Kelowna Capital News, November 09, 2012

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Do you download free music or wait for charity auctions to fill out your collection? What’s building one artist’s name is degrading another’s ability to sell work. If there’s a universal message in the small-town art world, it’s that artists cannot work for free and a few are getting ready to launch a call to arms. Capital News reporter Jennifer Smith examines the issue in today’s close-up feature. See story A3

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Capital News Friday, November 9, 2012


Capital News Friday, November 9, 2012

www.kelownacapnews.com A3

CLOSE-UP

Giving art away for free has a price Technology and fundraising donation demands are placing increased pressure on how artists and musicians are able to make a living. Jennifer Smith

LOCAL DJ Tim Fehr, of Spell Cast

STAFF REPORTER

Productions, is giving away his life’s work for free. Go to www.spellcastproductions.com and start clicking on songs for free downloads.

W

hen Craig Cardiff arrives to play the Streaming Café this weekend, there won’t be a tour bus in sight. He flies to do his tours, small stints he books in areas across the continent and Europe where he’s sparked demand for his music. As an independent singer/songwriter, he plays, packages, sells and markets his music, and talks to his fans via social media on the side. Along the way, he’s become a media go-to for perspective on socalled free music. Rather than lamenting download-happy scalpers, his philosophy is to encourage the world to share his art and “support it if you like it,” suggesting the only caveat be those who opt to pay send their dollars the artist’s way, rather than let iTunes skim its profits off the top. “Things have changed. Just as bowling alleys and horseshoe manufacturers had to roll with the times, this is how things are and it’s exciting,” he said, in a telephone interview from his Ontario home. To his mind, he is “open-sourcing the problem of touring.” What he loses in sales, he makes up for in requests to play. It’s a small business model for the music industry. While the bigger acts might want artists to quit giving product away without a price, there’s nothing wrong with a medium-income earning musician opting to trade direct profit for the notoriety and the touring dollars it will bring in his view. “I think it’s a mistake to apply the big model into an independent artist’s career and then be disappointed when it doesn’t work. There’s no shame in running a great small business as an independent artist,” he said.

CONTRIBUTED

“Music is one of This is what Kelowthe magical things still na’s Tim Fehr is bankleft in the world. It’s the ing on. best non-medical mediOver the last two cation we have for each months, he’s given other to help fall in love away an estimated or get through hard $10,000 of his work for times. To limit access free. to it based on the fact His entire collection someone doesn’t have of CDs is walking out $10 at the time feels the door without profsilly to me.” it in the hopes that it Whenever someone will build his name and Craig Cardiff tells him they’ll downyield a few gigs. load his music later be“This is off the side cause they don’t have any cash on of my desk. I’m not a formal master them, he hands over an album, asking of fine arts, I’m just the master of my the fan to send along the funds. About own destiny, I guess,” said the land85 per cent pay up. scaper by day, artist by night. “Once people know your story “If I give it out, then there’s more and can connect the dots on how you of a chance for everyone to enjoy it.” make a living, it’s rare they won’t step On Saturdays, Fehr sells heirloom up to pay,” he said. tomato varietals at the farmers’ mar-

ket and at night he plays gigs from Vancouver to Calgary, occasionally hanging with the Alternator Centre for the Arts crowd, cartooning images for his albums and videoing his dance parties. “Being a young artist in Kelowna, there’s not a lot of ways to make money,” he said. “I figure, if we give it away, then if you like it, you could donate. And if you don’t, you don’t have to. “There’s not a lot of money in CDs now anyway.” But the theory begs the question, what if the exposure doesn’t pay off? With freebies flooding the market, is it possible to earn a living directly off an artistic product? It’s a question that has the arts community preparing for battle as several artists resent being asked to give away art in exchange for publicity.

The Kelowna General Hospital Foundation recently released its call to artists for their Have a Heart Radiothon, asking that anyone interested in having their work juried for the chance to have their art used as that year’s thank you gift for the Foundation, submit a matted, framed piece of art, free of charge. “A print (of the winning selection) is then provided to those who choose to donate (to KGHF) monthly and the piece of art is hung in the hospital,” said Doug Rankmore, KGHF chief executive officer. “The artist is provided with a full value tax receipt for the value of the work, matting and framing.” Rankmore said the foundation has received about 15 submissions per year in the first two years. He believes the idea to conduct a juried show came out of the arts community itself, although he’s aware there are mixed feelings about it and has heard opposition to the matting and framing requirement. “Because it’s juried, the standard expectation is that the work be presented matted and framed. “It’s certainly not an expectation that now we be responsible for those costs…We’re providing an opportunity for exposure,” he said. Distinguished Canadian painter Rod Charlesworth and watercolorist Bill Litman sit on the jury. But lo-

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Friday, November 9, 2012 Capital News

NEWS

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Capital News Friday, November 9, 2012

www.kelownacapnews.com A5

CLOSE-UP

Low-earning artists get little from tax receipt for donated art Artists from A3 cal figurative artist Julia Trops is still incensed with the call. Trops says she went to the foundation to express her concerns, but received no response. (For the record, Rankmore said he had not been contacted.) So she took her battle to Facebook to try and put the breaks on a system that, in her view, demands far too much of smalltown arts communities. From shows like this Radiothon to the non-stop requests for silent auction donations, Trops says she’s easily donated more than $50,000 worth of “free” art in the last decade; and she can ill afford to do it. Looking at the average income of the nonprofit directors making the requests and the total value of the dollars donated, all she can do is shake her head when the free art queries come rolling in. “It’s completely unacceptable,” she said. “No more calls to artists for free art. The best way you

Julia Trops can promote my work is by word of mouth. Buy it, hang it on your wall, tell your friends about it; but don’t ask for it for free.” These calls to artists are damaging on multiple levels, in her view. First, it asks an artist who has not built a big name to give away needed income. Then, it asks that the artist pay to do so as the framing and matting costs are out of pocket expenses for the donor artist. And with the plethora of requests, the mere existence of these fundraisers also undermines the market for artists’ work. Knowing that a given artist typically donates to a given show, pa-

trons will often opt to wait for the auction and pick up a deal rather than take their business to the artist’s gallery and pay full price. Trops believes fundraisers that generate $100,000 should be able to build paying for the items they auction off into an event budget. When Michael Loewen served as executive director for the United Way, the organization heard similar grumblings and decided to act. “It was actually Mel Kotler who brought us along this path,” said Loewen. Kotler, who recently passed away, was a businessman and past chair of the United Way fundraising campaign in the Central Okanagan. “Mel had heard that collectively our expectations of artists were getting a bit out of hand. We were asking them to donate art as if it was water. We were asking for their contributions, we weren’t thinking about what we were asking.”

Kotler realized the practice was diluting the market for art and decided it was time for a business approach. The charity partnered with a framing gallery, which offered its services at a discount, and then started putting minimum prices on all silent auction items and sharing the cash proceeds with the artist. “In effect, we functioned as a gallery for them,” said Loewen, noting they received so much more art the plan bolstered funds raised as well. “There aren’t too many artists in our community who are making too much money,” he added. “To ask them to be constantly donating their work for free is great acknowledgement, but not a great deal of appreciation.” Trops has spoken with a number of local artists and all of them told her they will be boycotting the KGH Foundation’s request. The calls for free art issue will be raised at the next Central Okanagan

Arts Council meeting in effort to get a handle on the demands local artists are facing. Local Instagram whizkid and longtime artist Carrie Harper couldn’t be happier. She reposted Trops’ open letter to her own Facebook account, saying it astounds her

with its brilliance. “People asking for donations always say, the exposure will be great for you,” she said. “But after a while you get tired of starving from what you do for a living.” Harper says she no longer gives away original work as she doesn’t be-

lieve she’s ever received any benefit from donating, short of a thank you. “It’s kind of ironic,” she said. “We’re probably one of the lowest paid sectors in our society, so a tax receipt, even when you get it, doesn’t really do you much good.” jsmith@kelownacapnews.com

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Friday, November 9, 2012 Capital News

NEWS

Conclusion of Crown counsel’s case tugs on emotions Kathy Michaels STAFF REPORTER

Family and friends of slain teenager Ashlee Hyatt who crowded into the courthouse Thursday were visibly shaken as they endured another round of painful testimony about the teen’s last day. Emotional lows were

initially brought up as Crown counsel Murray Kaay started to wrap up his case for a second degree murder conviction of an 18-year-old West Kelowna girl, by calling upon forensic pathologist Dr. William Currie. Two days after Hyatt, 16, was killed outside a Peachland party, Currie

was called in to do an autopsy in which he reached the conclusion that the teen died when her body shut down from excessive blood loss. Jurors were shown pictures of the five-centimetre deep wound to Hyatt’s neck, just above her collar bone, and told it punctured and deflated

her lung and partially severed an artery. It wasn’t the only gash found on her body, either. More superficial cuts to her cheek, ear and hairline area were found. There were no cuts to her hands, although smears of blood from where she had tried to stem the flow of the nicked

artery were apparent. Currie also determined the wounds incurred matched the blade police confiscated from the Peachland party, which took place June 2, 2010. The emotional burden of the day became noticeably heavier, however, with Crown’s final witness. Recently deceased Michael Baxter was Hyatt’s on-again-off-again boyfriend, and had been scheduled to testify during the trial. He died shortly before it started, but his observations of the fatal night were recorded during the preliminary hearing, and jurors were made privy to that by mid-morning. Baxter, who was 18 the night of the party, told a judge last year that he was friends with most of the party-goers who’d assembled at the Peachland house, including the accused.

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City in Action COUNCIL HIGHLIGHTS Water Quality Project Council authorized the mayor to write a letter of support the South East Kelowna Irrigation District application for senior government funding for a water quality improvement project. The project was identified as one of the highest priorities in the Kelowna Integrated Water Supply Plan, a coordinated technical document recently completed by the Kelowna Joint Water Committee.

City Hall 1435 Water Street Kelowna, BC V1Y 1J4 250 469-8500 ask@kelowna.ca

· Add a new exemption in Chapter 14 to exempt construction of a typical single storey double garage (non-habitable space) up to 45m2. · Include minor text amendments to correct typing errors or omissions. Details related to this bylaw can be viewed on the City website. The deadline for comments to be received is Friday, November 23, 2012. INFO: 250 469-8441

ocp@kelowna.ca

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Free Downtown Parking Free on-street parking downtown was approved by Council for five Saturdays in December. For the 19th year, the City of Kelowna has waived parking charges on December Saturdays at the request of the Downtown Kelowna Association. Posted time limits and all other parking restrictions still apply to the free parking spots, to allow more customers to take advantage of free parking.

Removal of Highway Dedication

kelowna.ca/council

Pursuant to Section 26 of the Community Charter, the City intends to sell the “Closed Road” under Bylaw No. 10774, being a portion of Belgo Road at Springfield Road to Black Mountain Irrigation District (BMID), having an area of 0.137 ha. for a price of $1.00.

PUBLIC NOTICES OCP Amendment Bylaws First Reading has been given to OCP Bylaw Amendment 10753 intended to make minor housekeeping adjustments to the text and mapping of the OCP to: · Reflect recent changes in secondary suite policy - instances of “secondary suite” in the OCP have been replaced by “carriage house”. · Ensure Map 4.1 Future Land Use reflects current legal lots resulting from existing and new subdivisions, specifically for the Glenmore Recreation Park and other City owned properties. · Incorporate the Family Housing policy from the Housing Strategy. · Amend the Development Permits (DP) exemptions in Chapter 14 to exempt the addition or alteration of single storey accessory structures up to 30m2.

Council will consider the permanent closure and removal of the highway dedication of a portion of Belgo Road at Springfield Road on: Monday, November 19, 2012, 1:30pm Kelowna City Hall, 1435 Water Street – Council Chambers

The public may review copies of the proposed Road Closure and Removal Dedication Bylaw 10774 on kelowna.ca or at the Office of the City Clerk at City Hall, 3rd Floor, from 8AM-4PM, Monday to Friday.

‘‘

THEY STARTED GOING AT IT. THEY WERE ROLLING AROUND ON THE GROUND, HITTING EACH OTHER AND PULLING HAIR. Michael Baxter

His view differed from many other teens who testified, as he was sober. Baxter testified he arrived at around 7 or 8 p.m. and surmised on his arrival that everyone else had been drinking. The host and the girl he was seeing at the time were slurring their words, the accused was “obnoxious” while Hyatt likely had been drinking “a little bit.” The mood was light, but “changed when (the accused) started kissing guys.” Everyone at the party had been talking about it, he said, noting he hadn’t seen it himself. What he did see from a vantage point on the deck, however, was the accused trying to speak with her boyfriend over her alleged betrayal. “They were waiting on the road…they were out there screaming at each other,” he said. “Then (Hyatt) went out to get the (boyfriend)

to leave (the accused).” The teenage drama continued to heat up, and Hyatt grabbed the boyfriend and tried to drag him away. Her back was to the accused, but they continued to scream at each other. Baxter then moved to the road, because things were starting to get “heated.” Swear words were lobbed and pushes and punches started to erupt. “They started going at it,” he said. “They were rolling around on the ground, hitting each other and pulling hair.” Hyatt “got a couple good ones” in the (accused’s face), while he and the boyfriend stood nearby. By his estimates, Hyatt more or less had the upper hand for the fight that lasted just a minute or so. Then, the accused, turned the tables, he said. “(She’s) pissed off and she reaches into her purse,” he said, noting her hand emerged with a knife. “She was just holding it and saying, ‘I’ll stab you.’” Baxter said that she nicked Hyatt’s hand, and Hyatt showed those who had gathered the wound. “You just cut my hand, what’s wrong with you?’” he remembered her saying.

See Emotions A8

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Capital News Friday, November 9, 2012

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NEWS

â–ź UBC OKANAGAN

Health research centre hailed

Alistair Waters

ASSISTANT EDITOR

The University of British Columbia has officially opened a new scientific research centre in the Okanagan, one that has UBCO officials predicting “game changing� breakthroughs in the treatment of heart, lung and blood vessel diseases. The Centre for Heart, Lung and Vascular Health has already attracted highly regarded research professors and graduate students who are looking at the causes, consequences and treatments of heart, lung and blood vessel disease. “With this centre, we are exploring the challenges of finding new discoveries to combat chronic disease,� said Wes Pue, provost of UBC’s Okanagan campus. “We have the potential in the Okanagan to be a game-changer in health, prevention and care.� Led by co-directors, associate professors Phil Ainslie and Neil Eves, the

centre is an interdisciplinary clinical research facility that is part of UBCO’s faulty of health and social development. It combines several areas within the faculty, including laboratories run by Ainslie and Eves. On Thursday, Ainslie, a Canada research chair in cerebrovascular physiology, showed reporters around his laboratory where high-tech equipment is used to replicate conditions such as strokes and other cardiovascular conditions. With machines that use pressure to draw blood from the designated parts of the body, such as the brain and the heart, as well as replicate the effects of high altitude, conditions can be monitored to give researchers a better idea of how cardiovascular, respiratory and cerebrovascular diseases affect humans and how best to prevent or treat them. One of the machines Ainslie and the grad students working in his lab use came from NASA. He

said it is the only one of its kind in Canada. “We are doing work here that is not being done anywhere else in the country,� said Ainslie, who came to UBCO from the University of Calgary because of the opportunity to do such unique research at a smaller school in a fledgling program. And already the work being done on heart, lung and vascular health at UBCO is catching the eye of experts in the field. On hand for the opening of the new centre was Jerry Dempsey, a renowned Canadian professor of medicine and physiology at the University of Wisconsin, who was invited to officially open the UBCO centre. He said he was impressed with what he saw and admitted he was also a little surprised to see it happening at a small school in a smaller city in Interior B.C. But Dempsey said, given the calibre of the people running the centre, he had no doubt it will at-

tract other high-calibre researchers from around the globe in the coming years. “It’s all about the people,� said Dempsey, who praised the UBCO program for developing what he called the “muchneeded� strong scientific base to help enhance the notion of health through lifestyle. “There’s been lots of theoretic arguments supporting that but up until now we haven’t had that scientific base we need.� With construction of a the new heart and surgical centre at KGH underway and an aging population here that is more likely to suffer from cardiovascular problems in future, the new UBCO centre appears to be the right idea at the right time, in the right place. The centre plans to establish networks with Interior Health, provincial, national and international scientists and other centres focused on heart, lung and vascular health research as it grows. It has already attracted

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A8 www.kelownacapnews.com

Friday, November 9, 2012 Capital News

NEWS ▼ SMART METERS

BCUC told to stop proposal Wade Paterson STAFF REPORTER

More than 150 people crowded into the Nicola boardroom in Best Western Wednesday afternoon to hear fellow residents speak to the British Columbia Utilities Commission about FortisBC’s proposed Advanced Metering Infrastructure project. The commission—an independent regulatory agency of the province that operates under the Utilities Commission Act—held two community input sessions Thursday from 3 to 5 p.m. and 6 to 9 p.m. One by one, Kelowna residents expressed their concerns over the Advanced Metering Infrastructure project, commonly referred to as smart meters. “I’m confident that if this commission examines the facts as I have done, you will agree that, at this point in time, there is overwhelming, irrefutable, documented evidence to justify a moratorium on (advanced) meters,” Marty Enns told the commission. Carol Kergan said she was frustrated that customers have no control over the installation of the meters other than to turn their power off completely. “I can choose to have a wireless computer; I can choose to have a wireless cell phone; I can choose to have portable phones in my home. I can also choose to

unplug those things,” said Kergan. “This has been pushed on people who are saying they don’t want it. They’ve been told that basically they’ll be re-educated to accept them or you can unplug your power system.” Kergan noted long-term implications from the technology are not yet known and could be irreversible by the time they are discovered. Jerry Flynn has an extensive military background, specifically in the field of electronic warfare. “I’ve studied this particular situation now for the last two years; while I’m not an expert I certainly know quite a bit about it,” said Flynn. Flynn used his time at the microphone to list dangers and unknown elements associated with the proposed meters. If FortisBC’s application for the project is approved, meter exchanges will begin in 2014 and be completed in 2015. On its website the company states the new meters would provide a number of advantages: Saving customers money, providing more information and options, reducing greenhouse gas emissions and preventing electricity theft. wpaterson@kelownacapnews.com

▼ COURT

Do you have an opinion to share? E-mail your letter to edit@kelownacapnews.com

Crown concludes case in Ashlee Hyatt trial Emotions from A6 Then she went back toward the accused. They started “going at it again,” then Hyatt stopped in her tracks and

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“Her eyes rolled out of her head, and she started to go blue.” Baxter continued to try and block the blood flow, and passed her on to a friend so he could chase

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down the ambulance that had passed. He remembered seeing the accused two more times. First when she was struggling with the party host, then when he went on that run toward the ambulance. She was behind him, he said, and he told her she “should probably leave.” Defence is expected to start bringing forward witnesses today, and the trial is tentatively scheduled until next Friday.

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went toward Baxter, holding her neck. “I told her it was going to be fine, I was holding her and trying to call 911,” he said, his voice broken with emotion.

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Capital News Friday, November 9, 2012

www.kelownacapnews.com A9

BUSINESS

Canada’s top angel investment group lands in Kelowna The VA Angels, one of the leading entrepreneur investment groups in Canada, is opening a chapter in Kelowna. The group’s new chapter here opened this week and its first business forum is set for Nov. 15. “Kelowna and the Okanagan is fast becoming one of the next big business centres in Western Canada with the addition of new universities, colleges and incubators and given this activity a centre for entrepreneur-

ship,” said Randy Thompson, VA Angels founder and chief executive officer. “In addition to the capital growth of the region, there is an above average number of angel investors, former business owners and retired professionals looking to continue to diversify their investments, which is why Kelowna is an ideal location for a VA Angels chapter.” Kelowna Mayor Walter welcomed the arrival of the VA Angels chapter

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as reflective of the technology industry growth in the city. “The news of the expansion of VA Angels in the Kelowna market is welcome and timely as it will, no doubt, bring innovative technological ideas and investors together for mutual benefit,” he said. VA Angels is one of the most active investor groups in the country, recently chosen by the Har-

cessful enterprises in the fields of newspaper publishing, television and radio, recording artist management, retail, advertising and marketing, and the Internet. “We are looking forward to being part of the local tech and business community and helping to benefit a new generation of entrepreneurs,” Lennon said. “By engaging with VA

Angels Kelowna, participants in the Okanagan will now have access to other angel groups across the U.S. and Canada.” The accounting firm of MNP LLP is a sponsor of the chapter being located in Kelowna. “MNP is proud to sponsor this new Okanagan Chapter for Venture Angels,” said MNP LLP spokesperson Karen Christiansen.

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Friday, November 9, 2012 Capital News

CAPITAL NEWS

OPINION The Capital News is a division of Black Press, at 2495 Enterprise Way, Kelowna, B.C. V1X 7K2

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A study in the Lancet Neurology, shows the earliest signs of Alzheimer’s can be detected more than two decades before the first symptoms appear. (bbc.co.uk/ news/health)

Targeting just one chemical inside cancerous cells could one day lead to a single test for a broad range of cancers, researchers say. (bbc. co.uk/news/health)

Dementia is the second highest cause of death among British women, U.K. national statistics show. (bbc. co.uk/news/health)

Climate change could severely reduce the wild Arabica coffee drop before the end of the century, says a report published in Plos One. (bbc.co.uk/news/ science)

KAREN HILL Publisher/Advertising Manager BARRY GERDING Managing Editor ALAN MONK Real Estate Weekly Manager TESSA RINGNESS Production Manager GLENN BEAUDRY Regional Circulation/ National Account Manager RACHEL DEKKER Office Manager

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Different values applied to certified foods

To the editor: I have worked as a senior organic inspector for over 20 years so let me address some of the issues about organic certification outlined in an Oct. 11 letter to the editor of the Capital News. (Organic Food Criticism Needs Scientific Backing.) Answering three key questions: 1. Can organic certification be trusted? Yes. 2. Is Chinese organic (certification) meeting consumer expectations? No, not yet. 3. Do all organic certifying bodies follow the same standards? Yes, but… Organic certification is the gold standard of agri-food production around the world and at three per cent of total food sales, is still worth $60 billion and growing at seven per cent a year. It deserves a premium over local or natural because it provides food with superior perceived and actual benefits. The same cannot be said for industrial food with its regular recalls, food-caused illnesses and consumer

Newsroom: Sean Connor, Warren Henderson, Kathy Michaels, Kevin Parnell, Wade Paterson, Jean Russell, Jennifer Smith, Judie Steeves, Alistair Waters Advertising: Cindy Draper, Colleen Groat, Ron Harding, Antony Hutton, Sheri Jackson, Curt Jensen, Rick Methot, Wayne Woollett Classified: Shayla Graf, Michelle Trudeau, Emily Vergnano Production: LaToya Allan, Nancy Blow, Kiana Haner-Wilk, Teresa HuscroftBrown, Mary Matthews, Laura Millsip, Natasha Surerus, Kelly Ulmer, Becky Webb Accounting: Samm Corless, Rachel Dekker, Angela Fahy Real Estate Weekly: Terry Matthews Distribution: Mark Carviel, Richard Dahle, Sharon Holmes

Production prod@kelownacapnews.com

letter of the week

See Organic Food A11

Cheerful memories can’t disguise outrage of war

U

p until this week, nothing left me feeling more conflicted than pinning a poppy to my lapel. It’s nothing to do with faltering respect for the men and women who fought for this country. It’s just that the poppy heralds Remembrance Day—an occasion that has increasingly become a bit too rah-rah-rah, when it should be more In-Flanders-Field, for lack of a better way to describe it. Like many my age, much of my understanding of war comes from members of a generation that’s fading into history. My granddad and grandmother both served in the Army—being Eng-

lish, I don’t think they were given much choice—and the scars of those years were still more than apparent over 20 years ago, when I saw them last. In part, because Kathy they lived in Coventry. Michaels As anyone who’s been there knows, the damage of war is woven into that local culture. Nov. 14 1940, the Nazis aimed to take out the growing industrial capabilities of the midlands. Under the cloak of night their bombers demolished thousands of homes, a couple of hospitals and, as the city burned, Coventry Cathedral was cracked open. As the next day dawned, a decision

KATHARTIC

was made to rebuild the church with ruins intact. In particular, two medieval roof timbers had fallen into the shape of the cross, and they were later placed on an altar of rubble with the words “Father Forgive” inscribed on the sanctuary wall. As a child who was regularly making the trip there from green, pristine and nearly wild B.C., the sight was wholly enthralling. I’d pester my granddad non-stop for information on what he did during the war. Where, for example, was he when those bombs fell? Did he shoot people? Did he hate Germans? He diverted me through benign half-truths and told me instead about how much he hated Margaret Thatcher. Also interesting.

That said, as I got older and continued on with my prodding, I came to realize that memories of those years weren’t benign. My grandmother, I learned, had some form of mental illness from her time in the war. Relatives have since decided it’s post traumatic stress disorder, but a diagnosis decades after the fact isn’t exactly helpful. My granddad had survived, but carried a heavy burden of loss and sadness that he passed on to his children. And others fared worse. Men and women I didn’t really notice when I was a kid getting jacked up on sweets, crisps and the sight of broken down churches started coming out of the shadows as I got older. With a little explanation from my mum, I was able to see there was a

See Michaels A11


Capital News Friday, November 9, 2012

www.kelownacapnews.com A11

LETTERS

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Trade deal with China not good for Canadians To the editor: I am writing this to create awareness as a concerned citizen of the repercussions of the FIPA agreement. (CanadaChina investment treaty.) I am strongly against the FIPA deal and believe we—Canadian citizens— have a say in issues that

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directly impact our country. The fact that the government is not bringing this issue to vote or open to the public’s attention is extremely worrisome. I thought we lived in a democratic society but this kind of action and behaviour from our govern-

ment is proving to be a dictatorship. It is astonishing to me that the people the citizens of Canada have elected to be in power would agree to such an action that could and probably would leave Canada’s natural resources devastated and completely depleted.

Just because the land possesses such powerful resources doesn’t mean we need to exploit it. There are other solutions to energy production that have much less damaging effects to the environment in which we live. It’s time for Canada to be progressive and on the

front lines of clean, renewable energy sources. This land offers much diversity and her people should be respectful, responsible, and eager to investigate positive footprints to leave on this beautiful place. Jessica Meier, Kelowna

IN HOME ESTIMATES

MPs toe the line while corporations have their way say on the Enbridge Pipeline Proposal, other than to ask me “How did you get here?” This cop-out comment is lame as the alternatives are limited to bikes, buses, and walking. He fails to own-up to the real problem—government funding in the billions to rich oil companies. Imagine if that money was used instead for alternative energy development? (But that would eliminate the government pockets in the

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short term.) PM Harper must keep a tight ship, for it appears that no Conservative Member of Parliament will speak up against a party bill. Their last omnibus Bill 38 encompassed over 700 resolutions, many affecting Canadians’ rights and freedom of speech and especially those concerning food safety and northern pipeline proposals. How could a Member of Parliament possibly know

the nature of such a huge number of proposed laws? Or are they taking the approach of keeping their heads in the sand, like so many other Canadians? Now they have given us another omnibus Bill 45 without any public input, and FIPA (China foreign investment agreement). How will Chinese investment affect our food safety and the Canadian environment? Remember, China is not a democratic country.

While Richard Drinnan calls for government to upgrade their public policies to protect Canadians, I would add that Canadians need to stand up (or at least take notice of what is happening ) to the degradation of democracy in this country and to voice their concerns. Use pen, protests, personal contact with your Member of Parliament, and your vote. Janice Sich, Kelowna

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generation hollowed by war, and they hadn’t just passed into the footnotes of history, they were the walking wounded whom many looked away from as they passed on the street. It’s with that in mind that I’ve always pinned a poppy to myself. They deserve to be acknowledged for their sacrifices. But, as I’ve become older, and taken a job as a reporter, so often the story I’ve been asked to tell is one of success and jubilation. And the best-yearsof-their-lives narrative, is unsettling. To avoid that, I’ve tried to avoid all Remem-

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China, Deborah Kota, Dec. 14, 2011, bostonglobe.com • Questions remain about organic foods grown in China, Jan. 7. 2012, seattletimes. com. All organic certification bodies (CBs) follow similar production guides and materials lists. But how national programs are supported depends on the country, as we have seen with China. Some CBs are just for profit, focus on mega corporations for the export market and are at the organic-as-industry extreme of the organic community. They push the limits for money until consumer groups complain and governments step in and some serious en-

brance Day story assignments as my own homage to my family, their friends and neighbours and their cumulative loss. This week, however, I wasn’t able to and it may have been the best thing I’ve ever done. I interviewed a Kelowna man by the name of Tom Morimoto. The now 94-year-old was the only Japanese Canadian on the beaches of Normandy on D-Day, and his tale is nothing short of jaw-dropping. But, his placement in history isn’t something he thumped his chest about. In fact, he took on a familiar evasive tone when I asked him questions about the invasion.

What he did answer frankly, however, was my question about why the occasion has become almost celebratory. He explained, simply, that those who didn’t live through that time may never understand what soldiers endured when they enlisted. More importantly, however, as time has edged along, the dreams and memories that haunted them haven’t gone away. But one can’t move forward when they wallow in the horrors of the time. With some simple insights, Mr. Morimoto reconfigured my view in a way I’ll be forever grateful for and when I pin on my poppy in years to

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forcement occurs. I avoid the certifiers who do the biggest corporate organic players. At the other end of the spectrum are the smaller CBs which focus on the local food market, are run by volunteers, try to educate consumers and transitioning farmers and are part of the organic-as-lifestyle end of the spectrum. I buy all my food from local certified organic associations of B.C., accredited CBs and I try to stay regionally based. Robert Dixon, agricultural technologist, senior organic inspector Kelowna

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We welcome letters that comment in a timely manner about stories and editorials published in the Capital News.

