MONDAY APRIL 1, 2013
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Vol. 61, Issue 62
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BARRY COULTER PHOTO
Shooters of all ages from around the province gathered in Cranbrook this weekend for the B.C. Provincial Archery Championships. The Cranbrook Archery Club hosted the event, for the second year in a row, at the Cranbrook Curling Club Friday, Saturday and Sunday. See more in Tuesday’s Daily Townsman.
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Page 2 Monday, APRIL 1, 2013
Weatoheurtlook Tonight 5
POP 10%
Local NEWS
Tomorrow 16 5
Wednesday 15 4
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Friday
Thursday 16 6
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Saturday 13 4
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daily townsman / daily bulletin
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Almanac Temperatures
High Low Normal ..........................10.1° ................-1.5° Record......................20.4°/1992 ......-15.6°/1975 Yesterday......................17.7° ................-2.9° Precipitation Normal..............................................0.8mm Record.....................................6.9mm/1976 Yesterday ...........................................0 mm This month to date.........................16.4 mm This year to date........................1027.9 mm
Rev. Yme Woensdregt offers a reading from Jeremiah to commence the ninth annual Crosswalk from Clocktower Square.
Ninth Annual Crosswalk, Good Friday, March 29, 2013
Precipitation totals include rain and snow
Tomorrows
unrise 7 17 a.m. unset 8 16 p.m. oonrise 2 48 a.m. oonset 11 51 a.m.
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Members of Cranbrook’s Christian community gathered downtown for an ecumenical celebration of Good Friday. A crowd of about 65 took turns carrying the cross from station to station: From Clocktower Square to the courthouse, thence to the War Memorial and the Rotary Park Bandstand, then CMHA – Kootenays, the Women’s Resource Centre, and finishing up at Christ Church Anglican. Prayers and readings were offered for the city, the world, and all who live in it. Photos by Barry Coulter
Across the Region Tomorro w Prince George 7/-5 Jasper 11/-4
Edmonton 7/-2
Banff 11/0 Kamloops 18/6
Revelstoke 13/5
Kelowna 17/5 Vancouver 12/8
Canada
Castlegar 15/7
today
Yellowknife Whitehorse Vancouver Victoria Saskatoon Regina Brandon Winnipeg Thunder Bay S. Ste. Marie Toronto Windsor Ottawa Montreal Quebec City Fredericton
p.cloudy snow sunny sunny p.cloudy flurries p.cloudy p.cloudy p.cloudy flurries flurries p.cloudy showers showers rain rain
The World
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tlanta Buenos ires etroit eneva avana ong ong iev ondon os ngeles Miami Paris Rome Singapore Sydney Tokyo Washington
p.cloudy showers p.cloudy sunny p.sunny p.sunny showers p.cloudy p.cloudy tshowers sunny cloudy tstorms p.cloudy cloudy p.cloudy
Calgary 16/0
Cranbrook 16/5
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flurries flurries p.cloudy p.cloudy p.cloudy p.cloudy p.cloudy p.cloudy p.cloudy flurries p.sunny p.cloudy p.cloudy p.sunny flurries p.cloudy
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From City Hall to the Canadian Mental Health Association – Kootenays.
The Rev. Katherine Hough at the War Memorial, with Rev. Frank Lewis (with cross).
tomorrow
23/9 17/17 5/-3 10/0 33/20 22/20 11/8 6/1 16/12 29/19 7/0 16/8 32/27 23/20 10/10 19/3
p.cloudy 18/8 p.sunny 18/18 flurries 4/-3 cloudy 8/3 p.cloudy 29/20 showers 23/21 sunny 8/3 sunny 6/0 p.cloudy 18/14 tshowers 29/21 sunny 7/1 showers 16/11 cloudy 33/27 p.cloudy 24/21 rain 12/12 p.cloudy 11/2
The Weather Network 2013
Rev. John Tellman at the Bandstand.
Joyce Aasland gives a reading at the Women’s Resource Centre.
At City Hall, members of Cranbrook United Church gave the reading.
Pastor Ron Short at the courthouse.
