Saanich News, October 12, 2012

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NEWS: Rare rental unit breaks ground /A3 ARTS: Hobbit on stage at William Head /A17 SPORTS: Westshore Rebel on record pace /A20

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Embracing your inner child Nostalgia drives popular toy and hobby show

Bus strike looms for region

Edward Hill

Drivers could walk off the job Tuesday

News staff

Back in 1982 when a kid in Victoria tore open packaging for a Star Wars action figure and promptly lost the small bits behind the couch, the idea that Han Solo would become collectible and valuable never entered into the equation. What were toys of long-ago childhoods are now trophies of the modern hobby collector. Bragging rights and prestige goes to the guy with a 1970s GI Joe kung-fu grip in mint condition, obscure Hot Wheels cars, or discontinued Lego bits. All that is vintage, rare, nostalgic and collectible in the wide world of geek-dom – think Big Bang Theory in real life – will be found at Victoria’s Ultimate Hobby and Toy Fair at Pearkes Arena on Sunday. “People get to relive their childhood on their own terms,” says Candice Woodward, who organizes the show and owns Cherry Bomb Toys in downtown Victoria with her husband Biagio. “There’s such a big range of toys – there’s something for everybody,” including shooting volunteer zombies with Nerf guns. Geared at kids, families, model builders, collectors and those seeking to revisit their youth, the show promises 200 tables of old and new toys, models, trains, comic books, dolls, Lego, Star Wars, GI Joe, Transformers, superheroes, diecast cars and vinyl records. If there was a popular (or

Daniel Palmer News staff

designed to chop Barbie’s market share. Then Star Wars blew them out of the water. “GI Joes made possible the action figure. Boys would not play with dolls, so Hasbro made the action figure,” Biagio says. “It was huge. They had to do something to compete with Barbie.”

Bus drivers in Greater Victoria have scrapped their uniforms in favour of street clothes as part of a pressure tactic against B.C. Transit management. “We’re trying to do everything we can without disrupting service,” said Ben Williams, president of the Canadian Auto Workers local 333, which sanctioned the uniform ban. “We’re not getting their attention.” The drivers’ job action will escalate by Tuesday if B.C. Transit does not return to the negotiating table by that time, Williams said. “It will affect the commuting public.” More than 650 bus drivers, skilled trades and maintenance workers in Greater Victoria issued strike notice last Friday. The two sides remain at an impasse over wage increases and benefits, which are not in line with the B.C. government’s net zero mandate, said Transit spokesperson Meribeth Burton. “We asked the bargaining committee to go and speak to other unions. There seems to be a lack of understanding about what the co-operative gains mandate is,” she said. The negotiating mandate requires unions to offset any wage increases with cost savings and productivity gains in other areas. Both the B.C. Nurses Union and B.C. Government Employees Union have come to tentative contract agreements under the mandate.

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Edward Hill/News staff

Candice and Biagio Woodward show off handfuls of toys at their store, Cherry Bomb Toys. The duo organizes the bi-annual Ultimate Hobby and Toy Fair at Pearkes Arena in Saanich. even unpopular) toy or cartoon from the past 50 years, its paraphernalia probably has found table space at the fair. In all, toys span from the 1920s and to the modern day. The collectors and hobbyist demographic tends to skew toward males in their 30s, but as Candice points out, plenty of women collect vintage toys – a group of hard-core Barbie collectors should be on hand.

“Collectors want to get stuff they didn’t have as kids.” Candice herself is keen on collecting Transformers action figures from the 1980s, and vintage robots. Biagio keeps his eye out for vintage GI Joes and is a standing expert on their history and trivia: the original 1960s GI Joe looks like John F. Kennedy; the 1970s oil embargo shrunk it down to size; and the kung-fu grip was

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Travelling 1,100 kilometres and through 27 communities, this year’s Tour de Rock team has raised $1.02 million and counting. The money goes toward funding pediatric cancer research and Camp Goodtimes, a summer camp for kids with cancer. The team rode their final few kilometres to a hero’s welcome at Centennial Square last Friday, where supporters and public well-wishers gathered to pay

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tribute to the riders, which this year included 13 police officers, two media rider and two guest riders. All but two of the 17 riders hailed from the Capital Region, which led fundraising efforts this year. About 60 per cent of the total came from Greater Victoria. Tracie Clayton, with the Canadian Cancer Society, said money keeps coming in after the fact and the final tally won’t be

known until November. Of all the generosity demonstrated across Vancouver Island, Clayton noted the “mind blowing� $101,000 raised by Reynolds secondary in Saanich. It still brings a tear to her eye just talking about it, she said. “It’s kids helping kids. It doesn’t get any sweeter than that,� Clayton said. To donated to Cops for Cancer Tour de Rock, see tourderock.ca.

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SAANICH NEWS -Friday, October 12, 2012

COMMUNITY NEWS IN BRIEF

Surrey woman leaps from stolen car A woman in a stolen car sped away from police on Saturday, but ended up leaping from the moving vehicle near Tillicum Centre. Saanich police traffic officers zeroed in on the car after the automatic licence plate reader reported that it was stolen a few days earlier out of Surrey. A patrol officer pulled the car over in the 3200-block of Douglas St. (near the area of Tolmie Avenue) at 10 a.m., but the lone female driver soon sped off at high speed. Not long after, 911 calls poured in from witnesses reporting a car driving dangerously. Officers found it smashed against a wall at the Pearkes Recreation Centre. Witnesses told police the woman jumped from the car as it was moving, before it struck the building. The recreation centre didn’t suffer serious damage and the woman wasn’t injured. Police arrested a 27-yearold woman from Surrey, who faces charges of dangerous driving, escaping custody, possession of stolen property and failing to stop for police.

Gas leak clears McKenzie townhomes Residents in the 1400block of McKenzie Ave. spent part of their Sunday night outside or in a transit bus due to a large natural gas leak. Nine firefighters from the Saanich fire department systematically evacuated the townhouse complex after 8:30 p.m. after discovering a “significant” natural gas meter leak. B.C. Transit brought in a bus shelter for residents and police shut down McKenzie Avenue near Braefoot Park for about one hour, while Fortis crews controlled the leak and fire crews prepared fire protection. It’s unclear what caused the leak.

Kitchen fire damages townhome Saanich firefighters contained a kitchen fire at a townhouse complex Saturday night in the 2900 block of Harriet Rd. The fire department responded to the 10:50 p.m. callout with 19 firefighters in two engines and two ladders, a tanker truck and a rescue truck. The crew found the fire in a second floor unit and quickly had it under control and contained to the kitchen. The occupants had safely fled the townhouse and no injuries were reported. The unit and contents suffered about $60,000 worth of damage.

Work begins on first rental units in 25 years Three generations of family break ground on site at Tillicum, Burnside Natalie North News staff

By this time next year, tenants should be moving into the first privately owned purpose-built rental buildings in Saanich in a quarter century. Three generations of the Yakimovich family, owner-operators of EY Properties Ltd., returned to the site of their former offices, where, after three years of planning, they finally broke ground on Herons Landing and The Ardea. The two six-storey buildings, located at the corner of Burnside and Tillicum Roads, will offer 104 bachelor, one, two and three bedroom rental units, ranging in price from $775 to $1,700. “This is important that we get something going. Nothing’s really happened here in 25 years and I’m really hoping that this one development will kick start others in the area,” said Paul Gerrard, a Saanich councillor and Gorge-Tillicum resident. “We’ve got the mall, services, doctors, the rec centre, fantastic bus routes. This is obviously the best place for densification.” Company president, Ernie Yakimovich, alongside his mother, 88-year-old Olga Yakimovich, cofounder of George Yakimovich and Son, the precursor to EY, exuded enthusiasm over the much-anticipated start of the project and didn’t rule out the possibility of another new rental development, should economic conditions allow. “We’re looking at this one step at a time,” Ernie Yakimovich said. “It could be dependant on government regulation or government policy in that they’re talking about it finally after 25 years.” The “it” Ernie Yakimovich was

Natalie North/News staff

Family owners/operators of EY Properties came out to break ground on Saanich’s first purpose-built rental housing project in 25 years, at the corner of Tillicum and Burnside roads on Tuesday. From left, family matriarch Olga Yakimovich stands alongside her daughter-in-law and company co-owner, Yvonne Yakimovich, wife of company president Ernie Yakimovich, followed by Kerry Yakimovich who’s married to project co-ordinator Doug Yakimovich, and his sister, property manager Angela Oakley and her husband Doug Oakley. referring to is the capital gains taxation, which requires rental unit owners who sell to pay 50 per cent of the increased value of the property, and the lack of a rollover tax option for building owners selling properties in order to reinvest. The tax regime on rental buildings – not to mention ongoing upkeep costs – has created a disincentive to build new rentals, and an incentive for developers to build condos. The family has been open about the factors that allowed the project to move forward, despite the current challenges of building new rental stock. Working on a site the company

already owns and seeing the change in B.C. Building Code in 2009 to allow for six storey wood frame residential construction, as opposed to the previous fourstorey limit, rendered the project financially viable. “It’s been a long process and we’ve done a lot of work between ourselves and our consultants, the community and the municipality, to come up with the right building concept,” Ernie Yakimovich said. “I’m excited to be able to be able to produce this quality of rental building in this location.” EY has the set standard of achieving at least a Gold LEED (Leadership in Energy and Envi-

ronmental Design) rating, yet the company is more likely to achieve platinum standards on the project, through details such as common areas are powered by LED technology, exterior insulation, higher efficiency windows, energy star appliances and air to water heat pumps, said Doug Yakimovich, project co-ordinator. The higher efficiency standards will come at an initial investment of approximately $400,000 to $500,000 more than standard construction and are expected to yield a 60 per cent energy savings. Farmer Construction Ltd. has been hired for the contract. nnorth@saanichnews.com

$400K in losses during Cadboro Bay blaze A well-known Saanich artist was treated for smoke inhalation last week, following an afternoon house fire that left hundreds of thousands of dollars in damage to his home and art. At 2:30 p.m. Oct. 4, the Saanich Fire Department responded to a fire on Vista Bay Road, where heavy black smoke was emanating from the ground floor and upper windows of the home of painter Paul Hutner. A crew of 20 firefighters began salvaging his work while extinguishing the blaze. Hutner had been working in his downstairs

Trial starts for former Saanich priest accused of sexual assaults

studio at the time. When he went upstairs to do some framing, he heard the smoke alarm sound. Upon his return downstairs, he discovered the fire in the corner of his studio. “He tried initially to put the fire out with a fire extinguisher, then a garden hose,” said Saanich fire Capt. Rich Pala. “When he put the water on the fire, it darkened it right down, put the smoke right down, and that’s when he decided it was time to get out.” Hutner, who was home alone at the time, didn’t suffer any burns and was taken to hos-

The trial of a former priest charged with molesting children will start next week if the case can move past a number of procedural hurdles. Philip Jacobs, 62, appeared in Victoria Supreme Court this week, charged with sexual assault, two counts of sexual interference of a person under 14 and touching a young person for a sexual purpose. The charges involve three

pital for treatment of smoke inhalation and shock. The cause of the fire remains undetermined, but investigators are confident it was accidental. Damage is estimated to be approximately $400,000 to the structure and its contents. Hutner is known best for his large abstract pieces that blend elements of realism. He has been exhibiting his work since 1969 in Toronto and had much of his life’s work stored in his home at the time. nnorth@saanichnews.com

minors under the age of 14, with alleged incidents spanning September 1996 to June 2001, all within Saanich. Jacobs was arrested Aug. 4, 2010 and released on $25,000 bail. Jacobs served as a parish priest at St. Joseph the Worker on Burnside Road West from 1998 to 2002. Prior to that he worked part-time from 1996 to 1998 at St. Rose of Lima in Sooke. In the early 1990s he worked as a priest in Colom-

bus, Ohio, and faced similar allegations that never went to court. On Wednesday after the News’ deadline, the trial judge was expected to rule on a number of issues regarding disclosure of specific evidence documents. The trial will proceed with a voir dire – an examination for the admissibility of certain evidence – possibly today, before the actual trial begins. editor@saanichnews.com


A4 • www.saanichnews.com

Friday, October 12, 2012 - SAANICH

NEWS

An Island too far, an arena too small? Region guesses at reasons for losing Juno Awards bid Roszan Holmen News staff

Kyara Kahakauwila has her suspicions about why Victoria lost its bid to host the 2014 Juno Awards to Winnipeg. “It’s frustrating, as a committee member putting in two years,” said Kahakauwila, vice-president of the Capital Region Music Awards Society, which submitted the bid. Late last week, the Canadian Academy of Recording Arts and Sciences was keeping tight-lipped about its reasoning. Kahakauwila, however, suspects that two factors may have contributed to the academy’s decision. “One, we’re on an island,” she said, citing a perception of an added difficulty and expense to cross the water. “The fact that they didn’t come out here to do a site visit was really disappointing for us, because any concerns that they may have had, particularly with regard to travel, could have been waylaid.” Second, Kahakauwila admitted

The colour of fall Despite the sunny weather, fall is here and it is the season for pumpkins. Twoyear-old Eamon Canty makes room in his shopping cart for his pumpkins while shopping with mom Robyn Hiensch at the Root Cellar on McKenzie Avenue. Sharon Tiffin/News staff

that the Save-On-Foods Memorial Centre is smaller than most venues that have hosted the Juno Awards. In counter to those possible concerns, she noted St. John’s twice hosted the Junos despite being across the water and having an arena of a similar size. Academy president Melanie Berry said in a statement that the board of directors balanced all “relevant and collateral factors” in coming to its decision. “While each bid remains confidential, Victoria put in an excellent bid package, but was not the winning bid to host the 2014 Juno Awards,” said Berry. The Capital Region Music Awards Society will decide whether or not to resubmit its bid for 2015 after getting a better sense for why it lost the bid this year. “All the groundwork (for the bid) is already done,” Kahakauwila said, adding the board is grateful for the financial commitment from the province and most municipalities in the region. “Everyone thought this was a great idea. The interest and the need are still there.” Winnipeg hosted the Junos in 2005. It will host the 2014 awards on March 30. rholmen@vicnews.com

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SAANICH NEWS - Friday, October 12, 2012

‘Passive house’ aims for new efficiency standards

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Construction of Greater Victoria’s first “passive house” has begun on Oak Crest Drive, a home that promises to set high standards for energy efficiency. The project broke ground Sept. 24 after much resistance from area residents, who were vehemently against the previously proposed duplex – a plan that they felt would set a dangerous precedence and open the door monster homes on the large lots. Scaled back to a single family dwelling, neighbours are now supportive of the type of home developer Mark Bernhardt is bringing to the community – a house built to the high energy efficiency standards, or 60 to 90 per cent more efficient than standard house construction. “We can’t hold it against the neighbours for lodging concerns because it is their right and change is scary,” said Bernhardt, property owner and general contractor for Bernhardt Passive Home. “Rezonings are always controversial and change causes concern.” The current plan is for a home slightly smaller than the original and has undergone some changes to fit within the zoning. It features a flat roof, as opposed to the originally-designed peaked roof, a wall of south facing windows and an overhang that allows for shade in the summer and sunlight in the winter as the angle of the sun changes with the season. Bernhardt plans to live in the five-bedroom house, while his father Rob, project manager will live in the basement suite. “The general function is still the same,” he added. The home comes with a total price tag of $600,000, or $10,000 more than the same home stan-

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Mark Berndhardt, left, stands on his Oak Crest Drive property where he began building the region’s first passive home, pictured above in an architect’s rendering. Natalie North/News staff

dardly constructed. The difference will be recouped in six to 10 years of energy savings, Bernhardt said. Passive house certification is solely based on energy efficiency. A passive house maximizes energy collected from sunlight and through building shape, orientation, airtightness and heat recovery ventilation to achieve efficiencies 60 to 90 per cent greater than standard construction. They require so little heat that they can be heated primarily through passive sources such as sunlight and existing appliances. The passive house may be the first of its kind in the region, but according to Casey Edge, executive officer with the Victoria branch of the Canadian Home Builders’ Association, the Berndhardts are far from the only developers opting to adhere to high energy efficiency standards.