PITTED PRUNES .42 WALNUT PIECES/HALVES, California 1.69 12 BEAN SOUP MIX .29 DARK BROWN SUGAR .26 ORGANIC OAT GROATS .28 PINTO BEANS .22 UNBLEACHED WHITE FLOUR .13 CREAM OF WHEAT CEREAL .14 ORGANIC GRAN SUGAR .33 CHICKEN BASE, Low Sodium .79 CHOPPED DATES .49 CINNAMON STICKS .65 MEXICAN CHILI POWDER .79

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Those who were there mum on war’s brutal reality Michaels from A10

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deaths. China follows the same paper standards as Canada, but here the Canadian Food Inspection Agency has oversight of the organic certification process, whereas in China other government agencies without the same enforcement powers oversee the process. The following articles provide details about the frequent pesticide contamination of r Chinese organic food: • Western countries say “NO” to Chinese organic food, Li Ping, July 29, 2011, theepochtimes.com r • Can you trust organic produce from

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▼ VOTERS’ VOICES

To the editor: My kudos to Richard Drinnan regarding his open letter, Food Saferty Questioned (Oct. 23, Capital News) to MP Ron Cannan. He has certainly done his research. I, too, contacted MP fRon Cannan regarding the XL Food Fiasco, but he had little to say on the matter, other that he hadn’t heard from anyone in his constituency concerning this. He also had little to

FREE

come, I’ll keep him in mind as well as my loved ones. I’ll also take a moment to hope all of those

who served found happier times. kmichaels@kelownacapnews.com

Express yourself

Letters must bear the name, address and telephone number of the writer. Names will be withheld at the editor’s discretion, only under exceptional circumstances. E-mail letters to edit@kelownacapnews.com, fax to 763-8469 or mail to The Editor, Capital News, 2495 Enterprise Way, Kelowna, B.C., V1X 7K2.

EVERY TUES. & THURS. DISCOUNT DAYS

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SPRINGFIELD BULK250-860-4585 FOODS #133-1889 Springfield Rd. Monday to Friday 9:00-6:00 Saturday 9:00-5:30 • Closed Sunday


A12 www.kelownacapnews.com

Friday, November 9, 2012 Capital News

NEWS

The three steps to help prevent onset of type 2 diabetes Linda Boyd CONTRIBUTOR

Chances are you know someone with type 2 diabetes. That someone may even be you. Currently more than

2.7 million Canadians have type 2 diabetes. Genetics and lifestyle play a large role in the development of this serious health condition. Diabetes increases your risk of heart disease,

kidney failure, blindness, nerve damage and even erectile dysfunction. Making a few lifestyle changes can dramatically lower the chances of developing type 2 diabetes. Take these three im-

Don’t let the flu bug you.

portant steps to reduce your risk. Get moving. Aim for 30 minutes of activity a day. Getting active doesn’t have to mean starting an exercise class or joining a gym. Choose activities that you enjoy or ones that you can do as a family —rake leaves, walk your kids to school, go for a bike ride after supper, or dance the night away. Maintain a healthy weight. Extra weight around the belly area is a risk factor for diabetes. Even a modest amount of weight loss can reduce your risk. Speak with your health care professional about a healthy weight loss goal and ways

to achieve it. Eat well. Have foods from at least three of the four food groups at each meal. Fill half your plate at supper with vegetables, a quarter with a protein (from the meat and alternatives group) and the other quarter with a starch (from the grain products group). Drink lowfat milk and choose lowfat yogurt or cheese. Keep your portions reasonable and go easy on high-fat spreads, dips and sauces. Aim for two servings of fish each week and choose low fat meats like extra lean beef, turkey, and skinless chicken. Try cooking with beans, lentils and tofu.

These meat alternatives are inexpensive and have many health benefits. Lastly, cut out sugary drinks like soda. Sugary drinks provide extra calories and do not fill you up. For more great tips check out Eating Well with Canada’s Food Guide at www.hc-sc. gc.ca/fn-an/food-guidealiment/index-eng.php. It is a great resource and it’s available online or at your local health unit. Eating healthy does require some basic cooking skills. If you would like to learn how to cook healthy, budget-friendly meals consider participating in a Food Skills for Families program.

Food Skills for Families is a free hands-on program that makes healthy eating, shopping and cooking easy, quick and fun. To find out if there is a program near you, check with your local friendship centre, community centre, or other organizations that offer programs for parents or seniors. For more information visit www.foodskillsforfamilies.ca or call the Canadian Diabetes Association at 1-800-6656526 ext. 248. Linda Boyd is a community nutritionist with Interior Health. Assisting with this article was Heather Morrow, a dietetic intern.

RDCO water flushing season underway The regional district has begun its annual fall water main flushing program. The work is scheduled to take place during November affecting customers of the Sunset Ranch water system. Environmental services staff will be flushing mains between the hours of 8 a.m. and 3 p.m., Monday through Friday. Roadside notice boards are put up in advance of working in the system area. It’s important to flush water mains on a regular basis to ensure optimum water quality and remove any sediment deposits that may accumulate over

Get your flu shot at Shoppers Drug Mart. It’s easy, convenient and can help you stay healthy and well all season long.

Find a location offering flu shots near you at shoppersdrugmart.ca/flushotfinder

ANTS? The Capital News Serving our community since 1930.

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time. “When flushing is taking place, water pressure can vary slightly and there may be some slight discoloration in the water,” said RDCO spokesperson Bruce Smith. Customers will find more information and answers to questions they might have about the Regional District Water Main Flushing Program on the Water Systems webpage www.regionaldistrict.com/water. Also during November, RDCO staff will be doing maintenance work on fire hydrants in the Killiney Beach and Westshore water system areas. Customers on these two systems may experience minor short-term water quality and pressure changes while this hydrant work is underway. As with overall system flushing, running the cold water tap will remove any discolouration.


Capital News Friday, November 9, 2012

www.kelownacapnews.com A13


A14 www.kelownacapnews.com

Friday, November 9, 2012 Capital News

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Quantities and/or selection of items may be limited and may not be available in all stores. NO RAINCHECKS OR SUBSTITUTIONS on clearance items or where quantities are advertised as limited. Advertised pricing and product selection (avour, colour, patterns, style) may vary by store location. We reserve the right to limit quantities to reasonable family requirements. We are not obligated to sell items based on errors or misprints in typography or photography. Coupons must be presented and redeemed at time of purchase. Applicable taxes, deposits, or environmental surcharges are extra. No sales to retail outlets. Some items may have “plus deposit and environmental chargeâ€? where applicable. ÂŽ/TM The trademarks, service marks and logos displayed in this newspaper ad are trademarks of Loblaws Inc. and others. All rights reserved. Š 2012 Loblaws Inc. Customer Relations: 1-866-999-9890.

Guaranteed Lowest Prices *Applies only to our major supermarket competitors’ print advertisements (i.e. yer, newspaper). We will match the competitor’s advertised price only during the effective date of the competitor’s print advertisement. Our major supermarket competitors are determined solely by us and are based on a number of factors which can change from time to time. Identical items are deďŹ ned as same brand, item type (in the case of produce, meat and bakery), size and attributes and carried at this store location. We will not match competitors’ “multi-buysâ€? (eg. 2 for $4), “spend x get xâ€?, “Freeâ€?, “clearanceâ€?, discounts obtained through loyalty programs, or offers related to our third party operations (post ofďŹ ce, gas bars, dry cleaners etc.). We reserve the right to cancel or change the terms of this promise at any time.

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Capital News Friday, November 9, 2012

www.kelownacapnews.com A15

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A16 www.kelownacapnews.com

Friday, November 9, 2012 Capital News

CAPITAL NEWS

ENTERTAINMENT Architectural influences in Prince’s installation art work Jennifer Smith STAFF REPORTER

Richard Price says he likes the three dimensionality of sculpture, that “it lives in our space and our time.” If this is a predictable explanation for a life-long sculptor then it’s matched by an almost unbelievably predictable path to his extraordinary career. Through the intersection of the right time, opportunities and people, he’s managed to find one of the more unusual windows on the world, jump right in and, recently, start building showcases for others’ to draw their own reasonably unreasonable conclusions. “This napkin is an object. It has a story. So we know it’s been recycled. Big deal. What we’re attracted to is objects that tell a story,” he said this

week at the Kelowna Art Gallery where he and gallery curator Liz Wylie, who curated his exhibition which opens today, were assembling the pieces. Telling stories (with digressions) is an inspirational showcase of unique objects designed to spur its audience to consider the world behind each piece, the tangled plot-lines the sculptures might yield and, ultimately, the stories of their creator. There’s a good dab of Prince and his family in these utilitarian-looking works. With an air of architectural mockup suggesting his early modelbuilding business—“once you have a skill, you should use it”—and a fair hint at the days of jars and jacks and marbles—his mother was a canner— one can see the boy who grew up in the 1950s, dis-

T REATS

CONTRIBUTED

RICHARD PRINCE, (above) The Storyteller’s Cart (and the Cart of the Necessities) with Bicycle (detail), 2008-12). (Below left to right) Project Paradise, 2007, mixed media; Epistemology One: Rest on the Flight to Arcturus, 2009, mixed media; Device to Explain Something, 2007, mixed media. covered the art world in the ’60s and built a career at the University of British Columbia because “it was the right middle-class thing to do.” This is a show by a thoughtful person built for those who like to get lost in their own mind every once in a while, to take a moment to con-

A RTISTS

template an army greenbox on wheels entitled the Storyteller’s Cart. Beginning with a replica sewing machine when he was four or five years old, Prince has spent his life making things and says that he was drawn to sculpture as a means of exercising the ideas and themes that sha-

S ANTA

ke his brain to life, ruminations on the history he loves to read, a tool to disquieting boredom on cottage vacations. “The palpability of it and its implied tactility are very compelling,” he said after admitting to a stint with photography, probably unavoidable for an artist of his generation

in Vancouver. He chose art class in Grade 8 to following a friend who is now a successful set designer, and got a degree in art history because his crowd discovered and was inspired by art en route to the usual professional route. Lord Byng High School, where he attended, produced a number of artists, including celebrated photographer Stan Douglas, six years his junior, and he had planned to become an architect and avoid the teaching career he wound up with as his father was a high school shop teacher. Nevertheless, lecturing for UBC and enjoying a studio in an old fire hall, no doubt rife with stories he’s never heard, he’s learned that people

H OLIDAY F AIR

tend to learn from the tales we tell one another. Prince is known for his landscapes, so it is slightly ironic that he should bring his sculptural storytelling odyssey to KAG in a year dominated by landscape shows. But one can certainly see the landscape of a life and career in this show. From the canoe carved out of driftwood at an old family haunt to the stone column given to him by a developer friend demolishing a house, then removed from his own house to his studio because it could tip and hurt a child, this is a collecti- j on of built on squirrelled snippets of a life. Richard Prince Telling stories (with digressions) opens in Kelowna tonight and runs through Jan. 13.

S HOPPING

IT’S

S UGAR P LUM F AIR Sunday, November 18th

THAT TIME OF YEAR AGAIN . Bring the whole family down to Quails’ Gate Winery for this festive afternoon with local artisans, holiday cheer, and the dancers from the Canadian School of Ballet and Ballet Kelowna. Enjoy 15% off all purchases from our wine shop during this one day only sale. In the spirit of the season, we will be accepting donations on behalf of our regional food banks and Ballet Kelowna.

WE

LOOK FORWARD TO SEEING YOU !

11 AM - 4 PM Open Year Round | 3303 Boucherie Road, West Kelowna | 250.769.4451 | quailsgate.com


Capital News Friday, November 9, 2012

www.kelownacapnews.com A17

ENTERTAINMENT

Potters and Artisans of the Okanagan Valley present our 22nd Annual

▼ CD REVIEWS

No news in Van Morrison title VAN MORRISON: BORN TO SING, NO PLAN B (EMI) From the title of this new studio album, Van Morrison leaves no doubt as to his role in life even though at his age, in his late 60s, Morrison is making this mission statement rather late. That title is more like an argument a teen may make to a scolding parent who wanted their brat to go to college but not so oddly, Born To Sing sounds as fresh as ever and this new disc owes more to early work like Moondance. There is a small combo here with three understated horns and live-off-the-studio-floor recordings with elegant jazz/pop/folk not unlike the cake that was baked into Moondance. Born To Sing, No Plan B doesn’t have the chart quaking hit singles of past classics of the early 1970s but this new album is a very satisfying listen nonetheless. There are 10 tracks here where Morrison

SOUNDING OFF

Bruce Mitchell plays a variety of instruments like acoustic guitar, sax and piano to front his ace session players and again, the tenor of the sessions are in the same groove as those comfy sessions of yesteryear. Morrison is also quite expansive with some extended bluesy jams like the eight-minute Going Down To Monte Carlo, where he name drops philosopher Sartre and his famous line “hell is other people.” Morrison is in superb form here as a vocalist and he gets a tad cranky on the anti-materialism and anti-capitalism songs End Of The Rainbow (spoiler alert—there is no pot of gold) and Educating Archie (yes to a Mr. Bunker) and the deleteri-

ous affects of propaganda infotainment as in Fox News. My fave picks that standout include the John Lee Hooker-inspired roots blues of Pagan Heart and the sanguine Close Enough To Jazz where Morrison encourages his listeners to “be glad with all you have, never give in to worry.” The lead off song, Open The Door To Your Heart, harkens back to Caravan and its amiable refrains where the older, wiser Morrison tells his listeners “quit crying in your beer.” Born To Sing, No Plan B offers plenty of solos from three different horns, piano and guitar that rounds out this strong disc that is sure to please long standing fans. B

LITTLE BIG TOWN: TORNADO (CAPITOL/EMI) This fifth studio album from the neo-traditionalist country band Little Big Town will solidly crystallize the group as major stars on the music scene

now that this disc has hit No.1 on the country charts and, more importantly, No.2 on the Billboard mainstream charts. Tornado is Little Big Town’s major crossover album that will see them have hits and sales just like Lady Antebellum on the pop charts while still maintaining their country core. Meanwhile, many reviewers have noticed how much this new album reminds them of Fleetwood Mac of the ’70s with angelic harmonies, tight pop constructs and likeable party songs. The breezy song Leaving In Your Eyes even sounds like a Fleetwood Mac outtake while the topic of alienated affections, explored so widely by F. Mac (every See Mitchell A18

FALL GIFT SHOW & SALE

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A18 www.kelownacapnews.com

Friday, November 9, 2012 Capital News

ENTERTAINMENT Pledge to go

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Mitchell from A17 one was having an affair with everyone else in the band back then) is revealed in the mature relationship songs like Your Side Of The Bed and Can’t Go Back. But Tornado is also a party album. The lead off song, End Of The Pavement, is where the bush party begins and so “let the good times roll.� Meanwhil, Little Big Town carries the party onto the water with Pontoon—their platform on the river—and a No.1 smash country hit. More conservative country tastes will complain that this handsome 11-track album is a little too pop for their country palate but then again look at the group on their CD liner—they are dressed already for the Grammy and ACM Awards. B-

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SKYFALL 007: SOUNDTRACK (SONY CLASSICAL) Some reviewers are saying that Skyfall is the best Bond flick of all time but it would be hard to convince a 12-year-old me in 1964 that anything could surpass Goldfinger. I guess it comes down to zeitgeist and stage of life in a certain way but there is no doubt that 007/ Bond movies are always highlighted by the music and especially the main theme song. The big hit for Skyfall is the Adele hit of the same name but be cautious in buying this Official Motion Picture Soundtrack as in very small print on the back liner there are the words: “This album does not contain a recording by the artist Adele.� So if you are looking for her new song, it has

been released as a single or downloadable track. However, Skyfall is also the most travelled plot in Bond history with its globe-trotting settings. Hence the incidental music on this lengthy 30-track CD with titles such as Grand Bazaar Istanbul, Shanghai Drive, Granborough Road, Welcome To Scotland and The Moors. The amazingly prolific composer Thomas Newman (a cousin to bespectacled singer/writer Randy Newman) has another winner here that stands up to past glorious soundtracks such as The Best Exotic Marigold Hotel, The Help and Iron Lady, his most recent three. Fans of all things Bond will want to check out this polyglot soundtrack while others will just hear cinematic backdrop and wonder where

the visuals are. B

Theatre Kelowna AGM Tuesday, Nov. 13, 7:30 p.m., at the TKS office in the Rotary Centre for the Arts, 421 Cawston Ave.

Coffee group for people with MS will start meeting on Wednesday, Nov. 14, 2 p.m., at The Bliss Bakery, 109-1289 Ellis St. 250-762-5850

MUSICAL NOTE: It seems Bruce Springsteen music will always be confused for its messaging. So many politicos have used his anthem Born In The USA as an arena intro song not realizing it is a pointed tune criticizing America for its unfortunate, misguided involvement in Vietnam. A couple of nights ago Obama used Springsteen’s We Take Care Of Our Own as the music after his acceptance speech maybe not realizing the song is a sardonic jibe towards the one per centre billionaire Republicans—or maybe Obama is even smarter than we know. Bravo. mooseman19@telus.net

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Capital News Friday, November 9, 2012

www.kelownacapnews.com A19

CAPITAL NEWS

SPORTS ▼ SUN FOOTBALL

Rockets look National award bestowed on White to build on winning streak With much of the focus on the Okanagan Sun’s forgettable season on the field, one Sun player continued to go above and beyond the call of duty when it comes to giving back to the community this year.

is infectious. You can see younger players notice it even if they are unaware of it completely. He is a real role model on how you should carry yourself and respect your opponent.” For the last three

Warren Henderson STAFF REPORTER

‘‘

HE BRINGS A RESPECTFUL WAY TO THE LOCKER ROOM AND THE FIELD THAT IS INFECTIOUS. YOU CAN SEE YOUNGER PLAYERS NOTICE IT EVEN IF THEY ARE UNAWARE OF IT COMPLETELY. HE IS A REAL ROLE MODEL ON HOW YOU SHOULD CARRY YOURSELF AND RESPECT YOUR OPPONENT. Jay Christensen, Sun general manager

And now, fifth year receiver Ben White has been honoured for his goodwill over the years in a Sun uniform. The Canadian Junior Football League will award White the 2012 Past Commissioners Community Service Award, given annually to an outstanding young man playing football for a CJFL team as well as contributing to his community. CJFL Life Member Ron White will present White with the award at the Banquet of Champions tonight (Friday) in Langley. “Ben is such a solid player. His speed and hands are both exceptional,” said Okanagan Sun general manager Jay Christensen. “But the thing with Ben is he is such an exceptional person. He brings a respectful way to the locker room and the field that

seasons White has been a key member of the Sun offence with 51 receptions for 1,389 yards and nine touchdowns. The soft spoken White has been a leader among the receivers and has been named the team’s most sportsmanlike player both of the past two seasons. But it is his off field work that has really stood out. Twice this past year the OKM graduate travelled to Haiti to help to explore ways he might be of help, working with a Canadian group to help rebuild a camp for youth leaders and mentors at a place called Camp Mahanaim at Les Cayes, Haiti. He has helped raise over $50,000 to help the nation of Haiti and is planning to take a group of family and friends to Haiti in the spring. For the past several years he has also helped out

FRED SCHAAD/CONTRIBUTED

KELOWNA NATIVE Ben White (right) made a huge impact over five years with the Okanagan Sun and will be rewarded with a prestigious award handed out by the Canadian Junior Football League. at Nanoose Bay Camp on Vancouver Island in the capacity as a volunteer youth counsellor mentoring kids from 13 to 18-years old. White is also a youth leader at the New Life Church in Kelowna. “All our players I think understand the aspect of community involvement

but every once in a while one comes along who understands the importance of it, and knows why giving back to charities is just the right thing to do That’s Ben. You know he will do great things someday in this area because he cares about others,” said Christensen.

White will receive the award on Friday night as part of the Canadian Junior Football League championship weekend. The 2012 Canadian Bowl will kick-off on Saturday in Langley as the Rams host the Saskatoon Hilltops at McLeod Stadium at 1 p.m.

With wins over the Canadian Hockey League’s No. 1 team and the defending WHL champs in the span of a week, the Kelowna Rockets have ample reason to feel good about their game these days. Still, as happy as Ryan Huska is with his team’s recent successes, the Rockets’ head coach said there’s plenty of room for progress. “We’re pleased, but we still have a long way to go,” said Huska. “The challenge for us is to make sure we’re getting better everyday. “I think you play a little freer when you’re feeling good about your game, but at the same time there’s a fine line between being confident and being arrogant,” Huska added. “We need to keep things in perspective, and look at every day as a chance to improve.” The Rockets (11-61-1) will look to run their winning streak to five games Friday when they close out a four-game home stand against the Red Deer Rebels. Face off at Prospera Place is 7:05 p.m. On Wednesday at Prospera, the Rockets knocked off the Edmonton Oil Kings 3-2 for their fourth win in a row. Jackson Whistle was steady in the Rockets goal blocking 25 shots for his

fourth victory of the season. Whistle, 17, has a 1.07 goals against average in five appearances. While the win over the defending champs wasn’t perfect, Huska said his club battled through some inconsistency to register the two points. “I don’t think we were as good as our last couple of games at home (3-0 over Kamloops and 5-0 over Prince George), but what I liked is when when we got into trouble, we recovered well. The guys were defending well with their sticks and deflecting pucks away to prevent scoring chances.” The Rockets have enjoyed their recent run of prosperity largely without production from their top line. Myles Bell, Colton Sissons and Dylen McKinlay have combined for just four points in last five games. “We’re getting secondary scoring, our so-called third and fourth lines are coming through for us, and we need that to have success,” Huska said. “Colton’s line hasn’t been as effective, they need to get moving their feet and pressuring pucks more. We know they’ll be back playing like they’re capable of.” Following Friday’s home date with Red Deer, the Rockets head to TriCity Nov. 16 and 17 for two games with the Americans. whenderson @kelownacapnews.com

Publication Date: December 4, 2012 THE DIRECTION OF BUSINESS IN THE CENTRAL OKANAGAN

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A20 www.kelownacapnews.com

Friday, November 9, 2012 Capital News

SPORTS

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With the West Kelowna Warriors entering the B.C. Hockey League weekend with several key players out of the lineup, there is one player who will be there, providing scoring, leadership and anything else the team needs to snap out of a mini, two-game losing skid. Now in his third full season with the Warriors, 20-year-old veteran Brett McKinnon has developed into a top, two-way forward in the BCHL and a player counted on in all situations for the Warriors, who sit at 8-5-0-5 and in third place in the BCHL Interior. “Brett is a 200-foot player,” said Warriors’ coach Rylan Ferster. “He plays hard in both ends of the rink. He plays the

game the right way. He’s one of the best skaters in the league and he’s a very important player for us.” A Kelowna native, McKinnon moved to town when he was 10-yearsold and played the majority of his minor hockey in Kelowna, including winning a provincial championship in bantam. After a year in junior B, McKinnon joined the Warriors full time in 201011, posting 23 points in his rookie season and 21 points last year. But as a 20-year-old, he appears to have hit his stride, thanks to a solid work ethic and some nice hands. “I definitely have a bigger role this year than I have had in the previous years,” he said. “You are more accountable for the way the team plays. It’s a lot more fun to be one of the guys counted on.”

West Kelowna...

McKinnon has put up a point per game so far this season, with six goals and nine assists in 15 games played. With captain Max French injured, McKinnon has also been wearing the C as the team’s interim captain and has been a key leader for the club this year. The 5-foot-11 left winger points to former Warriors’ captain Alex Grieve as a player he learned a lot from when he was a rookie. “In my first year I was just a young guy and Alex was an unreal captain,” said McKinnon. “Every day he showed up ready to go and set the standard for everyone. You want to show the younger guys what you have to do at this level to win. I think we have a great group of leaders on the team. There are a bunch of older guys on the squad and they all

JOHN HEBERT/CONTRIBUTED

WEST KELOWNA Warriors player Brett McKinnon has taken on a bigger role offensively and in the leadership category as a 20-year-old with the Warriors. show up every game and every practice.”

See Warriors A21

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Capital News Friday, November 9, 2012

www.kelownacapnews.com A21

SPORTS

DO YOU WANT TO SEE YOUR

Mt. Bou Bears’ Court Okanagan MVP

With an unbeaten 6-0 record, it was an unprecedented regular season for the Mt. Boucherie high school football program. The Bears’ success on the field was also reflected in the Okanagan AAA Conference awards announced this week. Mt. Boucherie players claimed three major awards, led by slotback Joe Court who was named the conference’s most valuable player. “It wasn’t expecting this,� Court said of the award. “I guess all the hard work in the off-season paid off. There are a lot of really good players on our team and a lot of other guys could have won this, so it’s a big honour.� The 5-foot-10 1/2, 180-pound Court, who also ran some plays at quarterback, had 15 carries for 241 yards and two rushing touchdowns—including a 92-yarder—and added seven catches for 105 yards and two majors in conference play. A shoulder injury early in the season forced the Bears coaching staff to shift Court from quarter-

CONTRIBUTED

MT. BOUCHERIE senior Joe Court (right), seen here with Bears’ offensive coordinator Rick Nelson, is the Okanagan AAA Conference high school football MVP. back to the slotback position. With his heart, skill and strength, Bears’ offensive coordinator Rick Nelson said Court would be a huge asset to any team, regardless of his place on the field. “Every year a player steps up and becomes the go-to-guy, the player that leads the team to battle and to victory,� said Nelson. “Joe has been that player this year, leading the team on and off the field. “Not only has he led by his on field heroics at slot back, but he has done a great job mentoring our younger quarterbacks as well. Not once did I ever hear him complain about

not playing Q.B., a great team player.� Bears’ receiver Peter Briker was named the Okanagan’s outstanding offensive player, while linebacker Curtis Urlacher was awarded top defensive player honours. Briker caught 16 passes for 268 yards and six touchdowns, while adding 266 yards and two touchdowns on kick off and punt returns. The 6-foot-1, 205-pound Urlacher had 26 tackles, four sacks and three fumble recoveries. The Bears also placed seven players on the conference all-star team. On offense, quarterback Josiah Joseph, running back Ronnie De

Speed, skill, leadership Warriors from A20 This year McKinnon’s speed, skill and leadership helped earn him a scholarship to NCAA Div. I school Holy Cross, committing to the university early in the season and allowing him to focus on the rest of his final year of junior hockey eligibility. “It was one of my personal goals at the start of

this year to get a Div. I scholarship,� he said. “It’s nice that I will be able to continue my hockey career and get an education while I’m at it.� The Warriors are in the midst of a six game home stand that started last weekend with a pair of losses and the team will be looking to get back on track this weekend as they will host Victoria tonight

(Friday) and Salmon Arm on Saturday. “It’s really a key weekend for us,� said McKinnon. “We’re missing a few guys and after last weekend guys aren’t happy. This week we’ve been working hard and we’re going to be excited to come out and get a couple wins.� kparnell @kelownacapnews.com

REGIONAL D ISTRICT NEWS 1450 K.L.O. Road, Kelowna, B.C. V1W 3Z4 s s &AX s WWW REGIONALDISTRICT COM REMEMBRANCE DAY HOLIDAY CLOSURES The Regional District of Central Okanagan KLO Road office will be closed on Monday, November 12th in recognition of Remembrance Day Sunday, November 11th. During this time any emergencies involving Regional District water systems should be directed to 250-868-5299. We look forward to serving you again at 8:00 am Tuesday, November 13th. Regular curbside garbage collection will continue normally on Monday and the Westside Residential Waste Disposal and Recycling Centre on Asquith Road in West Kelowna will also be open its normal hours on November 11th and 12th. The Environmental Education Centre for the Okanagan (EECO) in Mission Creek Regional Park will be closed Remembrance Day Sunday, November 11th and Monday, November 12th.

Guevera, receiver Spencer Humes, and offensive lineman Ty Nelson made the list. On defense, Bears named were linemen Cole Bertram and Chet Dennison, and defensive back Cam Spence. The KSS Owls had eight all-star selections: running back Nathan Brown, receiver Darrion Bunce, offensive linemen Matt Steen and Connor Novak, linebackers Hudsen Anderson and Dele Oyelese, and defensive backs Eli Haynes and Aarun Mahl. The Rutland Voodoos placed four on the team, including the conference’s

top offensive lineman Michele Vecchio. Other Voodoos named were lineman Jeryd Isley, linebacker Connor Quinn and defensive back Devon Doherty. This weekend, Rutland will take on West Vancouver in first-round playoff action while KSS meets Notre Dame. Both games will be played Saturday at B.C. Place, with the winners moving on to the quarterfinal round. The Bears, who finished first in the Okanagan AAA Conference, have an opening round bye and will host a playoff game Nov. 17 against the winner of Van College and Lord Tweedsmuir.

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A22 www.kelownacapnews.com

Friday, November 9, 2012 Capital News

SPORTS ▼ KIJHL

Chiefs have let in third fewest goals in entire KIJH League The Kelowna Chiefs will hit the ice at Rutland Arena just a single time

this weekend as the junior B club will host the Kimberley Dynamiters on Sat-

urday night in Kelowna. The Chiefs played in Chase on Thursday night.