daily townsman
Local NEWS
Monday, APRIL 1, 2013
Page 3
Inquest into fatal Brisco crash concludes Columbia Valley Pioneer
Seeking answers after a Highway 95 crash that killed three men near Brisco in early 2011, a three-day BC Coroners Service inquest wrapped up in Invermere on Wednesday, March 29. Nearly 20 witnesses were called over the course of the inquest, which produced four recommendations: • In the future, if the Trans Canada Highway is closed for any length of time and Highway 95 is used as the alternate route, Highway 95 should be deemed a Class A highway. • An acceleration and deceleration lane should be built at the Spillimacheen rest area. • Considering the location of Highway 95, the speed limit should be reduced to 90 kilometres per hour between Golden and Radium. • When Highway 95 is used as an alternate route, portable road information signs should be placed south of Golden and north of Radium Hot Springs. Before taking their leave, the jury heard presiding coroner Chico Newell’s thoughts on the matter. He suggested more public awareness campaigns around winter highway driving and a further study on the impacts of re-routing Trans Canada Highway traffic could help prevent another ac-
cident like the one that ocurred on January 19, 2011. Chul Lee, Kwang Cha and Chungjic Koh were tragically killed when their southbound sedan was struck first by a logging truck, then by a Super B tractor trailer. The accident took place during an average winter day, with cold and clear weather and compact snow on the highway. At the time, avalanche control being carried out on the Trans Canada Highway meant significant traffic volumes were diverted onto Highway 95. Taking the stand on Tuesday, March 26, commercial vehicle inspector Ken Squarebriggs described the scene he witnessed as he came upon the scene while en route to Golden. The driver’s side of a 1996 Oldsmobile sedan was folded in, with the steering column pushed onto the passenger side of the vehicle, he said. A rotor was also destroyed. “It takes a lot of direct, straight impact to break a rotor like that,” he said. An inquest is a formal court process that allows for public presentation of evidence relating to a death, in which the goal is not to find blame, but to shed light on how to prevent futrure accidents.
Grass fire threatens homes Strong winds turn burn-off on grass lot into a fivehectare fire in Gold Creek last Wednesday Townsman Staff
Cranbrook Fire & Emergency Services responded to a fast moving grass fire Wednesday afternoon, March 27, threatening nearby homes. At approximately 2:30 p.m., Cranbrook Fire and Emergency Services attended the scene of the out-of-control grass fire, below the Gold Creek store in Area C. Cranbrook Fire and Emergency Services responded with six members and three apparatus including the bush truck. A resident was burning off grass on a lot in light winds in the morning, when the wind quickly strengthened
driving the flames across three lots, threatening some homes and sheds in the area. The fire totalled approximately five hectares in size and resulted in minimal property loss. Cranbrook Fire & Emergency Services would like to take this opportunity to remind residents that burning of yard and garden waste within the City of Cranbrook limits is prohibited. Residents in Area C are reminded to exercise caution when doing any burning. Conditions this early in the spring are already very dry.
Cougar shot near Okanagan daycare C ANADIAN PRESS
OYAMA, B.C. — Two cougars have been shot and killed in the Okanagan, including one prowling near a daycare in the community of Winfield, B.C. Conservation officers tracked and destroyed both cougars on Wednesday. The first animal was put down in Oyama, 22 kilometres south of Vernon, after stealing goats and sheep from a local farmyard. Conservation officer Ed Seitz says
the second cougar was spotted by children at a daycare just over 10 kilometres north of the first sighting. He says the animal was young, and he notes juvenile cougars are more likely to be shot because they haven’t successfully learned to survive on their own. Seitz points to an increasing number of cougar sightings around Lake Country and speculates populations of the usually shy and elusive cats are on the rise.
Photo courtesy B.C. government
Kootenay East MLA Bill Bennett with Kin Club Secretary Heather Smith; President Mike Paugh; and Vice Governor for BC/Yukon Anita Llewellyn.
Kin Club gets $25,000 boost Townsman Staff
The Kin Club of Cranbrook has been given a leg-up by the provincial government with a $25,000 community gaming grant. Kootenay East MLA Bill Bennett presented the grant last Wednesday, March 27. “The Kin Club here in Cranbrook has provided our community with immeasurable oppor-
tunities. They are dedicated to serving our community’s greatest needs as well as providing our area with community building events, such as the free public skating, which we have enjoyed over the past twenty years,” said Bennett. The Kin Club will use the grant to fund its annual free public skate, as well as scholarships.
“The gaming money means a great deal to our Kin Club and the community,” said president Mike Paugh. “The most visible benefit from the gaming funds is the annual free public skating that we have been running for more than twenty years. But, behind the scenes we provide four scholarships and bursaries, and many miscellaneous donations throughout our community.”
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daily townsman
Local NEWS
Kimberley ponders ‘aversive conditioning’ urban deer
Photo submitted
John Zehnder of Invermere has found the border collie to be the best dog for working with deer. Zehnder’s dogs are highly trained and respond to his every command. into the same spot teaches the deer that they will be harassed in town, but are safe in the non-human zone.
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tion, it got to the point that the deer would start to move as soon as they saw John’s truck.” The first application to the government is asking for a 48-hour trial
permit only. Obviously, that’s not enough to condition the deer, Oakley says, but he hopes it will be enough to demonstrate to Ministry of Environment people
that it is possible to move deer out of town with a professional handler and his dogs. “The 48 hours is just a demo for government,” he said. “Before we apply for the big piece that will allow an aversive conditioning program, they have to see it.” Oakley is hopeful the Ministry will approve a more extensive hazing program, and that it can occur before fawning this spring. The aversive conditioning occurs every day for about five or six weeks. “We do need to get them out of town before fawning. If they have their fawns out of town, they are more likely to stay out.” Oakley also stresses that aversive conditioning is only a piece of an overall plan to control the deer population. “The aversive conditioning deals with habituated animals; it’s not population control. Trapping emulates predation which is not here.”