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“Everyone is in favour of increased energy efficiency in homes and being environmentally responsible, but it’s important not to continually ratchet up the energy efficiency without doing the due diligence,” Edge said, quoting the leaky condo fiasco of the ’80s and ’90s. “British Columbia did that once already and it would be folly to do that again.” As for a return in investment on energy savings, Edge is mindful of the actual cost of higher priced homes, once interest rates are taken into consideration. “People say over the long term, savings will be recouped, well that will be quite a long time,” he said. “We have to balance energy efficiency with affordability – especially in this region where we have some of the highest costs of living in North America.” Bernhardt believes the merits reach beyond economics. “As a byproduct of that energy efficiency, you get all kinds of other benefits, like pristine indoor air quality, even temperatures throughout and warm concrete floors in the basement, even without radiant heating.” nnorth@saanichnews.com

Read the Saanich News every Wednesday and Friday

2012 PUBLIC NOTICE

SAANICH FIREWORKS BYLAW The Municipality of Saanich has a Fireworks Regulation Bylaw No. 8865 to regulate the sale, possession, and discharge of fireworks in the community. The Bylaw is in effect, 24 hours a day, 7 days a week, all year. Residents and visitors to the Municipality of Saanich should note the following important restrictions: • Everyone who possesses / discharges fireworks must have a valid Fireworks permit; • Permits are issued only to persons 18 years of age and older; • Consumer fireworks discharges may only take place on October 31st, between 5:00pm and 10:00 pm; and • No fireworks may be sold or traded in the Municipality of Saanich. Residents are encouraged to review the Bylaw for full information before planning any fireworks event. The Bylaw can be found at http://saanich.ca/municipal/clerks/bylaws/ fireworks8865.pdf. As a condition of the permit, a Fireworks Safety Course is MANDATORY for those wishing to use consumer fireworks. The Saanich Fire Department offers this course as a public safety initiative. Fireworks Permit applicants must choose and attend one of the Fireworks Safety Course workshops offered below.

PRE-REGISTRATION FOR THE WORKSHOPS IS MANDATORY Register by e-mail: fireprevention@saanich.ca. You must include your name, phone number, and the number for the Workshop you wish to attend. Or contact the Saanich Fire Prevention Division: 250-475-5500. Fireworks Safety Course Workshop Schedule

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Friday, October 12, 2012

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Capital Regional District directors should put the proposed $782-million secondary sewage treatment project on hold and look at emerging and alternative treatment technology. That’s the appeal Saanich Coun. Vic Derman put forward at Wednesday’s CRD liquid waste management committee meeting. Derman said new energy extraction methods in sewage treatment could make the current project a relic before it’s even completed. Esquimalt Mayor Barb Desjardins also expressed concern that directors are moving too hastily to implement the plan, which includes a wastewater treatment plant at McLoughlin Point and a biosolids energy centre in a to-be-determined location. The federal and provincial governments have pledged one-third of the $782 million price tag, but any cost overruns will fall on municipal shoulders. “The further we go down these roads, the more we have adopted and accepted this plan, the less opportunity we have to revisit and re-look at things,” Desjardins

said later in an interview. At the meeting, Desjardins put forward a notice of motion that calls for a re-evaluation of how federal environmental standards apply to the Capital Region and a request for exemption from federal wastewater regulations. She also hopes the CRD will re-engage “prominent scientists who are united in their opinion that we are not harming the environment and that we have the wrong plan.” “Basically, it’s asking this committee to take a stand and turn the table around, to stop,” she said. The committee also reviewed the first concrete cost-sharing formula between the seven municipalities involved in the project. Councils are expected to pony up $37 million collectively each year, but the formula will be reviewed by each municipality before being approved. Oak Bay fares the worst, with an estimated $391 annual cost per household by 2017, while Victoria comes in at $353 per household. CRD staff cautioned that the estimates are preliminary and will depend on borrowing rates at the time of implementation. Dr. Shaun Peck, the former CRD medical health officer and board member for

ARESST (Association for Responsible and Ethical Sewage Treatment), also presented his opposition to the project at Wednesday’s committee meeting. “There’s still time to apply for an exemption to the federal wastewater regulations based on the unique marine receiving environment of Victoria,” Peck said. dpalmer@vicnews.com

Sewage cost breakdown Early estimates of annual cost to operate the CRD sewage plant Victoria: $13.8 million; $353 per average household Esquimalt: $2.5 million; $311 per household Saanich: $11.5 million; $232 per household Oak Bay: $2.5 million; $391 per household Langford: $4.1 million; $332 per household Colwood: $1.4 million; $310 per household View Royal: $1.2 million; $240 per household

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In terms of vintage goods, Biagio suspects Greater Victoria has many people who have unknowingly squirreled away pure gold – old toys, LP records, comics, magazines and even old shopping catalogues that now have the added value of retro cache and nostalgia. “Shows like Big Bang Theory and Toy Hunter have brought collecting into the spotlight,” he says. “Victoria has a lot of untapped resources for collectables. There’s a lot of garages with stuff that hasn’t seen the light of day for decades.

“I know we have good stuff hiding here. A lot of folks moved here in the 1980s, a lot of retirees stayed here. Many of those haven’t touched what’s in their attic.” Candice and Biagio launched the toy show five years ago with the aim to celebrate the varied but dedicated collector culture, while appealing to kids and raising money for charity –$15,000 so far. This time they’ve drawn a few Victoria-based cartoon, comic and voice artists, including voice actor Jim Henshaw and Ken Steacy, who has illustrated for Marvel and D.C. comics.

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HEALS RANGE

CHAMP DE TIR DE HEALS

A night firing exercise will be carried out at Heals Range on: 20 October 2012

Un exercice de tir de nuit aura lieu au champ de tir Heals le: 20 Octobre 2012

Heals Range is located west of the junction of Willis Point Road and Wallace Drive, in Saanich, BC. The coordinates are 48° 32’ 40” North, 123° 27’ 00” West.

Le champ de tir Heals est situé à l’ouest de la jonction du chemin Willis Point et Wallace Drive, à Saanich, CB. Les coordonnées sont 48° 32’ 40” Nord, 123° 27’ 00” Ouest.

Bilingual signposts indicating that there is to be no trespassing mark all entryways, roads and tracks into the range area.

Des affiches bilingues interdisant l’accès indiquent les endroits interdits.

STRAY AMMUNITION AND EXPLOSIVE OBJECTS Bombs, grenades, shells and similar explosive objects are a hazard to life and limb. Do not pick up or retain objects as souvenirs. If you have found or have in your possession any object, which you believe to be an explosive, notify your local police and arrangements will be made to dispose of it. No unauthorized person may enter this area and trespassing is prohibited. BY ORDER Base Commander Canadian Forces Base Esquimalt

MUNITIONS ET EXPLOSIFS PERDUS Les bombes, grenades, obus et autres objets explosifs similaires posent des risques de blessures et de perte de vie. Ne ramassez pas ces objets et ne les gardez pas comme souvenirs. Si vous avez trouvé ou si vous en avez en votre possession un objet que vous croyez être un explosif, signalez-le à la police locale qui prendra les mesures nécessaires pour l’éliminer.

Entrée interdite aux personnes non autorisées. PAR ORDRE DU Commandant Base des Forces Canadiennes Esquimalt

The carnival games section is by donation and funds go to the B.C. Children’s Hospital. A Sideshow Collectibles one-sixth scale model of Skaar (son of the Hulk) will be auctioned off for the Multiple Sclerosis Society. “Big conventions like the San Diego Comicon focus on entertainment and movie stars. We are very much focused on family,” Biagio said. “It’s our No. 1 priority.” The Ultimate Toy and Hobby Fair is Sunday, Oct. 14, 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. at Pearkes Arena. Adults $5, kids are free. See www.ultimatetoyfair.com editor@saanichnews.com


www.saanichnews.com • A7

SAANICH NEWS -Friday, October 12, 2012

Beloved Cadboro Bay tree lives to fight another day Residents surround ailing Douglas fir, again News staff

Bob Furber photo

about safety, so we’re not going to put people at risk by trying to remove the tree, when they’re unwilling to get out from the hazard zone underneath the tree.” The tree has fallen victim to a rot-causing fungus, phaeolus schweinitzii, and the Saanich parks department had deemed that it should be removed, given its size and location in an area prone to high winds. The group of invested locals, to which Oberg belongs, hired their own arborist to conduct an independent review of the health of the tree after Saanich’s initial discovery of the fungus in the spring. That process yielded the same conclusion as Saanich’s testing. By the end of August, Saanich agreed to a third review of the health of the tree and imposed a deadline of Oct. 5 to receive any additional information residents found, before the sched-

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uled removal during this week, Roer said. “We’ve been trying to be patient to see what that information is, but there’s been no real hard and fast information that has changed our opinion,” Roer added. “Winter storms are approaching and that tree presents a risk we have to address. We’ve been very patient and attempted to be open and transparent from the beginning.” Residents have the assistance of a lawyer who lives in the neighbourhood, Oberg said, noting that an injunction against Saanich is in the works. Roer confirmed the department had received some correspondence, but no official legal action had been made by press time. “Where the factual trail goes, we will live with. But we are confident, we know now, that the trail still needs some development,” Oberg said.

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Natalie North John Oberg enjoyed his morning tea from a new locale Tuesday: on the boulevard along Cadboro Bay Road, where he pulled up a lawn chair and sat beneath a towering Douglas fir tree slated for removal. Oberg set up shop with a friend beneath the canopy of the ancient but ailing tree on Cadboro Bay Road near Arbutus Road, and within 15 minutes, a the tree removal company hired by Saanich to fall the tree had joined them. Next came a small group of concerned residents who’d like to see more testing done before the tree is taken down. Representatives from the municipality’s parks department, and two police officers were called in to keep the peace. “We’re not radicals,” Oberg said. “We’re senior citizens. … We’re just a bunch of seniors that love our neighbourhood and don’t want people destroying it.” The handful of residents refused to leave the base of the tree and their protest has worked, for now. Saanich’s plan to remove the tree is postponed once more – at least temporarily. “Obviously it’s not safe to remove the tree if folks are in the way,” said Rae Roer, manager of Saanich parks. “The original reason to remove the tree is

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A8 • www.saanichnews.com

SAANICHNEWS

Friday, October 12, 2012 - SAANICH

EDITORIAL

NEWS

Penny Sakamoto Group Publisher Kevin Laird Editorial Director Edward Hill Editor Oliver Sommer Advertising Director

The Saanich News is published by Black Press Ltd. | 818 Broughton St., Victoria, B.C. V8W 1E4 | Phone: 250-920-2090 • Fax: 250-386-2624 • Web: www.saanichnews.com

OUR VIEW

Bus strikes hit poor, elderly P

eople with long memories understand what life is like without bus service. Slightly more than 11 years ago, Greater Victoria suffered through a two-week transit strike, where the main form of transportation for tens of thousands of people ground to a halt. Some people made do and carpooled with friends or hopped on a bike. Many who needed to crisscross the region couldn’t get to their jobs and lost wages, or risked their personal safety by hitchhiking. Parents suddenly had to drive their teenager to school who normally took the bus. Elderly people on fixed incomes who usually hopped a bus had to dole out for taxis for medical appointments or grocery shopping. Some drivers and even bike riders enjoyed roadways free of big, imposing buses, and many people with cars offered strangers free lifts, but the silver linings of a transit strike are few. Perhaps more than any other public sector contract dispute, shutting down buses throws a city’s economy into chaos and hurts the most vulnerable people. Prior to the 2001 strike, bus drivers went on strike in 1999 for one week. Before that, transit went on strike in 1984 for three months and crippled the economy of downtown Victoria. Today its shocking how little has changed in terms of transportation infrastructure. At least back then you could still catch the VIA dayliner. If bus drivers strike next week, cycling and carpooling will ramp up and many people will make do. But the poor, elderly and disabled will face a grim few weeks or months. The Canadian Auto Workers union and B.C. Transit management have demonstrated in the past they are willing to use the city’s transportation network as a negotiating tool. Many other big unions – nurses, government employees and even teachers – have found ways to work within the province’s net-zero mandate. Both sides in the transit dispute claim they are too. The damage done by a transit strike is well documented. Agreeing to a contract is possible and inevitable. The CAW and B.C. Transit don’t have to shut down the city to do it. What do you think? Give us your comments by e-mail: editor@vicnews.com or fax 250-386-2624. All letters must have a name and a telephone number for verification. The Victoria News is a member of the British Columbia Press Council, a self-regulatory body governing the province’s newspaper industry. The council considers complaints from the public about the conduct of member newspapers. If talking with the editor or publisher does not resolve your complaint about coverage or story treatment, you may contact the B.C. Press Council. Your written concern, with documentation, should be sent to B.C. Press Council, 201 Selby St., Nanaimo, B.C. V9R 2R2. For information, phone 888-687-2213 or go to www.bcpresscouncil.org.

2009 WINNER

Mysteries in the family history F

amilies are odd things and While that time period remains family history is often odder. a mystery, I did, discover some I’m sure some of you have pretty amazing things. Using simple too many living relatives to worry online searches, I found a letter much about former family. But that my great grandfather William those of us who enjoy Thomas (Tom) Denton poking around in the wrote to his hometown world of genealogy are paper in Driffield, often more surprised England, extolling the by events than we opportunities to be found expected. in Manitoba. I’ve done a little The letter is a little research, mainly on my over the top, knowing as father’s side. It’s easier to I do that the attempts at investigate in a language farming were defeated by you understand – the poor land and flooding. Ukrainian and Polish on Maybe it was written Don Denton my mother’s side create soon after he arrived and A Thousand Words he was excited by what a challenge. The first thing you he first saw. realize when you start to research My cousin Russ is the real history family history is that you’re always sleuth in the family. He started starting too late. I really wish I’d researching years ago and is the been curious when my paternal go-to guy for any family info. grandmother was still alive. She A good example was his work lived into her 90s, but when you’re delving into what ultimately young, family stories often don’t happened to our great-grandfather. seem all that important. My father Despite searching, Russ could and his siblings have memories of never find an obituary and no their parents’ and relatives’ lives, one alive seemed to know what but there are many blank spots. happened to him, until recently. For instance I’ll probably never A few months ago in the know what my grandfather did Winnipeg archives, Russ came for two years when he and my across an article about Tom’s grandmother went to England, got retirement from the park. The married and had their first child. article stated that the freshly retired Did he work for his father-in-law? It Tom was moving to Victoria with was certainly not mentioned to any two of his sons. Nice to know my of his kids or at least not that they great-grandfather was a pioneer in remember. turning Victoria into a retirement

destination. This new info gave Russ a whole new direction and he’s since found that Tom married for a third time while here. He lived on Bethune Avenue in Saanich, and a recent visit allowed Russ to meet some descendants by the name of O’Connor. These unexpected discoveries can really make researching your family’s background a rewarding pastime. While I was writing this column, I was randomly typing into Google family names to see what would pop up. I quickly discovered a few new facts about my paternal grandmother’s brother, George Fowle. Then came the real surprise. My great grandfather had come to Canada with his wife and children, as well as a half-brother, Timothy Barmby. That half-brother had one child, who never had kids of his own, so that seemed like the end of the Barmby family line here. Except my search also turned up a family page for a Barmby brother or cousin who came to Canada at the same time, married in Winnipeg, had children and ended up in Saskatchewan. Who knew? Well, now we do. So now it’s back to the previous mystery: what did my grandfather do for those years in London? Don Denton is photo supervisor for Black Press Greater Victoria. ddenton@vicnews.com

‘I really wish I’d been curious when my paternal grandmother was alive.’


www.saanichnews.com • A9

SAANICH NEWS - Friday, October 12, 2012

Letters to the editor The News welcomes opinions and comments. Letters should discuss issues and stories covered in the News and be 300 words or less. The News reserves the right to edit letters for style, legality, length and taste. The News will not print anonymous letters. Please enclose phone number for verification of your letter’s authenticity. Phone numbers are not printed. Mail: Letters to the Editor, Victoria News, 818 Broughton St., Victoria, V8W 1E4 Fax: 386-2624 Email: editor@vicnews. com

Giving thanks for the sun The beach below Dallas Road attracted many walkers and sun worshippers on Thanksgiving Day, as temperatures reached the low 20s and provided summer-like conditions absent for so much of the region’s actual summer. Don Descoteau/News staff

LETTERS Flushing our sewage is far from an ideal situation I heard former environment minister David Anderson say recently that dumping Victoria’s sewage into the Strait of Juan de Fuca was “as effective as artificial land-based sewage treatment.” How can any intelligent human believe such a statement? According to Capital Regional District numbers, outfalls at Clover Point and Macaulay Point handle the effluent from 330,000 people daily, many of whom use personal-care products, laundry products, medicines and more, all contributing to a chemical stew being discharged into the local environment.