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Results were unavailable as of the Capital News press deadline. Kelowna entered play on Thursday coming off a two win weekend last weekend that continued to

showcase the team’s defense first philosophy. The Chiefs allowed just seven goals against in the three games and have now allowed 10 goals against in its past six games.

The Chiefs have now allowed the third fewest goals in the entire KIJHL. Kelowna’s record heading into Thursday night’s game was an even .500 at 9-9-0-0.

Nineteen-year-old forward Jordan Salahor is the team’s leading scorer so far this season with seven goals and 16 helpers in 18 games played.

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KELOWNA PRODUCTS Matt Blanchard (middle) and Quinn Stanhope compete for the Burnaby Mountain Selects elite boys field lacrosse team (right) at a tournament held recently in Charlotte, North Carolina. Blanchard, a defender, and Stanhope, a midfielder, are touring with the Burnaby program as members of the freshman elite team. The Selects are continuing their tour of North America over the next week with tournaments in Baltimore and New York.


Capital News Friday, November 9, 2012

www.kelownacapnews.com A23

SPORTS

Valley AA champs OKM senior boys off to provincials ty shoot out which OKM went on to win, however the re-match was a one sided game which the Huskies dominated and won 7-0 to become Valley champions. Mett Fielding and Dylan Wagner each scored twice in the final. The OKM Huskies now head off to the provincial finals in Burnaby

Nov. 19 to 21 where they will have earned a high seeding position as one the top teams in the championship. The finals will consist of the top 16 teams in B.C. and OKM will be hoping to improve on the third place they achieved in 2011. The full OKM squad is: Mike Sexton, Dan

Perry, Jordan Powers, Quintin Torrensan, Walker Shanks, Joe Overton, Alex Beutle, Ben McDonald, Jesse Nanci, Mackenzie Rigg, Matt Fielding, Keevin Lee, Spencer Young, Dylan Wagner, Andrew Stevenson, David Denton, Braden Peters, Arpan Kandola, Rafa Gutierrez and Malte Thom.

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CONTRIBUTED

THE OKANAGAN MISSION Huskies claimed the AA valley soccer championship after a perfect season and will now head to soccer’s provincials. The Okanagan Mission senior boys soccer team is off to provincials after continuing a historic season by winning the Okanagan Valley AA high school soccer championship. The OKM senior boys won the valley championship and one of the oldest soccer trophys in the Okanagan, the championship cup that dates back to the 1930’s. The Huskies completed an unbeaten season, outscoring its opponents 103-13, and dominating the AA Okanagan Valley league. OKM represented the local school district in a six team Valley Championship last weekend in a three team pool with Wvestsyde out of Kamloops and Kalamalka. They won both games to progress to the semi finals, scoring 11 goals and allowing just one against. In the semi final the Huskies were matched with Sa-Hali from Kamloops who had won both the valleys and provincials two years ago. The teams were very well matched and it was a very close game with both teams trying to find a weakness to exploit. With 20 minutes gone in the first half OKM captain Andy Stevenson started and finished an excellent move to put OKM in front 1-0. Sa Hali pressed

hard for the equalizer and just before half time a moment of brilliance from their midfielder Brodie Osborne tied the game at 1-1. In the second half the Huskies piled on the pressure and came close

a number of times. With only 15 minutes remaining Wagner was brought down in the penalty area and Mackenzie Rigg stepped forward to fire the Huskies into the lead, Ben Mcdonald later scored a third to put the Huskies

into the final with a 3-1 win and advancing the team into the valley final against Summerland. Summerland had recently pushed the Huskies very hard in a BC open tournament with the final being forced to a penal-

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A24 www.kelownacapnews.com

Friday, November 9, 2012 Capital News

NEWS ▼ MENTAL HEALTH

Avoiding life’s negative twists H

ave you ever wondered if there were some simple steps you could take to feel happier? Did you wish there was some good advice out there to help you get past the negative feelings that can hold you back? A new course designed with some of these simple yet important things in mind is coming to Kelowna next week. Living Life to the Full is an eight-week program that started in the UK and is now being run by the Canadian Mental Health Association here in Canada.

HEALING MINDS

Paul Latimer The course helps participants learn to identify and challenge negative thoughts, become more active and build confidence. Based on classic cognitive behaviour therapy, the program helps people identify five areas affecting mental health: thoughts, feelings, phys-

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ical symptoms, behaviours, activities and the environment in which we live. Next comes practical ways to effect change. Cognitive behaviour therapy (CBT) is known to be effective for those dealing with many mental health symptoms including depression, phobias, panic attacks, eating disorders, obsessions and anxiety. But the skills used within CBT are also useful for the general public —who couldn’t use a little extra insight into why we feel the way we do? This form of therapy is also very effective for other every day problems such as sleeplessness, inactivity, excessive worry or lack of confidence. Living Life to the Full has been proven effective in four randomized, controlled studies. A pilot program run in Canada also proved very successful with 85 percent of participants rating the course as useful to very useful and 91 percent saying they would recommend it to family

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The Canadian Mental Health Association has launched a new website this week called My New Head (www.mynewhead. com). The purpose of the website is to focus on helping Canadians of all ages improve their mental fitness. But the benefits don’t end there, as a bonus for signing up, participants will receive 20 Air Miles reward miles. “There can be ‘no health without mental health’ and there is no greater investment than the investment one can make in sustaining and building mental health throughout one’s life,” said Peter Coleridge, national chief executive officer of the CMHA. “We are truly excited to launch this new and innovative mental health website designed to help Canadians learn about and improve their mental fitness. “We encourage all Canadians to visit the website, work their way through the various tasks and challenges.” The initiative has the support of both the Air Miles program and Healthy Minds Canada and earn 20 AIR MILES

reward miles while doing so.” “We will be able to reach out and help improve the mental fitness of millions of Canadians through this innovative and engaging new website,” said Jean Milligan, executive director of Healthy Minds Canada. My New Head will give users free online access to a non-diagnostic tool and practical, highly interactive and fun content that has been specifically designed to help users of all ages learn about and improve their mental fitness. Those wishing to participate are asked to signup and answer a few brief survey questions that are centered on four key subject areas: Mind, body, self and life. Based on one’s individual answers, customized content is generated that participants can complete at their own pace from reading, watching and listening to various mental health focused pieces. Participants are then asked to make their way through various fun selfmonitoring challenges. “For the past two years Air Miles for So-

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and friends. Broken into eight 90-minute sessions, the course deals with a different topic each week and participants plan for how they will handle that situation between sessions. At each class, the previous week’s plan is reviewed and lessons gleaned for going forward. I think this program has some excellent skills to teach to just about anyone and could be especially helpful for those looking to make a positive change in their lives. While this kind of life skills training may not be all that is needed in cases of serious mental illness, it can certainly be a great place to start or a complimentary tactic in addition to medical help when necessary. Living Life to the Full began in Kelowna on Nov. 5 at Okanagan College. It runs Monday evenings for eight weeks from 6:30 to 8 p.m. and the cost is $190. Space is still available. For more information or to register, email cscentral@okanagan.bc.ca, call 250-862-5480 or visit www.llttf.ca.

New website helps to encourage mental fitness

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cial Change has been driving social change across Canada by inspiring and rewarding healthy behavior shifts on a mass scale,” said Angela Brown, general manager of the program. “Earlier this year a successful pilot with the CMHA showed us that our collectors want to learn how to better manage their mental fitness. “Now we are growing our partnership further with CMHA, this time reaching out to a national audience to encourage and reward all Canadians for taking steps to pro-actively manage their mental health, to promote mental health for all and reach out to Canadians in a unique and unprecedented way,” says Coleridge. Canadians can participate and register at www. mynewhead.com. Registered participants will be asked to answer a few short survey questions to help serve up the interactive mental fitness content most applicable to their desires. Also, between Nov. 8 and Dec. 31 the first 62,500 Air Miles collectors who participate will receive the 20 Air Miles reward miles.

Art installed at YLW

The Kelowna Art Gallery has unveiled a new art installation at its satellite gallery space in the Kelowna International Airport (YLW) terminal. Travellers making their way towards the departure gates will now be greeted by a series of images of trees that create the illusion of movement. For her installation at YLW titled Certain Movement, Kelowna-based artist Dawn Emerson has created a seven-paneled work using mixed media on sheets of mylar, exploring images of trees, which meander over the 40-footlong wall in the well-wishing area just before the airport security gates. Emerson was inspired by the digital work of Los Angeles-based artist Jennifer Steinkamp, which she saw installed at the Phoenix Art Museum when on a recent trip to Arizona.


Capital News Friday, November 9, 2012

www.kelownacapnews.com A25

JOBS

Science technology career opportunities booming in British Columbia “British Columbia has a ready source of great jobs and careers in technology. Our education programs need to keep up with that demand.” That is the enthusiastic opinion of John Leech, executive director of the Applied Science Technologists and Technicians of BC. “Every system we rely on—water, roads and transportation, telecommunications and Internet, hydro and natural gas, environment, health, forestry, and many more —utilizes engineering and applied science technology professionals working in the background. B.C.’s telecom and IT, animation and many other sectors produce new careers every month.” ASTTBC has more than 10,000 members currently working in thousands of careers available to graduates of two-year diploma programs available at the British Columbia Institute of Technology and other B.C. colleges and institutes including Okanagan College.

John Leech “Our members enjoy rewarding, well-paid and often recession-proof careers in public service and the private sector alike,” Leech stated. “For huge numbers of young men and women, technology is the answer. “In B.C. and across Canada, technology permeates every workplace and job. We need to get capable students involved and engaged in applied sciences and head off workforce shortages by building a B.C. ‘Science and Technology Culture.’” Leech calls on government for renewed efforts to build student skills and confidence in math and science programming.

“We especially need to interest young students in science and how things work. Young students use technology every day— smart phones, iPads and computers. They play video games, even build robots.” Leech lauds the recent “Year of Science” program that encouraged students toward so-called “STEM” subjects—science, technology, engineering and math. Citing the recent $6

million B.C. campaign to encourage careers in trades, Leech urges a similar effort to build awareness of engineering technology education and careers. B.C. Technology Industries Association employers like Telus and BC Hydro and many smaller technology-rich companies say the single most important position they now struggle to fill is specialty technician/technologist.

CONTRIBUTED

TWO RECENT ASTTBC technology award recipients Heather (left photo) is a supervisor for transportation engineering with the City of Prince George while Paul works in the FortisBC elecricity calibration lab in Penticton. Even the Canadian Council of Chief Executives expressed concern that only 37 per cent of 16- to 18-year-olds were interested in taking even one post-secondary course in sciences, according to a recent Angus Reid survey. Leech says the opportunities for those seek-

ing work in the technology field are considerable given a wave of retirements of present-generation B.C. technology professionals that is already underway. “Half of our membership is now middle-aged at 45-plus, and 22 per cent are over age 55,” Leech explained.

It would appear their investment is a smart move, as it will result in a broad range of career opportunities. Industries in all regions of B.C. support programs for local trainees to fill engineering and applied science technologist, technician and technical specialist positions.


A26 www.kelownacapnews.com

Friday, November 9, 2012 Capital News

NEWS ▼ POLITICS

Obama’s win, the NHL lockout and Remembrance Day O

K, everybody breathe. One of the two most important questions relative to the free world has been answered—and the other one is pending. Obama is back. On a personal note I

am pleased. However, on a Canadian content level I admit to being slightly perplexed. I have yet to figure out why Canadians are apparently so preoccupied with the U.S, election yet barely give a rat’s behind

about our own political outcomes. Perhaps it is the endless, non-stop Yankee hype for the better part of two years that fills our television screens which draws the attention. More than likely, though, it’s

probably the sad realization that (whether we like it or not) Big Brother to the south dictates a whole lot of what happens around the rest of the world. To many Canucks, having a fellow such as Obama back in the big chair is a heck of a lot more reassuring than someone else in charge perceived as a war monger or ‘hard-ass’. I have always been somewhat taken back by the illogical association of some that anyone who is quiet and non-aggressive in nature is somehow weak or a pacifist. President Obama simply sways towards the patient, non-confrontational demeanor rather than a swaggering, kill-themall-let-God-sort-them-out mindset of some others. That being said, the reigning White House champion strikes me as someone who I would not want to corner and then expect not to pay a price. As a young boy my father warned me many

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Charlie Hodge a time to make sure and ‘watch out’ for the quiet guy in the corner. Hopefully, that is a lesson that some aggressive nations around the globe will not have to learn during his next fouryear term. Now that our political focus can finally return to our own nation we can begrudgingly prepare for more rhetoric and hyperbole regarding our upcoming provincial election. Clearly the schmoozing and BS is already in full stride with Premier Christy Clark’s announcement earlier this week of the return of a provincially supported tourism plan. Destination B.C. (or whatever the new tag is) simply replaces the previous Tourism B.C. program the Liberal’s foolishly collapsed a few years back. (Can anyone say…“dumb as a brick”?) Ironically, I was chatting with friend Silverado a couple of weeks ago and we were lamenting the demise of the old and effective slogans: “Beautiful B.C.,” and/or “Super Natural B.C.” We had pondered whatever happened to those good, catchy promo hooks. Of course, the same senseless elimination happened by supposedly wise marketing brains

in Kelowna several years back when they dropped the “Four Season’s Playground” tag for Kelowna, and replaced it with, well, nothing. Hopefully that appropriate tag will also soon be returned. ••• The other earth-shattering question on the minds of most ‘good’ Canadians is will there actually be an NHL hockey season—and if so, when? My answer remains yes to a salvaged season, and while I thought the boys would be back on their skates by now, I am confident they will be back to bashing each other around arenas in North America well before Christmas. Like many puck pushers I am missing my Saturday sojourns to the TV, despite the fact it means having to occasionally listen to that racist bigot Don Cherry. (When will Hockey Night in Canada finally drop The Obnoxious One?) Regardless, I digress yet again. The league will return to play sooner than later because the owners are finally going to realize that this time around the players will not knuckle like last time. I hope it happens soon because, as pointed out by several others, many employees and small businesses that depend on hockey for their salary or income are seriously hurting. Many of those employees and small businesses are directly tied to the NHL arenas and owners. I believe the current impasse is largely due to

a select group of about eight hard-line team owners who are simply demanding more blood from the players and have cajoled the other owners into not budging. This time, however, the players are not taking the bluff. I note my friend and strong community voice Wally Lightbody has crafted a letter to the editor in the Capital News (Nov. 6 edition) about the NHL lockout and wisely suggested what is needed is an appointed arbitrator to step in. Grand idea, which I fully support. Unfortunately, such a move would likely need the consent of the team owners, the NHL itself, and the players’ association, and I’m not sure that will ever happen, Oh well, we can certainly hope. Good idea Wally! ••• A reminder to readers out there to please honour our past and present soldiers and military support personal on Remembrance Day this Sunday. We are so blessed to live in such a wonderful country and continent filled with so many freedoms we sometimes take for granted. In some countries I would not even be allowed to write this column to voice my views as such, and in some countries you would be at risk for reading them. If not for those brave men and women who laid their lives on the line such freedoms would not be ours. May they truly rest in peace.

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Capital News Friday, November 9, 2012

www.kelownacapnews.com A27

NEWS ▼ OUTDOORS

Multi-use lakes generate conflicts TRAIL MIX

Judie Steeves ly in the last century. With the failure a few years ago of the dam on Testalinden Creek further south in the valley, those responsible for dams have been under increased pressure to ensure their dams are safe and are not likely to fail and wash out homes, highways and farms. However, such drawdowns do no favours for the fish and other aquatic life that depends on a certain water level at a small lake. Ironically, many of these reservoir lakes are also stocked with rainbows or brook trout at least once a year by the Freshwater Fisheries Society of B.C., to encourage anglers from around the world to enjoy our back country and our sport fishing. That includes reservoirs such as Postill Lake in the Glenmore Ellison Improvement Dis-

trict which received 1,000 yearling rainbows May 22 this year; Dobbin Lake in the former Westbank Irrigation District, now operated by West Kelowna which became a new home to 1,000 yearling rainbows June 8; and Grizzly Swamp up on the Aberdeen Plateau, operated by Greater Vernon Water which received 3,000 rainbow fry this September. As well, 5,000 yearling rainbows were released May 30 at Bear Lake, also known as Lambly Lake, which is operated by West Kelowna; and 10,000 rainbow fry were released Sept. 4 in Whitehead Lake in Summerland’s chain of reservoirs. That chain includes Crescent Lake, Headwaters and Thirsk as well, while the West Kelowna group of reservoirs include Jackpine, Horseshoe, Paynter, Dobbin, Lambly and Tadpole Lakes. McCulloch Lake is the main reservoir for another irrigation district, as well as a popular fishing and camping area; Beaver and Dee are reservoirs serving Lake Coun-

try; while Belgo is the reservoir for users in the Black Mountain Irrigation District; Rose Valley, Big Horn and Esperon are used by residents of the Lakeview Heights area of West Kelowna. Even Okanagan Lake is a reservoir used by thousands of residents for domestic and irrigation water, although accommodations have been made in controlling its level now in order to protect spawning kokanee. Most of us drink treated surface water stored in a reservoir. Many of us also fish in those reservoirs. As they are stretched to serve more and more people, and as we become more conscious of the importance of protecting the source of our water and of safe maintenance of the dams on those reservoirs, the habitat they provide to aquatic and riparian creatures will take second place to human needs. Since those humans are us, how can we argue with that? There are lakes around here which are not reservoirs, but the most popular and common fishing spots are former streams

JUDIE STEEVES/CAPITAL NEWS

WINTER draw-down at Dobbin Lake, a reservoir on the Westside. or wetlands where a dam was constructed to create storage for water to serve the Okanagan Valley. Because roads of some sort had to be cleared for access to build, then maintain those dams, there was co-incidentally access provided to anglers, campers, birdwatchers and others who enjoy the outdoors, and they became known as fishing lakes. Severe draw-downs in these lakes puts stress

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and be prepared to be considered a secondary user, not the primary one, if what you’re using is a reservoir as well as a fishing hole. As one water manager commented to me recently, “Ducks get in the way of good water quality.” I imagine anglers do too. Judie Steeves writes about outdoors issues for the Capital News. jsteeves@kelownacapnews.com

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It’s the dawning of a new era for the Central Okanagan Land Trust, as it takes on a paid executive director to help it manage the properties now in its care. Former executive director of the Kelowna Museums Wayne Wilson, recently retired after 30 years with the museums, has taken on the new COLT position as one of his contracts. He will be responsible for helping the trust’s board of directors connect more closely with the community, sharing information about its work and the ways in which it can help conserve natural features of the Central Okanagan. That will include updating the trust’s website and setting up a presence on Facebook, as well as speaking to community groups about COLT. The land trust was set up by the Central Okanagan Foundation in 1991 in order to protect land for wildlife and parks and to preserve natural features of this valley for future generations. COLT was recently bequeathed 320 hect-

on the fish living in them, and can cause fish kills, but how can you fault a water utility for looking after its infrastructure—the dam that is used to provide the water that flows out of your tap? What can you say when they complain about your use of the water or the foreshore as a toilet, sink or garbage can? Don’t forget the connections when you’re enjoying an upland lake,

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louds of colourful leaves swirl up when I walk and a rain of orange, yellow and red drifts around my head and shoulders in the slightest breeze. It’s one of the most delightful aspects of this change in seasons, although the starkly bare tree trunks look cold and uncomfortable not clothed in the green leaves of summer. There are other ways we mark the season’s change, and not all are delightful. For example, one of the issues that is a feature of the Okanagan’s multi-use watersheds is the late-season drawdown of upland reservoirs so that water utilities can do a dam safety inspection, or because it’s been a water-short season and that water has been needed down in the valley. You may not even realize that your favourite fishing lake is a water reservoir that a domestic utility or irrigation district has created where water ran and the landscape was favourable to erecting a dam. Often, these earthfilled dams were built ear-


A28 www.kelownacapnews.com

Friday, November 9, 2012 Capital News

NEWS

Remembrance and gratitude will help you feel better T oday’s column is not about health, wellness or the latest trends in weight reduction. Rather, it is about gratitude. Research has demonstrated that the most pow-

erful emotion that we can have is that of gratitude. It embodies appreciation, respect and empathy. Today’s column is about our greatest natural resource—our veterans. They’re the heroes that

have fallen and the ones who walk amongst us. In the Second World War, we were one of the very few countries that participated in that war on a voluntary basis. We not only had one

of the highest respected soldiers worldwide but they were one of the best. Ever. Some 2.5 per cent of the world population died in that war alone, including 45,400 Canadian soldiers.

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That was four per cent of our population at the present day. And that was just one war to speak of. I have the highest respect for all of our war veterans. When they enter my clinic and I find out that they’re a veteran, they are never charged a dime from that day forth. This is the very least I can do. It amazes me when I speak with my veteran patients—their stories, their losses and all they’ve overcome. Suddenly every day annoyances don’t seem so large. These are women and men who elected to leave a life of security and comfort and voluntarily put themselves in harm’s way for country. That alone is truly remarkable. I had the great fortune of getting to know many of my veterans quite well. They don’t speak of their experiences with a degree of bravado, but rather one of honour and

ASK DR.THIEL

Markus Thiel respect. I’m a better man for knowing them. Imagine, if you will, leaving your family, your job and risking safety warmth and your life as you know it by you own volition. The courage that must be taken seems almost insurmountable. This is by no means another ‘long weekend’ by any measure. All that is asked is that we honor those who fell for our freedom. I was surprised when I was speaking with one of my patients, a teacher, who felt that Remembrance Day seemed inappropriate, that it was promoting “war mongering” and therefore wasn’t deserving of all the attention

it was getting. She felt the energy should be more directed towards peace. I think she’s missed the point. It is indeed not a day of promoting war. It is simply a day of remembering those who fell before us and for us for peace. Otherwise, we might be goose-stepping and speaking German today. My wife gave birth to our son on July 18. On July 20, my wife’s cousin Capt. Richard (Steve) Leary was killed in Afghanistan. He was like a brother to her. My son carries his name today. Respect the minute of silence. Respect those who fell before you and know that you owe them a debt that we cannot possibly repay. It’s not a lot to ask. Markus Thiel is a doctor of chiropractic practicing in Kelowna. askdrthiel@shaw.ca

Dedicated Rockets fan honoured The BMO Ultimate CHL Fan Appreciation Night came to Propsera Place last Saturday for Kelowna Rockets fans. As part of the festivities, BMO held a contest for the Ultimate Kelowna Rockets Fan, with the winner, Brendon Shannon, emerging victorious. After being selected from the crowd and competing against two other contestants in a round of Rockets trivia on the players’ bench, Shannon was named the BMO Ultimate Kelowna Rockets Fan,

winning a signed Rockets team jersey with the BMO Ultimate CHL Fan crest and a $50 pre-paid MasterCard. As the winner of the BMO Ultimate CHL Fan contest, Shannon is now entered to win the grand prize: A trip for two to the MasterCard Memorial Cup next year in Saskatoon. “We congratulate Brendon Shannon for proving himself to be the BMO Ultimate Kelowna Rockets Fan,” said Ryan Saari, Kelowna BMO branch manager.

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Capital News Friday, November 9, 2012

www.kelownacapnews.com A29

CAPITAL NEWS

TRAVEL ▼ ENGLAND

Regent’s Canal offers picturesque views of London’s north side Bob Downing CONTRIBUTOR

BOB DOWNING/AKRON BEACON JOURNAL

THE REGENT’S CANAL in London is home to narrowboats, house boats that can only be 14 1/2 feet (4.5 metres) wide. The boats pictured are anchored near the Islington Tunnel.

The Regent’s Canal towpath is a tough trail. It is narrow, crowded, bumpy with cobblestones in places, and bicyclists often end up in the canal. There are narrow passageways under bridges, wide enough for one person, who must duck. As an American, I never did figure out if one should walk or pedal on the right or left. From what I could see, traffic on the towpath was pretty much a free-for-all that could not be blamed on one puzzled tourist. But the canal is a hidden gem that stretches across London’s north side. It is a greenway, a walkway designated by the queen and a look at London’s colourful past. A narrow ribbon of water is tucked between rows of warehouses and other buildings in a picturesque urban landscape. It is used by walkers, runners and bicyclists, some of whom are commuting to work at London’s highrise Canary Wharf area near the eastern terminus. The canal runs 8.6 miles, from Little Venice in Maida Vale in the west, to the Limehouse Basin, London’s docks and the River Thames in the east. Its western terminus is the Paddington Arm of the Grand Union Canal that ran from the Midlands. Part of the appeal of the Regent’s Canal is the hundreds of colour-

ful houseboats that ply its waters. They are known simply as narrowboats, because the maximum width of boats on the canal is 14 feet, 6 inches. Some are active homes. Others appear to be mothballed in basins that adjoin the canal. The canal has 13 locks and three tunnels. It can handle narrowboats up to 74 feet long with a draft of 4 feet, 10 inches. The maximum headroom is 8 feet, 2 inches. It is quiet today, surrounded by parks, apartments, commercial office space and warehouses. Cafes are popping up. It has a festive outdoorsy feel. The towpath also provides a link to the Broadway market, with more than 100 food stalls and some of London’s tastiest street food. Canal locks like City Road Lock and Sturts Lock near Islington are popular spots for locals to picnic and hang out. The Regent’s Canal retains elements of its industrial heritage and planners want to combine that with its recreational uses. Elements along the canal include locks, lock cottages, wharves, lay-bys, bridges, bridge guards, horse ramps and boundary markers. (Horse ramps were built to allow teams that had fallen into the canal to get back onto the towpath.) An estimated 35,000 boats ply Great Britain’s canal system that stretches 2,200 miles. That includes

about 6,000 narrowboats. The canal was proposed by Thomas Homer in 1802. It was developed by John Nash, who hired James Morgan to be the engineer. It opened in 1820, named after the Prince Regent (later King Edward IV). In the northwest, the canal runs adjacent to 489acre Regent’s Park, which was being developed at the same time. The land was acquired by King Henry VIII in the 16th century as royal hunting grounds. That park includes an outdoor Shakespeare theater, the 36-acre London Zoo, Queen Mary’s Gardens, a boating lake and excellent sports facilities. Nearby is Primrose Hill, London’s one-time dueling venue. In the east, it runs by 218-acre Victorian Park, which was opened to the public by Queen Victoria in 1845. Boat tours and water taxis are available between Little Venice and Camden Lock through private companies. For details, check with the Jenny Wren (www.walkersquay. com), London Waterbus Co. (http://londonwaterbus.com), Regent’s Canal Pleasure Boats (http:// floatingboater.co.uk) or Jason’s Canal Boat Trips (http://jasons.co.uk). The Waterbus company has three boats on the National Register of Historic Ships. The canal where it

See Canal A30

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A30 www.kelownacapnews.com

Friday, November 9, 2012 Capital News

TRAVEL

In 1963, canals were taken over by British Waterways London Canal from A29

joins with the Grand Union Canal was originally

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dubbed Browning’s Pool after poet Robert Browning, who lived there from 1862 to 1887. Browning later named the area Little Venice. The Regent’s Canal quickly became England’s busiest, and wharves quickly sprang up along it and adjoining basins. The basins—some of which survive today—became home to industrial operations. Items being shipped from across England arrived via canal, and cargoes from seagoing vessels

were transferred to horsedrawn canal barges. Those shipments were transferred at the Regent’s Canal Dock (the Limehouse Basin) at the East End docks. Coal and building materials were the most-shipped commodities. In 1830, the 1.3-mile Hertford Union Canal opened with three locks off the Regent’s Canal. After the first railroad was built in London in 1837, the canal continued to do well. The rail and canal seemed to work to-

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were taken over by British Waterways London. The Regent’s Canal Dock was shut down in 1969. The Jubilee Greenway starts at Buckingham Palace and links Green and Hyde parks and Kensington Gardens Royal Park with Paddington Station and the Grand Union Canal at Little Venice. It then follows the Regent’s Canal through Camden. The greenway connects to East London through Victoria Park to the River Thames where the Woolwich Foot Tunnel

connects Greenwich and the South Bank at Tower Bridge and back to St. James via Westminster. The project is managed by the Jubilee Walkway Trust. Get information at www.walklondon.org.uk/ jubileewalkwaytrust. For canal information, contact the Canal and River Trust at http://canalrivertrust.org.uk. For London tourist information, check out www.visitlondon.com. Bob Downing is a reporter with the Akron Beacon Journal.

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gether to transport goods including coal, stone, ice and manure. There were two proposals in the 19th century to turn the canal into a railroad. But that never happened. The British government nationalized the rail, road and canal systems in 1948 under the British Transport Commission. The use of the canal as a shipping hub continued into the 1960s when rail and roads surpassed the canal system. In 1963, the canals

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A2 www.kelownacapnews.com

Friday, November 9, 2012 Capital News

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Friday, November 9, 2012 Capital News

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B SECTION • FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 9, 2012 • CAPITAL NEWS

MOTORING ▼ FIRST DRIVE

Santa Fe more efficient, more refined for 2013 Neil Moore CONTRIBUTOR

CONTRIBUTED

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B2 www.kelownacapnews.com

Friday, November 9, 2012 Capital News

MOTORING â–ź FIRST DRIVE

Only experiencing Santa Fe lets you feel how refined it is Hyundai from B1 is simply named the Santa Fe, and will replace the Veracruz sometime during in early 2013.

Last week, our group of journalists had an opportunity to drive the Sport, and I’ll admit that although having seen the photos, I didn’t expect

something quite so refined. This starts with the exterior. At first it doesn’t seem a huge leap from the outgoing model, but

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ALTHOUGH there’s an abundance of black in the Santa Fe’s interior, it’s nicely accented by metallic and optional woodgrain trim. The cool, blue illumination and available perforated leather are another upscale touch.

