on mountain rescue and firefighting missions in the U.S. and Austria.
daily townsman / daily bulletin
tuesday, october 9, 2012
Fire Prevention Week Al Collinson
Page 15
Kimberley Fire Department
Fire Chief
Assistant Fire Chief
Jack Paterson
Richard Prasad
Rich Klekowski
Ian Biddlecombe
Duane Hunt
John Adolphe
Grant Parnall
Chad Koran
Douglas Dickson
Dave Oscarson
Kevin Valin
Sam Lancaster
Phil Lomon
Jeremy Green
Dave Dresser
Dave Chorneyko
Colton Mayer
Jeff Busey
Ryan Berry
Jamie Davies
Andy Britner
Antoine Cuvele
Jamie Roche
Ron Milligan
Lieutenant
Firefighter
Calvin Dickson Firefighter
Lieutenant
Firefighter
Kyle Lomon Firefighter
Assistant Fire Chief
Firefighter
Firefighter
Juho Pelkonen Firefighter
Captain
Captain
Firefighter
Firefighter
Firefighter
Firefighter
Firefighter
Firefighter
Lieutenant
Firefighter
Firefighter
Firefighter
Lieutenant
Firefighter
Firefighter
Firefighter
Kimberley Fire Department Missing Noah Wesche Firefighter
Scott Davis Firefighter
Tim Greiner Firefighter
Open House & BBQ • Demo’s • Auto Extraction • Sparky the Fire Dog • Ladder 7 Aerial
Thank you
Have Two Ways Out! National Fire Protection Association focuses on Having Two Ways Out during Fire Prevention Week in October
October 7-13, 2012, NFPA blazes the trail for home fire safety and leads the campaign to have a home fire escape plan that prepares families 2012 theme highlights the to think fast and get out importance of fire escape planning and practice Join @NFPA in spreading importance of fire escape planning and practice. The National Fire Protection Association (NFPA) announced the 2012 Fire Prevention Week theme as “Have Two Ways Out!” to encourage families across the country to prioritize fire escape planning and practice. From
In Front of the Fire Hall!
to all our hard working firefighters.
quickly when the smoke alarm sounds. If one exit is blocked by smoke, it’s imperative to plan for another escape outlet. “We are excited for this year’s theme because
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(continued next page)
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daily townsman / daily bulletin
Page 16 tuesday, october 9, 2012
Fire Prevention Week
October 7 - 13, 2012
Kimberley Fire Department ( previous page)
it is simple and to the point—always plan for two ways out of your home,” says Jim Shannon, president of NFPA. “You never know which direction a fire will come from, and being prepared can save the lives of you and your loved ones.”
practice your escape plan. • Practice your escape plan twice a year.
Wish List. The Wish List encourages neighborhoods to partner together to build fire-safe communities and provides a
About the National Fire Protection Association (NFPA)
To coincide with this year’s Fire Prevention Week theme, NFPA gives practical fire safety tips to families: • Make a map of your home; mark a door and window that can be used to get out of every room. • Choose a meeting place outside in front of your home. • Have a grown-up sound the smoke alarm and
registry, fire departments create wish lists of fire safety materials needed for school visits, bringing fire departments and community members together to support lifesaving programs.
To further spread the word about fire safety during Fire Prevention Week, Sparky the Fire Dog kicks off Sparky’s
tangible way for media, local businesses and the general public to get involved with Fire Prevention Week. In the online
NFPA is a worldwide leader in fire, electrical, building, and life safety. The mission of the international nonprofit organization founded in 1896 is to reduce the worldwide burden of fire and other hazards on the quality of life by providing and advocating consensus codes and standards, research, training, and education.
HAVE 2 WAYS OUT www.ffp.org October 7-13
On November 4th, 2012 when you change your clock – change the batteries in your smoke detectors.
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