Stores throughout the region sell over-the-counter medicines, household cleansers, mouthwashes, hair dyes, bleaches and similar products every day. Additionally, many area residents use prescription drugs, virtually all of which pass through their bodies and are excreted into the waste stream. Anyone can read the warning labels on any of these products, and understand they pose a threat to the environment if not handled carefully. Even toothpaste is toxic, with labels warning users not to ingest the

product. But almost all of the areas’ 330,000 residents flush this down the drains, every day. Anderson and the Association for Responsible, Ethical and Sustainable Sewage Treatment say “source control” is their answer to the concerns about these chemical contaminants. Does he really think Victoria’s residents will stop washing their clothes, cleaning their houses, or stop taking their medicines? Many scientific studies have been done that show these chemicals are damaging the worlds’ environment. Anderson says the conditions

of the Strait of Juan de Fuca are somehow “different,” yet virtually all communities along the Strait currently have sewage treatment, except Victoria. Even little communities like Sooke, Sidney, Salt Spring Island, Friday Harbour, Port Townsend and Sequim have sewage treatment. If these communities all have funded and built sewage treatment, why can’t affluent Victoria, the Provincial Capital? Anderson tells the public an “exemption” is possible. With virtually every other nearby community already treating its

sewage, what will Victoria state as its “special” circumstances, warranting its ability to continue to pollute the areas’ environment all others are spending so much to clean up? Modern sewage treatment facilities remove 98 per cent of the chemicals of concern. Screening raw sewage before dumping it into the environment removes none of them. It is sad to see Anderson and others deceive the public in their efforts to achieve their political goals. Tyler Ahlgren Victoria

Readers respond: Ironman Canada bid, Syrian war, sewage legacy Ironman Canada bid loss a crying shame Re: Too much, too soon for Victoria (Sports, Oct. 5) What a shame. Although it was apparently the preferred location, Victoria has lost its bid to become the next host and permanent home of the Ironman Canada, a world famous triathlon event attracting thousands of participants and visitors each year. The reason given by the event organizers for not accepting Victoria’s bid was the archaic bureaucratic and stifling procedures required to obtain quick approval and continuity from 10 of our 13 municipalities in order to meet the timing and routing commitments for the event. Just another case for amalgamation wouldn’t you say? This is especially sad, since apparently Ironman Canada gave

Victoria the highest rating for its course, location and all round perfect venue. We all know the natural beauty of our area is a highlight for all participants from around the world when they participate in our many marathons and other sporting events throughout the year. Wouldn’t you think that an event of this magnitude, with the financial benefits it would bring to our area, that the provincial government, along with strong input from all municipalities in our area, would have enthusiastically endorsed our bid rather than idly sitting back, leaving just a few local interested parties to pursue the bid on their own? Maybe it’s for the best, as families from the Mainland would probably not be able to afford to come over to share in the excitement of this world-class event because of the atrocious

fare prices of our B.C. Ferries. Martin Battle Victoria

Children victimized in Syrian civil war Today, I am ashamed to be Canadian. I am appalled and disgusted that Canada is not doing more to help children in Syria. While I sit and pay for Stephen Harper’s salary and spending account, hundreds of children are dying by the day. What is the media doing to support them? Is the media applying pressure to the federal government to mobilize aid? As a Canadian citizen, I increase your ratings by turning on the news. When do you do something for me? I’m asking that you help these children, draw as much attention to their plight as you possibly can. Tell Canadian citizens what it

is they can do to help. Somebody needs to get to those children, any way they can. Rachelle Dallaire Langford

Sewage project latest Campbell legacy fiasco Should anyone be surprised that the B.C. Appeal Court has thrown out the ludicrous thirdparty advertising law that Gordon Campbell crafted? It joins the turfing-out of his drinking-driving curbside justice fiasco, his shredding of the teachers’ contracts and several others. And they join his brilliant policies like the carbon tax and the phony $100 rebate that came with it, his compulsory balancedbudget legislation, the payment of $5 million in legal fees for the defendants who pleaded guilty in the B.C. Rail scandal, his fixed election dates, $600-million

roof for B.C. Place, his closing of Tourism B.C., open cabinet meetings and dozens of equally bizarre decisions that he and his cabinet colleagues decided were so appropriate. Perhaps people will now understand how much thought went into the Campbell/Penner orders that we should spend $1 billion treating sewage effluent that is already – almost perfectly – being treated in the ocean off our southern shores. Too bad he also eliminated the requirement for a referendum, or for any environmental/economic/ social impact study, because neither would pass. When will some of our elected officials summon up the courage to start telling the truth and stop this project? Or, is the stampede of the politically correct lemmings irreversible? Bob Wheaton Saanich


A10 • www.saanichnews.com

Friday, October 12, 2012

Project aims to build trust between teens, seniors Natalie North News staff

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nizers of “Trust Me!” want to hear from you. And teens feeling judged by seniors – you’re invited into the conversation, too. Trust Me! is a project aimed at building relationships between teens and seniors of Gorge-Tillicum by making safer shared community spaces that most teens and seniors use – areas such as sidewalks, malls, recreation centres and bus stops. “We called it ‘Trust Me!’ because between ... teens and the seniors, we feel that there’s a lack of trust,” said Liz McCarter, wellness centre co-ordinator for the Vancouver Island Health Authority. “I’ve often heard seniors say, especially when they live near a high school, that they don’t go out at noon and they don’t go out after three, when all the kids get out,” McCarter said. “Then you’ll often hear kids say ‘Well I was trying to be nice to a senior, but they didn’t do anything’ – they just don’t understand each other.” “There’s a lack of trust on both sides,” said Julie Wallace, recre-

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ation programmer. “This is a way for teens to see how community development works and how you build a relationship with community groups.” A team of 10 teens and 10 seniors will participate in four brainstorming sessions to develop projects aimed at joining the two segments of the population in Gorge-Tillicum. McCarter sees the project as the first of its kind across the region. Trust Me! is sponsored by the Greater Victoria Eldercare Foundation, the Vancouver Island Health Authority, B.C. Healthy communities and the District of Saanich. The final project will be revealed to the community in March, through Wallace has no idea what form it will take at this point. “That’s the exciting part,” she said. “It’s not driven by anyone organizing the project. It’s organized by the teens and the seniors.” Trust Me! is made possible through a $20,000 federal grant under The New Horizons for Seniors Program, which supports projects led or inspired by seniors who want to make a difference in the lives of others and in their communities. Any seniors interested in contributing to the project should contact McCarter by Oct. 12 at 250-370-5688 ext: 34682 or elizabeth.mccarter@viha.ca. Interested teens can contact Wallace at julie. wallace@saanich.ca. nnorth@saanichnews.com

- SAANICH

NEWS

Offer in line with other unions, Transit says Continued from Page A1

“Our (offer) is exactly in line with the nurses (and) the BCGEU and we’re still surprised we’re sitting at this impasse,” Burton said. Williams said the union is aware of the government’s restraints. “We are within the guidelines that are laid out with the government,” he said. No specific bargaining details are being provided by either side, but both Williams and B.C. Transit have expressed a desire to return to negotiations. Burton called the uniform ban a safety violation, from B.C. Transit’s perspective. “It’s confusing for our riders but we’re grateful that at least the system is running,” she said. Greater Victoria transit operators last took strike action in April 2001. The strike lasted 14 days. HandyDART drivers are under a separate collective agreement and are not part of the job action. dpalmer@vicnews.com - with files from Roszan Holmen

COVER-TO-COVER

On-Line

Now available in an easy to read downloadable and printable format!

Go to: vicnews.com oakbaynews.com saanichnews.com goldstreamgazette.com Click on Link (on the right) or Scroll down to the bottom Click on eEdition (paper icon)

Instant access to our complete paper! Editorial, Ads, Classifieds, Photos


www.saanichnews.com • A11

SAANICH NEWS - Friday, October 12, 2012

Celebrate final link in the news chain

Are your kids begging for new games?

Newspaper carriers celebrated for weekly efforts Don Descoteau News staff

It’s easy to take for granted the community newspaper that gets delivered to your door twice a week. Readers should know, however, that Black Press doesn’t take the people who distribute the Saanich News for granted. “For me the carriers are number one,� says Black Press Greater Victoria circulation director Bruce Hogarth, who oversees about 1,100 delivery people throughout the system. “Without the carriers, all the hard work that goes into producing the newspaper would be for naught.� Newspaper Carrier Appreciation Week in B.C. runs from tomorrow (Oct. 13) through Oct. 20. To celebrate, the News and parent company Black Press are spotlighting the

youth and adults who are the final link in the news chain that starts with stories being written and advertisements sold and ends with people taking time out to read our print products. In Greater Victoria, the small army of Black Press carriers deliver free community newspapers to approximately 100,000 homes and businesses. Carriers are valued and appreciated for that weekly effort, Hogarth says, noting the job comes with a lot of responsibility. “For a lot of our carriers, this is their first job and it’s a great opportunity for them to learn valuable skills that they can carry forward.� He also credits those parents who play a major role in helping younger carriers fulfill Black Press’ commitment to the readers of the News.

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Kodiak Whitney, 11, is one of hundreds of Black Press employees who deliver the News twice a week throughout Greater Victoria. Newspaper Carrier Appreciation Week runs Oct. 13 to 20. The News rewards carriers through the year with various inhouse contests and prize draws. If you’re interested in finding out more about becoming a News carrier, call 250-360-0817.

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A12 • www.saanichnews.com

A CRITICAL LOOK AT CORE SERVICE REVIEWS-

The Toronto Experience

Friday, October 12, 2012 - SAANICH

Curious about how a core service review can affect a community? Join us Monday October 15 at 7:00 pm for an evening of discussion.

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Simulated crash at YYJ tests emergency crews Steven Heywood

Sean Meagher, President of Public Interest Trevor Davies, CUPE BC General Vice-President and CUPE 374 President

News staff

Sean was highly involved in Toronto’s core service review and will speak about his experience with Toronto’s core service review and how a community can mobilize and protect their public services when involved in such a review. Trevor will speak from a local perspective about Greater Victoria’s public services and how core service reviews could drastically affect our community.

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A flaming wreck near the runway of the Victoria International Airport saw a quick response from firefighters, paramedics and police on Oct. 4. Municipal and airport fire crews doused the flames with fire retardant foam and cut into the fuselage of a downed aircraft to get to the trapped passengers inside. The fiery simulation — an emergency preparedness exercise — was designed to test the response times of the airport emergency services and fire crews from the Town of Sidney and the North and Central Saanich. “It’s part of our emergency preparations and we plan for it regularly,� said airport authority president and CEO Geoff Dickson. “It’s a regular event every four years to have such a major simulation.� Dickson said the response to a fake downed aircraft at the west end of the airport, complete with live volunteer victims, flame, smoke and foam, went well and the emergency response department will review the effort to make sure they hit their targets. One of the main goals, he said, was to ensure airport fire crews can get the call, get on the tarmac and hit a fire with foam in two minutes. “It went better than we could have expected,� said Dickson, adding there were some glitches with communications outside of the airport with mutual aid partners. “(A crash) could happen

Steven Heywood/News staff

A Victoria Airport Authority firefighter pulls a simulated victim from a burning fuselage during last Thursday’s airport emergency exercise. here,� he admitted, “but the probability is pretty low. But we have to prepare for it.� On scene during the event, Dickson said there were around 120 people participating, from emergency crews and victims to communications and security staff. “I think it’s realistic,� Dickson said of the exercise. “When you’re in the heat of something like this, it’s always a challenge but it’s first class from what I can see in the first response.� YYJ media spokesperson Terry Stewart said airport fire

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www.saanichnews.com • A13

SAANICH NEWS - Friday, October 12, 2012

NEW VIEW

MEET JOHN RYZEBOL

Making A Difference

boomers to seniors

Seniors Helping in Your Community SHARING TIME AND ENERGY

‘RESPECT’

saanich

Senıor

The Senior Life

Osteoporosis

session sheds light on hidden disease

Living in love and kindness

Joan Hirons stretches during an osteo-fit class at the Monterey Centre in Oak Bay. TIM COLLINS/NEWS STAFF

Q TIM COLLINS NEWS STAFF

Joan Hirons has always been an energetic, vibrant woman – enjoying activities like line dancing, tap dancing and working as a volunteer at the Monterey Centre in Oak Bay. At age 78 she felt Åt and ready to meet the world. Then last July, Hirons was at the entrance to the centre when she twisted her body without moving her feet and broke her hip. “It wasn’t a fall, or an accident of any kind,” she said. “I just planted my feet and turned.” She was still recovering from that injury

when in October, she broke her other hip while at home. Hirons was eventually diagnosed with osteoporosis, a chronic disease that is characterized by low bone mass and the deterioration of bone tissue. She was told that she faced a signiÅcant period of recovery at Royal Jubilee Hospital. “I had no idea that I had a problem,” Hirons said. “I wasn’t feeling weak or anything like that. It’s one of those silent things that can affect you without a lot of warning.” Hirons’ story is all too common, said Larry Funnel, chair of the Osteoporosis

page

the

15

BIG

“They leave the hospital with a cast, but are still unaware that they are suffering from a chronic disease,” said Funnel. For Hirons, the story h has a positive ending. D Despite her fractures, she has recovered and her diagn diagnosis allowed her to make th the appropriate changes in her life. During her two months of recovery and rehabilitation at Royal Jubilee, Hirons began to participate in osteo-Åt classes. The classes are designed to teach participants how to minimize twisting and bending from the waist, while leading them through a series of movements designed to increase

ISSUE

Patient Network. About 80 per cent of women with the chronic disease are undiagnosed, n he said. “The Årst indication that they have a problem is when a fracture occurs,” said Funnel. The situation is even worse for men. Even though about 20 per cent of men will at some point in their lifetime suffer an osteoporotic break, nearly 95 per cent of those men are undiagnosed. And both men and women may continue to be undiagnosed, even after a fracture.

continued on 15

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A14 • www.saanichnews.com

Friday, October 12, 2012 - SAANICH

NEWS

Saanich Senior

Boomers to Seniors

Respect nutured with age You know you’re getting old when the thought of being photographed naked sends chills down your spine. Yes ... my generation gap is Q BRIAN KIERAN showing. COLUMNIST I come by this senior reÆection honestly enough. Like most of you I have been bombarded by Internet photos of Prince Harry romping around his Las Vegas hotel suite in the buff. In the conservative shelter of my reclining years these photos remind me that I was pretty cheeky when I was a younger man. They also remind me that one of my truly cheeky professional moments came during a conversation with Harry’s mom when he was just a baby. In my defence, I was fully dressed. Let me take you back more than a quarter century. Five years after their “wedding of the century” Prince Charles and Princess Diana came to B.C. for Expo ’86. In Victoria the Lieutenant Governor hosted a media reception. I had covered the wedding in London for the Vancouver Sun and was struck then by how powerfully Lady Di radiated her shy bewilderment at the spectacle in which she was the centre piece. At the reception Åve years later, I was immediately aware that

saanich

the beautiful shyness was gone from her eyes. The Princess of Wales commented that the off-therecord event must be boring for journalists in search of news. I jumped in. “On the contrary Your Highness, we get to dress up in our Ånest and be on our best behaviour.” Diana looked at my pin stripe suit and said: “New suit then?” I countered: “Actually Your Highness I bought it for your wedding Åve years ago.” This was the truth. Then came the zinger, a comment seemingly We can all be crazy in our youth but experiences make us aware innocent yet so damning of the importance of respect. STOCK PHOTO and so foreboding: “Ah yes, the wedding. If you talk to in discrediting the Charles it seems like forever.” family name. That’s when I committed the sin of I appreciate Yes ... my youthful familiarity. “Your Highness, it that his father generation gap seems like only yesterday to me,” I beamed. wasn’t much of Princess Diana gave me a glare that froze a role model. is showing. me in my tracks. Our friendly chat was over However, at the and I was dismissed as just another brash, risk of falling ink-stained wretch. deeper into the I think of that moment every time I see generation gap I can’t help wondering if Prince Harry making a fool of himself. I ask Prince Harry would dare get naked for the myself how this 27-year-old royal with so titillating exploitation of the world press if much responsibility can take such pleasure his mother was alive to see it. O

Senıor

Making a Difference

‘‘

In Your Community

Know an outstanding senior in your community? We want to hear about them. Contact Laura Lavin, editor: editor@oakbaynews.com 250-480-3239

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www.saanichnews.com • A15

SAANICH NEWS - Friday, October 12, 2012

Saanich Senior upper body strength and improve the muscles around the bones. Those muscles can offer support to the skeletal structure and reduce fractures. Once she was released from hospital, Hirons sought out similar osteo-Åt classes at the Monterey Centre. She participates in those classes twice a week, and repeats the exercises at home. “I don't want to get frail,” she said. “You can never be too Åt.” “There are wonderful success stories like Joan’s out there, and we like to focus on them,” said Funnel. “Still, education is key, especially for men. Men are statistically more likely to die from complications arising from osteoporotic fractures than they are to succumb to prostate cancer. But they’ll have heard all about that cancer but know nothing about osteoporosis.” Exercise, lifestyle and treatment of osteoporosis are some of the topics addressed in an upcoming free information session to be held Thursday, Nov. 1, at the Fairmont Empress Hotel. The session will be hosted by the Canadian Osteoporosis Patients Network and will feature a number of prominent experts in the Åeld who will discuss the latest developments in reporter@vicnews.com osteoporotic care. O

Where to begin: Registration is by telephone at 1-600-463-6842. More information on the COPN can be found at osteoporosis.ca.