2013 XV CROSSTREK TOURING Well equipped plus AWD from

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*Models shown are the 2013 Forester 2.5X 5MT (DJ1 XO) / 2013 Outback 2.5i Convenience 6MT (DD1 CP) / 2013 XV Crosstrek Touring 5MT (DX1 TP) with MSRP of $28,015 / $30,515 / $26,515 including freight & PDI ($1,595), documentation fees ($395) and battery and tire tax ($30). License, taxes, insurance and registration extra. **0.9% ďŹ nance and lease rates available on all new 2013 Forester / 2013 Outback models for a 24-month term. Financing and leasing programs available through Toyota Credit Canada Inc. on approved credit. Dealer order/trade may be necessary. **Offer valid until November 1, 2012. See your local Subaru dealer or www.western.subarudealer.ca for complete details. †Based on Natural Resources Canada estimated fuel economy of 9.8L / 8.9L per 100 km (city) and 7.0L / 6.7L per 100km (highway) or 29 / 32 miles per gallon (city) and 40 / 42 miles per gallon (highway) for a 2013 Outback 2.5i Convenience 6MT (DD1 CP) / 2013 XV Crosstrek Touring 5MT (DX1 TP). Actual fuel consumption will vary based on driving conditions, driver habits, and vehicle load. ††Based on data provided by the Canadian Motor Safety Standards for the Compact SUV segment.

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I’m not saying fit and finish are quite at that level, but the lighting, instruments, controls and seating wouldn’t look out of place in a more expensive vehicle. The boomer buyers that Hyundai is targeting want more than utility, and the company has responded with a pile of premium features for those wanting to upfit their Santa Fe: dual zone climate control, heated rear seats, ventilated front seats, rear door sunshades, heated steering wheel, rear park assist, rear camera, push button start, navigation, panoramic sunroof and 19-inch alloy wheels. Of course, these are higher trim options, but even the base, at $26,499, offers a healthy list of standard amenities. The Santa Fe 2.4-litre FWD includes air conditioning, heated front seats, power windows with driver’s auto up/down and pinch protection, tilt/telescopic steering with audio and cruise controls, power lumbar support, Bluetooth and six-speaker AM/FM/ XM/CD/MP3 audio system with iPod/USB/aux inputs. Also standard are second-row 40/20/40 split fold reclineable seats that drop to double the 1,002 rear cargo hold to 2,025 litres. And there’s ample under-floor storage. This entry model also gets a rear spoiler, roofrack side rails and the previously mentioned 17inch alloys. Next in line, with the 2.4-litre engine, is the Premium FWD ($28,299),

See Hyundai B3


Capital News Friday, November 9, 2012

www.kelownacapnews.com B3

MOTORING ▼ FIRST DRIVE

2.0 turbo ‘more robust’ at $38,499. Indeed, there’s a hefty premium for going with the turbo ($2,200) and AWD ($2,000), but Hyundai expects roughly twothirds of their sales to be turbocharged models, and more than 70 per cent to be AWD. The turbo may be top dog, but the 2.4-litre is no wimp, producing 190 hp and 181 lb/ft of torque—15 hp and 12 lb/ ft more than the 2.4-litre engine it replaces. And with 12 percent better fuel economy.

Hyundai from B2

followed by Premium AWD ($30,299) and Luxury AWD ($33,899). The base turbo model comes in Premium trim, which will set you back $30,499 for FWD or $32,499 for AWD. However Hyundai expects the SE AWD, to be their overall volume seller, which at $35,299 includes pretty much everything but navigation, power passenger seat and upgraded audio system. If you want these, opt for the Limited AWD

Acceleration is smooth, and the engine doesn’t drone noticeably, but there isn’t much kick when you plant the pedal. Which is to be expected, as the Santa Fe still tips the scales at 1,569 kg (FWD) and 1,640 kg (AWD). The 2.0T, on the other hand is considerably more robust. Replacing last year’s V6, it gives up a few horses (four percent), but delivers eight percent more torque and the same percentage in added fuel economy.

CONTRIBUTED

WITH TRAILER BRAKES INSTALLED, the Santa Fe 2.0T will haul 1,590 kg. The 2.4-litre model will tow 907 kg.

CONTRIBUTED

THERE’S PLENTY OF ROOM for all your gear in the Santa Fe, with 1,002 litres of cargo space behind the second row, and 2,025 litres with the 40/20/40 seats folded.

Numbers are 264 hp and 269 lb/ft, with torque coming in at a low 1,750 rpm. As a result, it’s significantly quicker off the line than the 2.4-litre, and far better at highway passing. With the MacPherson strut/multilink front/ rear suspension setup, ride is smooth, and as you’d expect in a tall vehicle, there’s a bit of lean in hard cornering. Steering, however, is taut and precise. Mind you, I had the Santa Fe’s driver selectable steering mode (DSSM) set to ‘Sport’ most of the time. This dials back the power assist, which increases ac-

cordingly with ‘normal’ or ‘comfort’ settings. There’s much more to be said about the all-new Santa Fe, and I hope to do a longer test—probably once the snow flies. Hyundai believes this is their most important new vehicle launch since the Elantra, and I would agree. Demand for this kind of vehicle shows no sign of slowing down, and the company points out that 21 per cent of new vehicle buyers are intending to purchase a compact or intermediate CUV. And I’ll bet a lot of them will be putting the 2013 Santa Fe on their

shopping list.

2013 HYUNDAI SANTA FE SPORT Body Style: mid-size crossover SUV Drive Method: frontengine, front- or allwheel-drive Engine: 2.4-litre fourcylinder with gasoline direct injection (190 hp and 181 lb/ft of torque); 2.0-litre turbocharged four-cylinder with GDI (264 hp and 269 lb/ft) Cargo: 1,002 litres behind rear seats, 2,025 litres with 40/20/40 second row folded Towing Capacity: (with trailer brake) 2.4

litre—907 kg, 2.0T— 1,590 kg Fuel Economy: 2.4 litre FWD 10.1/6.7 litres/100 km (city/hwy); AWD 10.5/7.7 litres/100 km (city/hwy); 2.0 litre turbo FWD: 10.4/7.4 litres/100 km (city/hwy), AWD 11.0/8.4 litres/100 km (city/hwy) Price: 2.4L FWD $26,499, 2.4L Premium FWD $28,299, 2.4L Premium AWD $30,299, 2.4L Luxury AWD $33,899, 2.0T Premium FWD $30,499, 2.0T Premium AWD $32,499, 2.0T SE AWD $35,299, 2.0T Limited $38,499 Website: www.hyundaicanada.ca

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Friday, November 9, 2012 Capital News

MOTORING ▼ FIRST DRIVE

Volkswagen adds hybrid choice to Jetta for 2013 Jim Robinson CONTRIBUTED

Not content with offering affordable low consumption gasoline and diesel cars, Volkswagen has added a third option with the 2013 Jetta Hybrid. You would think a small displacement diesel and gas vehicle would be enough for the fuel ef-

ficiency conscious, but Volkswagen is convinced increasing numbers of buyers feel some form of hybrid should be their next choice. On top of that, VW believes buyers will accept paying about $4,000 more over the Jetta 2.5-litre because of the perceived fuel savings over the longer term. So the next question

CONTRIBUTED

THERE ISN’T MUCH to tell a Jetta Hybrid from other

models except for small things such as the badging, an integrated rear spoiler and hidden exhaust pipe.

you might ask, and I did, was why not go all out with a diesel hybrid? VW said they have looked at it but the extra cost of a hybrid and a diesel is more of a premium that consumers are currently willing to pay. A 1.4-litre inline fourcylinder turbo direct injection gasoline engine producing 150 hp and 184 lb/ft of torque powers the Jetta Hybrid. This is combined with a 20 kW (27 hp, 114 lb/ft) electric motor for a total 170 hp and the same 184 lb/ft of torque. According to VW, the Jetta Hybrid uses about 20 per cent less fuel than an equivalently sized sedan with a gasoline engine. In city stop/go driving that goes up to about 30 per cent. In pure electric mode that Jetta Hybrid can hit up to 60-70 km/h and travel up to 2.0 km depending on driving conditions. The hybrid system borrows technology from the Touareg Hybrid CUV using a clutch that decouples the gasoline en-

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WITH THE 2013 Jetta Hybrid, Volkswagen is the only automaker in North America offering a choice of affordable gasoline, diesel or hybrids with the Comfortline model (shown) starting at $28,875. gine when in electric mode or ‘coasting.’ Besides regenerative power being routed back the battery when braking, when the driver lifts off the accelerator at speeds up to 100 km/h and coasts, this also serves to provide power to the lithium-ion battery. The 220-volt lithium-ion battery is located under the rear seat and weighs 163 lb. By watching the weight, the Jetta Hybrid comes in at just 221 lb more than the standard sedan. Even the seven-speed dual clutch transmission is trimmed down in size and weight. There are about three separate ways of monitoring your fuel conservation. When driving, it is hard to take you eyes off the ePower meter that is part of the overall hybrid energy flow display integrated into the multi-info readout found in the main instrument cluster. Here’s where it gets cool. The Power Meter is an additional multifunctional display that replaces the tach on the left side of the instrument cluster. It informs the driver of the momentary operating state of the Jetta Hybrid.

You can watch the ‘tach’ needle swing up and down as the engine kicks in or when regenerative power is replenishing the battery. Lastly, when you give it the gas and the battery adds its thrust, the needle swings all the way to the right in the ‘boost’ mode. But wait, there’s more. Part of the audio system also helps coach the driver with messages on the audio display.

For instance, the audio display’s ‘Zero Emissions’ menu offers a graphic of the car’s zero emissions driving time. The zero emissions values are shown in the form of percentages in a bar diagram, where the measurement interval of one bar represents one minute of driving. A value of 100 per cent means that the car was driven with zero emissions throughout the driv-

ing minute, i.e., with the TSI engine shut off. The effective time period for this is 30 minutes. Lastly the audio monitor can also give an instantaneous depiction of the flow of energy back in forth between the engine and battery. It’s pretty extensive but surprisingly easy to live with when driving, See VW B5

CONTRIBUTED

THE 2013 VW HYBRID gives the driver several ways to monitor fuel consumption. The Power Meter to the left of the main instrument cluster replaces a tach and the centre ePower display that readouts energy flow, average and instant fuel mileage.


Jetta a peppy performer even at altitude

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VW from B4

despite all the information vying for the attention of the driver. My co-driver and I could have read the manual but decided that, only if the system was intuitive, would it work for the wide of range of driv-

AP W S YOURRIDE SOON

/FordCanada

ers and their experiences who would encounter the system. The Power Meter was simple enough, but at first all we could get was the average and instantaneous fuel consumption reading in the ePower readout between the Power Meter and speedo on the right.

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Then we figured out the iPod-like click pad on the right spoke of the steering wheel and it all came together with all kinds of info a click or two away. The roads selected for the Jetta Hybrid debut seemed odd in that the 7,500 foot high roads

$

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WISE BUYERS READ THE LEGAL COPY: Vehicle(s) may be shown with optional equipment. Dealer may sell or lease for less. Limited time offers. Offers may be cancelled at any time without notice. Dealer order or transfer may be required as inventory may vary by dealer. See your Ford Dealer for complete details or call the Ford Customer Relationship Centre at 1-800-565-3673. *Purchase a new 2013 Escape SE FWD Eco-Boost/2013 Edge SEL FWD with automatic transmission/2013 Explorer Base FWD with automatic transmission for $27,999/$34,999/$30,999. Taxes payable on full amount of purchase price after Manufacturer Rebate of $0/$1,000/$250 has been deducted. Offers include freight and air tax of $1,650 but exclude variable charges of license, fuel fill charge, insurance, dealer PDI (if applicable), registration, PPSA, administration fees and charges, any environmental charges or fees, and all applicable taxes. Manufacturer Rebates can be used in conjunction with most retail consumer offers made available by Ford of Canada at either the time of factory order or delivery, but not both. Manufacturer Rebates are not combinable with any fleet consumer incentives. ±Until November 30th, 2012, lease a new 2013 Escape SE FWD Eco-Boost/2013 Edge SEL FWD with automatic transmission and get 2.49%/1.99% annual percentage rate (APR) financing for up to 48 months on approved credit (OAC) from Ford Credit. Not all buyers will qualify for the lowest APR payment. Lease a vehicle with a value of $27,999/$34,999 at 2.49%/1.99% APR for up to 48 months with $0/$2,750 down or equivalent trade in, monthly payment is $379/$425, total lease obligation is $18,192/$23,150 and optional buyout is $11,760/$13,650. Offers include freight and air tax of $1,650 but exclude variable charges of license, fuel fill charge, insurance, dealer PDI (if applicable), registration, PPSA, administration fees and charges, any environmental charges or fees, and all applicable taxes. Additional payments required for PPSA, registration, security deposit, NSF fees (where applicable), excess wear and tear, and late fees. Some conditions and mileage restrictions of 80,000 km over 48 months apply. A charge of 16 cents per km over mileage restrictions applies, plus applicable taxes. ‡‡Receive a winter safety package which includes: four (4) winter tires, four (4) steel rims (2012 Escape receives alloy wheels), and four (4) tire pressure monitoring sensors when you purchase or lease any new 2012/2013 Ford Fiesta, Focus (excluding BEV & ST), Fusion (excluding HEV), Escape, Edge (excluding Sport) or Explorer on or before November 30/12. This offer is not applicable to any Fleet (other than small fleets with an eligible FIN) or Government customers and not combinable with CPA, GPC, CFIP or Daily Rental Allowances. Some conditions apply. See Dealer for details. Vehicle handling characteristics, tire load index and speed rating may not be the same as factory supplied all-season tires. Winter tires are meant to be operated during winter conditions and may require a higher cold inflation pressure than all-season tires. Consult your Ford of Canada dealer for details including applicable warranty coverage. ††Offer only valid from November 1, 2012 to November 30, 2012 (the “Program Period”) to Canadian resident customers who own or are currently leasing (during the Program Period) certain Ford Pickup Truck, Sport Utility Vehicle (SUV), Cross-Over Utility Vehicle (CUV) or Minivan models (each a “Qualifying Loyalty Model”), or certain competitive pickup truck, SUV, CUV or Minivan models (each a “Qualifying Conquest Model”) and purchase, lease, or factory order (during the Program Period) a new 2012/2013 Ford truck (excluding Raptor), SUV or CUV (each an “Eligible Vehicle”). Some eligibility restrictions apply on Qualifying Loyalty and Conquest Models and Eligible Vehicles – see dealer for full offer criteria. Qualifying customers will receive $1,000 (the “Incentive”) towards the purchase or lease of the Eligible Vehicle, which must be delivered and/or factory-ordered from your participating Ford dealer during the Program Period. Limit one (1) Incentive per Eligible Vehicle sale, up to a maximum of two (2) separate Eligible Vehicle sales if valid proof is provided that the customer is the owner/lessee of two (2) separate Qualifying Conquest/Loyalty Models. Each customer will be required to provide proof of ownership/registration of the applicable Qualifying Conquest/Loyalty Model and the ownership/registration address must match the address on the new Buyer’s Agreement or Lease Agreement for the Eligible Vehicle sale. Offer is transferable only to persons living in the same household as the eligible customer. This offer is subject to vehicle availability and may be cancelled at any time without notice. This offer can be used in conjunction with most retail consumer offers made available by Ford of Canada at the time of factory-order or delivery (but not both). This offer is not combinable with CPA, GPC, Daily Rental Allowances. Taxes payable before Incentive is deducted. Dealer may sell or lease for less. See dealer for details. ***Estimated fuel consumption ratings for 2013 Escape 1.6L Eco-Boost FWD 6-speed Automatic transmission: [9.1L/100km (31MPG) City, 6.0L/100km (47MPG) Hwy] / 2013 Edge 3.5L V6 FWD 6-speed Automatic transmission: [11.1L/100km (25MPG) City, 7.2L/100km (39MPG) Hwy] / 2013 Explorer FWD 3.5L 6-speed Automatic transmission: [12.2L/100km (23MPG) City, 8.2L/100km (34MPG) Hwy]. Fuel consumption ratings based on Transport Canada approved test methods. Actual fuel consumption will vary based on road conditions, vehicle loading, vehicle equipment, and driving habits. †Class is Small Utility versus 2012/2013 competitors. Estimated fuel consumption ratings for the 2013 Escape FWD 1.6L GTDI I-4 6-Speed Automatic: 9.1L/100 km city and 6.0L/100 km hwy. Fuel consumption ratings based on Environment Canada approved test methods. Actual fuel consumption will vary based on road conditions, vehicle loading, vehicle equipment and driving habits.©2012 Sirius Canada Inc. “SiriusXM”, the SiriusXM logo, channel names and logos are trademarks of SiriusXM Radio Inc. and are used under licence. ©2012 Ford Motor Company of Canada, Limited. All rights reserved.

Capital News Friday, November 9, 2012 www.kelownacapnews.com B5

MOTORING VW Canada has an estimated combined consumption rating of 4.4L/100 km. Driving time was limited but the Jetta was a pretty peppy performer. Handling is always a VW See VW B10

bcford.ca

Available in most new Ford vehicles with 6-month pre-paid subscription


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Friday, November 9, 2012 Capital News

MOTORING ▼ TEST DRIVE

Entry-level affordability and room for five with Chevrolet Equinox Rob Beintema CONTRIBUTOR

CONTRIBUTED

THE CHEVROLET EQUINOX, here in Tungsten Metallic, a new colour for 2013 and just one addition from a broad list of upgrades that include a new, more powerful optional V6 engine and new technologies enhancing a popular made-in-Canada compact crossover.

UPCOMING ROUTES AVAILABLE 3 DAYS A WEEK / NO EARLY MORNINGS / NO WEEKENDS #KC03014303 – 21 Papers Kelowna North & Glenmore Sandpiper Crt, Sandpiper St, Thrasher Ave. #KC01004501 – 55 Papers Clement Ave. 725 to 865, Coronation Ave. 726 to 871, Ethel St. 1206 to 1238 Even Side Only, Richter St. 1205 to 1241 Odd Side Only #KC01005400 – 203 Papers (Businesses) Abbott St. 1571 to 1675, Bernard Ave. 205 to 489 Odd Side Only, Harvey Ave. 245 to 453, Lawrence Ave. 215 to 455, Leon Ave. 224 to 487, Pandosy St. 1545 to 1685, Water St. 1500 to 1691 #KC01005500 – 298 Papers (Businesses) Bernard Ave. 507 to 697 Odd Side Only, Bertram St. 1601 to 1688, Ellis St. 1521 to 1665, Harvey Ave. 544 to 634 Even Side Only, Lawrence Ave. 507 to 591, Leon Ave. 525 to 649, Richter St. 1626 to 1664 Even Side Only #KC04003600 – 64 Papers Fairway Cres, Nassau Cres, St. Andrews Dr. 1940 to 2055, Valley Rd. 893 to 971 #KC04005200 – 67 Papers Athans Crt, Bernard Ave. 1410 to 1640, Elm St. 1363 to 1500, Leaside Ave. 1576 to 1614 #KC04000302 – 52 Papers Camelot Crt, Highgate Crt, Pendragon Pl, Magic Dr. 241 to 272, Rio Dr. 1195 to 1248 #KC04020307 – 62 Papers Fairmont Ave, Harrogate Lane, Selkirk Crt, Selkirk Dr. 2441 to 2583

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for Canadian consumers. But the Equinox does offer a choice of powertrains. A larger percentage of Americans, and some Canadians with recreational towing needs, have traditionally opted for a more powerful V6 engine. As tested here, our 2013 Equinox 2LT model harnesses a new, 3.6-litre DOHC direct-injected LFX V6 that replaces the previous 3.0-litre unit. The new engine makes 301 hp at 6500 rpm (up 37 hp or 14 per cent) and 272 lb/ft of torque at 4800 rpm (up 50 lb/ft or 22 per cent). This motor makes significantly more grunt than its predecessor although Chevrolet has not changed

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It should come as no surprise that the Chevy Equinox, built right here in Canada, has proved to be one of the most popular compact crossovers in this country and in the United States. Since its debut in 2004, this five-passenger ‘sportcute’, manufactured with unibody architecture on GM’s Theta platform, has offered entry-level affordability, five-passenger room, four-cylinder fuel economy, optional six-cylinder towing power and all-wheel drive availability at every trim level. The Chevy Equinox has evolved steadily to keep pace with a very competitive market. An improved second-generation 2010 model set new

sales records and GM’s yearly upgrades have culminated with this year’s 2013 model, featuring a new optional V6 engine and new technologies. The Equinox comes in four trim levels—the base LS model, LT (divided into 1LT and 2LT package choices) and in top-of-theline LTZ trim with all the fixings. The standard power unit for Equinox is a 2.4-litre DOHC Ecotec direct-injected in-line four-cylinder engine making 182 hp at 6700 rpm with 172 lb/ft of torque peaking at 4900 rpm. Fuel economy is rated at 9.2/6.1L/100km (city/ hwy) in FWD configuration. This four-banger’s combined blend of fuelefficient thrift and adequate pulling power has made it the go-to engine

#KC10007310 – 39 Papers Glenford Rd, Glenview Rd, Woodell Rd, Lower Glenrosa Rd. 2841 to 2869 Odd Side Only #KC10007410 – 33 Papers Lower Glenrosa Rd. 2816 to 2888 Even Side Only, Webber Rd. 3591 to 3723 #KC10010110 – 42 Papers Glen Abbey Crt, Glen Abbey Pl, Glenrosa Rd. 2938 to 2958 Even Side Only, Walnut Glen Dr.

For information, contact our circulation department ~ 250-763-7575

CONTRIBUTED

THE 2013 EQUINOX centre stack with MyLink, complete with standard rear vision camera and available navigation display.

www.kelownacapnews.com


Capital News Friday, November 9, 2012

www.kelownacapnews.com B7

MOTORING

City level gas rates in real life driving

Chevy from B6 the official 1588 kg tow rating (3500 lb). To complement the additional power, GM has a new available FE2 suspension package to go with the 3.6-litre V6. It offers refined ride and handling control, a good idea

for customers with towing demands. The FE2 suspension packaged is tied in with the purchase of optional 18-inch wheels or the 19inch chrome-clad wheels on LTZ models. Fuel economy in this AWD model is rated at 13.2/8.4L/100 (city/hwy)

although, as usual, real world testing numbers tend to average out closer to the ‘city’ rating. After 500 km or so of mixed driving conditions, my fuel economy average worked out to 12.6L/100km (comb). Inside, the Equinox offers a nice blend of com-

fort and conveniences. Instruments are well laid out and the blend of tones and textures, metallic highlights and Ice Blue ambient illumination sets an upscale tone to the interior. There are nooks and crannies for storage and a deep centre console that will swallow a laptop.

Some competitors may offer more cargo space but a standard MultiFlex rear seat allows 200 millimetres (7.9 inches) of fore/aft movement for best-in-class rear legroom and luggage versatility. With the 60/40 splitback rear seat moved all

the way forward, the cargo area offers 872 litres (30.8 cu ft) of storage. That expands to a maximum of 1,803 litres (63.7 cu ft) with the second row folded flat. This 2LT model with

See Chevy B8

r

r

WHO INSTALLS YOUR WINTER TIRES IS AS IMPORTANT AS YOUR WINTER TIRES. Ford Technicians aren’t your typical mechanics. They’re trained by Ford to know your Ford better than anyone else, especially when it comes to winter tires. They’ll help you find the tires that fit your vehicle best, according to its year, model, weight and drivetrain. This winter, don’t let just anyone install your winter tires. TRUST THE EXPERTS WHO KNOW YOUR FORD BEST.

Motorcraft®

WINTER TIRES

A fu full range of national brand name tires and the exp expert knowledge to help you make the best choice.

WE W WILL NOT BE UNDERSOLD ON TIRES! ††

100

$

UP TO

in Tire Manufacturer Mail-In Rebates.‡‡ See your Service Advisor for details.

Steel Ste or aluminum wheels alu

49

$

FROM

BRAKE PADS OR SHOES

Genuine Motorcraft® brake pads and shoes are engineered to fit your Ford perfectly. And, because they’re covered by our Lifetime Warranty , they could be the last you’ll ever buy. V

INCLUDES: Replacement of front or rear pads or shoes** Service of calipers, mounts and sliders

99 PER WHEEL

PLUS, convenient tire storage at participating locations.1 PLU

Inspection of rotors, hydraulic system and brake fluid levels

199

$

FROM

99

**

Includes installation

Ask A k about b t our

Help prepare for winter with select brand name tires, wheels and a tire pressure monitoring sensor designed by Ford for your Ford.

For more details and offers, visit us at your BC Ford Store or ford.ca

All offers expire December 15, 2012. Offers may be cancelled at any time without notice. See Service Advisor for complete details. Applicable taxes and provincial levies not included. Dealer may sell for less. Only available at participating locations. 1Storage term is at the Dealer’s sole discretion, up to a maximum of one year. ††In order to receive a local competitor’s advertised price: (i) tires must be purchased and installed at your participating Ford Dealer; (ii) customer must present the competitor’s actual local advertisement (containing the lower price) which must have been printed within 30 days of the sale; and (iii) the tires being purchased must be the same brand, sidewall, speed and load ratings as shown in the competitive advertisement. Offer only available at participating Ford dealerships. This offer is valid on the cost of the tire only and does not include labour costs, valve stems, mounting, balancing, disposal, and taxes. Offer does not apply to advertised prices outside of Canada, in eBay advertisements, by tire wholesalers and online tire retailers, or closeout, special order, discontinued and clearance/liquidation offers. Limited time offer. Offer may be cancelled or changed at any time without prior notice. See your Service Advisor for details. VFord Protection Plan is only available for non-commercial cars and light trucks. If an eligible Ford, Motorcraft® or Ford-approved part fails due to a defect in material or workmanship, wear out or rust through, it will be replaced at no charge as long as the original purchaser of the part owns the vehicle on which the part was installed. Labour is covered for the first 12 months or 20,000 km (whichever occurs first) after the date of installation. Emergency brake pads are not eligible under this plan. See Service Advisor for complete details and limitations. ‡‡ Rebate offers are manufacturer’s mail-in rebates. Rebates available on select Hankook, Continental (credit card gift card), General Tire (credit card gift card), Goodyear, Dunlop, Pirelli, Yokohama, Bridgestone (credit card gift card), Firestone (credit card gift card), Michelin and Toyo tires. Offers are valid on qualifying sets of four tires, purchased and installed at participating locations during the respective promotion periods for each tire brand. Offer is valid on the cost of the tire(s) only and does not include labour costs, valve stems, mounting, balancing, disposal, and taxes. Amount of rebates, start dates and expiration dates (range from November 20 – December 31, 2012) vary depending on tire manufacturer. It is the responsibility of the customer to submit the required claim forms and proof of purchase to the relevant tire manufacturer with sufficient postage by the required deadline for that rebate offer. See your Service Advisor for complete details and claim forms. ** Excludes emergency brake pads or shoes. Machining or replacement of rotors and drums available at additional cost. © 2012 Ford Motor Company of Canada, Limited. All rights reserved.


B8 www.kelownacapnews.com

Friday, November 9, 2012 Capital News

MOTORING ▼ TEST DRIVE

2LT model offers the bells and whistles INSIDE THE 2013 EQUINOX with near

Chevy from B7

mid-size passenger and cargo room, sliding second row, multiple storage areas and new MyLink audio/ infotainment with Bluetooth connectivity.

TI FI M RS E T EV ER !

CONTRIBUTED

2013 ELANTRA

2012 CANADIAN & NORTH AMERICAN CAR OF THE YEAR

$0 DOWN PAYMENT

96

$

AT

BI-WEEKLY

2.95% FINANCING FOR 84 MONTHS

HWY: 5.2L/100 KM CITY: 7.1L/100 KM

15,694

$

FRIENDS & & FAMILY FAMILY FRIENDS SELLING PRICE PRICE SELLING

ʕ

OFFER INCLUDES $1,750 IN PRICE ADJUSTMENTS‡. ELANTRA L 6-SPEED MANUAL. DELIVERY & DESTINATION INCLUDED.

Limited model shown

2013 ELANTRA GT

2013 AJAC BEST NEW SMALL CAR (OVER $21K)

HWY: 5.3L/100 KM CITY: 7.8L/100 KM

$0 DOWN PAYMENT

FRIENDS & FAMILY SELLING PRICE

116 2.95

$

%

AT

BI-WEEKLY

18,969

$

ʕ

OFFER INCLUDES $1,675 IN PRICE ADJUSTMENTS‡. ELANTRA GT GL 6-SPEED MANUAL. DELIVERY & DESTINATION INCLUDED.

FINANCING FOR 84 MONTHS

SE with Tech. shown

AWARDED THE HIGHEST GOVERNMENT CRASH SAFETY RATINGʆ U.S. NATIONAL HIGHWAY TRAFFIC SAFETY ADMINISTRATION

2013 SONATA

GET UP TO

3,250

$

IN PRICE ADJUSTMENTS‡

WITH

0%

FINANCING FOR 24 MONTHS

HWY: 5.6L/100 KM CITY: 8.7L/100 KM

22,314

$

FRIENDS & FAMILY SELLING PRICE

ʕ

OFFER INCLUDES $3,250 IN PRICE ADJUSTMENTS‡. SONATA GL AUTO. DELIVERY & DESTINATION INCLUDED.