The Senior Life

Q&A

Seventy-nine-year-old John Ryzebol has lived in Saanich for 24 years. He moved from Winnipeg in 1988 after Swifts, the meat packing plant he worked for closed. John grew up in Saskatchewan with eight brothers and sisters and helped his family on their farm. He got his first job as a cowboy when he was about 12-years-old and earned $1 a week. He worked on horseback without a saddle or boots, he said. Last year, while at the Silver Threads Community Centre he had what doctors think was a heart attack. He credits Silver Threads assistant director Julie McGaghey for saving his life by giving him CPR until the ambulance arrived. He has been married for 56 years and has seven grandchildren and five great-grandchildren. “The older I am, the better I get. I’ve never had it so good,” said Ryzebol.

Q A

Favourite Saanich destination or activity?

I teach oil painting at Silver Threads Community Centre at 286 Hampton Rd. I enjoy painting and I like to share this experience with others. Hopefully they too will find pleasure in it, as I do. I’ve also volunteered at Bibles For Missions Thrift Store at 2520 Government Ave. for 20 years. I love meeting all the people who come in the store. It is very interesting.

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What “words of wisdom” have you strived to follow from your parents? To live in love and kindness.

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What is your proudest achievement? I learned to play the organ in my old age.

What are you reading right now? I am reading the Bible. I also read books about music and history. O

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A16 • www.saanichnews.com

Friday, October 12, 2012 - SAANICH

NEWS

Saanich Senior

In Your Community:

Making a difference Director, Goward House

Anglican priest and CNIB board member

saanich

Senıor

Calendar of Events

Carrier, Saanich News

Don Walls

Margaret Cross

Sharron Ryan

Age 63

Age 74

Age 63

An Anglican priest with St. Luke’s Cedar Hill, Don Walls pulls double duty as chair of the Vancouver Island regional board for CNIB. Being blind himself, Walls is a strong advocate for CNIB and is currently working with the B.C. and federal governments to establish national funding to create sight-disadvantaged libraries.In his capacity as a priest, Walls makes regular hospital and care home visits. He moved to Saanich from Vancouver in 2005 and has also lived in Ottawa and London, England. O If you know someone who is making a difference in your community, please email your comments to Edward Hill, editor@saanichnews.com

Every day of the week save one, Margaret Cross is kept busy with her various volunteer jobs. For the past two years, she’s been a director at Goward House, an activity centre for seniors, where she also takes classes and helps out in the kitchen with many of the centre’s special events, such as barbecues and strawberry teas. One day a week, she also volunteers at the Royal B.C. Museum. Though Cross isn’t Greek, she has several friends who are, and once a year she adopts the Mediterranean heritage for Greek Fest. Serving as a chopper in the kitchen, she says the fest is both exhausting and a lot of fun. In her free time, Cross is learning to weave at the Les Passmore Seniors Centre, and also takes turns hosting a weekly stitch and bitch – a fun group who come together to sew, gossip and eat. O

When Sharron Ryan’s grandmother died, it was her mother who held her hand in her last moments. Afterwards, she advised Ryan with the following advice: “If you ever have the chance to sit with someone who is passing away, do it.” Ryan took her mom’s words to heart. To date, she has held the hands of about 75 patients as they died in the palliative care unit at Aberdeen Hospital, and describes her experiences as mind boggling. Currently on a break from this volunteer work for health reasons, Ryan is the go-to person for any kind of help for all the seniors in her apartment building. She’s also well-known along her two Saanich News paper routes. In her free time, the animal lover enjoys feeding ducks at a pond near her home on West Saanich Road. O

Not to be missed

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Oct. 18 - Make retirement amazing. Resources for Retirees free at Goward House, 2495 Arbutus Rd. Everyone is welcome, 1:30 to 3:30 p.m. Guest speaker is Mathieu Powell, marketing and advertising consultant with Senior Living Magazine. To register call 250-477-4401.

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www.saanichnews.com • A17

SAANICH NEWS - Friday, October 12, 2012

THE ARTS

HOT TICKET

5440 with guests Grapes of Wrath

5440 and Grapes of Wrath, two of Canada’s most beloved and iconic bands, will come together for one evening at Victoria’s stunning Royal Theatre. This pairing offers Victoria music fans an amazing journey through Canada’s musical heritage. At the Royal Theatre on Oct. 19 at 8 p.m. Go to rmts.bc.ca for ticket information.

Inmates find purpose in the world of Tolkien Prison production of The Hobbit celebrates 75th anniversary Kyle Wells News staff

The vast expanses of J.R.R. Tolkien’s Middle-earth may be hard to imagine from life inside a prison, but for the inmates of William Head Institution, putting on The Hobbit has been a journey all their own. Under the direction of Kate Rubin, the William Head Stage Theatre Society is performing Rubin’s adaptation of Tolkien’s beloved novel from Oct. 12 to Nov. 1 at the prison, 6000 William Head Rd. Rubin has been involved as an actor with two plays at the minimum-security prison before, including last season’s Gormenghast. This year she was asked to g direct, andgshe gladly accepted.

Be part of the next Runaways rock band As part of a mandate to provide artist development for aspiring young musicians, Kasper Creative Media and Blue Water Gun Records present an opportunity for female musicians ages 18 to 23 to audition for an all-girl rock band that will be professionally managed and promoted. The goal is to produce high-calibre recordings and live performances, maximize artist development and launch the band. Auditions for White Hot Jet will be held today (Oct. 12) from 7 to 9 p.m. at Lemon Tree Studios, 1821 Cook St. They are looking for vocalists, guitarists, bassists, and drummers. Being able to sing and play more than one instrument is an asset, but not required. There is no cost to audition. Participants not chosen for this project may still be chosen for future projects. If you would like an audition spot, call or email James Kasper at 250-885-4209 or info@ jameskasper.com. llavin@vicnews.com

On this, the 75th anniversary of the publication of the novel, Rubin’s post-industrial adaptation takes a unique look at the tale. The story and dialogue remain true to the source material, but costumes and sets are meant to reflect a more contemporary working-class sensibility. The tone of the play touches on subjects more common to Kyle Wells/News staff recent newspaper headlines Actor Bronwyn Steinberg plays than Tolkien’s Middle-earth. “It relates to the devastation an elven queen in Kate Rubin's that can happen from greed,” post-industrial take on The Hobbit Rubin said. “The environmen- being performed at William Head tal devastation, the social Institution from Oct. 12 to Nov. 10. devastation, things breaking down so that there becomes these The cast is made up of inmates, creatures like Gollum, who has plus three professional actresses lost his humanity.” who are brought in to play the

female roles. Monica Prendergast, Anne Cirillo and Bronwyn Steinberg have come in as professional actors and two professionals are also involved in the crew: Carole Klemm, the designer, and puppeteer Tim Gosley. Admitting she was at first a bit nervous to work with the prisoners, Steinberg, who plays the elven queen, among other parts, said the experience has been overwhelmingly positive and has reinvigorated her love of theatre and its more human aspects. She has been amazed to see the enthusiasm and commitment of the inmates. “Even in just the few weeks that I’ve been involved you can see they’ve been building confidence and also just a sense of ownership and agency,” Steinberg said. “You can see them just growing through the show and through the process.”

Rubin too, said it’s amazing to see the transformative power of theatre and just how beneficial the process of putting on a play is for the inmates. Many come into the process shy and unsure, Rubin said, but by the end are proud to have been a part of something positive and productive. “They want to give and they don’t get that opportunity very much,” Rubin said. “Especially someone who feels shame for what they’ve done, and if they’ve come through that shame, there’s a huge need to give.” Tickets are $20 and are available at Ticket Rocket, 2-1609 Blanshard St., My Chosen Cafe, 4480 Happy Valley Rd., online at TicketRocket. org or by phone at 250-391-6291. For more information on the play call 250-391-7078. The program is for adults over the age of 19. kwells@goldstreamgazette.com

childrenshealthvi.org

Here’s a great children’s story. The Queen Alexandra Foundation for Children has been renamed Children’s Health Foundation of Vancouver Island. Please welcome our new name! We are excited about the change because the new name tells the story of what we do and where we do it. Our Foundation has a 90-year legacy of helping children thanks to you, our incredible donors and supporters. We will continue to promote the health and well-being of children, youth and families all over Vancouver Island and the Gulf Islands. This includes funding for facilities, organizations, programs, and equipment for children in need. If you would like more information or wish to donate, please visit childrenshealthvi.org or call 250-519-6722.

Every September, Shoppers Drug Mart® stores across Canada set up a Tree of Life in support of women’s health, with 100% of all proceeds going directly to women’s health initiatives in your community. Over the years, you’ve contributed over $17 million and we’re hoping you’ll help us make a difference again this year. Visit your local Shoppers Drug Mart between September 29 and October 26 and buy a leaf ($1), a butterfly ($5), an acorn ($10) or a cardinal ($50) to help women’s health grow in your community. To find out which women’s charity your local Shoppers Drug Mart store supports, visit shoppersdrugmart.ca/treeoflife.


A18 • www.saanichnews.com

Friday, October 12, 2012 - SAANICH

NEWS

The essence of Zeppelin From high energy electric classics to beautiful acoustic works, Led Zepagain resurrects original Led Zeppelin front man Jimmy Page’s soaring guitar leads, John Paul Jones’ brilliant keyboard passages, John Bonham’s trademark pounding rhythms and signature Robert Plant vocals. Led Zepagain will take Victoria back to the hey day of hair bands with its show at the Upstairs Cabaret, 5 Bastion Square, Oct. 13. As you experience Submitted photo immortal classics Stairway to Heaven, Immigrant Song, Led Zepagain brings Led Zeppelin Whole Lotta Love, Rock ‘n’ back to life at the Upstairs Cabaret Roll and Black Dog, you’ll Oct. 13.

believe Page is right; Led Zepagain is “as close as you’ll ever get to the real deal.” Taking on the role of Page is Christian Nesmith, son of famous Monkee Michael Nesmith. After watching Page perform in Zeppelin’s live concert movie The Song Remains the Same, Nesmith settled his focus on guitar. An avid student of Page from age 13, his intense application of the tone and style of the master has made Nesmith a guitar master. For ticket information go to ticketweb.ca. llavin@vicnews.com

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P

rolific songwriter, virtuoso guitarist, and musical adventurer, Richard Thompson performs at the Alix Goolden Performance Hall‚ 907 Pandora St. Oct. 16 at 7:30 p.m. Thompson’s solo career has resulted in more than 30 records and numerous film and television scores. Submitted photo

Listen in at Writers Festival A collective of writers who miss the International Literary Arts Festival that was the highlight of spring in Victoria for many years has organized the Victoria Writers Festival this weekend. The group has organized two days of events to be held at Camosun College. Today, (Oct. 12) events will include readings by Arleen Pare, Susan Musgrave, Tricia Dower and Bill Gaston and an on-the-spot writing slam. Saturday events include writing workshops, readings and panel discussions along with Saturday Night

Fevers, readings by Patricia Young, Esi Edugyan, and Brian Brett at 7:30 p.m. All events take place at Camosun College, most in the Gibson Auditorium. All cost $10 ($8 for students), except Step Into the Ring and Meet the Creators, which are $3 at the door. Festival passes are available for $30. Writing workshops are $20. Order tickets and passes and register for workshops at victoriawritersfestival.com. Or go to Munro’s Books, Ivy’s Bookshop, Camosun College Bookstore or Legends Comics. llavin@vicnews.com

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www.saanichnews.com • A19

SAANICH NEWS - Friday, October 12, 2012

THE CANADIAN SCOTTISH REGIMENT

Shipyard boom stresses roadways in Esquimalt Daniel Palmer News staff

Catherine Nash is nine months pregnant and cares for two young daughters at home. Her husband mostly works out of town. Like many mothers, she struggles to fit in play time with her kids, house chores and in-town errands each day. Parking in front of her house was one convenience she used to take for granted. But since the nearby Victoria Shipyards ramped up production, the congestion has created chaos for Nash and her neighbours. “If you leave for 10 minutes, your parking is gone for the day,” said Nash, one of many upset residents who live on or around Lockley Road and Intervale Avenue in Esquimalt. On Oct. 1, Esquimalt councillors addressed the issue and asked staff for a report on the options available, including resident parking, permit parking and two-hour zones. Seaspan Marine Corp. – owner of Victoria Shipyards, the third-largest employer in Esquimalt – was recently awarded an $8-billion shipbuilding contract by the federal government.

It will create 6,000 jobs, and a press release stated 15 per cent of the work will be completed in Esquimalt, while the rest will take place at Seaspan’s Vancouver shipyards. Construction is slated to begin later this year or in early 2013, and a $160-million upgrade has been taking place at both locations. Seaspan did not respond to multiple requests for comment. Nearby residents said the company paved a parking lot near their offices on Admirals Road to help alleviate parking congestion earlier this year. But with construction ramping up and more employees arriving, the parking squeeze is likely to get worse. “When you combine (Department of National Defence) and dockyard, that’s approximately 6,000 people,” Mayor Barb Desjardins said. “And we know from years gone by, even prior to the Seaspan announcement, that two-thirds of those people come from West Shore and transportation is a real challenge.” The cancellation of the navy’s popular Blue Boat commuter ferry service earlier this year has exacerbated the problem. While the Baseline Connector

ferry service still does the daily run, it costs $5 for each return trip and many workers choose to drive instead. Desjardins said the only regional solution to congestion is the long-delayed Salish Express rail service between Victoria-Langford and Esquimalt-Cowichan. She plans to meet with the region’s mayors this fall to discuss how to fund an implementation plan, estimated to cost $98,000. In July, the Capital Regional District rejected an appeal from eight mayors to fund two-thirds of the plan. “There’s no ability to say halfway through a calendar year to take on a new project,” said Andy Orr, CRD spokesman. “The quickest we could say is to budget for this in the next fiscal year.” But Desjardins said action needs to be taken now to avoid a perfect storm of traffic congestion. “This is only the tip of the iceberg. Wait until Craigflower Bridge and Johnson Street Bridge start to go under construction. How are we going to manage parking and problems, then? We have to get a handle on it regionally now.”

(PRINCESS MARY’S)

1912 - 2012

Join us in celebrating our 100th Anniversary 19-21 Oct 2012 in Victoria

The Canadian Scottish Regiment (Princess Mary’s) whose roots are from the 88th Regiment (Victoria Fusiliers) and the 50th Regiment (Gordon’s) both established in Victoria BC on September 3, 1912 and August 15, 1913 respectively is celebrating its 100th year of service to the communities on Vancouver Island and Canada. Her Royal Highness Princess Alexandra KG, GCVO, CD, will attend the 100th Celebrations in Victoria BC during the period October 19 - 21, 2012. The Public are invited to attend the following events: Friday October 19 at 10:00 AM at Government House for the formal arrival ceremony of Her Royal Highness Princess Alexandra Sunday, October 21 at 11:00 AM at Christ Church Cathedral where members of the Regimental Family including Her Royal Highness will participate at a Church Service and followed at Noon by a Memorial service at Pioneer Square (beside Christ Church Cathedral). Sunday, October 21 at 12:45 PM at Royal Athletic Park, 1014 Caledonia Ave, where Her Royal Highness will review The Canadian Scottish Regiment (Princess Mary’s) at a formal military parade. Sunday, October 21 at 3:45 PM in front of the Victoria City Hall on Douglas Street where the Regiment will exercise its Right to the Freedom of the City challenged by the Mayor, City Council and Chief of Police. Deas Gu Cath

COME AND SEE THIS PROUD REGIMENT www.cscotr100.ca

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Owner, auctioneer and appraiser Kilshaw’s Auctioneers Alison achieved her Master’s degree in History in Art in 1994 with a specialty in Northwest Coast art. She has taught History in Art as well as Antique and Collectibles courses at the UVic, Malaspina (now Vancouver Island University) and Camosun College. Alison started her auction career with Kilshaw’s in 1997 as a cataloguer and photographer. She quickly moved into the position of auctioneer. In January of 2006, Alison purchased Kilshaw’s from Don Kilshaw. In 2012, Alison became a Pawn Master on History Television’s “Pawnathon Canada”. Alison is the only female Western Pawn Master.

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Friday, October 12, 2012 - SAANICH

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Travis Paterson 250-480-3279 sports@vicnews.com

Chargers golfers slip in B.C. tie-breaker

Omwenga doubles Adam Campbell well-suited to task Travis Paterson News staff

Kenyan Thomas Omwenga won the GoodLife Fitness Victoria Marathon for the second year in a row on Sunday, but his record stands from 2011. Omwenga finished the course on an “unseasonally warm” day with a time of two hours, 20 minutes and 41 seconds, which is six minutes slower than his record of 2:13:44 set in 2011. Gilbert Kiptoo, another Kenyan, came second at 2:27:01. Portland’s Hallie Janssen was the top woman with a time of 2:47:03, just 33 seconds ahead of Nadyia Fry (Invermere), the second-overall woman. The two were 14th and 15th overall, with Victoria’s Catrin Jones the third woman and 19th overall finisher in a time of 2:49:02. Easily the most fashionable effort from Sunday’s 33rd annual Victoria Marathon was Adam Campbell’s impressive time of 2:35:53. Campbell, a lawyer and ultramarathoner from Victoria, managed not to overheat under autumn sun while wearing a suit, blazer and tie. He should qualify for the Guinness World Records fastest marathon in a suit, breaking the previous time 3:24.