Limited model shown

2013 SANTA FE

2013 AJAC BEST NEW SUV (OVER $35K)

HWY: 6.7L/100 KM CITY: 10.1L/100 KM

$0 DOWN PAYMENT

165 2.95

$

%

AT

BI-WEEKLY

Limited model shown

FINANCING FOR 84 MONTHS

5-year/100,000 km Comprehensive Limited Warranty 5-year/100,000 km Powertrain Warranty 5-year/100,000 km Emission Warranty

FRIENDS & FAMILY SELLING PRICE

27,109

$

ʕ

OFFER INCLUDES $1,150 IN PRICE ADJUSTMENTS‡. SANTA FE 2.4L FWD AUTO. DELIVERY & DESTINATION INCLUDED.

added options comes close to the trappings of a full-blown LTZ version. Some of the features include the new MyLink audio and connectivity suite of technologies with navigation, the Pioneer premium sound system, heated leather seating and more. Frankly, with all the extras, this tester in 2LT trim ($31,825) with AWD ($1,950), 3.6-litre V6 ($1,725), power sunroof ($1,095), 18-inch chrome wheels ($950), MyLink with navigation ($795), Convenience package with power liftgate and universal home remote ($675) and other options, comes to a total price of $42,595, which seems somewhat removed from the Equinox’s frugal origins. I would personally opt for a simpler choice but it’s the wide versatility of trim and packaging levels that makes the Equinox a viable contender in a market niche crowded with other competent competitors like the Kia Sportage, Hyundai Tucson or Santa Fe, Nissan Rogue, Mazda CX-5 and Ford Escape, to name just a few. Customers playing the made-inCanada card should also consider the Toyota RAV4 and Honda CR-V. The Equinox and its GMC Terrain sibling have been a boon for the CAMI plant in Ingersoll, Ontario (see sidebar attached), with three recent upgrades in shift numbers and volume, and with some final assembly in Oshawa. But there is also some worry

as GM shifts a production percentage to the former Saturn plant in Spring Hill, Tennessee. Hopefully, the Canadian standards of production excellence that have contributed so much to the Equinox’s competitive spirit and sales success will continue to make it a viable made-in-Canada alternative.

CHEVROLET EQUINOX 2LT AWD 2012

Body Style: fourdoor, five-passenger compact crossover SUV. Drive Method: frontengine, front- or all-wheel drive. Engine Choices: 2.4-litre direct injection inline four-cylinder engine (182 hp, 172 lb/ft); As Tested 3.6-litre direct injection V6 engine (301 hp, 272 lb/ft) Fuel Economy: 2.4-litre I-4 FWD 9.2/6.1L/100km (city/ hwy); 2.4-litre I-4 AWD 10.1/6.9L/100km (city/ hwy); 3.6-litre V6 FWD 12.4/8.1L/100km (city/hwy); As tested 3.6-litre V6 AWD 12.9/8.6L/100km (city/ hwy) Cargo: 872 litres (30.8 cu.ft.); 1803 litres (63.7 cu.ft.) with second row folded Tow Rating: 2.4-litre I-4 680 kg (1,500 lb); 3.0-litre V6 1,588 kg (3500 lb) Sample Prices: Equinox 2.4-litre FWD LS $26,935; 1LT $30,025; 2LT $31,825; LTZ $36,005; (AWD $1,650) (3.6-litre V6 $1,725) As Tested Price: $41,095 Website: www.gm.ca

HyundaiCanada.com

TM

The Hyundai names, logos, product names, feature names, images and slogans are trademarks owned by Hyundai Auto Canada Corp. †Finance offers available O.A.C. from Hyundai Financial Services based on a new 2013 Elantra L 6-Speed Manual/Elantra GT GL 6-Speed Manual/Sonata GL Auto/Santa Fe 2.4L FWD Auto with an annual finance rate of 2.95%/2.95%/0%/2.95% for 84/84/24/84 months. Bi-weekly payment is $96/$116/$430/$165. No down payment required. Cost of Borrowing is $1,689/$2,051/$0/$2,925. Finance offers include Delivery and Destination of $1,495/$1,495/$1,565/$1,760. Registration, insurance, PPSA, fees, levies, charges, license fees and all applicable taxes are excluded. Delivery and destination charge includes freight, P.D.E., dealer admin fees and a full tank of gas. Financing example: 2013 Sonata GL Auto for $22,314 at 0% per annum equals $430 bi-weekly for 24 months for a total obligation of $22,314. Cash price is $22,314. Cost of Borrowing is $0. Example price includes Delivery and Destination of $1,565. Registration, insurance, PPSA, fees, levies, charges, license fees and all applicable taxes are excluded. Delivery and destination charge includes freight, P.D.E., dealer admin fees and a full tank of gas. ʈFuel consumption for 2013 Elantra Sedan L 6-Speed Manual (HWY 5.2L/100KM; City 7.1L/100KM)/2013 Elantra GT GL 6-Speed Manual (HWY 5.3L/100KM; City 7.8L/100KM)/2013 Sonata GL Auto (HWY 5.6L/100KM; City 8.7L/100KM)/2013 Santa Fe 2.4L FWD Auto (HWY 6.7L/100KM, City 10.1L/100KM) are based on Manufacturer Testing. Actual fuel efficiency may vary based on driving conditions and the addition of certain vehicle accessories. Fuel economy figures are used for comparison purposes only. †ʕFriends & Family prices for models shown: 2013 Elantra Limited/Elantra GT SE Tech 6-Speed Auto/Sonata Limited/ Santa Fe 2.0T Limited AWD is $22,944/$26,214/$27,339/$39,009. Prices include Delivery and Destination charges of $1,495/$1,495/$1,565/$1,760. Registration, insurance, PPSA, fees, levies, charges, license fees and all applicable taxes are excluded. Delivery and destination charge includes freight, P.D.E., dealer admin fees and a full tank of gas. ʕFriends & Family Selling Prices are calculated against the selling price less all factory to dealer price adjustments (including Friends & Family price adjustments). Friends & Family Selling Prices include Delivery and Destination. Registration, insurance, PPSA, fees, levies, charges, license fees and all applicable taxes are excluded. Delivery and destination charge includes freight, P.D.E., dealer admin fees and a full tank of gas. ‡Factory to dealer price adjustments (including Friends & Family price adjustments) are calculated against the vehicle’s starting price. Factory to Dealer Price adjustments of $1,750/$1,675/$3,250/$1,150 available on 2013 Elantra L 6-Speed Manual/Elantra GT GL 6-Speed Manual/Sonata GL Auto/Santa Fe 2.4L FWD Auto includes Friends & Family price adjustments. Factory to dealer price adjustments are applied before taxes. Offer cannot be combined or used in conjunction with any other available offers. Offer is non-transferable and cannot be assigned. No vehicle trade-in required. †ʕ‡Offers available for a limited time, and subject to change or cancellation without notice. See dealer for complete details. Dealer may sell for less. Inventory is limited, dealer order may be required. ʆGovernment 5-Star Safety Ratings are part of the U.S. National Highway Traffic Safety Administration’s (NHTSA’s) New Car Assessment Program (www.SaferCar.gov). ††Hyundai’s Comprehensive Limited Warranty coverage covers most vehicle components against defects in workmanship under normal use and maintenance conditions.

Kelowna Hyundai 3260 Highway 97 North PAPER TO INSERT DEALER TAG HERE Kelowna, 250-491-9467 D#30301

D#30301

CONTRIBUTED

ON THE EQUINOX, 18-inch chromed wheels are optional as are larger 19-inch wheels on the LTZ model.


ON NOW AT YOUR BC BUICK GMC DEALERS. GMC.GM.CA 1-800-GM-DRIVE. GMC is a brand of General Motors of Canada. */††Offers apply to the purchase of a 2012 Sierra Light Duty Crew Cab, Terrain SLE-1, based on a purchase price of $26,295, equipped as described. Freight included ($1,495). License, insurance, registration, PPSA, administration fees and taxes not included. Dealers are free to set individual prices. Limited time offers which may not be combined with other offers, and are subject to change without notice. Offers apply to qualified retail customers in the BC Buick GMC Dealer Marketing Association area only. Conditions and limitations apply. See dealer for details. Purchase financing offered on approved credit by TD Auto Financing Services/Ally Credit. 2.99% financing offered on new or demonstrator Terrain SLE-1 models for 84 months. Rates from other lenders will vary. Down payment, trade and/or security deposit may be required. Monthly payment and cost of borrowing will vary depending on amount borrowed and down payment/trade. Example: $10,000 at 2.99% APR, the monthly payment is $132 for 84 months. Cost of borrowing is $1,088, total obligation is $11,088. WBased on GM Testing in accordance with approved Transport Canada test methods. Your actual fuel consumption may vary. +The Best Buy seal is a registered trademark of Consumers Digest Communications, LLC, used under license. ^* For more information visit iihs.org/ratings. ^5 year/160,000 km (whichever comes first) Powertrain Component warranty. Conditions and limitations apply. Based on most recent published competitive data available for WardsAuto.com 2012 Large Pickup segmentation. See dealer for details. ¼¼ 2012 GMC Terrain FWD equipped with standard 2.4L ECOTECŽ I-4 engine. Comparison based on Natural Resources Canada’s 2012 Fuel Consumption Guide and Ward’s Middle Cross/Utility Segment. Excludes other GM models. *†Comparison based on 2012 Wards segmentation: Middle/Cross Utility Vehicle and latest competitive data available, and based on the maximum legroom available. Excludes other GM brands. X$11,500/$3,500 manufacturer to dealer delivery credit available on the 2012 Sierra Light Duty Crew Cab/Terrain for retail customers only and are tax exclusive. Other cash credits available on most models. See your GMC dealer for details. †*To qualify for GMCL’s Cash For Clunkers incentive, you must: (1) turn in a 2006 or older MY vehicle that is in running condition and has been registered and properly insured in your name for the last 3 months (2) turn in a 2006 or older MY vehicle that is in running condition and has been registered and properly insured under a small business name for the last 3 months. GMCL will provide eligible consumers with a manufacturer to consumer incentive (tax inclusive) to be used towards the purchase/finance/lease of a new eligible 2012 or 2013 MY Chevrolet Colorado, GMC Canyon, Chevrolet Silverado, GMC Sierra, or Chevrolet Avalanche delivered between October 2, 2012 and January 2, 2013. Incentive ranges from $1500 to $3,000, depending on model purchased. Incentive may not be combined with certain other offers. By participating in the Cash For Clunkers program you will not be eligible for any trade-in value for your vehicle. See your participating GM dealer for additional program conditions and details. GMCL may modify, extend or terminate program in whole or in part at any time without notice.

Capital News Friday, November 9, 2012

$

$ "

www.kelownacapnews.com B9

MODEL YEAR-END EVENT

LOWEST PRICES AND PAYMENTS $ ( " # $ # UP TO

11,500 $

3,000 †*

# '

$ "" #

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GMC.GM.CA

Call Jacobsen Buick GMC Cadillac at 250-860-7700, or visit us at 2727 Highway 97 North, Kelowna. [License #9748] Recycle your 2006 model year or older vehicle and receive up to $3,000 towards the cash purchase, financing or leasing of an eligible 2012 or 2013 Sierra (HD amount shown).

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VISIT YOUR BC GMC DEALER TODAY TO TAKE ADVANTAGE OF THESE LIMITED TIME OFFERS

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B10 www.kelownacapnews.com

Friday, November 9, 2012 Capital News

MOTORING ▼ FIRST DRIVE

Like other VWs, handling excellent in Jetta Hybrid VW from B5

CONTRIBUTED

EXCEPT FOR the Power Meter replacing the

virtue; the Hybrid being no exception with my codriver commenting the

PLEASE READ THE FINE PRINT: Offers valid until November 30, 2012. See toyota.ca for complete details on all cash back offers. In the event of any discrepancy or inconsistency between Toyota prices, rates and/or other information contained on toyotabc.ca and that contained on toyota.ca, the latter shall prevail. Errors and omissions excepted. *2012 Camry Sedan LE Automatic BF1FLT-A MSRP is $25,390 and includes $1,690 freight and pre-delivery inspection, tire levy, battery levy and air conditioning federal excise tax. Lease example: 2.9% Lease APR for 48 months. Monthly payment is $278 with $2,660 down payment. Total Lease obligation is $16,000. Lease 48 mos. based on 80,000 km, excess km charge is $.10. Applicable taxes are extra. **2012 Tacoma 4x4 DCab V6 5A TRD Automatic MU4FNA-CA MSRP is $36,810 and includes $1,760 freight and pre-delivery inspection, tire levy, battery levy and air conditioning federal excise tax. Lease example: 2.9% Lease APR for 48 months. Monthly payment is $399 with $4,034 down payment. Total Lease obligation is $23,186. Lease 48 mos. based on 80,000 km, excess km charge is $.10. Applicable taxes are extra. ***2012 Prius Liftback Automatic KN3DUP-A MSRP is $27,685 and includes $1,690 freight and pre-delivery inspection, tire levy, battery levy and air conditioning federal excise tax. Lease example: 1.9% Lease APR for 48 months. Monthly payment is $299 with $2,538 down payment. Total Lease obligation is $16,890. Lease 48 mos. based on 80,000 km, excess km charge is $.10. Applicable taxes are extra. †0% finance for 72 months, upon credit approval, available on 2012 Corolla, Matrix, RAV4, and Tundra. Down payment, first monthly payment and security deposit plus HST on first payment and full down payment are due at lease inception. A security deposit is not required on approval of credit. $6000 Non-stackable Cash Back available on 2012 Tundra 4x4 DCab 5.7L models. Non-stackable Cash Back offers may not be combined with Toyota Financial Services lease or finance rates. Vehicle must be purchased, registered and delivered by November 30, 2012. See toyota.ca for complete details on all cash back offers. Informational 72 month APR: Tundra 5.95%. Government regulation provides that the Informational APR includes the cash customer incentive which is only available to customers who do not purchase finance/lease through Toyota Financial Services at a special rate, as a cost of borrowing. If you would like to lease or finance at standard TFS rates (not special rates), then you may be able to take advantage of Cash Customer Incentives. Visit your Toyota BC Dealer or www.toyotabc.ca for more details. Some conditions apply; offers are time limited and may change without notice. Dealer may lease/sell for less.

tack in the instrument cluster, the interior of the Hybrid Jetta is only discernible by a small badge above the glovebox door.

, e c n a h c lastest offers b

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electric steering did not have a ‘wooden’ feel. Despite all the different ways of minding your consumption, I found the Power Meter more than sufficient. Cruising along the highway and watching how the battery’s boost would phase in and out helped me, in the short time I drove the car, modulate my right foot to get more from the system. When it arrives in Canadian showrooms early next year, the Jetta Hybrid will be offered in Trendline ($27,875), Comfortline ($30,175) and Highline ($34,025) trim levels. The Jetta still boasts the biggest interior passenger volume in the compact segment and, despite the battery back intruding into the trunk, cargo volume is still adequate at 11.3 cu ft. There is no doubt electrification of the automobile is no longer a novelty but part of the

route to greener, cleaner transportation. With the Hybrid added to the gasoline and diesel Jetta lineup, Volkswagen is on the right road to that goal.

VOLKSWAGEN JETTA HYBRID 2013

Body Style: Compact hybrid sedan. Drive Method: frontengine/electric motor, front-wheel-drive. Engine: 1.4-litre fourcylinder inline turbocharged (150 hp, 184 lb/ft of torque); 20kW (27 hp, 114 lb/ft); combined 170 hp/184 lb ft Fuel Economy: (Est.) 4.4L/100 km combined Cargo Capacity: 11.3 cu ft (0.32 cu m) TOW RATING: Not recommended Price: Trendline, $27,875; Comfortline $30,175; Highline $34,025. Website: www.vw.ca

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A M A Z I N G LY A F F O R D A B L E C A R S A N D T R U C K S

Make Things Better.

KELOWNA

TOYOTA

Steve Enns Pre-Owned Mgr. 17 years

Trusted since 1970

DEALER #5134

1200 Leathead Rd, Kelowna, B.C. | 250-491-2475 | www.kelownatoyota.com | Mon-Fri 8:30-7 | Sat 9-5 Steve White Sales Mgr. 27 years

der coupled with a 20 kW electric motor for a combined 170 hp and 184 lb/ft of torque. The lithium-ion battery is stowed under the rear seat, intruding on cargo space (below), which is still adequate at 11.3 cu ft.

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*on select 2012 models

Pat Fortin

Greg Klein

Rick August

Wendell Gillis

Steve John Fullerton

35 years

23 years

15 years

6 years

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Duane Preece


Capital News Friday, November 9, 2012

www.kelownacapnews.com B11

Your community. Your classifieds.

250.763.7114 fax 250.862.5275 email classified@kelownacapnews.com INDEX IN BRIEF FAMILY ANNOUNCEMENTS COMMUNITY ANNOUNCEMENTS TRAVEL CHILDREN EMPLOYMENT BUSINESS SERVICES PETS & LIVESTOCK MERCHANDISE FOR SALE REAL ESTATE RENTALS AUTOMOTIVE ADULT ENTERTAINMENT LEGAL NOTICES

AGREEMENT It is agreed by any display or Classified Advertiser requesting space that the liability of the paper in the event of failure to publish an advertisement shall be limited to the amount paid by the advertiser for that portion of the advertising space occupied by the incorrect item only, and that there shall be no liability in any event beyond the amount paid for such advertisement. The publisher shall not be liable for slight changes or typographical errors that do not lessen the value of an advertisement.

Announcements

DISCRIMINATORY LEGISLATION Advertisers are reminded that Provincial legislation forbids the publication of any advertisement which discriminates against any person because of race, religion, sex, color, nationality, ancestry or place of origin, or age, unless the condition is justified by a bona fide requirement for the work involved.

COPYRIGHT Copyright and/or properties subsist in all advertisements and in all other material appearing in this edition of bcclassified.com. Permission to reproduce wholly or in part and in any form whatsoever, particularly by a photographic or offset process in a publication must be obtained in writing from the publisher. Any unauthorized reproduction will be subject to recourse in law.

ON THE WEB:

bc classified.com

Obituaries

Announcements

Announcements

Coming Events

Funeral Homes

Craft Fairs

Coming Events

Credible Cremation

QUILTERS Christmas Craft Sale, at Linda’s Quilt Shoppe, 948 Mc Curdy Rd.(in the classroom) Friday, Nov.16, 1pm6pm. & Sat., Nov 17, 9am6pm, Cash or cheques only. FREE ADMISSION !

Basic Cremation $1390 + taxes

HOME Based Business Christmas Fair At Holiday Park Resort 1-415 Commonwealth Rd. Kelowna Turn at the Big Boat on the Highway Enter Through the Front Gate Saturday November 10. 9am to 2pm Lots Of Great Vendors In One Place

Coming Events

KELOWNA SINGLES DANCE EVERY other SATURDAY. night,Rutland Centennial Hall. Live music, 8pm-12am, Lunch, Refreshments 250-862-8640

Services Ltd. (Kelowna Area)

24 Hours “No Hidden Costs”

1-250-493-3912

Pre-Pay and Save www.crediblecremation.com 559 Ellis Street, Penticton, BC

Obituaries

ATTENTION The Capital News cannot be responsible for errors after the first day of publication of any advertisement. Notice of errors on the first day should immediately be called to the attention of the Classified Department to be corrected for the following edition. CCA TOWN HALL MEETING, Thursday, November 22, 2012 3:30 PM at Coast Kamloops Hotel & Conference Centre in Kamloops, BC. Beef producers, come and get a first-hand account of the many initiatives the CCA is involved in on your behalf and the progress we are making toward improving industry competitiveness for the long term. Learn more and RSVP at www.cattle.ca/townhall or call 403-275-8558. Meetings sponsored by Farm Credit Canada.

bcclassified.com cannot be responsible for errors after the first day of publication of any advertisement. Notice of errors on the first day should immediately be called to the attention of the Classified Department to be corrected for the following edition. bcclassified.com reserves the right to revise, edit, classify or reject any advertisement and to retain any answers directed to the bcclassified.com Box Reply Service and to repay the customer the sum paid for the advertisement and box rental.

Announcements

Obituaries

FIRST MEMORIAL FUNERAL SERVICE To find out the many benefits of pre-arranging please call 762-2299

Terance Coderre Assistant Manager

1211 SUTHERLAND AVENUE www.firstmemorialkelowna.com

BOUCHER, PIERRE .

It is with great sadness that we announce the passing of our beloved husband, dad, papa, brother and friend. Pierre passed away peacefully on October 30th, 2012 at the Hospice House at the age of 73, surrounded by the love of his family, after a courageous 17 year battle with cancer. Predeceased by his parents Philippe and Lillian Boucher and sister Dora in Montreal. He will be forever missed by his loving family, wife Renate, daughter Jennifer Boucher, Kelowna, son Philippe (Marlise) Boucher, Fruitvale, his cherished grand children Madison and Brooklin Boucher, Fruitvale, sister Helene (Roger) Ethier, Montreal, brothers Edmond (Madeleine), Claude (Francine) and Michel Boucher, Montreal and several nieces and nephews all of Montreal , his sisters-in-law Erika Burress, Kelowna and Edelgard Haas, San Francisco. Our heartfelt thanks to Dr. Dan Obedkoff for his excellent care and compassion and for always being there for Pierre and to the wonderful nurses and staff at KGH and the Hospice House. Cremation to follow. A Mass will be held at a later date followed by interment in the family memorial gravesite in Waterloo, Quebec. Donations may be made to the Okanagan Hospice House in Pierre’s memory. Arrangements entrusted with First Memorial Funeral Services, Kelowna. 250-762-2299.

“Memories made to last”

Toll Free: 1-800-665-4143 (BC)

15818 Industrial Ave. Summerland, BC V0H 1Z6 www.gracogranite.com

SPCA (Aux) Book & Jewellery Sale! Thurs - Fri - Sat, Nov. 15 - 16 - 17, 9:30-5pm. Store #25, Mission Park Shopping Centre, 3155 Lakeshore Rd.

In Memoriam

In Memoriam

In Loving Memory of

Demetrius Nicholas Goreas 1936 - 2011

XMAS BAKE SALE & TEA Sat.,Nov 10, 9:30am-1:30pm UKR Orthodox Hall 1935 Barlee Rd Braided bread, perogies, cabbage rolls,baked goods & much more!

You suffered much in silence, Your spirit did not bend, You fought for life with courage, Until the very end, Memories are a gift to treasure, Ours of you will last forever. You are forever in our hearts Uncle Jim. Love Fotini, Niko (Renee), Jasmine (Carlo), Olga (Jace) Ashley, Thomas, Katerina, Lucas and Alexandra

Engagements

Engagements

Information

Community Newspapers We’re at the heart of things™

PET Grooming NOW Open at Bone Appetit in Glenmore, 111-1940 Kane Rd. 862-2663

Obituaries

Obituaries

PETERS, PETER “PETE” Passed away on November 3, 2012 at the age of 97 years. Dad was sadly predeceased two and half months ago by his loving wife and companion of almost 72 years, Maria. He is survived by five children: Gorden (Shirley) Peters, Martha (Harry) Koop, Frank (Shirley) Peters, Gloria (George) Boyle, Frances (Albert) Lemire; eleven grandchildren; numerous great grandchildren; one great great grandchild; his sister, Suzanna Peters and brother Abe Peters. Many thanks to the staff at Sutherland Hills for their excellent care of our Father. A Memorial Service will be held on Friday, November 16, 2012 at 10:30am at The Church of God, 3705 Mission Springs Drive, Kelowna. Condolences may be sent to the family by visiting www.springfieldfuneralhome.com 250-860-7077.

MARGUERITE DODDS Marguerite Dodds, 102, of Kelowna, passed away on Tuesday November 6, 2012 at Sun Pointe in Rutland. She was born Marguerite Anne Emma Vandendriessche in Weyburn, Saskatchewan on October 23, 1910. She graduated from Weyburn Collegiate in 1928, and graduated as a Registered Nurse on May 9, 1933 from the Grey Nuns School of Nursing in Regina. She worked at the Mayo Clinic in Rochester Minnesota, at Seton Hospital in Jasper, and at the Kelowna General. Marguerite married Earl Dodds on November 26, 1939 in Edmonton and they moved to Kelowna in 1948. They had six children: Bert Dodds (deceased), Beverley Woodward (Gordon); Betty Timuss; Marvin Dodds (Terry); Kenneth Dodds (Norma); Peggy Kinley (George). She has 12 grandchildren and 11 great grandchildren. Marguerite is survived by her sisters, Alice Vandendriessche, Blanche Keating and Doris Vandendriesshe. The family would like to thank the staff at Sun Pointe and the Kelowna General Hospital for their dedication and support. A memorial mass will be held on Saturday, November 10, 2012 at 10:00 am at St. Theresa’s Catholic Church, 750 Rutland Road, Kelowna, BC with Father Otto Rollheiser OMI as celebrant. In lieu of flowers, memorial donations may be made to St. Theresa’s Church. Condolences may be sent to the family by visiting www.springfieldfuneralhome.com, 250-860-7077.

Donna & Kimmo Numminen with Sue & Rob McKenzie are thrilled to announce the upcoming marriage of their children!

Sarah Numminen to David McKenzie Mexico, March 2013

Birth Announcements Starting at

42

$

Call the Classifieds to book a space

763-7114 or email: classified@kelownacapnews.com

Coming Events

Coming Events

SPECIAL NOTICE Big Brothers Big Sisters of the Okanagan

Annual General Meeting The 2012 Annual General Meeting will be held on: Monday, November 26, 2012 at 5:00 p.m. at Grant Thornton LLP #200-1633 Ellis St Kelowna, BC V1Y 2A8 Nominations for Directors are to be submitted to the Big Brothers Big Sisters office #102-151 Commercial Drive, Kelowna, BC, V1X 7W2 Phone: (250) 765-2661 Fax: (250) 765-3057 no later than Friday, November 23, 2012 at 12:00 Noon. Attention: Deanna Stone, Nominations Chair Please RSVP by Friday, November 23, 2012


B12 www.kelownacapnews.com

Announcements

Friday, November 9, 2012 Capital News

Information

Announcements

Employment

Personals

Business Opportunities

Information ADVERTISE in the LARGEST OUTDOOR PUBLICATION IN BC The 2013-2015 BC Freshwater Fishing Regulations Synopsis The most effective way to reach an incredible number of BC Sportsmen & women. Two year edition- terriďŹ c presence for your business.

Please call Annemarie 1.800.661.6335 email: ďŹ sh@blackpress.ca

While we try to ensure all advertisements appearing in the Kelowna Capital News are placed by reputable businesses with legitimate offers, we do caution our readers to undertake due diligence when answering any advertisement, particularly when the advertiser is asking for monies up front. Refund Policy Our ads are non-refundable when booked for less than 4 weeks (12 issues), when cancelling a 4 week ad you will be refunded in weekly increments only, calculated at the appropriate discount level. Refunds not available for 1/2 price promotion.

Level 2 Water Distribution Operator Required. Rutland Waterworks requires a Level 2 Water Distribution Operator. The ideal candidate possesses a Level 2 CertiďŹ cation, and will work towards obtaining a Level 3 Five years experience in the water industry. Class 5 driver’s license - must provide a driver’s abstract. This person should have experience in the following areas: SCADA, PRV maintenance, Pump maintenance & installation, Backow prevention, Meter maintenance, Hydrant maintenance, Water quality testing and basic understanding of hydraulics. The successful candidate would be responsible for the day to day operations of a water district. The position is a full time 40 hour per week position with on call requirements for every 4th weekend and some weeknights of pager duty. Please respond with your resume. No interviews or drop in interviews will be granted without going through the resume process. Resumes can be emailed to info@rutlandwaterworks.com

or dropped off at our ofďŹ ce: Suite # 106-200 Dougall Rd. North, Kelowna BC.

single man with small housecleaning business looking for partner, 1-888-492-2543

Lost & Found FOUND: Ereader and Calculator, near Hwy 97/Banks Road bus stop. 250-763-0393. FOUND: Saturday, Nov 3rd afternoon, SpringďŹ eld & Spall 2 gas containers 1 & 2 gal. lawn rake & extension cord. Call 250-763-1294 to claim LOST: Black duffel bag with important items inside. Reward offered. (250)870-0548 LOST: Black Iphone 4, Rutland area. Phone 250-7653468 or 250-801-0634. Reward offered.

Career Opportunities

GIFT BASKET franchise needed in your area. Start before the Christmas Season. For more information go to www.obbgifts.com and click on “own a franchiseâ€?. Any questions? Email head ofďŹ ce directly through website or call (778)-753-4500 (Kelowna). WANTED! People who... Love fashion & beauty...& Want to earn money while having fun. Audra Allen District Manager Looking to ďŹ ll areas all through the Okanagan 18 6 6 - 4 8 4 - 0 3 6 9 audra.allen@avon.com

Employment Business Opportunities ‘BUSINESS LOANS’ For a new start up or expansion loans, contact Community Futures Developement Corp. Dave Scott, Loan Manager, 250-868-2132 ext 227 FABULOUS Future! Biz partners wanted. No experience needed. Full training given. Must have own money. Apply here: www.freedomstarter.com

Information

Career Opportunities ATTENTION LOGGERS! The Isley Group of Grande Prairie, AB. is currently hiring: Forestry Equipment Operators (Processor & Buncher) and Log Haul Truck Drivers. Please submit resume & driver’s abstract to: hr@isley.ca or fax: (780) 5321250

Vernon School District No. 22 CertiďŹ ed Education Assistant Level 2 - Signing School District No. 22 (Vernon) is currently accepting applications for a: CertiďŹ ed Education Assistant Signing ASL Level 7 Temporary to June 2013 but may become permanent. The successful applicants will have: Recent Okanagan College CertiďŹ ed Education Assistant (CEA) CertiďŹ cate including practicum experience or CPI training in dealing with resistant students, conict resolution. Familiarity with current computer programs such as Boardmaker, Intellitools, Clicker, Kurzweil, etc. Possess and maintain current First Aid or CPR CertiďŹ cate Background in signed communication ASL Level 7 required or equivalentPrevious experience desirable Registration/Association with AVLIC and/or WAVLI. This position is in a union environment. Interested and qualiďŹ ed applicants should forward their resume with supporting documentation, professional references and cover letter by November 23, 2012 to: Human Resources Support Staff School District No. 22 (Vernon)1401-15th Street, Vernon, B.C. V1T 8S8 email: personnel@sd22.bc.ca fax:(250)549-9200 www.sd22.bc.ca Only those persons selected for interviews will be contacted. To all others, thank you for your interest.

Contractor Sales Manager Primarily responsible for day-to-day management of Contractor Sales Departments and will work in partnership with the General Manager to achieve company goals. Must have previous experience in management and/or contractor retail sales. We offer competitive wage and excellent employee beneÀts. Closing date is 1ovember .

Personals HANDSOME man dark ďŹ t professional seeks 40-55yr old warm petite fun lady for possible LTR who enjoys bonďŹ res, romance & travel. Reply to box #331 - 2495 Enterprise Way, Kelowna, BC. V1Z 7K4

To request a detailed job summary and preferred qualiÀFations or to submit a resume please email Nim sFKepers#KKbFFreston Fa

Christmas Corner

Join our Creston team!

It’s that time of the year! Advertise your craft sale in our Creative Craft Corner a 1 column x 2 inch ad with text & graphics for as low as $16/day actual ad size

Call the 763-7114

Career Opportunities

Career Opportunities

玽— ÚÊçĂ™ Â‘ÂƒĂ™Â›Â›Ă™ óŽã çĂ? Process Control Supervisor ,ĞŋĞLJ ĆŒÄžÄžĹŹÍ• ` &Ĺ˝Ä?ĆľĆ? ŽŜ Ć?Ä‚ĨĞƚLJ Ć‰ÄžĆŒĨŽĆŒĹľÄ‚ĹśÄ?Äž ` /ŜĚƾĆ?ĆšĆŒÇ‡ ĹŻÄžÄ‚ÄšÄžĆŒ Ĺ?Ĺś Ç Ĺ˝ĆŒĹŻÄš ĹľÄ‚ĆŒĹŹÄžĆšĆ? ` ŽžĆ‰ÄžĆ&#x;Ć&#x;ǀĞ ŽžĆ‰ÄžĹśĆ?Ä‚Ć&#x;ŽŜ ƉĂÄ?ĹŹÄ‚Ĺ?ÄžĆ? ` ^ĆľĆ?ƚĂĹ?ŜĂÄ?ĹŻÄž Ä?ĆľĆ?Ĺ?ŜĞĆ?Ć? Ć‰ĆŒÄ‚Ä?Ć&#x;Ä?ÄžĆ? ` WĆŒĹ˝Ĺ?ĆŒÄžĆ?Ć?Ĺ?ǀĞ ĞŜǀĹ?ĆŒŽŜžÄžĹśĆš Do you thrive in a dynamic and challenging environment with opportuniĆ&#x;es Ĩor conĆ&#x;nuous growth and development?

Apply today at www.tolko.com

PRODUCTION SUPERVISOR

(Woods Foreman) TIMBERLANDS Campbell River, BC Mid Island Forest Operation is a continuous harvest operation (6x3 shift) harvesting 1.1 MM M3 annually and building 140 km of road. Working as part of a team of supervisors, this position will have direct responsibility for woods operations and union crews. The successful candidate will value the team-oriented approach, have a good working knowledge of applicable occupational safety regulations, first-hand knowledge and experience in a unionized environment, and will be responsible for planning, supervision of hourly personnel, safe work performance and the achievement of departmental goals. Further job details can be viewed at:

http://www.westernforest.com/building-value/our-people-employment/careers WFP offers a competitive salary, a comprehensive benefit and pension package and the potential to achieve annual performance rewards. Please reply in confidence, citing Reference Code. )VNBO 3FTPVSDF %FQBSUNFOU t 'BDTJNJMF Email: resumes@westernforest.com "QQMJDBUJPO %FBEMJOF 5IVSTEBZ /PWFNCFS 3FGFSFODF $PEF 1SPEVDUJPO 4QWTPS .*'0

Education/Trade Schools

Education/Trade Schools

BUILD YOUR CAREER WITH US Purchaser DÄžĆŒĆŒĹ?ƚƚ͕ ` &Ĺ˝Ä?ĆľĆ? ŽŜ Ć?Ä‚ĨĞƚLJ Ć‰ÄžĆŒĨŽĆŒĹľÄ‚ĹśÄ?Äž ` /ŜĚƾĆ?ĆšĆŒÇ‡ ĹŻÄžÄ‚ÄšÄžĆŒ Ĺ?Ĺś Ç Ĺ˝ĆŒĹŻÄš ĹľÄ‚ĆŒĹŹÄžĆšĆ? ` ŽžĆ‰ÄžĆšĹ?ĆšĹ?ǀĞ ŽžĆ‰ÄžĹśĆ?Ä‚ĆšĹ?ŽŜ ƉĂÄ?ĹŹÄ‚Ĺ?ÄžĆ? ` ^ĆľĆ?ƚĂĹ?ŜĂÄ?ĹŻÄž Ä?ĆľĆ?Ĺ?ŜĞĆ?Ć? Ć‰ĆŒÄ‚Ä?ĆšĹ?Ä?ÄžĆ? ` WĆŒĹ˝Ĺ?ĆŒÄžĆ?Ć?Ĺ?ǀĞ ĞŜǀĹ?ĆŒŽŜžÄžĹśĆš Do you thrive in a dynamic and challenging environment with opportunities for continuous growth and development?

Apply today at www.tolko.com

Place a classiďŹ ed word ad and...

IT WILL GO ON LINE! Education/Trade Schools

Education/Trade Schools

Become a Psychiatric Nurse in your own community There is an urgent need for more Registered Psychiatric Nurses (RPN), particularly outside the urban areas of the province. And with the workforce aging – the average age of a Registered Psychiatric Nurse in BC is 47 years – the number of retirees from the profession is exceeding the number of graduates. Entry-level earnings start at $30.79/hour to $40.42/hour. Train Locally – The only program of its kind in BC, students can learn within their local communities via distance education, local and/or regional clinical placements, and some regional classroom delivery. This 23 month program is accredited by the College of Registered Psychiatric Nurses of BC (CRPNBC). Government student loans, Employment & Labour Market Services (ELMS), band funding & other ďŹ nancing options available to qualiďŹ ed applicants.

Toll Free:

1-87-STENBERG www.stenbergcollege.com


Capital News Friday, November 9, 2012

www.kelownacapnews.com B13

Employment

Employment

Employment

Employment

Employment

Employment

Employment

Career Opportunities

Career Opportunities

Career Opportunities

Education/Trade Schools

Education/Trade Schools

Education/Trade Schools

Drivers/Courier/ Trucking

Interior Heavy Equipment Operator School OPERATORS

ARE IN

‘Like Us’

DEMAND

iheschool.com x x x x x x

NO Simulators. In-the-seat Training Only Never share equipment REAL WORLD TASKS Job board & placement aid FREE SITE TOURS Classes start every Monday Call 1 399--3853 866--399 1--866 Funding options, Call for details

Class 1 Drivers to haul dry vans Western Canada & US. Only drivers with 2 years exp. & US border crossing capability. Local Drivers also required. Dedicated tractors, paid drops, direct deposit. No phone calls Fax 250-546-0600 Owner Operators Wanted for Canadian Operation No start-up costs, fuel & safety incentives, lots of miles, benefits & much more. Above average RPM. Limited Number of Trucks required, apply today Email resume to: annette.paradis @monarchtransport .com

Farm Workers

GP SANDHER Holding ltd looking for farm workers. Winter pruning, thinning, cherry picking, sorting, apple picking. $10.25/hr or piece rate up to 40hrs. 6days/wk. Avail January 15,2013. 250-765-9471 billsandher@hotmail.com

Help Wanted Help Wanted

Help Wanted

Help Wanted

EMPLOYMENT OPPORTUNITIES

PLANNING ASSISTANT Education/Trade Schools

Education/Trade Schools

Education/Trade Schools

CREATING BRIGHTER FUTURES SINCE 1903

BUSINESS Business Management Accounting & Payroll Administrative Assistant Business Administration International Trade Legal Assistant Marketing & Sales Sales Professional

TOURISM & HOSPITALITY MANAGEMENT International Hospitality Tourism & Hospitality Food & Beverage Hotel Management Conference Management

(Full Time — Temporary) November 19, 2012 - December 13, 2013 (approximately) Reporting to the Manager, Community Development and the Manager, Economic Development, this position performs a full range of technical planning support functions requiring skilled planning and regulatory work. This position focuses on economic development and long range planning matters, as well as supporting the planning review process for development applications, providing information and interpreting regulations/policies/ processes, making recommendations to development applicants and various internal and external clients. Please see our website at www.vernon.ca for a complete job description and method of application. Closing date is November 16, 2012. Please quote competition # 61-COV-12.

ARE YOU EXPERIENCING FINANCIAL DISTRESS? Relief is only a call away! call 250-979-4357 to set up your FREE consultation in Kelowna. Donna Mihalcheon CA, CIRP 33 years experience. BDO Canada Limited. Trustee in Bankruptcy. #200-1628 Dickson Avenue. Kelowna, BC V1Y 9X1

Landmark I #210-1726 Dolphin Ave. Kelowna, BC www.cfdcco.bc.ca

YOUTH MEANS BUSINESS A new business development program targeting youth 18-29 is now taking applications. Applicants must not be receiving EI or have established an EI claim in past 3 years (5 years for maternity). This unique program will help you examine your business opportunity, develop your business idea and complete a business plan to get ready for start-up. Up to a $5,000 grant is available to those that are selected.

HEALTH AND DEVELOPMENT

Attend a free Information Session: Fridays from 10am —12 noon

Practical Nursing Community Support Social Services Assisted Living Health Care Assistant Health Unit Clerk Live-In Caregiver Pharmacy Assistant Spa Body Therapy

Call 250-868-2132

Funding provided through the Canada-British Columbia Labour Market Agreement

CALL NOW Must be able to start immediately. Company training. FT permanent positions.

TRADES Construction Electrician Levels 1, 2 & 3

2,500+/mo to start!

$

EDUCATION Early Childhood Education Basic & Post Basic

FIND YOUR BEST FIT Before embarking on a sucessful career, you need to know what industry and general position you are interested in. Speaking with one of our career advisors will help you outline your career goals and what fields are best suited to you. You can even tour the campus, speak with current students, and find out where our graduates are now. A new career and life path is only a meeting away.

CALL KELOWNA: 250-860-8884 OR VISIT SPROTTSHAW.COM

Thinking About a Ca reer in Health Care? There’s no shortage

of demand for well-tra ined health care profes If you’re ready to launc sionals. h a rewarding career an d start making a real di in the lives of others, a fference diploma from Vancouve r Career College may be secret to your success. the Choose from:

· Practical Nursing · Addictions & Community · Health Care Assistant · Medical Office Assistant · Community Health · Ph Services Worker armacy Assistant Care Worker · An d More CONTACT US FOR MORE INFO

}

CALL: 1.866.306.3768

/VancouverCareerCollege

VISIT: kel.VCCollege.c a

/VCCollege

/VCCollege

Incentive bonuses. Promotions in 90 days. Call 250-860-9480 info@plazio.ca

An Alberta Construction Company is hiring Dozer and Excavator Operators. Preference will be given to operators that are experienced in oilfield road and lease construction. Lodging and meals provided. The work is in the vicinity of Edson, Alberta. Alcohol & Drug testing required. Call Contour Construction at 780-723-5051. BOUCHERIE Bottle Depot. FT Cashier required. Apply with Resume to Ken @ 2711 Kyle Rd, West Kelowna.

LICENSED GASFITTER/SHEETMETAL WORKER WANTED Valid drivers license required. Fax resume to (250) 785-5542 or pronorthheating@telus.net


B14 www.kelownacapnews.com

Friday, November 9, 2012 Capital News

Employment

Employment

Employment

Employment

Services

Services

Services

Help Wanted

Help Wanted

Help Wanted

Trades, Technical

Home Care

FIBRE GLASS CHOPPING gun operator wanted Okotoks Alberta Bath tub manufacturing plant. Please contact for details:1-(403)-938-2448 www.altrekproducts.com

Are you a senior requiring extra help? Crystal Care, quality care for seniors, 250-718-4892

Irrigation/Sprinkler Systems

Trucking/ Bull Dozing

JOURNEYMAN Industrial Mechanic (Millwright) required immediately. Preference will be given to applicants with a minimum 5 years experience and CNC programming knowledge. Remuneration based on experience, benefits package available. Please forward resume and cover letter to: info@aspenware.ca or mail to: #3 1935 11th Ave., Vernon, BC V1T 9A9. Only those candidates selected for an interview will be contacted.

Urban Classic Cabinetry. Kit/ bth renos, wallbeds, home office, closet org. 250-860-2801

CARPET & UPHOLSTERY TECHNICIAN.

$18 - 28 /hr. DOE. Must be a hard working, physically fit, punctual, responsible and have a valid drivers licence. Training is provided. References required. Please drop off resume in person to # 4a - 3312 Appaloosa Rd or Fax to 250-765-3655. Only those considered for the position will be contacted

CAUTION

While we try to ensure all advertisements appearing in the Kelowna Capital News are placed by reputable businesses with legitimate offers, we do caution our readers to undertake due diligence when answering any advertisement, particularly when the advertiser is asking for monies up front. CDA/Hygiene Coordinator position available. Temporary full time with the possibility of becoming a permanent postion. Experience with Dentrix preferred. Please submit resume in person or by email to: Dr. Darren Berg, 308 - 1890 Cooper Rd., Kelowna or email: bergdentistry@telus.net DISPATCHER needed, will train. On call casual, 24/7, with at least 2 guaranteed shifts. Need car. Email resume to: kelownacabs@shaw.ca or Fax: (250)-491-5278 DRIVERS wanted, will train. Class 4 or less license required. Fax resume to 250491-5278 or Email to: kelownacabs@shaw.ca EI CLAIM Denied? Need Help? 18yrs Exp. As an EI Officer. Will prepare & Present Appeals. Reasonable Rates. Call Bernie Hughes, Toll Free at 1-877-581-1122. FERNBRAE Manor is currently looking for F/T Activities Coordinator. Send or bring resume to: 295 Gerstmar Rd. V1X 7W9, Kelowna, B.C. Attention Donna, no phone inquiries please.

North Okanagan Sawmill is looking to hire Millwrights,Fabricators and Heavy Duty Mechanics. We offer competitive wages along with a comprehensive benefit package. Please fax resume to 250-8389637. Permanent F/T labourer positions at Coral Beach Farms Ltd. (Lake Country). No experience necessary. Must have own transportation. Applicant must be capable of physically demanding (incl. heavy lifting) work in all weather conditions. 5-6 days a week. 8-10 hours a day beginning approximately January 10th. 2013. Work includes but is not limited to tree planting, pruning & irrigation. Pay $10.25/hour. Apply by fax at 250-766-0813 or email at jobs@coralbeach.ca PET Groomer, F/T & P/T Positions required for Bone Appetit in Glenmore at #111-1940 Kane Rd. Required for an Alberta Trucking Company. One Class 1 Driver. Must have a minimum of 5 years experience pulling low boys and driving off road. Candidate must be able to pass a drug test and be willing to relocate to Edson, Alberta. Fax resumes to: 780-725-4430 SAND BLASTER wanted in Winfield. Experienced. Please fax resume to 250-766-1350 or phone 250-862-1345

STORE SUPERVISOR & CASHIER G. Bains Enterprises Ltd. o/a ESSO (Kelowna) is hiring for Retail Store Supervisor ($17.00/hr) & Cashier ($10.25/hr) both 40 hrs/week + benefits. Apply by Fax: (250) 763-8631 Tire Person required Full Time. Experienced Tractor/Trailer Tire Person, Must be Mechanically Inclined. Please Fax Resume to 250546-0600.

Lets You Live Life.

Help Wanted

YARD PERSON/ LOAD BUILDER Successful applicants should be: Able to work outdoors and do physical labour, customer service, focused, flexible, good team player, alert and safety conscious, hold a high school diploma, be able to work weekends and holidays, be able to lift heavy materials (up to 100 lbs) to or from the lumber yard & trucks and know methods for securing cargo, have experience in the construction industry & load-building. • Fork Lift certification or First Aid training are both assets. • Good manual dexterity. What can we offer you? Competitive wage & benefits, RRSP’s and a strong team environment coupled with a fun, autonomous culture and great working conditions! Interested applicants can send their resume by November 14th, 2012 to: Lauri Klassen, Manager, Human Resources Email: recruiting@pro builderssupply.ca Fax: 250-490-9509 301- 1516 Fairview Road Penticton, BC V2A 6A3. Or visit our Westside Home Building centre on Bylands Road, and ask for our Yard Manager, Bill Lawley between 9am and 2pm. Thank you for your interest and only candidates selected for an interview will be contacted. Start your career with us… at HOME!

Work Hours to fit your Lifestyle Hotel, Restaurant, Food Services

Golden Life Management, Southern BC’s largest seniors care provider, is seeking an RN to work with our growing team at Silver Kettle Village in Grand Forks, BC as

Director of Care Check us out at goldenlife.ca/careers and send your resume to careers@glm.ca or fax to 250-489-2673

Toll Free 1-866-377-1999 View Our Entire Inventory At

www.smithgm.com

D# 5359

250-372-2551

AFFORDABLE, Excellent F/B Massage. New! Neuro-Activating Touch. Linda 862-3929. ASIAN Massage. Lovely, Peaceful Setting, $60/hr. Call (250)-317-3575 BLISS Massage 4 your every need. 10 yrs exp. men only . Call 4 appt. 250-215-7755 THAI Massage. Totally relax & energize your body & mind. Open 7 days/wk 250-801-7188

KSK Framing & Foundations. Quality workmanship at reas rates. Free est 250-979-8948

Esthetics Services 100$ off - Clinical Permanent Cosmetics! by a Master Tech/Instructor - Lips, Brows and Eyes www.skinhance.ca Free Consults: 778-480-3116 Winfield/Kelowna Toll Free 1855-480-3116

Financial Services

Reduce Debt by up to

70%

• Avoid bankruptcy • 0% Interest

250-860-1653

Countertops REFACE Countertops. 1/2 the Cost of Replacing. Granite & Corian Designs. 470-2235.

Drywall J&C Drywall, + Sm. reno’s., Tbar, taping, tex. ceilings, free est., ref’s avail., 778-821-1850 PESL DRYWALL Service Inc. Renovations, new construction and repairs. Boarding, taping, textured ceilings. Call Tomas at 250-212-4483 or 860-3495. Small Repairs/Reno’s. Drywall, Framing, Painting, Fin’d Carpentry etc. 250-212-9588

Classifieds Get Results! Electrical A&S ELECTRIC. Resid/Comm Wiring. New constr, renov. lic’d & bonded. 250-864-2099

www.4pillars.ca

Fencing

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

ALL KINDS OF FENCES. Cedar, Gates,Custom & Stain. 250-491-4622 www.akf.ca

Need CA$H Today? Own A Vehicle?

Garage Door Services GARAGE Doors- install, service, repair all makes of doors & openers. 250-878-2911

Garden & Lawn

684900 BC LTD DBA BIG E’s Bar & Grill Peachland BC. Requires line cooks 2-3 yrs exp. Wage $12.70-$15.00. Offering Full Time position 35-42 hrs/wk. Shifts include evenings & weekends. Duties include: food prep, line cooking, cleaning. Please apply to Susan or Mike Hwy 97 Peachland Center Mall or Fax 250-767-1968

REDUCE DEBT by up to 70% Avoid bankruptcy. Free consultation. BBB accredited. 250-860-1653.www.4pillars.ca

JIM’S MOWING Book a job at www.jimsmowing.ca or call 310-JIMS(5467). KATH’S Yard Care. Fall Clean Up & Raking Leaves. Call (250)212-7003 KELOWNA Lawn & Irrigation. Winterization/Blow-outs and repairs. Gerry 250-769-8717

Help Wanted

Help Wanted

Handypersons

Borrow Up To $25,000

No Credit Checks! Cash same day, local office.

www.PitStopLoans.com 1.800.514.9399

To apply for this position, please call Capital News Circulation at 250-763-7575 and ask for Richard.

Please contact Clint Duff or Mike Brown for details! 950 Notre Dame Drive Kamloops, BC

Contractors

Work as much or as little as you want.

Worried about moving costs? NO PROBLEM! Moving expenses and/or signing bonus will be paid to the right individual who joins our team and remains a Smith team member.

Computer Services

Mind Body Spirit

Your papers would be dropped at your home early in the morning, and you would have the whole day to complete your deliveries.

Move to a community with one of the lowest living costs in the Interior! Home to some of the best golf, skiing and outdoor adventures around every corner.

WEEKLY, Bi-weekly, organizing, elderly welcome, reliable & flexible, Call 250-448-1786

Services

Capital News is looking for a person or persons with a reliable vehicle to deliver newspapers door to door in the Kelowna and Westside areas. Various sized routes on Tuesday, Thursday and Friday.

Join the fastest-growing GM store in the Interior! This is a progressive sales team that has increased our sales in 2012. With one of the best benefit plans and a 3 month guarantee until client base is established, joining this team and facility in beautiful Kamloops is an absolute no-brainer, and we have fun!

Cleaning Services

12/7 A MOBILE COMPUTER TECH. Certified computer technician, virus removal, repairs, upgrades. Let me come to you. (250)-717-6520.

Are you into exercise, motivated and wanting some extra income?

STUCK IN A RUT AND LOOKING TO MAKE A CHANGE?

Carpentry/ Woodwork

A-Z HANDYMAN, domestic wizard, furniture assembly, all repairs & reno’s.250-859-4486 COMPLETE Handyman Service. Free estimates, Seniors disc., Call 250-317-8348 HANDYMAN Services. Reasonable rates, free estimates. Call Brian (250)300-4085

Home Improvements MARAINE Construction, 30 yrs. Exp. Complete Home Building/Reno’s.250-300-4657 NEED Help? Paint, Tile, Carpentry, Drywall, light Electrical & Plumbing. Rentals a specialty. Call 250-869-6577 paintspecial.com. 3 rooms for $299! Price incls. Cloverdale Premium Quality Paint. NO PAYMENT until the job is completed! Free Est. A-TECH SERVICES (1) 250-899-3163 STUDZ Renovations Carpentry, Plumbing, Elect., Drywall, Decks, Tile, 250-317-8275

Home Repairs LARRY’S Handyman & Reno Serv., Lg. & Sm. jobs, Graffitti Removal etc., 250-718-8879 REPLACE Your Leaking Gutters with 5” Fasica Continuous Gutters. Stan: 250-317-4437

A-1 LAWN SPRINKLER BLOW OUTS $50 most homes. Owner operator.

Call or Text -Tim (250)-215-7788

Landscaping Kettle Valley ROCK WALLS. $18-$25 sqft. Call Jay (250)215-4956 PREMIUM Top Soil Available $16 per yard + Delivery. (250)979-8033 or (250)-862-7777

Machining & Metal Work GET BENT Metal Fab, fences, gates, railings, security bars, 863-4418www.getbentmetalfab.ca

Moving & Storage AAA Best Rates Moving $59+. FLAT Rates long dist. Weekly trips BC/AB. 250-861-3400 DAN-MEL MOVING SERVICES Local & long distance 250215-0147 or 250-766-1282 FAMILY Movers. Moving? Anything, anywhere. Local and long distance trips. Packing service available, weekly trips to Vancouver, Alberta, full and partial loads. Cheapest rates in the valley. Free Estimates, 250-493-2687 JOE’S MOVING.reasble rates fully equip’d trucks, local-long dist, no job too small470-8194

Painting & Decorating 100% Prestige Painting, European Craftsmanship, Fine Detail work Ext/Int. 250-864-1041 AFFORDABLE Painting, Exp., Quality. Interior Paint/Ceilings. Terry 863-9830 or 768-1098

A-TECH SERVICES (1) 250-899-3163 WWW.PAINTSPECIAL.COM

3 Rooms For $299, 2 Coats Any Colour (Ceiling & Trim extra) Price incls. Cloverdale Premium Quality Paint. NO PAYMENT, until job is completed!

DALE’S PAINTING SERVICE. Painting Kelowna a better place since 1982. 862-9333

Pest Control BUDGET Pest Solutions. LESS BUGS FOR LESS BUCKS Call (250)-718-8000

Plumbing BAYSIDE Plumbing & Gas Fitting Service. H/W tanks. Qualified & Reliable. 250-317-2279 DREGER MECH. Plumbing, Gasfitting, comm/res & reno, ins’d, 24hr. Call 250-575-5878.

Roofing & Skylights GERMAN MASTER ROOFER. Free estimate. Call Steffen, 250-863-8224 RYDER Roofing Ltd. ‘From a hole in your roof to a whole new roof.’ Call: 250-765-3191

Rubbish Removal OK RUBBISH REMOVAL Residential and commercial disposal and recycling. 250215-4499

Sundecks KELOWNA DECK & RAIL. Vinyl, Mod. Flooring, Alum., GlassTopless/Picket 878-2483

Swimming Pools/ Hot Tubs PENGUIN MFG. HOT TUB COVERS. 250-860-7805

Tiling TILE Setter. Artistic Ceramics. Custom tile setting. Call 250870-1009 TILE & STONE Craft. Quality Installation. Best Rates. Free Estimates. Call 250-769-1077

TNT TRUCKING. No load too small. Junk removal, sand, gravel, etc. (250)862-0821 .

Pets & Livestock

Feed & Hay

HAY FOR SALE; Grass or Grass Alfalfa mix, Large square bales, 3x3x8, $160/ton. Round bales $70. each, approx. 800lbs. Delivery avail. on larger orders. 250-8386630 cell 250-804-6720

Hauling ATTENTION The Capital News cannot be responsible for errors after the first day of publication of any advertisement. Notice of errors on the first day should immediately be called to the attention of the Classified Department to be corrected for the following edition.

Pets

Beautiful Miniature Pinschers, 2 brown and 1 black & tan males, 8 wks old. Both parents have great temperments & are family oriented. $600 OBO, 250-470-8665. 250-448-0597 Chocolate Lab 16wk old female, all shots, de wormed $550 (250) 554-9214 or text DACHSHUND, Prbred mini. Blk-Tan m/f Red m, Choclt m. 12 wks, 778-753-0584 eve Tues & Sat, any Sun + Mon $600 up. PET Grooming NOW Open at Bone Appetit in Glenmore, 111-1940 Kane Rd. 862-2663 TRINITY SHEPHERDS Long haired German Shepherd puppies, ready to go $350., Hybrid Malamute X puppies $250. 250-547-9763 Unregistered Purebred German Shepherd Puppies (6wks), Fe-$650 M-$550. Sicamous, Call: 250-836-2126 WOLF Hybrid Cubs. Available now. Sun Valley Wolf Kennels Kelowna (250)-765-4996 www.sunvalleywolfkennels.com

Merchandise for Sale

Antiques / Vintage

Recollectables is now open! Collectables, antiques, furniture & quality used goods. 191 Asher Road, 778-753-6169. We buy select items & estates.

Appliances

WALK-IN Tubs, Slide-in Baths, Remodeler Showers Aquassure Showroom @ 1048 Richter Kel 250-868-1220 Water Softener, Sears Ultra 400, New, Paid $1000, Selling for $750. Tank Size: 18.5” diametre x 46” height. Contact Larry: 250-762-4951

Auctions

WWW.KWIKAUCTIONS.COM New/Used Restaurant Equipment Sat. Nov. 17th, 11am, 7305 Meadow, Burnaby, BC

Building Supplies

Cedar and Pine - T+G Sidings and Trim. Fir, Hemlock & Pine Flooring. Log Siding and Cabins. Natural Edge Mantels. RBS - Lumby 1-800-960-3388 www.rouckbros.com

$100 & Under

13”, 14”, 15” & 16” Radial M&S Tires, As New, $100. Phone: (250)762-2193 BISSEL Little Green Carpet & Upholstry Cleaner New condition. $50 (250)764-9401 Hamilton Beach Xtra large Slow Cooker. Still on box $25 (250)764-9401 MEN’S Electric Shaver, New, $30. Phone: 250-862-9571 Older set Men’s golf clubs. Ben Hogan Woods. Heavy Duty bag $100 (250)764-9401 Safety1 all in one Portable High Chair. Perfect condition. $25 firm (250)764-9401 Star Choice Motorola Receivers, digital & HD, surround sound $75obo. 250-768-0323

Tree Services

$200 & Under

1-ALL Exterior Hedge & Tree Service. Insured, For free a quote call Dave: 250-212-1716

4 16” Mag Wheels, 4 x 100mm Bolt Pattern. Asking $120 for all four. (250)486-6462


Capital News Friday, November 9, 2012

www.kelownacapnews.com B15

Sales & Service Directory CLEANING SERVICES

COUNTERTOPS

CLEANING, ORGANIZING & HOUSESITTING AVAILABLE Kelowna & Westbank Weekly, Bi-weekly Residential Reliable & Flexible | Seniors Welcome

250.448.1786

FENCING

ALL KINDS OF FENCING 6x8 cedar panels starting at $65. Gates & custom orders, staining.