Photo by Gunnar Freyr Steinsson

Thomas Omwenga, left, Gilbert Kiptoo and Philip Samoei take the early lead at the 33rd Annual GoodLife Fitness Victoria Marathon on Oct. 7. Other notables include Vancouver’s Graeme Wilson, third overall in the marathon. Wilson was the top B.C. runner and the top men’s master with a time of 2:29:17, winning the B.C. marathon championship. First time marathoners, Nikki Jomha and Greg Robbins, two locals featured in the News’ fall series On the Run, finished the race in 4:21:26 and 3:57:40, respectively. Barefoot runner Derek Shaw, also part of On the Run, completed the halfmarathon in 2:09:47. Natasha Fraser outdueled Lucy Njeri and broke her own course record in the half-marathon from 2011, with a new record of 1:14:06 to Njeri’s 1:14:27. Rutto Kibet (Edmonton) was the top

male in the half-marathon with a time of 1:04:27, with Victoria’s Geoff Martinson running to second in 1:05:39. Local Jim Finlayson was the top master runner in the half-marathon, his first run in the over-40 master category, finishing in 1:08:51, eighth overall. Chris Winter (Vancouver) won the eight kilometre road race in 24:13. Rachel Cliff (Vancouver) was the top woman at 27:43 Registration numbers: 2,056 registered for the marathon, 5,503 for the half, 2,844 in the eight-km, 1,100 in the Thrifty Foods Kids Run, for a total of 11,503. Full results at sportstats.ca. sports@vicnews.com

Runnin’ Rebel on record pace Travis Paterson News staff

File photo

Rebels running back Greg Morris is eyeing the BCFC record for total yards rushed in a season.

NEWS

Greg Morris can expect some added attention this weekend. Breaking a 13-year-old Canadian Junior Football League rushing record will do that. The Westshore Rebels running back carried the ball 24 times against the Kamloops Broncos, in Kamloops on Saturday, to an astounding 405 yards, scoring four touchdowns along the way, including a 91-yard scamper. Morris now leads the league in rushing with a total of 1,471 yards and 17 touchdowns scored. The Rebels move to seven wins and two losses, second place in the B.C. Football Conference standings. The win also eliminated the Broncos from their playoff hopes. With one regular season game remaining, all that’s left to decide for the Rebels is home advantage in the upcoming playoff semifinal against the Langley Rams. This Saturday the Rebels visit the Vancouver Island Raiders, while the Rams face the Okanagan Sun. Playing against the Raiders in the final game of Morris’ career year is fitting. It was with the Raiders that current B.C. Lions running back Andrew Harris

broke the 400-yard mark during the 2008 playoffs. And even though Saturday’s game bears no outcome on the Raiders’ plans (they’ll host the Sun in the other semifinal), Morris and the Rebels can expect a strong defensive effort from the Raiders. Morris needs to run the ball 122 yards to break Matt Medwick’s BCFC rushing record of 1,592 yards in a season, set with the Valley Huskers in 2000. However, five yards is all Morris needs to take Harris’ spot behind Medwick on the season list, ahead of Harris’ best season in 2009. Surprisingly, the previous single game rushing record in the BCFC, now held by Morris, was not Harris’, but was actually 338 yards, set by Eric Scott of the Richmond Raiders in 1985. Harris broke 338 in the playoffs, but not during the regular season. Morris also added 50 yards to the previous Canadian record of 355-yards, accomplished by Craig Carter of the Windsor AKO Fratmen in 1999. Fourteen of Morris’ 17 touchdowns this year are from the rush, which likely puts him out of reach of Harris’ 2009 BCFC league record of 20 TDs rushed, 24 TDs in total. sports@vicnews.com

The Camosun Chargers men’s golf team is going to the Canadian Collegiate Athletic Association Golf National Championships. The Chargers led the PacWest conference with a five-stroke lead going into the fourth and final tournament over Thanksgiving. That’s where the host Fraser Valley Cascades defeated the Chargers in a tie-breaker to win the 2012 PacWest championship. Despite slipping to second place in the season’s standings the Chargers will attend the nationals, Oct. 15 to 19, hosted at the Oshawa Golf Club by Durham College in Oshawa, Ont. “It was a tough weekend for us,” Chargers coach John Randle said in the team’s press release. “It came right down to the wire and we didn’t get it done.” After the first round of the UFV Invitational at Chilliwack Golf and Country Club, the Chargers led the cumulative season standings by nine strokes, with one round to go to win the championship. That’s when the lead crumbled. UFV caught the Chargers on Day 2 and, with a cumulative season total of 2,354 strokes each after four tournaments, the two went to a tie-breaker, which UFV won. “All things considered, the guys played hard and conducted themselves as gentlemen and they represented Camosun with class and skill,” Randle said. The Chargers settled for silver in the team standings but Jarred Callbeck, who was twice named the PacWest golfer of the week this year, won the men’s gold medal. Callbeck shot a cumulative total of 578 over 144 holes in the fall season, five strokes better than Aaron Pauls of UFV. The Chargers men’s team are Callbeck (Claremont secondary), Jared Hundza (Pacific Christian School), Kevin Walz (Kwalikum secondary, Qualicum), Grant Maskiewich (Smithers secondary) and Kevin Bredy (Sir Winston Churchill, Calgary, Alta). sports@vicnews.com

SPORTS NEWS IN BRIEF Ruggers roll in for ARC tourney U.S.A., Uruguay and Argentina visit Canada this week to contest the Americas Rugby Championship. The four-team, round robin series of international men’s rugby begins today (Oct. 12), 5:30 p.m. at Westhills Stadium when U.S.A. kicks off against Argentina, followed by Canada versus Uruguay at 7:30 p.m. Canada plays again Tuesday (Oct. 16) vs. U.S.A. at 7:30 p.m. and Saturday (Oct. 20) at 7:30 p.m. vs. tourney favourites Argentina. Tickets available at the stadium or online at rugbycanada.ca. Canada’s men’s sevens team is also competing this weekend in Australia.

Lions second, Chargers open The Lambrick Park Lions kicked off the tournament season as the top women’s high school volleyball team at the Camosun College high school event during Thanksgiving. Oak Bay High (AAAA) finished third. “It was our third straight year making it to the final only to lose,” said Lions coach Chris Koutougus. The AA Lions, ranked No. 9 in B.C., fell to the No. 2 ranked AAAA team South Delta. Back to captain the Lions this year is Grade 11 Emily Wong, who has been with the team for its past two silver medal runs at the AA girls provincials. The Camosun Chargers volleyball teams open the PacWest season tonight (Oct. 12) and tomorrow vs. the V.I.U. Mariners, women at 6 and men at 8 p.m. both nights.


www.saanichnews.com • A21

SAANICH NEWS - Friday, October 12, 2012

LOCAL DINING WING’S WIN NG’S

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Victoria Royals Logan Nelson, No. 19, and Brandon Magee, No. 18, celebrate a preseason goal versus the Vancouver Giants.

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Until the buzzer sounds First-place Victoria Royals finding identity Travis Paterson News staff

Call them clutch, call them competitive, call them whatever you want, the Victoria Royals are winning. Through the first eight games the Royals had six wins, half of those came in extra time. Forward Logan Nelson is one of the most visible reasons the team is off to a great start. The 19 year old is playing noticably more physical and is chipping in timely goals, like the one he scored to tie the game against the Tri City Americans with 35 seconds left on Saturday to make it 3-3. He then scored the only goal of the shootout to cap a come-from-behind 4-3 victory. It was his second shootout winner this year. “I’ve been lucky in the shootout, getting bounces I guess,” Nelson said. All in all, it was a solid three games in three nights road trip for the Royals, as they bounced back from a 5-3 loss to the Spokane Chiefs on Friday to beat the Americans Saturday and Vancouver Giants 2-1 on Sunday. “I really liked the adjustments

we made on Saturday and the resiliency we showed (after Friday’s loss),” Lowry said. “We had a goal called back on the powerplay but came back and scored again, and that’s a good sign.” Saturday was also the second time this season Nelson scored the only goal of the shootout, thereby winning the game for the Royals (in partnership with goalie Patrik Polivka, who has let in zero goals on six shootout attempts). Nelson’s other shootout goal was against the Kamloops Blazers on Sept. 28, also a 4-3 win. “We’re much better at staying positive and if they get a goal, we know it’s not the end of the world,” Nelson said. “We’re not going to give up until the buzzer goes, especially when the other team thinks they’ve got the win.” Without Steven Hodges, who was perhaps the team’s best player in the first three games before getting injured, the recent success of Nelson and the Royals is all the more impressive. As of Wednesday morning, Nelson was second in team scoring with three goals and six assists, behind Alex Gogolev’s three goals and eight assists. “It’s been up to the older guys to pick it up. We definitely miss Steve in the lineup,” Nelson said.

SPORTS CALENDAR Basketball Fri. Oct. 12: CIS men’s presesaon, UVic Vikes vs. Seattle Mountaineers, 8 p.m. at McKinnon Gym. Fri. & Sat. Oct. 12-13: CIS women’s preseason, UVic Vikes vs. UBC-Okanagan, 6 p.m. Friday, 5 p.m. Saturday at McKinnon Gym.

Rugby Sat. Oct. 13: ARC Championship, Uruguay vs. Canada at Westhills Stadium, 7:30 p.m. at Windsor Park. Sat. Oct. 13: CDI men’s premier, Meraloma Rugby Club at Castaway Wanderers, 2:45 p.m. at Windsor Park.

Rockets vs. Royals Friday & Saturday, 7:05 p.m. at Save-OnFoods Memorial Centre.

“Gogolev has been great. He’s got eyes in the back of his head finding guys out there.” With Hodges out, Nelson moved off of Gogolev’s line and, onto a line with Jamie Crooks and Austin Carroll, though Nelson and Gogolev have skated together on the powerplay and with the extra attacker. “I’ve been able to be compatible with (Crooks) and (Carroll) and game-by-game, we’re getting better,” Nelson said. Trend or no trend, coming back from behind and winning in extra time is the biggest difference from last year’s Royals, and coach Dave Lowry isn’t picky right now about the way his team wins. “This is a team searching for an identity right now,” Lowry said, “coming from behind, winning close games, winning in shootouts. When you’re winning you’re looking for new ways to challenge the team just as you would when you’re losing.” The Royals results from Wednesday’s game against the Kamloops Blazers were past press time. sports@vicnews.com

Volleyball Fri. & Sat. Oct. 12-13: PacWest, V.I.U. Mariners at Camosun Chargers, women at 6 p.m. men at 8 p.m., at PISE.

Field Hockey Sat. Oct. 13: Women’s premier, Vikes vs. West Vancouver Vipers, 12:30 p.m. at UVic turf No. 1. Sat. Oct. 13: Men’s premier, UVic Vikes vs. Victoria Selects, 2 p.m. at UVic turf No. 1.

Hockey Fri. Oct. 12: VIJHL, Westshore Wolves at Saanich Braves, 6:30 p.m. at George Pearkes arena; Oceanside Generals at Peninsula Panthers, 7:30 p.m. at Pearkes arena. Fri. & Sun. Oct. 12 &14: BCHL, Penticton Vees at Victoria Grizzlies, 7:15 p.m.; Alberni Bulldogs at Victoria Grizzlies, 1:30 p.m. at Bear Mountain arena.

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Friday, October 12, 2012 - SAANICH

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BERNINA 820 QE Sewing Computer - high end sewing & quilting machine w/ 40 cm long free arm, stitch regulator, dual feed. $4500. (250)882-5465.

10353 DEVLIN Plc, Sidney. Private Rancher. $499,000. 3 bdrm, 2 bath, lrg treed lot. Complete details at w w w. p r o p e r t y g u y s . c o m ID#192295 www.realtor.ca mls #307481

DOWNSIZING SALE. Rocker/Recliner, Sears Special, dark brown, $125, Charbroil BBQ, side burner-rotisserie, $100, electric body heater/vibrator, $35. Call 250-655-4185 FOR SALE 1-200 KW/250 KVA/300 amp 480 generator Cat engine 3406B c/w 1-1800 litre double wall Tidy Tank. $7000. Call 250-949-8133.

LAKEFRONT PROPERTYDesirable location in Sooke, $575,000. View by appt. (250)658-9133.

FOR SALE BY OWNER. #30 Lekwammen Drive. 55+ complex. 2 bdrm, 2 bath, den, family room, dbl. garage. LP $319,900. Irma (250)477-4117

HOT TUB (SPA) COVERS. Best price. Best quality. All shapes & colours available. 1-866-652-6837 www.thecoverguy.com/newspaper?

FUEL/FIREWOOD

The most effective way to reach an incredible number of BC Sportsmen & women. Two year edition- terriďŹ c presence for your business.

ARBUTUS, CYPRESS, ďŹ r, hardwoods. Seasoned. Call 250-661-7391.

Please call Annemarie 1.800.661.6335 email: ďŹ sh@blackpress.ca MONEY MAKING SECRETS they don’t want you to know. For a FREE CD, call 855-3733231 ADCODE 251.

EDUCATION/TRADE SCHOOLS INTERIOR HEAVY EQUIPMENT OPERATOR SCHOOL. NO Simulators. In-the-seat training. Real world tasks. Weekly start dates. Job board! Funding options. Apply online! IHEschool.com 1-866-399-3853

GET BACK ON TRACK! Bad credit? Bills? Unemployed? Need Money? We Lend! If you own your own home - you qualify. Pioneer Acceptance Corp. Member BBB. 1-877987-1420. www.pioneerwest.com

Need CA$H Today? Own A Vehicle? Borrow Up To $25,000

No Credit Checks! Cash same day, local ofďŹ ce.

www.PitStopLoans.com 1.800.514.9399

HELP WANTED HANDICAPPED MAN seeks an inexpensive web designer. Call (250)415-6321.

Looking for a NEW job?

PERSONAL CARE

.com

CERTIFIED FOOT Care Nurses for seniors only $35 (limited time offer). Call me at 250588-4312. Visit us at h t t p : / / w w w. i s l a n d h a p py feet.com/ 100% infection control.

GREAT DEAL. Thanksgiving Special. Seasoned Firewood. Delivered. Call 250-881-4842. SEASONED FIREWOOD Vancouver Island’s largest ďŹ rewood producer offers ďŹ rewood legally obtained during forest restoration, large cords. Help restore your forest, Burndrywood.com 1-877-902-WOOD.

LOWREY ORGAN Symphonic Holiday.4 channels, upper/lower keyboard, about 4’L x 2’W x 3.5’H, $600. obo. SCOOTER Rascal Continental,good working order $400. (250)544-2116

DOWNSIZING/ SACRIFICE. Glass & white oak china hutch - wall mount or buffet. $200. White solid oak entertainment/ media storage centre $250. (250)656-9717. NEED TO OutďŹ t An OfďŹ ce? Executive Chair, desk, bookcase, 2 client chairs. Call (250)652-0793.

WE’RE ON THE WEB

OAK BAY. Updated home on two levels. 3 bedrooms, 1 bathroom, sunroom + patio, new everything. 1766 sq ft & 956 unďŹ nished sq ft. $658,000. Call 250-598-6902.

NEWSPRINT ROLLENDS$2-$10. Fridays only, 8:30am to 4:30pm. #200-770 Enterprise Cres, Victoria. Goldstream Press Division.

FURNITURE

Osteoporosis~MS~Fibromya lgia? Increase Performance? Commercial Vibration machine. Clinically proven. (250)287-2009. TOTAL LIQUIDATION Storewide! New & Used Furniture, Mattresses, Tools, Hdwe! Everything Goes! Vic & Toni Retired! BUY & SAVE, 9818 4th St., Sidney. We Buy, Sell, Trade. buyandsave.ca

CORDOVA BAY. REDUCED! (Bring Offers). 3 bdrm, 3 bath Character house, view. with 1bdrm suite. $575,000. (below appraisal) Call 250-818-5397.

SOOKE RANCHER Beautiful, immaculate, 1,649 sq ft executive rancher located in Whiffen Spit Estates, Sooke, BC. 10,000+ sq ft lot. Asking price $429,900. 250-686-5372

HOUSES FOR SALE $399,000. Next to VGH, 2 bdrm + 3rd or ofďŹ ce, 2 lvl, end unit, windows on 3 sides. Large family room, 2 ďŹ replaces, pet allowed. 71-14 Erskine Ln., Tel: 250-478-0269. Open House, 2PM-4PM, Sat & Sun. www.Comfree.com/367097

Incredible 5 acre treed PARK-LIKE PROPERTY with Well-Maintained Furnished Home 1500 sq.ft, 3-bdrm, 2 bath. Extremely close to Pristine Cowichan Lake, in the town of Caycuse. Perfect for recreational property or full time living. Motivated seller $378,800. Exceptionally low yearly cost. Not leased land. Call 250-745-3387 smartytwo@hotmail.com

SIDNEY Spectacular Rancher. Inside & Out! Very private, 12ft hedge žâ€™s way around house. Beautiful exposure on a quiet, well maintained Cul-de-sac! Call 250-656-2222 or for more info: www.propertyguys.com ID#192329

BUYING - RENTING- SELLING


www.saanichnews.com • A23 , , ,

SAANICH NEWS - Friday, October 12, 2012 REAL ESTATE

REAL ESTATE

RENTALS

TRANSPORTATION

TRANSPORTATION

TRANSPORTATION

TRANSPORTATION

HOMES WANTED

REAL ESTATE SERVICES

SHARED ACCOMMODATION

AUTO FINANCING

CARS

SPORTS & IMPORTS

RECREATIONAL VEHICLES FOR SALE

WE BUY HOUSES

VICTORIA HOUSING. $475$575 all incl, suits working/students, disability. 778-977-8288

Damaged House? Pretty House? Moving? Divorcing? Estate Sale? We will Buy your House Quick Cash & Private. Mortgage Too High and House won’t sell? Can’t make payments? We will Lease Your House, Make your Payments and Buy it Later!

1981 MERCEDES 300SD Turbo Diesel for sale. 281,000 KMS, (Champagne colour) in fair condition, asking $3000. Maintenance log available. Call 250-885-9010.

SUITES, LOWER C. SAANICH. 1-Bdrm. $850. inclds utils & laundry. NS/NP. Avail immed. 250-418-0780.

RECREATIONAL VEHICLES FOR SALE

DEEP COVE lrg 1 bdrm, acreage, hot tub. W/D, cat ok, N/S. $850+ util. 250-656-1312

SAVE ON COMMISSION Sell your home for $6900 or 1% plus $900 fees FULL MLS SERVICE!

Call: 1-250-616-9053 www.webuyhomesbc.com

REAL ESTATE SERVICES

CALL: 250-727-8437

Jasmine Parsons www.jasmineparsons.com One Percent Realty V.I.

GORGE. QUIET cul-de-sac. 2 bdrm grnd level. Shared laundry, NS/NP. $1100./mo inclds utils. Avail now. 250-384-5466.

RENTALS

LAKE HILL- 2 bdrms, grd lvl, 5 appls, fenced yrd, priv parking, close to schools, bus, shopping, cat ok, N/S. $1150. Call (250)213-5614.

APARTMENT/CONDO

Auto Financing 1.800.910.6402

DreamCatcher Auto Loans “0” Down, Bankruptcy OK Cash Back ! 15 min Approvals

1-800-910-6402

www.PreApproval.cc DL# 7557 Guaranteed

Auto

Loans1-888

-229-0744

or

apply

at:

www.

greatcanadianautocredit.com

LANGFORD- BRIGHT, new 1 bdrm. Lvl entry. W/D, NS/NP. $825. incl. utils (250)220-8750

GLANFORD AREA- Avail now 3 bdrms, 2 bath upper, $1400. 5 appls, 2 balconies, quiet str. Yard is shared. Sm pet ok. Call Equitex 250-386-6071.

SAANICH: 2 bdrm. NS/NP, N/D. Separate ent. W/D. Quiet area close to Beckwith Park. Avail. Nov. 1. $1300/mo. Call (250)479-7201.

SIDNEY5TH STREET Available now. 2 bdrms, $950. small pet ok, coin op. Includes HW & parking. Call Equitex, 250-386-6071.

SAANICH- LARGE, 2000sq ft, 2 bdrm, lights & heat incld, NS/NP. Refs, $1100 mo. Avail now. 250-652-0591.

$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$

UVIC/CAMOSUN area, 2 bdrm, priv ent, N/P, N/S, $900. Avail immed. (250)477-6652.

CASH PAID FOR ALL VEHICLES in

DEEP COVE: cozy 1bdrm, wood floors, acreage, skylights $950 mo, N/S. 250-656-1312.

APARTMENTS FURNISHED SIDNEY EXECUTIVE suite. near ocean & town. $1295. Short/ long term.250-656-8080

HOMES FOR RENT HIGH QUADRA bright 3 bdrm w/ ensuite, liv rm/din rm, W/D, close to all amens, lease, N/P, $1200 mo. 778-350-1952.

1985 CADILLAC Seville, 70,000 k. Mint condition. White leather upholstery. 1 owner. $3,500. Call (250)656-1560.

1982 HYBRID Westphalia. Can run on diesel or veggie oil. 1.9l 1996 Jetta engine. $12K. Serious enquiries only. Nanaimo (250)591-3711.

1998 PONTIAC Grand Prix GT US car, 193,000 km, lady driven since 1993. $2800 obo. Alan, (778)426-3487.

AUTO SERVICES

$50-$1000 CASH

1999 FORD Econoline 350 Super duty Motorhome. V10. $22,000. 125km. Very well taken care of, clean and runs great. Please phone 250-6554840. Located in Sidney. 1998 FORD Expedition Eddie Bauer 5.4L V8 4x4, 7 passenger, 5 dr, loaded, black/tan leather, tow pkg. Like new. $5900. Call (250) 661-2734.

For scrap vehicle FREE Tow away

858-5865

all conditions in all locations

SUITES, UPPER

250-885-1427

SIDNEY: QUIET cozy 1 bdrm. W/D, utils incld, NS/NP, completely furnished. Avail. Nov. 1st. $995/mo. (250)656-7184.

Call us first & last, we pay the highest fair price for all dead & dying vehicles. Don’t get pimped, junked or otherwise chumped!

2005 TIFFIN Allegro bus 21,500 miles, 400 Cummins diesel, 6 speed Allison transmission, Freightliner Chassis, 3 slides, solar panels, star choice satellite, 7500 Onan generator, fully loaded, immaculate. $129,500. Small trades considered. Call 250656-5875 or 250-889-3042.

WANTED TO RENT SENIOR COUPLE 65/66 looking for a private, quiet, unfurnished rental. We will provide reliable, responsible care of your property. Exc. references. Prefer long term in Saanich area. NS/NP. (778)679-2044.

26’ 1997 Golden Falcon 5th Wheel with all options, one slide, bath/shower, rear kitchen. $6000. (250)479-1771.

SPORT UTILITY VEHICLES

COLWOOD 2 bdrm condo, 4th floor, elevator, 5 appls, insuite laundry, F/P, prkg. N/P.$1100. Avail now. Call 250-474-6855

COTTAGES

BUYING OR SELLING?

FLORENCE LAKE, 2 yr old 1 bdrm ground level suite, large mudroom, F/S, W/D, & micro. 2 private entrances w/ sunroom & patio on 1 acre prop. Utils incl. N/S, small pet ok, $950. Oct. 15. 250-391-1967.

22’ 5TH wheel, $4,900. Or sell with 2006 Chevy Silverado total package (asking $14,900). Incld’s Tonneau Lid. All excellent cond. Call (250)655-1147.

1977 CADILAC Eldorado, beige metallic. Cruise control, automatic. Very good cond., only 80,000 km. $3000. obo. Please call (250)477-7076.

CARS 2007 CUSTOM Chev HHR. Excellent condition. Loaded. White. 119,000 km, mostly hwy driven. On-Star. $11,900 firm. 250-755-5191.

‘99 SUNFIRE, Painted & inspected, $2500. 778-425-3604 250-532-0751

“2004 RAV4 4WD”- $13,500 firm. 4 cyl, auto, silver, Michelins, 120,000 km,Victoria only vehicle. Complete maintenance history. Lady-driven, no accidents, excellent condition, keyless entry. Model Recommended In Top 10 by Consumer Reports. (250)479-5545.

TRUCKS & VANS 1995 PLYMOUTH Voyager Van, 7 seater, 1 family owned, well maintained, woman driven, low mileage (164,000 KMS). Asking $2900. Call (250)477-4256.

Time for a NEW car?

SERVICE DIRECTORY #OMPLETEåGUIDEåTOåPROFESSIONALåSERVICESåINåYOURåCOMMUNITY

www.bcclassified.com

250.388.3535

HOME/BUSINESS SERVICES

HOME/BUSINESS SERVICES

HOME/BUSINESS SERVICES

HOME/BUSINESS SERVICES

HOME/BUSINESS SERVICES

HOME/BUSINESS SERVICES

HOME/BUSINESS SERVICES

ACCOUNTING/TAX/ BOOKKEEPING

CLEANING SERVICES

CONCRETE & PLACING

ELECTRICAL

FURNITURE REFINISHING

GARDENING

GUTTERS & DOWNSPOUTS

ACCOUNTING Vida Samimi

HOUSEKEEPER EXPERIENCED, reliable. References. 250-920-6516, 250-881-7444.

RBC CONCRETE Finishing. All types of concrete work. No job too small. Seniors discount. Call 250-386-7007.

GNC ELECTRIC Res/Comm. Reasonable rates for quality work. #43619. 250-883-7632.

U-NEEK SEATS. Hand cane, Danish weave, sea grass. UK Trained. Fran, 250-216-8997.

MALTA HOUSECLEANING Estates, events, offices. BBB member. (250)388-0278.

CONTRACTORS

KENDRA’S ELECTRICAL Co. #86952. No Job too Small. Kendra, 250-415-7991.

GARDENING

DPM SERVICES- lawn & garden, seasonal pruning, clean ups, landscape, power wash, etc. 15yrs exp. (250)883-8141 FALL CLEANUP special: $18/hr. Weeding, Pruning, etc: Free est’s. Steve 250-727-0481 GARDEN OVERGROWN? Weeding, lawn cuts, cleanups, pruning. John Kaiser 250-478-7314, 250-812-8236. LANDSCAPE & TREE care hedges/pruning/shaping. Lawn & garden. Maint. 18 yrs exp. WCB. Andrew, (250)893-3465. NO JOB too BIG or SMALL. SENIOR’S SPECIAL! Prompt, reliable service. Phone Mike (ANYTIME) at 250-216-7502.

250-507-6543. AL’S V.I.P. Gutter Cleaning, Guards, windows, powerwashing, roof demoss, repairs. Insured. 250-889-5794. DIAMOND DAVE Gutter Cleaning. Thorough Job at a Fair Price! Repairs, gutter guard, power/window washing, roof de-moss. Free no obligation estimates.

Certified General Accountant Bookkeeping, Audit, Payroll, HST. Set up & Training. E-File

TAX 250-477-4601

CARPENTRY BENOIT CONSTRUCTION. Reno’s & Additions. Windows, Doors, Decks. 250-479-0748. COMPLETE HOME Renos. Carpentry, Drywall, Painting. Licenced insured. Call Darren 250-217-8131. DECKS, STAIRS, interesting projects. 30 years experience. Frank, (250)477-3315. McGREGOR HOME Repair & Renos. Decks to doors. Small jobs OK. WCB. (250)655-4518

CARPET INSTALLATION MALTA FLOORING Installation. Carpets, laminates, hardwood, lino. BBB 250-388-0278

CHIMNEY SERVICES JKG CHIMNEY. Clean, Repairs, Gutters, Roof Demoss, Torch On Flat. 250-588-3744.

SUPER MAID Cleaning Services. You get what you pay! It is charge by home not hourly on reasonable rate. I clean the way you want. I supply my own cleaning supplies. 100% customer service. Quality clean guaranteed. Call Judy: 250-508-8122

COMPUTER SERVICES A HOME COMPUTER Coach. Senior friendly. Computer lessons, maintenance and problem solving. Please call Des 250-656-9363, 250-727-5519. COMPUDOC MOBILE Computer Services. Repairs, tuneups, tutoring, web sites, etc. 250-886-8053, 778-351-4090. HAGENS COMPUTERS. New and used computers. Sales and service. 250-655-3566.

CONCRETE & PLACING ALL TYPES of Concrete & Carpentry work specializing in all types of retaining walls, large or small. IKON Construction since 1980. Call 250-4782898 or 250-880-0928.

CARPENTRY, DRYWALL, kitch/bath, wood floor, tiles, plumbing, renos 250-213-6877

DRYWALL AARON’S RENO’S Drywall, taping, texture. Insured/bonded. Free est. 250-880-0525. BEAT MY Price! Best workmanship. 38 years experience. Call Mike, 250-475-0542. DRYWALL PROFESSIONAL: Small additions, boarding, taping, repairs, texture spraying, consulting. Soundproof installation;bath/moisture resistance products. Call 250.384.5055. Petrucci’s Drywall. MUD on the RUN. Small drywall repairs, textures & renovations. Ross, (250)812-4879.

ELECTRICAL 250-361-6193 QUALITY Electric. New homes, renos. No job too sm. Seniors disc. #22779. AT&T ELECTRIC. Renovations. Residential & Commercial. Knob & tube replacement. #26125. (250)744-4550.

LICENSED, BONDED & F.S.R. Electrician, 30 yrs. Exp. Residential, new construction & renos. Knob & tube removal. Aluminum wiring upgraded and made safe. Lic.#3003. (250)590-9653. NORTHERN SUN Electric Comm/Res. $40/hr. Work Guaranteed. Any size job. (250)888-6160. Lic#13981.

EXCAVATING & DRAINAGE BUBBA’S HAULING. Mini excavator & bob cat services. Perimeter drains, driveway prep, Hardscapes, Lot clearing. Call 250-478-8858.

FENCING ALL TYPES of fencing, repairs. Reliable, on-time. Free estimates. Call 250-888-8637.

FURNITURE REFINISHING FURNITURE REFINISHING. Specializing in small items, end-tables, coffee tables, chairs. Free pick-up & delivery. References available. 250-475-1462.

10% OFF. Mowing, Power Raking, Hedge/Shrub Trimming, Clean-up. 250-479-6495 J&L GARDENING Specialty yard clean-up and maintenance. Master gardeners. John or Louise (250)891-8677. (250)208-8535 WOODCHUCK Yard a mess? Fall pruning & clean-up. Blackberry & ivy rmvl, weed control. 24yrs exp. 250-216-9476 ACCEPTING clients, From the Ground Up, custom landscapes, home reno’s, garden clean-ups.

(250) 858-0588 - Tree Service - Landscaping - Lawn & Garden Clean ups - Hedge trimming & Pruning - Pressure washing - Gutters Free estimates * WCB www.mowtime.ca ARE YOU in need of a professional, qualified, residential or commercial gardener? www. glenwood gardenworks.com AURICLE BSC. 250-882-3129 Fall clean up, Lawn aeration & fertilize-soil-hedges & more.

YARD ART Tree, Hedge & Shrub Pruning Lawn Care. 250-888-3224

PERIMETER EXTERIORS. Gutter Cleaning, Repairs, Demossing, Upgrades. WCB, Free estimates. 250-881-2440.

HANDYPERSONS AL’S AVAILABLE to update your home. Kitchens, baths, basements, etc. Licensed & Insured. Al 250-415-1397. BEETLES RESIDENTIAL Renovations Ltd. Bathrooms, decks, painting, landscaping and handyman services. Fully insured and guaranteed. Free estimates. Call 250-889-4245. BIG BEAR Handyman. Decks, Stairs, Painting, General household repairs. Free estimate. Call Barry 250-896-6071 SENIOR HANDYMAN. Household repairs. Will assist do-it-yourselfers. Call Fred, 250-888-5345.

HAULING AND SALVAGE CLEAN-UP SPECIAL. You load bins, size 12 yard $100 plus dump fee or we do it all. Call 250-361-6164.


A24 • www.saanichnews.com

Friday, October 12, 2012 - SAANICH

SERVICE DIRECTORY

NEWS

#OMPLETEåGUIDEåTOåPROFESSIONALåSERVICESåINåYOURåCOMMUNITY

www.bcclassified.com

250.388.3535

HOME/BUSINESS SERVICES

HOME/BUSINESS SERVICES

HOME/BUSINESS SERVICES

HOME/BUSINESS SERVICES

HOME/BUSINESS SERVICES

HOME/BUSINESS SERVICES

HAULING AND SALVAGE

HAULING AND SALVAGE

HOME IMPROVEMENTS

MASONRY & BRICKWORK

PAINTING

PLUMBING

JOHN’S STONEWORK. Free estimates. Over 30 years experience. (250)595-6099.

LADY PAINTER Serving the Peninsula for over 20 yrs. Interior/exterior. Call Bernice, 250-655-1127.

FREE ESTIMATES. Reasonable. Reliable. No job too small. Call 250-388-5544.

#1 JUNK Removal & Hauling. Small Renos. Free estimates. Cheapest in town. Same day emergency removal. Call 250818-4335.

MOVING & STORAGE

$20 & Up Garbage & Garden waste removal. Senior Disc. Free estimates. 250-812-2279. CITY HAUL- a lot of junk won’t fit in your trunk, you’re in luck I own a truck. 250-891-2489.