250-491-4622 www.akf.ca

Get Featured! Call

250-763-7114

LAMINATE TOPS

$

NATURAL STONE

$

starting at

starting at

1630 Innovation Dr. Kelowna, BC V1V 2Y5 P 250.765.3004 | F 250.491.1773

14.95 LF

59.00 SF

On select colors only | Installation available

Natural Stone Surfaces All One Piece Laminate

Visit our showroom at THE AIRPORT BUSINESS PARK Monday - Friday 8 am - 4:30 pm Family owned & operated for over 40 years

colonialcountertops.com

FRAMING

250.979.8948

“The Professionals”

• Local/long distance • Storage Available • No job too small • Free Estimates Call Joe Anytime 250-470-8194

ANYTHING ANYWHERE ANYTIME JUNK REMOVAL Construction site cleanups to the dump/recycling depot. We haul appliances, household waste & furniture

250.317.0323

A & S Electric

TREMBLAY’S EXCAVATING LTD.

www.okanagancountertopsystem.com

Boarding, taping & texture, framing, painting, finishing, carpentry, etc.

250-470-2235

Ken 250-212-9588

10% OFF WITH THIS AD

• Replace Your Leaking Gutters w/ 5" Fasica Continuous Gutters • Leaf Guard - Never Clean Your Gutters Again • Soffit, Fasica

CRYSTAL CARE

250-878-2911 abcohdoors@gmail.com

Maraine Construction

COMPLETE HANDYMAN SERVICES 2EPAIRS 2ENOVATIONS -AINTENANCE #ARPENTRY $RYWALL

0AINTING #ARPET 4ILE 0LUMBING 9ARD #LEANUP

2UBBISH 2EMOVAL 'UTTERS 7INDOWS #LEANING

Personalized service with integrity My Job is Focusing on You!

250-718-4892

KITCHEN CABINETRY

LANDSCAPING

HOME REPAIRS

www.crystalclassic.ca

www.maraineconstruction.ca

Marty 250-300-4657

& Renovation Services • Interior & Exterior Renovations • Carpentry • Painting • Small Repairs • Pressure Washing

• Kitchen & Bathroom Upgrades • Yard Maintenance • Fences, Decks • Tile • Graffiti Removal

250-718-8879

SAME DAY SERVICE FULLY INSURED FREE ESTIMATES

Complete Kitchen & Bath Reno’s All Services - All Trades & Lots of Happy Customers www.UrbanClassicCabinetry.com

250.860.2801

ROCK WALLS $

18-$25 sq.ft.

CALL JAY

BOOK YOUR WINTER CLEAN UPS! Lawn Maintenance, Clean-ups, Pruning/Hedges, Rubbish Removal, Fertilizing, Aeration, Odd Jobs.

Call 310-JIMS (5467) www.jimsmowing.ca

250-215-4956

PEST CONTROL

PAINTING/DECORATING

FAMILY MOVERS

www.PAINTSPECIAL.com

“PREMIUM PAINT AND SERVICE”

Ceiling and trim extra Price includes Cloverdale Premium Quality Paint NO PAYMENT Until Job Is Completed!

PAINTING SERVICE

AND DELIVERIES No load too small. Local, Long Distance Weekly to Vancouver & Alberta. $49/hr + Up. Lowest Rates Guaranteed Anything, Anywhere, Anytime

3 rooms for $299 (2 coats any colour)

250-317-0323

1.250.899.3163

A-TECH SERVICES

EXPERIENCED CRAFTSMEN QUALITY WORKMANSHIP SERVICE YOU CAN TRUST

• Electrical • Tile Work • To-Do Lists • Much More

MEMBER

Canadian Homebuilders Association

Kelowna • 250-717-5500 kelowna.handymanconnection.com

TILING TILE SETTER Artistic Ceramics

Custom tile setting. Travertine, marble, granite & ceramic. Decks, kitchen, baths. Guaranteed work.

Call 250-870-1009

FEATURE

Joe’s Moving Service “The Professionals”

• Local/long distance • Storage Available • No job too small • Free Estimates Call Joe Anytime 250-470-8194

Licensed, Bonded & Insured Independently Owned and Locally Operated

TRUCKING

TNTTRUCKING

No load too small • BARK MULCH • SAND • GRAVEL • YARD CLEAN-UP • JUNK REMOVAL LIGHT FLAT-DECK Nick Nixon - Trish Nebot Cell 250-862-0821 Office 250-765-2778

“Less Bugs for Less Bucks”

862-9333

cell: 250-718-8000 email: lessbugs@telus.net www.budgetpestsolutions.net

PAINTING KELOWNA A BETTER PLACE SINCE 1982

www.dalespaintingservice.ca

ROOFING

Kelowna

Deck & Rail Serving the Okanagan 14 yrs. Vinyl Decking up to 80 mil., Modular Flooring, Aluminum, Glass, Topless, Picket Railings, Fences & Gates. Free Estimates

250-878-2483

www.kelownadeckandrail.com

STUDZ RENOVATIONS PLUMBING CARPENTRY ELECTRICAL DRYWALL FLOORING TILE WORK KITCHEN CABINETS LICENCED, INSURED

250-317-8275

WELDING METAL FABRICATION LTD. Fences • Gates • Railings • Security Bars • Cargo Racks • Rollcages • Boat Railings & more. Tube Bending Specialists www.getbentmetalfab.ca

250-863-4418

member of B.B.B. Fully insured, WCB coverage. All types of shingle roofing & torch on roofing systems. ‘From a hole in your roof to a whole new roof.’

250-765-3191

TEAM GERMAN MASTER ROOFER ROOFS OF ALL KINDS • • • • •

Free estimate Over 30 years experience WCB and Liability coverage VISA and Mastercard accepted Final roof inspector available

WWW.TEAMGERMAN.COM

250.863.8224

250-763-7114 and speak with a classified rep today!

INTRO PRICE

157.25

RYDER ROOFING LTD. Free estimates, senior discounts,

To book your space, call

TRY THE SALES & SERVICE

$

Budget Pest Solutions

DALE’S

RENOVATIONS

• Kitchen Remodels • Painting • Plumbing

LAWN AND GARDEN

Kettle Valley

Larry’s Handyman

Specialize in Kitchens & Bathrooms. Planning, Design & Installation. 30 years exp. All types of renovations: residential & commercial.

Personal & Respite Care

250.317.8348

3ENIOR $ISCOUNT 3ATISFACTION 'UARANTEED

CELL: (250) 979-8033 BUS: (250) 861-1500

Bath & Shower assists | Transportation & Errands | General Housekeeping & Laundry | Companionship

FREE ESTIMATES

Call: Stan 250-317-4437

• Full Landscaping • Rock Retaining Walls • Portable Soil Screener • Premium Top Soil Available

(cont#90929)

We install, service, & repair all makes of doors & openers. Broken Springs, Cables, Rollers... WE DO IT ALL!

OVERHEAD DOORS

HOME IMPROVEMENT

• Bath Remodels • Decks • Drywall

Residential & Commercial Wiring, New Construction, Renovations & Service Changes. Complete telephone & data cabling services, Prompt quality service. Licensed & Bonded Call Steve 250-864-2099

Crystal Classic Exteriors

Bayside Plumbing & Gas Fitting

RUBBISH REMOVAL

SMALL REPAIRS & RENOVATIONS

ABC

PLUMBING Qualified, reliable, bonded. Over 30 years exp. res./comm. service renovations, new installations, h/water tanks, dishwashers, washers, dryers. 250-317-2279

EXCAVATION

HOME CARE

MOVING/STORAGE Joe’s Moving Service

ELECTRICAL

GARAGE DOOR GUTTERS & HANDYMAN DOWNSPOUTS SERVICES

ksk Framing & Foundations Quality workmanship at reasonable rates. Free estimates

REFACE DON’T REPLACE 1/2 the cost of replacing Corian & Granite Designs. The Green Alternative.

DRYWALL

tax incl.

12 inserts for new clients only please

Please call a classified representative at

250-763-7114

FEATURE

TILE SETTER Artistic Ceramics

Custom tile setting. Travertine, marble, granite & ceramic. Decks, kitchen, baths. Guaranteed work.

Call 250-870-1009


B16 www.kelownacapnews.com

Merchandise for Sale

Merchandise for Sale

Friday, November 9, 2012 Capital News

Merchandise for Sale

Merchandise for Sale

Heavy Duty Machinery

$300 & Under

$500 & Under

Free Items

MUST sell high blue sofa bed & chair. Attractive & great cond, $230 obo. 250-762-5435

23ft Upright Fridgidaire Freezer 1yr old. $500 (778)479-4707

$400 & Under

FREE: Kittens, free to good homes. 4 part Siamese kittnes: 2 males, 2 females. Phone: (250)862-2687

Free Items

LIKE New Mastercraft Wood Lathe with extras. $350 OBO (250)860-0939

For Sale By Owner

FREE: 2 Greyhound cross puppies, 3 months. Phone: 778-478-1007 Free pickup, of aluminum windows, wire, pipe, air conditioners & batteries. 250-717-0581

For Sale By Owner

FREE Pick-up of used bicycles that you no longer want. Ok if need repair 604-800-2104 FREE P/U- Appliances, Rads, Batteries, Old machinery & vehicles. Harley 778-821-1317

Firewood/Fuel

✔Jack FIREWOOD.

Pine $160/cd, Birch $275/cd, Phone: Jim, 250-808-0733 APPLEWOOD $170, Fir $120 Pine $90, full size P/U, 2/3rds of a cord, split & dry, Free De-

A- STEEL SHIPPING STORAGE CONTAINERS / Bridges / Equipment Wheel loaders JD 644E & 544A / 63’ & 90’ Stiff boom 5th wheel crane trucks/Excavators EX200-5 & 892D-LC / Small forklifts / F350 C/C “Cabs”20’40’45’53’ New/ Used/ Damaged /Containers Semi Trailers for Hiway & StorageCall 24 Hrs 1-866-528-7108 Delivery BC and AB www.rtccontainer.com Will pay cash for oversized scrap steel, cats, yarders, saw mill equipment, farm equipment, etc. All insurance in place to work on your property. 250-260-0217

Medical Supplies

livery Kelowna 250-762-7541

Firewood For Sale: Fir Pine. Call: (250)491-4641

250-763-7114 TO BOOK YOUR AD

&

LOG Splitter, 123cc OHV gas engine, 8 ton, 16thousand lb. thrust,$900obo, 250-486-6462 Seasoned Applewood, $170, Full size pick-up load delivered. 250-317-6681

Furniture $459,000 3027 Ironridge Place

Lower Mission 180° Lakeview Brand new family house, room for the in-laws. Open living room concept main floor. 2 decks, patio, double garage. Quiet area, Smith Creek. Open House Daily: 1pm - 4pm Shannon Lake Rd - Asquita - Ironridge - Ironridge Place Call Dennis: 250-768-4509 Cell: 250-808-4546

FOR SALE BY OWNER SPECIAL Save on Real Estate Fees! Limited time offer!! Buy 2 weeks, get 30% off the 2nd week

Approx 4500 sq.ft with mortgage helper. Suitepays $200,000 of the mortgage. Granite, updated floor coverings and trim. Fuel efficient furnace & A/C. 6bdrm, 4 bath with skylights throughout. 2 lg decks, hot tub, double garage & new roof. Asking $699,900. Call Gary at 250-764-7572

ATTENTION The Capital News cannot be responsible for errors after the first day of publication of any advertisement. Notice of errors on the first day should immediately be called to the attention of the Classified Department to be corrected for the following edition.

#1 Solid Wood Used Furniture Red Dot Sale up to 50% Off OK Estates Furniture & More. 3292 Hwy 97N, Kelowna (1.5 Kms North of McCurdy) 11-5 Tues-Sat (250)-807-7775 OKestates.ca STAR Stores, now buying quality furniture, estates, households, miscellaneous, antiques & collectibles. Phone: 250-868-3255 or Drop in at #9-1753 Dolphin Ave,Kelowna

Goods for Sale Goodbye Sale 836 Lowland St. 8am-3:30pm Saturday, Nov.10th Tools Household items & furniture .

Garage Sales

Garage Sales

Moduline Home - Own the land. 2 bdrm, 2 full bth, gas fireplace, 45+, 2 small pets under 15”, 2 extra parking stalls, CA, side deck, 10X18 rear deck, strata fee- $45/mo. Insulated 12X32 garage w/work bench & Lrg storage in rear. Call 250-769-6446.

THE HEART OF SCOTTY CREEK

Houses For Sale

Open Houses

Say “OK Big Three”

#9-2250 Louie Dr, West Kelowna

Humidifier, 2 queen Nikken magnetic mattress’, yarn, lawn mower, computer desk, computer cabinet, baker rack, microwave stand, Xmas tree & Royal typewriter.250-707-1229 LUMBER, Trusses, Plywood, Steps, Doors & 2x10’s etc. (250)765-2740, 250-861-0564

to advertise in the Capital News, the Vernon Morningstar and the Penticton Western News! Call 250-763-7114 or email your ad to classifed@kelownacapnews.com

WHAT IS MY HOME WORTH? Find Out What Your Home Is Worth. Free Quick Over The Net Evaluation. www.KelownaHouseValue.com

Royal Lepage Kelowna

New Full Leather White Sofa & Chair $4200.(new) $1850. obo. 250-260-8511 Must Sell! Recollectables is now open! Collectables, antiques, furniture & quality used goods. 191 Asher Road, 778-753-6169. We buy select items & estates.

SPCA (Aux) Book & Jewellery Sale! Thurs - Fri - Sat, Nov. 15 - 16 - 17, 9:30-5pm. Store #25, Mission Park Shopping Centre, 3155 Lakeshore Rd.

Fruit & Vegetables

Fruit & Vegetables

Fresh From the Fields “Local Produce at Your Doorstep” To place an ad...call the Kelowna Capital News

250-763-7114

APPLES 9 VARIETIES K&J Pacific Peaches Fruit Stand

Graziano Orchards

1145 Morrison Rd., Kelowna, (Take McCurdy Rd. to Morrison.) OPEN 9-5 till Nov 1, 2012 after Nov. 1 till Feb., Opened by demand only. By calling ahead, phone 250-765 8184 Top Quality Farm Prices

Different variety of Apples, Bartlett & Bosc Pears, Italian Prunes & Walnuts

5lb buckets, $2.50/lb. 9850 Read Rd, Winfield

3455 Rose Rd. E. Kelowna

(250)-860-2644 www.grazianofamilyorchards.com

Green Acres Organic Orchards 100% Apple Juice 5litre boxes - $12.00/each 3260 Mathews Rd.

Apt/Condo for Rent

While we try to ensure all advertisements appearing in the Kelowna Capital News are placed by reputable businesses with legitimate offers, we do caution our readers to undertake due diligence when answering any advertisement, particularly when the advertiser is asking for monies up front. Refund Policy Our ads are non-refundable when booked for less than 4 weeks (12 issues), when cancelling a 4 week ad you will be refunded in weekly increments only, calculated at the appropriate discount level. Refunds not available for 1/2 price promotion.

Okanagan ®

REALTOR WANTED

Real Estate Team seeks sales partner. No cold-calling, All appointments and leads supplied. Make $100,000+/1st year. All expenses paid including cell phone. More info available, email request to: info@vantagewestrealty.com

WANTED: Books by Annalee Skarin. Phone: (250)869-4853

Real Estate Apt/Condos for Sale OPEN concept 1 bedroom, 1 bath $229,000 MLS#10055443. Contact 250718-1351 for more info.

Houses For Sale BUYING or SELLING? For professional info call Grant Assoc. Broker, Premiere Canadian Properties (250)-8626436, FREE Evaluation Estate Sale! Level Entry, 3bdrm up, 2bdrm down, 2912sq.ft., In-law suite, 2 car garage, quick possession $349,700. (250)545-8152

Mobile Homes & Parks EXCLUSIVE Canadian Built SRI’s in Belaire Estates. Hurry, only 3 lots left! For more information and to view show homes call Lake Country Modular 515 Beaver Lake Road, Kelowna (adjacent to SRI’s factory )1-866-766-2214 www.LCMhomes.com

Mr. Mobile Home Certified Factory Outlet. Featuring SIERRAS family community, or single and multi-section homes for your property. 250-769-6614 www.accenthomes.ca

MORTGAGES LOW RATES. 10YR. 3.89% 5 YR. 2.99% Trish at 250-470-8324

SIERRAS 2440 Old Okanagan Hwy. from $1092 a month O.A.C. $7995 down or trades toward down payment 3bdrm 2bath, Panoramic, Lake, City & Mountain views. $159,900 tax included. www.accenthomes.ca (250)-769-6614

Apt/Condo for Rent

Apt/Condo for Rent

BEST DEALS IN KELOWNA! Affordable 1, 2 & 3 Bdrms. AC, near schools, shopping & bus route. Insuite laundry H.Up’s. Across from Park. Clean Quiet & Spacious. Sorry NO Pets. Well Managed Building (250)-861-5605 or (250)-861-5657

Kelowna, BC.(250)764-4399

NOW RENTING

green-acres@shaw.ca

250-766-4776 Organic walnuts. Phone to order your Christmas delivery now! $1.50 /lb 250-762-3560

Community Newspapers We’re at the heart of things™

Bosc & Anjou Pears, Gala, Aurora Golden Gala, Fuji, Ambrosia, Nicola & Braeburn Apples and Apple Juice

Hazeldell Orchards

1980 Byrns Road

250-862-4997 OPEN Monday-Saturday 9:00am-5:30pm Sunday 10:00am-5:00pm • Closed Nov. 11 for Remembrance Day

OPEN HOUSE SAT & SUN 1-3pm Westlake Gardens Gated Adult, Priv. setting by creek, 2bdrm, 2bath, Den, 2 Gas FP’s. H/Wood Flrs A/C, Dbl Gar., 6 appls,& Security. $359,500 250-768-4995 or Cell 250-864-5708

Rentals

PURCHASING old Canadian & American coin collections & accumulations. 250-548-3670

FROZEN BLACKBERRIES

This gem is in beautiful condition with Ellison Elementary at the end of the cul-de-sac. Roomy two car garage attached with family room and sunken living room. Two bedrooms up with extra bedroom, two dens and rec room down. Two gas fireplaces, newer gas furnace, heat pump, and hot water tank. Mature fenced back yard is private, with low maintenance tiered decking to your outdoor living room and hot tub. Two full baths with tiled floors and hardwood and carpet make this home ready to move into and low maintenance. Lots of storage space for your toys, including RV pad. Excellent neighborhood surrounded by orchards and golf, and a 10 minute drive to Kelowna’s amenities. Drive by 4820 Parkdale Crescent. Listed for $399,999. Great for a family or empty nesters who love having the children visit. BY APPOINTMENT ONLY: call 250-469-0649.

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

Private Coin Collector Buying Collections, Accumulations, Olympic Gold & Silver Coins + Chad: 250-863-3082 in Town

PERFECT FOR HORSES

2.4 Acres in South East Kelowna Backs onto South Slopes Park Trails. 1500 sq.ft Open Plan 3bdrm 2 bath Rancher. New Horse & Hay Shelter. Immaculate. $729,000 Call 250-764-9401

Real Estate

Misc. Wanted

HUGE Moving / Garage Sale November 10-11 9am-3pm 1125 Windermere Court Kelowna Contents must go! All undercover from weather.

(Reg Price $196.25)

Real Estate

I’m a private coin collector & I would like to buy a safe full of coins. Todd 250-864-3521

REDUCED PRICE to $228,000 OWN THE LAND.

1 col x 2” size with or without picture for 3 insertions(1 week)

250-763-7114

Misc. for Sale

******* OKHomeseller.com View Okanagan properties for sale by owner. Selling? No Commission. 250-545-2383, 1-877-291-7576

ONLY $69.99 plus HST

Call your classified representative today!

Stair lifts, platform stair lifts, vertical platform lifts. Shoprider Scooters & Power chairs, new & used. Kel: 250-7647757, Vernon 250-542-3745. Toll Free 1-888-542-3745 www.okmobilty.ca

Merchandise for Sale

Luxury and location. Modern suites from 765 sq’-1,500 sq’

One year lease required

Kelowna’s newest and finest selection of rental suites. 773 Glenmore Road, corner of Glenmore & Summit.

Call for appointment to view 778-484-5847 or inquire at www.kelownaconservatory.com

1bdrm Pandosy. Very clean, fresh paint, adult building, NS, NP. Walk to DT or Hospital. Laundry facilities & utilities incl’d. Available immediately, $795. Phone: 250-878-0136 2bd, 2bth Condo. L.Mission, Nov 1. Pool, w/d, f/s, dw. Near OC. $1100/m, 250-764-0801 2 BDRM 1.5bath Behind Superstore $990 month + utilities, 6 month lease or longer, no cats/dogs, 250-212-7072 2BD. Senior’s apt. quiet cls. to Downtown, 3appls, heat, hotwater, drapes, a/c, secure prkng w/video survillience, onsite mgr., safe & secure, NS, NP, $800/mo. (250)-860-6548 BARBER Rd. Rutland. Brand new, 1bd+den. 2 full bths, avail immed. NS, NP. DD. & ref’s req’d. $1000. Call (306)867-1893, (250)-258-9484 SEXSMITH area loft. Sngle, mature, NS, NP, priv ent & prking, all appls incl $650 + DD, utils & cbl incl. Call 250763-0547 or 250-212-7609 APARTMENTS FOR RENT in Granada Gardens for OCT & beyond, ranging from $800$850/mo, Call 250-765-6578 CENTRE of Kelowna. New affordable lux 1&2bd, 5appls, ug prking, NS/NP. 250-763-6600. www.rentcentrepoint.com

Commercial/ Industrial

FOR LEASE 1000 sq.ft. Office Trailer fully serviced on fenced 1/2 acre. Zoned Heavy Industrial Including Auto Wrecking. $3000 triple net incl. Fenced 1/2 acre service industrial lot available. Central Westside Location. will build to suit. 250-769-7424 HWY 97 North, Compounded yard for lease and/or 2000sqft. of Industrial area with overhead door, compressor & hoist with compounded yard. Phone: 250-765-3295 RUTLAND CENTRAL INDUSTRIAL YARD SPACE..Fenced lot with workshop, $800. One acre also available. Phone: 250-765-5578 Studio/Apartment DT Kelowna. $1200/mo. includes utilities Phone: (587)215-0922

Cottages / Cabins

Small furnished cabin at Idabel Lake, can sleep 4. TV & electricity incl’d. Great cross country skiing, sledding & hiking trails. $75/night, $300/wk, $600/mo. (250)807-7921

Duplex / 4 Plex

Avail Dec 1/12 3bdrm 1.5 bath 4 appls,full bsmt. $1100/mo. Glenrosa near school fenced yard. NP (250-769-0516 AVAIL Dec. 1. Upper 2bdrm, near KLO college, 2.5bath, 4appl, cov’d patio, garage. $1200 utils incl. NP, ref’s req’d 250-861-9013, 250-878-2049

Modular Homes

2bdrm Mobile Home. Includes washer, dryer, fridge & stove. Avail Dec. 1, $825, $675. 250768-5080, 300-0984. Executive 1bdrm all inclusuive $875 Avail now. 250-717-1033 NP


Capital News Friday, November 9, 2012

Rentals

Rentals

www.kelownacapnews.com B17

Rentals

Transportation

Transportation

Adult

Auto Financing

Cars - Domestic

Adult Entertainment

Homes for Rent

Office/Retail

Suites, Lower

1BD Cottage in Country setting with scenic view, just 5 min. from Orchard Park. Quiet clean. Small Pet negot. NS $795 + utils Available Nov 1 Call (250)762-6627 2BDRM Townhouse. Great location, near amens & bus. FS, WD, free prking, balcony overlooking big yard, $975, NP. Avail. Nov 1, 250-470-0000 2BD upper flr lndry, newly reno’d, utils incl, $950. Avail Nov 15 . 250-212-4972 3 BDM full house 2 floors, Dogs/Kids OK, w/d, air, d/w $1280. 2 bdrm large bsmt suite, Westbank, w/d, air, garage $950. Call or Text 250862-1181 3bdrm, 2bath house in Lake Country. Fenced yard, 5 appl’s, large deck with lake view, NS, pets neg. $1500 + utils. Avail Asap 250-212-2603 3bdrm & 4bdrm 2 bath 4appls window blinds, garage, carport Avail Dec 1 (250)860-8583 3Bdrm Avail immed. Rutland 140 Briarwood Rd. garage. fenced yard. 6appls. NS. Pets negot. $1350 (250)861-5757 3bdrm, main floor, 1.5baths. South East Kelowna, vineyard setting, view, pool. Mature applicants pref’d. Newly reno’d, appl’s incl: washer, dryer, fridge & stove. Small pet negot. $1650/m incl. eletric heat. Avail Dec. 1, (250)763-7806 4BDRM, 2 bath, large lot, garage, North Glenmore, raise horses.$1950. 250-317-6243. Avail Dec. 1, South Okangan College area, 3bd, main floor. Cable & utils incl’d. Dishwasher, fr., st., shared lndry. Large fenced yard, on bus rte, NS, NP. Looking for mature, working couple/person, $1275/mo. + DD. Phone: (250)317-2325 FREE DOWN PAYMENT......REALLY? If you can make monthly mortgage payments but don’t have a downpayment saved, you may be eligible for a $45K non-repayable grant to put down on a brand new home. Contact us today! info@thepropertysource.ca or Gino 250.317.2707 House on Old Okanagan Hwy. Central, clean, new 2bd, 1 fam room, $1190. (250)769-8807 Immaculate 4bdrm 2.5 baths 2000sqft fr/st/dw. WD hook up dbl garage UG irrigation Close to UBCO NP $1500 Available immediately (250)765-2740 LAKE Okanagan Resort, fully furnished duplex, utils incl’d, upper 3100sqft. 5bdrm, 4bath, $1500/mo. + DD AND Lower walk-out, 1400sqft. 2bd, 2bath, $1000/mo. + DD. Avail now. Phone: (587)436-8828 LAKEVIEW, 3Bdrm house $1000. 2bdrm bsmt $650. 2 full bths, lrg livingrm, sundeck, newly painted. 250-718-1975 Lakeview, ideal for 2 families, 3bd up, 2bd down. $1650/mo. NS NP Phone: 250-769-6992 N.Glenmore two storey house 3 bdrms,2 bath office, familyroom, carport, patio,extra large yard, splendid view, NS. no appls. No indoor pets. $1525/mo.+utils(250)-860-7012 UPPER Level of house for rent. 3bd, 2bath, on Friesen Rd. NS NP NP $1500 incl utils, cable & int. day 250-7623141, after 6pm 250-862-6821

HWY 97 North, 1800sq’ of retail, & Rutland 1500 - 2000sq’ Retail. 250-765-3295 Retail, Office or Fitness, newly reno’d, main floor, Avail now, 1300sqft,ample parking, Westbank Town Centre, 718-9083 STORE FRONT on busy Rutland Road, in high traffic area available immediately. Contact (250)861-1565.