2 BURLEY MEN MOVING. $85/hr for 2 men (no before or after travel time charges on local moves. Please call Scott or Joshua, (250)686-6507.

EWING’S MOVING & Hauling. 1 men & truck. $60/hr. Call Dave at 250-857-2864.

DIAMOND MOVING- 1 ton 2 ton. Prices starting at $85/hr. Call 250-220-0734.

INSULATION

FAMILY MAN Hauling. Prompt, Courteous. Call Chris for all your hauling needs. 250-920-8463.

MALTA BLOWN Insulation. Attics - interior/exterior walls & sound silencer. (250)388-0278 JUNK REMOVAL 7 days / wk. Fast Service, Best Prices!! Free quotes. (250)857-JUNK. ✭BUBBA’S HAULING✭ Honest, on time. Demolition, construction clean-ups, small load deliveries (sand, gravel, topsoil, mulch), garden waste removal, mini excavator, bob cat service. 250-478-8858.

SCOTCH BROOM PROBLEM? We will hand-cut or hand-pull, chip, weigh and haul away the little devil. $150 plus 15 cents a pound. A Scot brought it...make a Scot take it away! 250-668-2888

SAVE-A-LOT HAULING Furniture, appliance, garden waste, we take it all! Always lowest rate, senior discount. Brad 250-217-9578.

HOME IMPROVEMENTS GEOF’S RENO’S & Repairs. Decks, stairs, railings, gates & small additions. 250-818-7977.

CBS MASONRY BBB. WCB. Chimneys, Fireplaces, Flagstone Rock, Concrete Pavers, Natural & Veneered Stone. Replace, Rebuild, Renew! “Quality is our Guarantee”. Free Competitive Estimates. (250)294-9942/(250)589-9942. www.cbsmasonry.com

High quality, Organized. Interior/Exterior Residential/Commercial Jeff, 250-472-6660 Cell 250-889-7715 Member BBB

Peacock Painting

ALFRED, ALFRED Quality Painting. Wholesale, Discounts! 50 years experience. 250-382-3694. A PROFESSIONAL Woman painter. Karen Bales Painting & Wallcoverings. Over 25 yrs exp. Free est. 250-514-5220. BIG BEAR Painting. Interior & Exterior. Quality work. Free estimate. Barry 250-896-6071 DRYWALL REPAIRS & HOUSE PAINTING. Free estimates. If you, your family or friends need any of the above give Joseph Bronson a call 250-686-0663. Reasonable rates in a tight economy. I take pride in the end results.

WRITTEN GUARANTEE Budget Compliance

PLUMBING

UPHOLSTERY UPHOLSTERER work. Your fabric 250-480-7937.

or

NEEDS mine.

WINDOW CLEANING

ROOFING & SKYLIGHTS

DAVE’S WINDOW Cleaning. Windows, Gutters, Sweeping, Roofs, Roof Demossing, Pressure Washing. 250-361-6190.

DEMOSS Dr. $499 per/roof. 2 years warranty. We also install new roofs? Call 250-589-4998

GLEAMING WINDOWS Gutters+De-moss. Free estimate. 18 yrs. Brian, 514-7079. WCB.

RUBBISH REMOVAL

WINDOW & Gutter Cleaning, minor repairs. Comm/Res. Insured, free est. (250)881-3684

PATCHES, ADDITIONS, restucco, renos, chimney, waterproofing. Bob, 250-642-5178. RE-STUCCO & HARDY Plank/Painting Specialist. 50 years experience. Free estimates. Dan, 250-391-9851.

WINDOWS ALFRED, ALFRED Quality Windows Wholesale, Discounts! 50 years Construction experience. 250-382-3694.

WE’RE ON THE WEB

Sudoku

32. Sun in spanish 33. Helps little firms 34. Cease living 39. Flames up 40. Egyptian sacred bull 41. To wit 42. Mire 43. Bring two objects together 47. Filths 50. Israeli dance 51. Oil cartel 52. A particular instance of selling 53. Microelectromechanical system 54. Var. of 45 across 55. Goat & camel hair fabrics 56. Soda 58. A firm’s operational head 60. Seaport (abbr.)

To solve a Sudoku puzzle, every number 1 to 9 must appear in: • Each of the nine vertical columns • Each of the nine horizontal rows • Each of the nine 3 x 3 boxes

Remember no number can occur more than once in any row, column or box.

Today’s Solution

38. L. Comfort’s illuminator 44. Foot digit 45. Minute tunicate genus 46. Green regions of desert 48. Direct a weapon 49. ___ de Janeiro 50. Equestrian animals 53. Acress Tomei 56. Head of the RCC 57. Twines 59. Scientific workplace 61. Minerals 62. Hypothetical original substances 63. Hit with the open hand 64. Political action committee 65. Winged goddess of the dawn 4. Fault’s incline from vertical 66. W. states time zone 5. Method of birth control 6. City founded by Xenophanes DOWN 7. Legumes 1. Electronic data processing 8. Beckham’s spice girl 2. Man or boy (Br.) 9. Explosive 3. W. African nation 11. 1936 Nobel winner Otto 12. Greenbay teammate Today’s Answers 13. Brass that looks like gold 14. School graduates 19. Lively, merry play 21. Make indistinct 24. Egyptian mythological figure associated with floods 25. Washing sponge 27. Old name for nitrogen 28. Impounds for lack of payment 29. Radiotelegraphic signal 31. MN 55731

PRESSURE WASHING

STUCCO/SIDING

EXPERIENCED JOURNEYMAN Plumber. Renos, New Construction & Service. Fair rates. Insured. Reliable, friendly. Great references. Call Mike at KNA (250)880-0104. FELIX PLUMBING. Over 35 years experience. Reasonable rates. Call 250-514-2376.

Crossword

ACROSS 1. European Common Market 4. Poetic go quickly 7. Parts per thousand (abbr.) 10. Pigeon pea 12. Sao __, city in Brazil 14. Longest division of geological time 15. __ Alto, California city 16. Small terrestrial viper 17. Coming after all others 18. Penetrate with a sharp fork 20. Still-hunt 22. Chinese frying pan 23. Cave-dwelling salamander 24. Any thick messy substance 26. About the moon 29. AKA Tao 30. Jet cabin requirement 35. Prince Hirobumi, 1841-1909 36. An easy return in a high arc 37. Italian commune

TREE SERVICES LOCAL TREE CO. 30 yrs exp. Bucket truck, chipper. We buy logs. Insured. (250)883-2911.

MALTA GARDEN & Rubbish Removal. Best Rates. BBB member. (250)388-0278.

15% SENIORS DISCOUNT

A1. SHAWN The Tile GuyRes/ Comm/ Custom/ Renos. 250-686-6046

PLASTERING

DRIVEWAYS, WALKWAYS, Decks, etc. Reasonable rates. 250-744-8588, Norm.

250-652-2255 250-882-2254

TILING

PATCHES,Drywall, skimming, old world texturing, coves, fireplaces. Bob, 250-642-5178.

D’ANDREA’S Power Washing, Gutter Cleaning & Painting. Quality guaranteed. Free est. Excellent ref’s. (250)413-7541.

PAINTING

LANDSCAPING

MASONRY & BRICKWORK PARRY’S HAULING We haul it all - FREE estimates. Call Shawn 250-812-7774

DONE RIGHT MOVING $80/hr. Senior Discount. Free Est’s. No travel time before or after. SMOOTH MOVES. Call Tyler at 250-418-1747.

SAFEWAY PAINTING

HOME/BUSINESS SERVICES


www.saanichnews.com • A25

SAANICH NEWS - Friday, October 12, 2012

This Weekend’s

Select your home. Select your mortgage.

OPENHOUSES Published Every Thursday

Oak Bay 250-370-7601 Victoria 250-483-1360 Westshore 250-391-2933 Sidney 250-655-0632 Chatterton Way 250-479-0688 www.vericoselect.com

754 Humboldt, $398,900 pg. 7

3163 Balfour, $499,000 Saturday 2-4 RE/MAX Alliance Ron Neal, 250-386-8181

pg. 32

pg. 11

110-1505 Church Ave, $225,000

743 Chesterlea, $525,000

Saturday 1-3 Sutton Group West Coast Realty Hiro Nakatani, 250 661-4476

Saturday 2-4 Boorman’s Rod Hay, 250-595-1535

Saturday 2-4 Re/Max Camosun Marsha Crawford, 250-889-8200

pg. 11

2237 Windsor, $749,000 Saturday & Sunday 2-4 Century 21 Queenswood Realty Mike Van Nerum, 250-477-1100

Saturday 2-4 Sotheby’s International Don St. Germain, 250-744-7136

pg. 12

Saturday 1-2:30 Royal LePage Coast Capital Realty Norma Campbell, 250-477-5353

pg. 5

30-300 Six Mile Rd

Saturday 1-3 Pemberton Holmes Rick Couvelier, 250-477-0921

pg. 11

pg. 30

Saturday 2-4 Sutton Group West Coast Realty Fred Lerch, 250-889-2528

pg. 1

Saturday & Sunday 1-4 Royal Lepage Coast Capital Murray Lawson 250 385-9814

Sunday 1-3 DFH Real Estate Ltd. Shannon Jackson, 250-474-6003

pg. 16

pg. 28

pg. 13

Saturday 2-4 Duttons & Co. Real Estate Colin Moorman, 250-383-7100

Saturday 11-1 Pemberton Holmes Rick Couvelier, 250-477-0921

pg. 10

pg. 5 Sunday 1-3 DFH Real Estate Ltd. Shannon Jackson, 250-474-6003

1044 Davie St, $799,000 Saturday 2-4 DFH Real Estate Cassie Kangas 250 477-7291

pg. 6

pg. 12

Saturday 1-4 Sutton Group West Coast Bill MacDonald 250 479-3333

pg. 6

311-2022 Foul Bay Rd, $159,000 pg. 12

Saturday 2-4 Century 21 Queenswood Realty Alison Stoodley, 250-477-1100

A-707 Linden St, $449,900 Saturday & Sunday 1-3 Pemberton Holmes Ltd Jack Jazz Jazlowiecki 250 744-0150

540 Cornwall St., $799,900 pg. 28

Saturday 11-1 One Percent Realty Valentino, 250-686-2242

Sunday 12:30-2 SmartMove Real Estate Blair Veenstra, 250-380-6683

302-1025 Meares St, $349,500 Sunday 2-4 Sutton Group West Coast Realty Fred Lerch, 250-889-2528

Saturday 1-3 Re/Max Camosun Fran Jeffs, 250-744-3301

Saturday 1-3 RE/MAX Camosun Dale Sheppard, 250-478-9600

934 Craigflower, $369,000 pg. 10

205D-1115 Craigflower Rd, $429,900 Sunday 2:30-4 Royal Lepage Coast Capital Realty Norma Campbell, 250-477-5353

pg. 5

Saturday 1-3 Royal LePage Coast Capital Realty Sylvia Schumann, 250-474-4800

pg. 5

pg. 11

pg. 30

pg. 13

Saturday 2-4 Re/Max Camosun Lynne Sager 250 744-3301

pg. 12

1018 Joan Cres, $899,000

pg. 8

pg. 12

305-3010 Washington, $259,900

Saturday 2-4 Royal LePage Coast Capital Realty Deborrah Robertson, 250-592-4422

pg. 6

302-1000 McClure, $219,900

3533 Murdoch Cres. pg. 30

Sunday 12-2 Pemberton Holmes Josh Prowse, 250-661-5674

Saturday 2-4 Century 21 Queenswood Realty Anke Venema, 250 477-1100

pg. 15

pg. 14

pg. 13

pg. 13

pg. 28

pg. 28

pg. 6

pg. 5

pg. 13

pg. 13

pg. 14

4-4305 Maltwood, $469,000

Sunday 2-4 Sutton Group West Coast Realty June Wing, 250-479-3333

5640 Batu, $1,775,000 Sunday 2-4 Re/Max Camosun Lynne Sager 250 744-3301

Saturday 12-1:30 Sotheby’s International Don St. Germain, 250-744-7136

pg. 15

pg. 25

pg. 18

pg. 18

pg. 18

pg. 31

Saturday 1-3 Royal LePage Coast Capital Realty Gary Bazuik, 250-477-5353

Sunday 2-4 Royal Lepage Coast Capital Rosemarie Colterman 250 384-7663

6-10072 Third St., $509,000 Saturday 3-4 Holmes Realty Michele Holmes, 250-656-0911

Saturday 2-4 Sotheby’s International James Leblanc, 250-812-7212

pg. 1

407-2341 Harbour Sunday 2-4 Century 21 Queenswood Realty Julie Rust, 250-477-1100

pg. 26

pg. 29

pg. 19

6694 Tamany, $569,000 Saturday 2-4 Sutton West Coast Mikko Ikonen 250 479-3333

pg. 28

pg. 30

10371 Patricia, $460,000 Saturday 11-1 Sutton Group West Coast Realty Stuart Price, 250-479-3333

Sunday 2-4 Macdonald Realty Scott Garman 250 896-7099

pg. 19

pg. 14

6664 Welch Rd, $665,000 Sunday 2-4 Royal LePage Coast Capital Realty Deborrah Robertson, 250-592-4422

1905 Portway, $949,000 Saturday 2-4 & Sunday 11-1 DFH Real Estate Cassie Kangas 250 477-7291

pg. 18

pg. 15

5E-9851 Second St., $729,000 Saturday 1-3 DFH Real Estate Ltd. Dorothee Friese, 250-477-7291

Sunday 2-4 Pemberton Holmes Rick Couvelier, 250-477-0921

Saturday 1-2 Holmes Realty Michele Holmes, 250-656-0911

pg. 29

pg. 14

101-10461 Resthaven $214,500 Sunday 2-4 Macdonald Realty Scott Garman 250 896-7099

pg. 19

pg. 15

8993 Marshall, $757,000 Sunday 1-3 Royal LePage Coast Capital Realty May Hamilton, 250-477-5353

pg. 19

pg. 15

16-3981 Nelthorpe St, $309,900 Saturday 12-2 Pemberton Holmes Josh Prowse, 250-661-5674

pg. 15

3926 Mina Walk, $669,900

3648 Doncaster Dr, $849,000

1822 Fairhurst Ave., $599,900

Saturday 2-4 Fair Realty Kevin Ramsay, 250-217-5091 Saturday 1-3 DFH Real Estate Wendy Herrick 250-656-0131

Sunday 12-1 Fair Realty Matt Bourque 250-418-1695

Saturday & Sunday 2-4 Sutton Group West Coast Realty Lorraine Williams, 250-216-3317

3995 Hopesmore Dr., $599,900

pg. 3 Saturday 2-4 Re/Max Camosun Roy Coburn 250-478-9600

8-3957 South Valley

pg. 25

3536 Richmond, $499,900

1010 Lucas, $564,000

4029 Providence, $899,888 Saturday 2-4 Pemberton Holmes Ltd Deborah Kline 250 661-7680

Saturday & Sunday 2-4 Kroppmann Realty Dale Kroppmanns, 250-478-0808

3800 Hobbs, $769,000

8-4522 Gordon Point Dr, $739,900 pg. 12

pg. 6

4044 Angeleah

111-3921 Shelbourne, $299,000

Saturday 1-3 DFH Real Estate Ltd. Dorothee Friese, 250-477-7291

Sunday 2-4 Pemberton Holmes Ltd Rick Shumka 250 384-8124

Sunday 1-3 DFH Real Estate Ltd. Suzanne Mitchell, 250-477-7291

Sunday 1:30-3:30 Pemberton Holmes Daryl Ashby, 250-478-9141

3942 Aspen Pl., $769,000

1534 Edgemont, $668,800 Saturday 2-4 Sutton West Coast Mikko Ikonen 250 479-3333

pg. 18

4360 Interurban Rd, $389,000

4639 Lochside, $599,900

4404 Bartholomew

pg. 17 Saturday 1-3 Sutton Group West Coat Realty David Nixon, 250-479-3333

pg. 15

4035 Cumberland Rd, $524,900

Sunday 3-4:30 Royal Lepage Coast Capital Realty Bob Krueckl 250 477-5353

Saturday 2-4 Century 21 Queenswood Realty Anke Venema, 250 477-1100

Sunday 1-3 Newport Realty Robert Buckle 250 385-2033

Saturday 2-4 Royal Lepage Coast Capital Paul Holland 250 592-4422

4634 Cordova Bay, $634,900

1235 Astra Pl, $515,000

2560 Orchard Ave., $839,000 Saturday 2-4 JonesCo Real Estate Ian Heath, 250-655-7653

5005 Cordova Bay Rd, $750,000

pg. 26

21-4120 Interurban, $364,900

pg. 9

203-5350 Sayward Hill, $629,900

pg. 31

1560 Clive Dr, $595,000

pg. 15

Saturday 1-3, $499,900 RE/MAX Camosun Craig Walters, 250-744-3301

pg. 14

Saturday & Sunday 2-4 Cathy Duncan & Associates 250 658-0967

Saturday & Sunday 2-4 Re/Max Camosun John Percy 250 744-3301

Saturday 2-4 Newport Realty Gordon Lee 250-385-2033

3845 Mildred, $624,900

105-3259 Alder St, $327,932

4030/4040 Borden St, $229,900

Saturday 12-1:30 One Percent Realty Guy Effler, 250-812-4910

Sunday 2-4 Duttons & Co. Real Estate Colin Moorman, 250-383-7100

pg. 30

Saturday 1-3 DFH Real Estate Ltd. Mike Hartshorne, 250-590-3921

Saturday 11-1 Royal LePage Coast Capital Realty Deborrah Robertson, 250-592-4422

pg. 3

106-651 Jolly, $215,000

Saturday 2-4 Fair Realty Diana Winger, 250-480-3000

pg. 13

2166 Ferndale, $895,000

2424 Beach Saturday 2-4 DFH Real Estate Ltd. Philip Illingworth, 250-477-7291

pg. 30

3991 Cherrilee, $759,000

pg. 10 Saturday 2-4 Re/Max Camosun Roland Stillings 250-744-3301

Sunday 2-4 Pemberton Holmes Jeff Shorter, 250-384-8124

Sunday 1-3 JonesCo Real Estate Inc. Ian Heath 250-655-7653

1571 Craigiewood Crt, $509,900

2537 Sinclair Rd., $605,000

2046 Kings Rd, $559,500 pg. 10

pg. 24

930 Tuxedo, $664,900

36-909 Admirals Rd., $369,000 Saturday 1-3 Royal LePage Coast Capital Cheryl Bejcar, 250-592-4422

pg. 15

4640 Ocean Park Pl, $324,900

2676 Arbutus Rd, $935,000

Saturday 2-4 DFH Real Estate Ltd. Jenn Raappana, 250-590-3921 Sunday 2-4 Re/Max Camosun Marsha Crawford, 250-889-8200

Saturday & Sunday 1:30-3:30 DFH Real Estate Ltd Henry Van der Vlugt, 250 477-7291

Sunday 1-2:30 Royal Lepage Coast Capital Realty Bob Krueckl 250 477-5353

Sunday 1-3 Century 21 Queenswood Realty Jodie Farup, 250-477-1100

5460 Old West Saanich, $1,069,000

304-1505 Church St, $189,900

205-1831 Oak Bay, $429,000

1477 Finlayson, $524,900

Saturday 1-3 Royal Lepage Coast Capital Rosemarie Colterman 250 384-7663

pg. 10

840 Coles St,

pg. 6

113-21 Erie, $515,000

Saturday 3-4:30 Royal LePage Coast Capital Realty Norma Campbell, 250-477-5353

Sunday 2-4 Pemberton Holmes Ltd Shelley Saldat, 250 384-8124

209D-1115 Craigflower, $264,900

3143 Stevenson Pl, $399,000

Saturday 1-3 Newport Realty Robert Buckle 250 385-2033

pg. 28

675 Superior St., $624,800 pg. 6

216-1560 Hillside Ave, $224,900

Sunday 2-4 Re/Max Camosun Daniel Clover 250 507-5459

pg. 8

D-349 Foul Bay Rd, $475,000 pg. 24

Sunday 2-4 Royal Lepage Coast Capital Rosemarie Colterman 250 384-7663

Sunday 1-3 DFH Real Estate Ltd. Dorothee Friese, 250-477-7291

305-847 Dunsmuir, $829,000

Friday, Saturday & Sunday 1-4 Pemberton Holmes Nicole Burgess 250 384-8124

104-1121 Oscar, $342,900

615 Broughton, $219,000

Saturday 1-4 Sutton Group West Coast Lynn MacDonald 250 479-3333

pg. 6

2-2538 Fifth, $449,900 pg. 17

pg. 15

1248 Pearce, $549,900

3-801 Langham, $399,999

Saturday & Sunday 2-4 Sutton Group West Coast Realty Karin Amorim, 250-588-5585

Saturday & Sunday 12-2 Pemberton Holmes Eli Mavrikos 250 896-3859

pg. 14

4038 Cumberland, $505,000

4798 Elliott Pl, $698,800

101-75 Songhees, $690,000 pg. 10

pg. 15

407-1009 McKenzie, $199,000

204-1146 View St., $219,900

Daily 12-5 Sotheby’s International Realty Scott Piercy, 250-383-2999

Saturday 1-3 Royal LePage Coast Capital Realty Doug Poruchny, 250-474-4800

637 Kenneth St, $484,100

4624 Sunnymead, $679,900

1289 Derby, $519,000

5-15 Helmcken, $429,900

Saturday 2-4 Royal LePage Coast Capital Realty Betsy Gutnik, 250-885-1357

Saturday 2:30-4 One Percent Realty Guy Effler, 250-812-4910

Saturday 2-4 Royal Lepage Coast Capital Rosemarie Colterman 250 384-7663

118-21 Conard St., $299,900

6-1464 Fort St, $389,900

Saturday 2-4 DFH Real Estate Ltd. Philip Illingworth, 250-477-7291

20-1473 Garnet, $409,000

Sunday 2-4 Re/Max Camosun Rick Turcotte, 250-744-3301

1-3211 Shelley, $389,900

pg. 9

304-365 Waterfront Cr, $549,000

pg. 15

1877 Feltham Rd, $519,900

Saturday 1-3 Pemberton Holmes Corie Meyer 250 384-8124

pg. 11

828 Rupert Terrace

2314 Richmond, $424,900

Sunday 1-3 RE/MAX Camosun April Prinz, 250-744-3301

Sunday 1-3 Royal LePage Coast Capital Realty Doug Poruchny 250-474-4800

5-15 Helmcken, $429,900

Daily noon - 5 pm (exc Thurs & Fri) Fair Realty Ryan Bicknell 250 480-3000

Saturday 2-4 Pemberton Holmes Rick Couvelier, 250-477-0921

770 Claremont, $749,000

Saturday 2-4 Macdonald Realty Ltd Eleanor V Smith, 250 388-5882

3236 Cedar Hill, $589,000

Sunday 1-4 Pemberton Holmes Ltd. Jim Fields, 250-384-8124 Saturday 2-4 One Percent Realty Valentino, 250-686-2242

401-670 Dallas

pg. 10

3963 Juan De Fuca

156 Levista Pl, $599,900

733A Humboldt

Sunday 2-4 Re/Max Camosun Geoff McLean, 250-744-3301

205-2125 Oak Bay Ave, $405,000

Sunday 11-1 Pemberton Holmes Rick Couvelier, 250-477-0921

308-1342 Hillside, $180,000

623 Manchester, $459,000 Sunday 1-3 Royal Lepage Coast Capital Rosemarie Colterman 250 384-7663

208-305 Michigan, $154,900

406-1149 Rockland, $339,900

2921 Gosworth Sunday 11-12:30 Century 21 Queenswood Realty Julie Rust, 250-477-1100

Find more details on the Open Houses below in the Oct. 11 - 17 edition of

1479 Lang St, $849,900

Daily Noon-5 exc Fridays Concert Properties 250 383-3722

Check the page number below in Real Estate Victoria or visit www.revweekly.com

302-3724 Harriet, $214,900 Saturday & Sunday 2-4 Pemberton Holmes Allen Tepper 1-800-480-6788

7161 West Saanich pg. 18

Thursday - Monday 3-5 Gordon Hulme Realty Don King 250 656-4626

pg. 10


A26 • www.saanichnews.com

Friday, October 12, 2012 - SAANICH

This Weekend’s Published Every Thursday

71-7701 Central Saanich Rd, $124,900 Saturday 11-12:30 Royal LePage Coast Capital Realty May Hamilton, 250-477-5353

OPENHOUSES

Check the page number below in Real Estate Victoria or visit www.revweekly.com

8-10110 Third St, $539,900

2455 Prospector, $649,900

2941 Creekside, $599,900

681 Lombard, $699,000

3100 Dornier

Saturday 2-4 Re/Max Camosun April Prinz, 250-744-3301

Saturday 2-4 Kroppmann Realty Dale Kroppmanns, 250-478-0808

Sunday 2-4 Cathy Duncan & Associates 250 658-0967

Saturday & Sunday 1-3 Gallie Realty Barbara Gallie 250-478-6530

Daily 12-4 DFH Real Estate Ltd Mike Hartshorne 250 889-4445

pg. 6

306-1240 Verdier Ave., $315,000 Saturday 1-3 Holmes Realty Michele Holmes, 250-656-0911

Saturday 3-5 Sutton Group West Coast Realty Stuart Price, 250-479-3333

pg. 29

pg. 19

313-10459 Resthaven, $362,000 Saturday 1-2 Holmes Realty Michele Holmes, 250-656-0911

762 Harding Lane, $549,900 Saturday 1-3 Address Realty Ltd. Patrick Achtzner, 250-391-1893

pg. 20

Saturday 1:30-3:30 DFH Real Estate Ltd. Henry Van der Vlugt, 250-477-7291

Saturday 1-3 DFH Real Estate Ltd. Robin Lewis, 250-656-0131

pg. 21

pg. 21

402-1240 Verdier, $328,500

pg. 7

867 Wild Ridge, $399,900 Saturday 2-4 SmartMove Real Estate Gary Brown, 250-380-6683

Sunday 1-3 Royal LePage Coast Capital Realty Gary Bazuik, 250-477-5353

Sunday 1-3 One Percent Realty Tania McFadden 250 589-0248

Saturday 3-5 Re/Max Camosun Rick Turcotte, 250-744-3301 Sunday 1-3 DFH Real Estate Ltd. Jenn Raappana, 250-590-3921

pg. 21

pg. 21

Sunday 2-4 Re/Max Camosun Roy Coburn 250-478-9600

pg. 25

Saturday 2-4 RE/MAX Camosun Dale Sheppard, 250-478-9600

pg. 6

Saturday 1-3 RE/MAX Alliance Ron Neal, 250-386-8181

Sunday 2-4 Pemberton Holmes Ltd. Diana Winger, 250-384-8124

720 Tiswilde, $505,000 pg. 32

3304 Haida, $849,000

270/274 Atkins pg. 31

100-594 Bezanton Way, $324,900

1193 Goldstream, $649,000

415-866 Brock, $274,000

pg. 30

Sunday 2:30-4:30 Re/Max Camosun Roy Coburn 250-478-9600

Sunday 1-3 Pemberton Holmes Ltd John Almond 250 384-8124

pg. 21

pg. 25

pg. 21

Friday thru Sunday 1-4 RE/MAX Camosun Dale Sheppard, 250-478-9600

pg. 26

Daily 12-4 DFH Real Estate Ltd Mike Hartshorne 250 889-4445

pg. 21

pg. 30

Sunday 2-4 Royal LePage Coast Capital Mark McDougall, 250-477-5353

pg. 21

pg. 21

1011 Oliver, $499,900 Sunday 2-3:30 Re/Max Camosun Adrian Langereis, 250-999-9822

pg. 20

Daily 12-4 DFH Real Estate Ltd Mike Hartshorne 250 889-4445

pg. 21

pg. 21

Saturday 12:30-2 SmartMove Real Estate Gary Brown 250 380-6683

3128 Antrobus Cres, $549,000

12-848 Hockley Ave, $174,900

Saturday 2-4 Sutton Group Seafair Realty Allan McDowell, 604-240-8586

Sunday 2-4 Royal LePage Coast Capital Realty Betsy Gutnik, 250-885-1357

Reface your

6662 Rhodonite Dr, $279,900 Saturday & Sunday 3:30-4:30 Re/Max Alliance Karen Love, 250-386-8875

pg. 5

B-2720 Phillips Rd., $470,000 Sunday 2:30-4:30 Pemberton Holmes Gregg Mah, 250-384-8124

515-1400 Lynburne, $349,900

526 Brough, $447,900 Sunday 1-3 Fair Realty Kevin Ramsay, 250-217-5091

Saturday 1-3 Royal LePage Coast Capital Realty Sylvia Schumann, 250-474-4800

2983 Dornier Rd, $399,900

2550 Crystalview Dr., $569,500

308-3220 Jacklin, $315,900 Saturday 2:30-4 SmartMove Real Estate Gary Brown 250 380-6683

3146 Glen Lake Rd

1025 Grob

571 Latoria, $389,900

2421 Marlene Dr, $525,000

3286 Hazelwood, $479,900 pg. 19

Sunday 12:30-2 Royal LePage Coast Capital Realty Norma Campbell, 250-477-5353

102-866 Goldstream, $234,900

201-2829 Peatt Rd, $209,900 pg. 18

205-611 Goldstream, $234,000

Sunday 2-4 Sutton Group West Coast Komal Dodd 250 479-3333

pg. 18

2463 Costa Vista Pl, $559,000

7161 West Saanich Rd, $269,900

978 Rattanwood, $349,900

Daily 1-4 Kahl Realty Jason Kahl 250-391-8484

Sunday 12-2 Pemberton Holmes Ltd Gregg Mah 250 384-8124

pg. 26

pg. 19

662 Goldstream Ave., $239,900

117-643 Granderson, $365,000

7227 Peden Lane, $556,900

Saturday 1-3 Royal LePage Coast Capital Realty May Hamilton, 250-477-5353

pg. 25

pg. 29

pg. 19

303-1240 Verdier, $322,000

Thursday-Monday 3-5 Re/Max Camosun Craig Walters, 250-655-0608

Find more details on the Open Houses below in the Oct. 11 - 17 edition of

pg. 19

1-7570 Tetayut, $209,000

Sunday 1-3 Re/Max Camosun Gary Anderson, 250-744-3301

NEWS

pg. 31

pg. 10

Sunriver Estates Sales Centre Saturday& Sunday 11-4 Newport Realty Blair Watling 250 642-2233

pg. 22

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www.saanichnews.com • A27

SAANICH NEWS - Friday, October 12, 2012

Planning Ahead Provides Peace of Mind.

Victoria changes tune on freedom of information Roszan Holmen News staff

The City of Victoria has withdrawn its application to limit requests for information by Focus magazine. In August, corporate administrator Rob Woodland applied to B.C.’s Office of the Information and Privacy Commissioner for permission to restrict the magazine to one active request at a time. While the city claimed the number of requests filed by Focus Magazine overburdened city resources, publisher David Broadland countered that he suspected the move was strategic, to delay the release of specific materials related to the Johnson

Street Bridge. An adjudicator with the commission will no longer have to make a ruling in the case. On Oct. 9 Woodland distributed a letter explaining his reasons for withdrawing his application. “In the two months since the filing of the City’s application … the Respondents have made no new requests related to the JSB Project,” Woodland wrote. By assigning extra resources to the job, the city has fulfilled all but one outstanding request by Focus, he continued. “Thus it is no longer necessary to proceed with the Section 43 application.” rholmen@vicnews.com

Laurie McDonald,

First Memorial Advisor

Kristy Martin

Notary Public, Farley Martin Notaries Public

Questions about Estate Planning and what it means to be an executor? Join us for a complimentary session on how to save time and money on Estate Settlement, Pre-Planning your final wishes & an overview of Capital Gains Tax. Questions are welcome - Refreshments available. Reserve now as seats are limited.

Local news. Local shopping. Your local paper.

Annette Quan

Financial Advisor, Manulife Securities Incorporated Life Representative, Manulife Securities Insurance Agency

Monday, Oct. 15 6:00-7:00pm First Memorial Funeral Services 4725 Falaise Drive

Tuesday, Nov. 13 3:00-4:00pm First Memorial Funeral Services 1155 Fort Street

To register contact Tara at 250.405.3550 or email Tara.zajac@manulifesecurities.ca HOSTED BY: FIRST MEMORIAL FUNERAL SERVICES, winner of the 2011 Consumers Choice Award

Read the Saanich News every Wednesday and Friday Manulife Securities and the block design are registered service marks and trade marks of The Manufacturers Life Insurance Company and are used by it and its affiliates including Manulife Securities Incorporated, Manulife Securities Insurance Agency.

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A28 • www.saanichnews.com

Friday, October 12, 2012 - SAANICH

NEWS

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STEP#5

Trace

Fri, Oct. 12th • Sat, Oct. 13th th Sun, Oct. 14 , 2012 ONLY

Strip Loin Grilling Steaks Naturally Aged 21 Days Family Pack Savings Size $15.41/kg

Mandarin Oranges Grown in China 4lb/1.81kg Bag

2

4 lb Bag

6

99 Per lb

Island Farms

Premium Ice Cream Country Cream, Denali or No Sugar Added Dessert 1.65L

On Sale

99

On Sale

24 Pack

On Sale

499 Each

Chocolate Chip Cookies On Sale

300 When you buy 2

5

9Each9

Three Day Sale specials in effect Friday, Saturday & Sunday, October 12th – 14th, 2012


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