Avail Nov. 1st, 2bdrm, private entrance with parking, private laundry, nice sundeck, all utils, cable, int. incl’d. Good for students, no dogs, cats ok, children over 8 acceptable. $1000/mo. 250-469-0494 LARGE 2bdrm walk out bsmt suite, sep ent, own lndry, full bath, near schools, YMCA & UBCO.NS, NP. 250-765-1524 or 250-300-6200 LEGAL suite $850 + utils. 2bdrm Rutland area close to University & shops. Available November 15 (250)826-2526 MAGIC Estates, 1bdrm, over 800sqft., island kitchen, security alarm, full bath & lndry. Professionals only, $950 utils incl. Phone: 250-870-1433 NEWER, lrg 2bd bsmt suite on Kirschner Mnt. Wonderful view of lake & Kelowna. NS, ND, no pets or children. Ideal for working couple or student. All utils incl, only $1000. Dec.1 Call 250-491-5992 N.Glenmore 2bd great rm, laundry rm 6 appls, parking, priv deck, NS NP $1000. utils incl, DD. Nov1 250-868-4873

While we try to ensure all advertisements appearing in the Kelowna Capital News are placed by reputable businesses with legitimate offers, we do caution our readers to undertake due diligence when answering any advertisement, particularly when the advertiser is asking for monies up front. Refund Policy Our ads are non-refundable when booked for less than 4 weeks (12 issues), when cancelling a 4 week ad you will be refunded in weekly increments only, calculated at the appropriate discount level. Refunds not available for 1/2 price promotion. W.Kelowna Clean 3bdrm Bungalo. 2 Gas FP’s, 2 baths, covered deck, carport, quiet area. NP. NS. $1200 + utils. Ref’ req’d (250)769-1678

Room & Board ROOM & Board. Fully Furnished. Utilities & Cable included. $700, NON SMOKER, Call 250-862-8353

Rooms for Rent #1 Affordable furnished room DT area, cable, w/d, w.int, quiet, avail immed. 862-9223 #1BEST DWT furn’d. rooms. int.ca,.utils.w/d.working/stdent. $450+ Avail now 250-861-5757 2 rooms for rent, $475 & 450/mo. tv/cbl/utils incl’d, very quiet, lndry, full kitchen & bath. 250-861-8907, 250-899-1235 MATURE Female, Large Lovely, Quiet, Furn’d House. Lovely View, Balcony, W/D, Cable & Internet. Private Bathroom. $550, (250)769-0661 RUTLAND Area 1bd $400 all utils incl, int. For female NS, NP,NB,No Drugs,on bus route. 250-862-9749, 250-575-9109. Rutland furn’d rooms for working man, 30+, livingrm, TV, kitchen, lndry, utils incl, $400 & $525 + DD. 250-215-1561

Senior Assisted Living Mission area home, get some care & keep your independance. Includes priv bd with cable, 3 home cookes meals and snacks, lndry & housekeeping done & all utils. Avail Jan. 1, $1250, (250)317-3341

Shared Accommodation 1BD for rent, female pref’d. private bath, shared kitchen, includes: W/D, cbl/utils. Avail. immed.$600/mo 250-860-2194 1Furn’d room in clean, quiet, home. Shared kitchen, lndry & bath. Includes utils & internet. NS, Working or Senior. Near Costco, $500. 250-860-7793 MALE, 50’s seeks roommate. Lakefront home, $700/mo. Call 250-717-5354 for details MISSION Area, lower level, private living area & bdrm. Share kitchen & bath with 1 other. Laundry included & all utilities. $800, 250-317-3341 RUTLAND. 1bdrm room avail $450 utils incl’d DD. Mature person. NS NP (250)862-5709

Storage WANTED- Prof. couple seeks place to camp 35ft RV for summer seasons. Not in RV park. Prefer private location. Call Bob 1-(403)-703-4777

Suites, Lower 1BDRM Bsmt suite, incl’s internet cable, utilities. Available Now.N.Glenmore $600/mo NS. NP. Prefer Working Female. (250)317-7008 1BDRM Clean & Quiet. Glenmore area. Close to schools, plaza bus rte. NP. NS. $750 utils included. Avail. Nov.1st (250)712-0466, 250-808-2721 1bdrm suite NS NP No children. Centrally located in DT Westbank 1 block to bus route $700/mo utils not incl’d. (250)768-8533 Avail Nov 15th 2BD bsmt suite, $900 incl utils. NP, NS, Avail Now! Westbank.769-0076,864-4255 2BD. Glenrosa. Sep. ent., lg. bright, 2ba. $900 incl. int/cbl, dw & all utils. Pool. Pets/children ok. Immed.250-768-3890 2BIG BD, din. rm, lndry, sep. ent., w/o basement. Cls to bus & UBC. NP, NS. Avail anytime in Nov. $775 + utils. Phone: (250)317-4238 $650/mo. includes internet, TV & utils. Rutland area. Call 250870-4230 or 2500-801-5753 $950 2Bd, 1Ba, bsmt. suite 1100 sq.ft. Nov. 1st or 15th utils incl’d. Pets negot. NS. DT Westbank. 250-868-5121 Beautiful, bright, 1bd walk out suite located in West Kel. $750 incl utils. 250-681-4670 RUTLAND N. Avail. Nov15th. 2bdrm near schools bus Ymca NP NS $900 (250)212-1024

While we try to ensure all advertisements appearing in the Kelowna Capital News are placed by reputable businesses with legitimate offers, we do caution our readers to undertake due diligence when answering any advertisement, particularly when the advertiser is asking for monies up front. DreamCatcher Auto Loans “0” Down, Bankruptcy OK Cash Back ! 15 min Approvals

1-800-910-6402

www.PreApproval.cc DL# 7557

Cars - Domestic 1999 Cadillac STS

Partly furn’d 1bdrm ste. Close to North campus, prefer working, single person. All utils & cable incl’d, $600/mo. NS, NP. Avail Nov. 15, (778)753-3352 RUTLAND 2bdrm suite, grnd lvl, sep entr., NS, NP. $750 utils incl. Near schools, Avail Dec. 1. Call 250-869-9530 Rutland Avail. Nov 15 2bd +den Includes W/D net/cable SS appls parking huge fenced backyard (250)864-3526 SUNRISE sparkling on the lake, have coffee sitting by the fire, while the dog is in the run. Best 2 bedroom suite in town! $750 (778)479-4571 PCHLND WINFIELD. 2bd. lovely lakeview, country setting, 6appl, ns, np, fp, sing/prof. cpl, $950 utils/cbl incl Avail 250-317-2279

Suites, Upper ATTENTION The Capital News cannot be responsible for errors after the first day of publication of any advertisement. Notice of errors on the first day should immediately be called to the attention of the Classified Department to be corrected for the following edition.

Transportation

Auto Accessories/Parts LYLE’S TOWING. Free Removal of unwanted vehicles. Pay up to $1000 for good vehicles. Lots of used parts for sale. (250)-765-8537

Say “OK Big Three” to advertise in the Capital News, the Vernon Morningstar and the Penticton Western News! Call 250-763-7114 or email your ad to classifed@kelownacapnews.com

SCRAP Car Removal. $100 cash paid for unwanted vehicles. 7 days/week Call Paul Haul (250)808-9593 Tires-Toyo-G-02+ 265/70R/18 for a Toyota Tundra. Used for 1 winter. $500 (250)718-6404

Auto Financing

Refund Policy Our ads are non-refundable when booked for less than 4 weeks (12 issues), when cancelling a 4 week ad you will be refunded in weekly increments only, calculated at the appropriate discount level. Refunds not available for 1/2 price promotion.

Cars - Sports & Imports One too many cars, so she’s gotta go. Very reliable. Brand new cooling system, tires have 70-90% tread left. Leather seats, power everything. There are some scratches & dents above the drivers wheel well and on the bumper. Also needs a splash of paint. Very comfortable travel car or a great starter car! Appraised at $4600. Further Reduced to $1800 250-215-6671 Lve msg 2002 MUSTANG GT, 5spd coupe, leather, all power options, keyless entry, tinted glass, MACH system 6CD, new tires (only used 2 months), like new condition inside & out, lady driven, 2nd owner, summer driven only $5500. 250-351-5478. 2005 Chrysler 300, 57,000km, one owner, up town shape, comes with 2 new tires, cream in color, loaded. $15,000 obo. (250)491-9029, 470-2613 2005 Dodge 2.0 SX. 222,000km. Runs very well, but a few minor issues. $2000 OBO. Call: 250-300-2093 2006 Honda Accord, loaded, 71000ks 4cyl, showroom cond silver $16900 250-767-6190 2006 Mazda 3 Sport GS, Copper Red, 5-door hatch bac, 2.3 L, 5-speed manual, sunroof, cruise control, steering wheel radio controls, air conditioning, heated leather seats, 4-wheel disk brakes, remote keyless entry, power windows, rain sensing wipers, tilt/telescoping steering wheel, front wheel drive, 112,000 km. Bonus: 4 mounted snow tires; after market GPS. Asking $9,995. 250470-8855

1993 Mazda MX3, 5-spd, 287K, runs great, recently fully serviced, winter ready! $2995.obo 250-260-4418 or cell 250-540-1116 2008 Toyota Corolla CE, auto, 4-cyl, 4-dr, 90K, lots of extras, $10,400.obo (250)545-8152

Recreational/Sale

Adult Escorts BEACH BUNNIES Be Spoiled At Kelowna’s Only 5 Star Men’s Spa #32-2789 Hwy 97 Blue Heights www.beachbunnies.ca 250-448-8854

AFFECTIONATE Blonde Lady Wants To Spoil You! “Seniors Preferred” xoxo 778-484-7438

Escorts 1*AAA* Kelowna’s Finest Mature Lady Hot Busty Blonde *Independant* Daily Specials. BRANDY (250)-826-8615 #1 PAMELA. Blonde bombshell, 36D, all natural, GFE. Call 250-215-4513 #1 The Total Experience Massage. Call: (250)878-1514 250-307-8174. Krystal 20, Paris 23, Lily 24, Jasmine 28, Jina 45. In/out Up scale Discreet, Fun, Flirty Girls! Hiring. 2 for 1! Brittany, Slim, Blonde, 26 & Tiffany, 47, Swedish Massage +. Downtown, 10am10pm. Appointment, In/Out. Call: 778-363-1074

KAILY Memorable Long Dark Haired Beauty. 250-860-0591 kelownaskaily.zoomshare.com

MALE 4 Male Erotic Massage $95, waxing, intimate grooming & skin care. Winfield, 9-9 Daily 250-766-2048

PLAYFUL, Upscale, Open Minded Beauty offering massage in my studio. View back page under body rubs. 250808-3303 Sierra. THE DOLLHOUSE. Kelowna’s erotic hot spot! (250)448-4305 www.thedollhouse.info

A GORGEOUS BRUNETTE Pretty Face, Hot Legs, Sexy, Sensual Massage/Gfe, Upscale In/Out Dana 250-300-8883 A Sexy smile, a sensual touch, way of knowing what you need Lydia 250-448-2869 BEAUTIFUL Black Girl, In or Out Calls. No Blocked Calls. No Texting. 250-899-5151

Tenders

1976 OKANAGAN 24 FT MOTOR HOME DIVORCE SETTLEMENT, MUST GO! V8, AUTO RUNS GREAT

$990 FIRM Phone 250-575-2191

Scrap Car Removal 1AA SCRAP CAR REMOVAL Min $60 cash for full size vehicles, any cond. 250-899-0460 Armour Towing & Scrap Removal. Will pay up to $80 for a full size vehicle. 250-801-4199 SCRAP Car Removal, $100 cash paid for unwanted vehicles. 7 days a week. Call Paul Haul (250)808-9593

Snowmobiles

Tenders

INVITATION TO TENDER T12-098 Compost Material Hauling Services Sealed tenders, clearly marked on the outside of the envelope with the words “T12-098 Compost Material Hauling Services” will be received at the office of the City Clerk, 1435 Water Street, Kelowna, BC up until 3 PM, Local Time, November 22, 2012. Tenders will be opened publicly at that time. The City reserves the right to reject any or all tenders, to waive defects in any bid or tender documents and to accept any tender or offer which it may consider to be in the best interest of the City. The lowest bid or any tender will not necessarily be accepted. Tender documents may be obtained at no charge from the City of Kelowna website or from the City of Kelowna Purchasing Branch, 1435 Water Street, Kelowna BC V1Y 1J4.

LOOKING FOR: New reverse kit for a 2000 MXZ Ski-Doo! Please call 250-212-7042

kelowna.ca

Sport Utility Vehicle AUTOMOTIVE SPECIAL Limited time offer!! Buy 2 weeks, get 30% off the 2nd week

ONLY $59.99 plus HST 1 col x 2” size with or without picture for 3 insertions (1 week)

2004 Toyota Highlander, leather int., 6cyclinder, 7pass., great cond. $9000 OBO, Phone: (250)767-9069

Trucks & Vans 1992 Toyota Van, Auto, AWDrive, Very Good condition. $1400. Call 250-860-1648

Legal

(Reg. price $196.25)

Legal Notices Call your classified representative today!

250-763-7114

FIND A FRIEND

INVITATION TO TENDER

NOTICE TO CREDITORS AND OTHERS Re: Estate of BELA BALIKO, Deceased, formerly of 4185 4th Avenue, Peachland, British Columbia Creditors and others having claims against the Estate of BELA BALIKO, are hereby notified under Section 38 of the Trustee Act that particulars of their claims should be sent to the Executor at 221 – 3011 Louie Drive, Westbank, BC, V4T 3E3, on or before December 7, 2012, after which date the Executor will distribute the estate among the parties entitled to it, having regard to the claims of which the Executor then has notice. REG MINTY, Executor by Porrelli Law, Barristers and Solicitors, Attention: Nancy E. Fish, telephone: (250) 768-0717.

T12-109 City of Kelowna Security Access Replacement Sealed tenders, clearly marked on the outside of the envelope with the words “T12-109 City of Kelowna Security Access Replacement” will be received at the office of the City Clerk, 1435 Water Street, Kelowna, BC up until 3 PM, Local Time, November 27, 2012. Tenders will be opened publicly at that time. There is a mandatory site meeting on November 15, 2012 at 8:30 am PST at City Hall, 1435 Water Street, Kelowna BC; from City Hall to all locations. The City reserves the right to reject any or all tenders, to waive defects in any bid or tender documents and to accept any tender or offer which it may consider to be in the best interest of the City. The lowest bid or any tender will not necessarily be accepted. Tender documents may be obtained at no charge from the City of Kelowna website or from the City of Kelowna Purchasing Branch, 1435 Water Street, Kelowna BC V1Y 1J4. kelowna.ca


Less Fuel. More Power. Great Value is a comparison between the 2012 and 2011 Chrysler Canada product lineups. 40 MPG or greater claim (7.0 L/100 km) based on 2012 EnerGuide highway fuel consumption estimates. Government of Canada test methods used. Your actual fuel consumption will vary based on powertrain, driving habits and other factors. See dealer for additional EnerGuide details. Wise customers read the fine print: •, *, ‡, ', § The Holiday Event offers are limited time offers which apply to retail deliveries of selected new and unused models purchased from participating dealers on or after November 1, 2012. Dealer order/trade may be necessary. Offers subject to change and may be extended without notice. See participating dealers for complete details and conditions. •$19,998 Purchase Price applies to 2013 Dodge Grand Caravan Canada Value Package (29E+CL9) only and includes $8,100 Consumer Cash Discount. $19,998 Purchase Price applies to 2013 Dodge Journey SE Canada Value Package (22F+CLE) only and includes $2,000 Consumer Cash Discount. Pricing includes freight ($1,500-$1,595) and excludes licence, insurance, registration, any dealer administration fees and other applicable fees and applicable taxes. Dealer order/trade may be necessary. Dealer may sell for less. See participating dealers for complete details. *Consumer Cash Discounts are offered on select new 2013 vehicles and are deducted from the negotiated price before taxes. Amounts vary by vehicle. See your dealer for complete details. ‡4.49% purchase financing for up to 96 months available on the new 2013 Dodge Grand Caravan Canada Value Package/2013 Dodge Journey SE Canada Value Package models to qualified customers on approved credit through Royal Bank of Canada, Scotiabank, TD Auto Finance and Ally Credit Canada. Dealer order/trade may be necessary. Dealer may sell for less. See your dealer for complete details. Examples: 2013 Dodge Grand Caravan Canada Value Package/2013 Dodge Journey Canada Value Package with a Purchase Price of $19,998/$19,998 (including applicable Consumer Cash Discounts) financed at 4.49% over 96 months with $0 down payment equals 208 bi-weekly payments of $115/$115 with a cost of borrowing of $3,823/$3,823 and a total obligation of $23,821/$23,821. Pricing includes freight ($1,500-$1,595) and excludes licence, insurance, registration, any dealer administration fees and other applicable fees and taxes. Dealer order/trade may be necessary. Dealer may sell for less. §2013 Dodge Grand Caravan Crew shown. Price including applicable Consumer Cash Discount: $27,395. 2013 Dodge Journey Crew shown. Price including applicable Consumer Cash Discount: $27,595. Pricing includes freight ($1,500-$1,595) and excludes licence, insurance, registration, any dealer administration fees and other applicable fees and applicable taxes. Dealer order/trade may be necessary. Dealer may sell for less. ■Based on Ward’s 2012 Small Van Segmentation. Excludes other Chrysler Group LLC designed and/or manufactured vehicles. &Based on R. L. Polk Canada Inc. January to October 2011 Canadian Total New Vehicle Registration data for Chrysler Crossover Segments. ^Based on 2013 Ward’s Middle Cross Utility segmentation. ¤Based on 2013 EnerGuide Fuel Consumption Guide ratings published by Natural Resources Canada. Transport Canada test methods used. Your actual fuel consumption will vary based on powertrain, driving habits and other factors. 2013 Dodge Grand Caravan – Hwy: 7.9 L/100 km (36 MPG) and City: 12.2 L/100 km (23 MPG). 2013 Dodge Journey SE 2.4 L 4-speed automatic – Hwy: 7.5 L/100 km (38 MPG) and City: 10.8 L/100 km (26 MPG). TMThe SiriusXM logo is a registered trademark of SiriusXM Satellite Radio Inc. ®Jeep is a registered trademark of Chrysler Group LLC.

B18 www.kelownacapnews.com

SCAN HERE FOR MORE

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Friday, November 9, 2012 Capital News

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Capital News Friday, November 9, 2012

www.kelownacapnews.com B19

showhome directory

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14 Radius #112-2142 Vasile Rd Priced from $264,000 OPEN BY APPOINTMENT 250 250-575-5851 57 www.pentarhomes.com

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PHONE:

17

OPEN DAILY 12-4:30PM

399,900

DAILY

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A 55+ adult gated community 4035 Gellatly Road South

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The Water’s Edge

3823 Sonoma Pines Drive

NEW SHOW HOMES NOW OPEN (NOON-5PM DAILY)

3865 Truswell Rd.

250.764.3104 250.469.2127

Downsize without compromise. $ from

NEW 1745 SF SHOWHOME Detached Homes starting at $419,900 +tax Open Saturday to Wednesday noon-4 pm, Thursday and Friday by appt. by calling 250-864-3773

250.707.0619

314,900

www.thewatersedgekelowna.ca

SIERRAS

G 1

Gardena in Kettle Valley

328 Providence Ave. Remax 250-717-5000 Lin Schierling/ Jane Matejka FINAL 3 HOMES www.GardenaLiving.com from $389,900 www 2 Bellamy Homes Heweston (Upper) Crt ROSEDALE MODEL HOME IN THE PONDS 250-470-2429 www.bellamyhomes.ca 250-47 3

Enclave

7

Gateway Urban Village

3623 Elliott Rd., West Kelowna from $289,900 OPEN NOON-5 PM SAT.-THURS. 250-448-6306 250 44 www.gatewayurbanvillage.com 8

Sage Creek

From $249,000 OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK 12-4PM 250-707-3801 www.sagecreek.com

600 Sherwood Road from $319,900 9 Miravista OPEN SAT & SUN 1-4PM from $249,000 Darcy Nyrose 250-575-1946 Coldwell Banker #2210-3834 Brown Rd. VIEW BY APPOINTMENT 250-878-8118 4 Woodland Hills Last Developers Suite to be Sold! 965 Westpoint Dr Lots starting at $265,000 Home + Lots starting at $1.4 M OPEN WED-SUN 12-4 PM 250-764-0626 250 76 woodlandhillskelowna.com 5

Seasons at Kettle Valley

433 McCarren Avenue from $379,900 OPEN SATURDAY & SUNDAY 1-4PM Darcy Nyrose 250-575-1946 Coldwell Banker 6

Mission Meadows

from $159,900 www.missionmeadows.ca

Ambrosi Court

Stonewater on the Lake

BLACK MOUNTAIN L

Tower Ranch

Sales Centre 12 -4 pm Daily (closed Tues.) 575 Black Mountain Dr.

18 Summit at Selkirk starting at $474,900 588 Harrogate Lane OPEN 12-5PM daily except Friday 250-861-8989 www.DilworthHomes.com

GLE GLENMORE 19

Roth Homes

739 Boynton Pl Was $999,000 Reduced to $920,000 OPEN SAT-SUN 2-4PM 250-470-8251 www.rothhomes.net

I6 Sp Spectacular Show Homes S p

$

Rykon Homes

1058 Henderson Drive $509,900 + HST Nyrose & Assoc. Jennifer 250-870-8118 Darcy 250-575-1946 www www.KelownaRealEstatePros.com

The Gate Townhomes

1651 Lynrick Rd. $295,000 inc net HST 250-718-1368 www.the gatekelowna.com

OUTSIDE OF AREA 26

Predator Ridge

100 Mashie Cres, Vernon from $409,000 250-860-PLAY www.predatorridge.com

Conveniently located for your Okanagan Lifestyle

From

24

25

www.canyonridgeliving.com

www.sonomapines.com 250-768-3703

SHOW SUITE OPEN DAILY

23

5235 Buchanan Rd $1,439,000 250-868-2776 - OPEN WEEKENDS 12-4 PM

DIL DILWORTH

F Celebrating over 25 Years of Building C

PEA PEACHLAND

Tower Ranch/North Pointe from $379,900 1836 Tower Ranch Blvd. OPEN SAT-THURS 12-5PM 250-491-2918 www.towerranch.com

$ Starting at Call 250-707-3799 or 250-878-7600 www.townhomesfortoys.com

12-5 PM

(778) 477-3455

Cadence at the Lakes

RUT RUTLAND

TESORO ARCA 3359 Cougar Rd (Treasure Chest for Toys)

OPEN

Mill Creek Landing

1933 Ambrosi Rd..... From $289,900 OPEN WEEK DAYS 3-5PM OPEN WEEKENDS 1:30-5PM www.ambrosicourt.com 250-470-2143

NO STRATA!

1,900-2,553+ sq/ft 2 Storey Walkouts 3+ Bed | 2.5 Bath

K

13075 Lake Hill Dr. Home + Lot from $379,900-$549,900 OPEN DAILY 12-4PM 1-877-766-9077 www.CadenceKelowna.com

1777 Water Street OPEN SUNDAY 1-4PM Jackie Bear 250-317-1699 Jacki

Home & Lot

1,222+ sq/ft Ranchers 2 Bed | 2 Bath

Destination Homes

13310 Lakehill Dr., Lake Country Sat-Thurs 11-4 from $249,900 250-707-1752 www.homesbydestination.com 250-70

A

WEST KELOWNA

$359,900

winsomehill.ca

LAKE COUNTRY/WINFIELD LAK

15

UPPER MISSION U N LAKE VIEWS!

589 Boynton Place Display home open weekends 1-4

H urban u 2 - 3 bedroom 4 level towhomes with private rooftop patios

Prices starting from $299,000 inc. Net HST

Map by Fred Armstrong © The Kelowna Capital News

A

New Home Designs Starting from 327,900 Inc. Net HST

Black Mountain & Joe Rich

Kelowna’s most complete guide to local showhomes

OKANAGAN MISSION

3 Bedroom Townhomes

Hillside Homes

KELOWNA SOUTH

O Okanagan M Missio Mission

1

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2355 Paramount Dr.- $589,000+HST Jaime Briggs 250-860-7500 Coldwell Banker

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H&H Homes in Smith Creek

3355 Sundance Dr. - $589,000+HST Jaime Briggs 250-860-7500 Coldwell Banker

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OKANAGAN

SHOWCASE

12

26

Ca

CENTRAL

169,900 Tax Included

z

TO ADVERTISE HERE...

5% down, 25 yr Bank/Credit Union Financing oac From $1138/mo. $8495 down or we look at trades toward down payments.

Quality Ɵle, 6 Whirlpool appliances, drywall, cemboard siding, 3 bed, 2 bath, 1188 sq.Ō.

250.717.7966

Call Accent Homes 250-769-6614 www.accenthomes.ca

20

Pearwood Corner

SHANNON LAKE/SMITH CREEK SHA

511 Yates Road OPEN SAT-SUN 1-4PM Ryan Mayne 250-860-0303

CALL FOR APPOINTMENT Mayne/Neufeld 250-469-4004 or 250-470-1044 www.tallusridge.com www

21

10

11

Tallus Ridge at Shannon Lake

H&H Homes in Smith Creek

from $329,900

Glenvalley on Clifton

Call Alan, or Terry at 250-763-3212 and upgrade your listing to a display advertisement!

600 Boynton 3 BD Units starting at $289,900 OPEN M-TH 12-5PM S-S 12-4PM Jason 250-801-6808 Pat 250-859-6335

3107 Sageview Road - $569,000+HST Jaime Briggs 250-860-7500 Coldwell Banker

showhome directory

CENTRAL

OKANAGAN

THERE’S MORE SHOWCASE

³


B20 www.kelownacapnews.com

Friday, November 9, 2012 Capital News

CE NTRAL

OKANAGAN

SHOWCASE W HOUSING SALES

Selling home sets the stage for retirement A recent survey revealed one in three Canadians over the age of 45 believe they will need to sell their real estate investments to support themselves through retirement. While funding retirement can mean selling off real estate, downsizing or putting the family home on the market, Valley First Credit Union’s Jay Christensen says a better option is to get an early start on your savings. “Saving is a habit,” explained Christensen. “Like any habit we’ve got to work at it so it becomes second nature. The earlier we can train our-

selves to put some money aside, the better off we will be in the long run.” Another factor leading to the need for greater retirement income is the climbing life expectancy—nearly 90 per cent of survey respondents anticipate they will live past 80. With the current retirement age set at 65, that means having the funds available for more than 15 years of retirement. “It’s no secret, people are living longer,” said Christensen. “Many are also working longer as a means to fund their retirement. The days when you could hang up your work

Upbeat 2013 forecast from CMHC

I CONTRIBUTED

WITH ABOUT 230,000 people aged 45 or older across the Okanagan, Similkameen and Thompson regions, more than 70,000 people will be looking to part with their estate holdings to fund their future lifestyles. clothes for good sometime in your 50s are quickly passing us by, so it’s important to have a sound financial plan.” For many, retirement seems like a long way off, but Christensen says those

who have successfully built up a healthy nest egg, often pass on a common piece of advice— discipline. “There seems to have been a generational shift in attitudes toward money,” noted Christens-

en. “Our parents took a lot less for granted, which for many meant a more cashconscious lifestyle. I think a lot of us would be better off if we could learn a few spending and savings lessons from the past.”

W OF PRIME INTEREST

Becoming familiar with mortgage language To help better understand the language of mortgage terminology, here are some key words that all potential home buyers need to be knowledgeable about.

PORTABILITY With today’s low mortgage interest rates, when either purchasing a home or refinancing your existing mortgage, peace of mind can take the worry out of future interest rate increase concerns. When a financial institution says you can “port” your mortgage, that means if you decide to sell your current home and still require a mortgage, the current interest rate will follow you to the new property. For example, if you have just taken a five-year closed mortgage and decide to sell and move to a new property in two years, you

do not have to pay out the mortgage but instead transfer it over to the new property, and any subsequent interest rate increases won’t be applied to the new mortgage for its remaining years. As well, if you have a variable rate mortgage, the rate is generally not portable.

TERM For those who take out a mortgage for the first time, there often is confusion between the words “amortization” and “term.” When your lender states the amortization of your mortgage is 25 years, that is how long it takes to pay off the mortgage debt with a monthly payment. Buyers have the option to accelerate paying off a mortgage by making biweekly or weekly payments. Term refers to the guaranteed time for you mortgage interest

rate before it can change as interest rates go up or down. The term for a mortgage can be as short as six months to as long as 10 years before coming up for renewal.

CLOSED VS. OPEN MORTGAGE Closed mortgages have certain conditions attached to them, such as being allowed to pay a certain amount off beyond the regular payments each year without a penalty being imposed. The allowable lump sum payment amount is usually 15 to 20 per cent. For example, on a $200,000 mortgage, a 20 per cent annual lump sum can max out at $40,000 each year of the mortgage term. Paying off the whole term of the mortgage before the maturity date will mean a penalty payout as well.

With an open mortgage, it offers the opportunity to pay off any amount of the mortgage at any time without incurring a penalty. But not being locked in to a set interest rate leaves you susceptible to changes in interest rates from month to month. When deciding what type of mortgage to take out, think about your financial intentions for the future. Of Prime Interest is a collaboration of mortgage specialists. Darwyn Sloat: 250-718-4117, email dsloat@kelownahomemortgages.ca; Trish Balaberde: 250-470-8324, email attrishb@ kelownahomemortgages.ca; Kristin Rosdal: 250-878-3007, email kristin@kelownahomemortgages.ca. They welcome your questions. Check out Facebook at Kelowna Home Mortgages Inc.

n September, only a mere 116 single-family homes were sold in the Central Okanagan, a surprisingly low monthly number but comparable to September 2007 when Canada’s red-hot real estate market came to a halt with just 117 single family homes reported sold. According to the Canadian Real Estate Association, September home sales fell across Canada by 15.1 per cent from a year ago, however, this is not region specific information. In October, 123 sinREAL ESTATE gle family homes sold, RUNDOWN slightly up from the previous month. Last year, that figure was 132 dwellings sold, a decrease from 2012 to 2011. As Canada’s housing Ceinwen market cools down in the Morgan third and fourth quarters, whispers are being heard of another recession. However, Canada Mortgage and Housing Corporation is claiming a different forecast. In CMHC’s recent Housing Market Outlook, the housing sales forecast for 2013 shows an increase of eight per cent in sales over 2012. Inventory is expected to remain on the high side, offering competitive sale prices and extending the buyer’s market sales conditions before leveling out by midyear. And mortgages rates are predicted to rise only slightly in 2013. The increase in employment growth in the Kelowna and surrounding areas will continue to support the supply and demand of the housing market, according to the CMHC forecast. “We see a pick up in growth in both employment and the economy next year, and that’s what leads to a slightly stronger outlook for housing,” said Carol Frketich, CMHC’s B.C. regional economist. Among all these promising predictions, CMHC says Canada has been feeling a recent staleness in the market due both to the usual seasonal slowdown and that extreme adjustments were made to the mortgage rules last July, forcing Canadian buyers to tighten up on their spending. The likelihood of seeing 2006 sale prices in the near future is doubtful as buyers are waiting for the bottom to hit in our real estate slump, but we may not be waiting too much longer if CMHC is on target with its housing sales forecast for 2013. Ceinwen Morgan has worked in the Kelowna real estate industry for the past five years.

Home-sites starting at $143,900. Lake view sites starting at $219,500. Call or visit our Sales Centre today Open Mon to Fri 9-4 and Sat & Sun 12-5

This is life.

Located in Upper Mission at Frost Rd. & Gordon Dr.

250-764-8700 | www.theponds.ca


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