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“Waterton is about the size of Marysville. John would come in with his dogs and he’d have the deer moved out of town in about 20 minutes. With repeti-
E • RE C YCL
With the City of Kimberley having now applied for a 48-hour trial permit to see how hazing might work in dealing with habituated deer within city limits, the question being asked is, what exactly is hazing? Hazing may not be quite the correct term, said Coun. Darryl Oakley, who is the council liaison to the deer management committee. “A better term would be ‘aversive conditioning’,” Oakley said. Aversive conditioning has been used in the Banff townsite since 2000 to deal with the elk population. It has also been used in Jasper on elk, and in Waterton on mule deer. Simply put, dogs, under control of their handler at all times, drive deer out of town, or the human zone, into the non-human zone away from town. When they have the deer in an area well away from
town, the dogs are called off. “The dogs create pressure on the ungulates in the human zone and then release it when the deer are out of the human zone,” Oakley said. “These dogs are extremely well trained. It’s all they’ve ever done.” John Zehnder of Invermere has worked on aversive conditioning in all three of the communities, and he is the dog handler who visited Kimberley and presented to the deer committee. “He has toured Kimberley and found several areas where he believes the aversive conditioning would work, like Marysville,” Oakley said. “The deer have pathways they will take to move in and out of town. John will identify those pathways, then the dogs drive the deer out of Marysville and down into the valley, then they let them go.” Repeatedly being driven out of town and
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C AROLYN GR ANT Daily Bulletin
Submitted
Shyanne Palmer-Paynter shows her Easter mask in Mrs. Maletta’s Kindergarten class at Pinewood Elementary School last week.
daily townsman / daily bulletin
Opinion/NEWS
B.C. returns to old sales tax Dirk Meissner Canadian Press
VICTORIA — Monday marks British Columbia’s official return to the provincial sales tax after an almost fiveyear crash-and-burn relationship with the harmonized sales tax. Introduced in 2009 as a saviour for business, but rejected in a historic peoples referendum in August 2011, the HST managed to cling to the province’s political, social and business fabric until now — taking with it former premier Gordon Campbell and possibly the current Liberal government of Premier Christy Clark as victims. British Columbians go to the polls on May 14, with the Opposition New Democrats, who called the HST a $2 billion transfer of wealth from consumers to businesses, expected to form the next government. Businesses are now grudgingly forced to return to the former seven per-cent PST after taking the past two-anda-half years getting used to the simplified, value-added HST, which combined the five-percent federal goods and services tax with the PST. Former B.C. finance minister Kevin Falcon once referred to the PST as a “stupid tax,’’ for its complications and exemptions, but he was one of many
Liberals quick to admit the government employed a bone-headed strategy to sell the HST to British Columbians. Barely three months after winning its third consecutive term in May 2009, Campbell’s Liberal government announced it had accepted Ottawa’s $1.6 billion offer to move to a harmonized federal-provincial tax system. The announcement was viewed with skepticism, especially since B.C. had consistently rejected previous federal offers to move to the an HST. The federal cash offer and the potential gold mine for business now appealed to Campbell’s Liberals who were virtually silent on the HST in the past, but now faced a massive budget deficit voters didn’t know about during the election campaign. Almost immediately, a grassroots Fight-HST movement began, enlisting former premier Bill Vander Zalm as a spokesman, while more than 500,000 people signed up to oppose the tax, prompting a provincewide referendum on the HST under B.C.’s direct democracy laws which allow for recalls of politicians and votes on some initiatives. Campbell resigned midterm, essentially admitting peoples concerns about his policies had stalled the progress of his government.
The tax went down to defeat in August 2011, but it’s taken until now to officially bring back the PST. B.C.’s small business minister Naomi Yamamoto said she has some concerns that not every business has properly registered to move to the PST for April 1, but for the most part, it will be business as usual. “We will see all those permanent exemptions prior to the HST reintroduced,’’ she said. “So, people will not be paying PST on things like gym memberships and restaurant meals, bicycle purchases, haircuts. But for the majority of purchases some may make they will probably see no difference at all.’’ Yamamoto said about 25,000 businesses have yet to register to collect the PST. She said about 100,000 B.C. businesses, mostly retailers, will collect the PST. She said the Finance Ministry has undertaken to contact every eligible business about their need to sign up and how they can do it on line or through consultations. She said the ministry has made more than 115,000 calls to businesses, written to each business twice and conducted almost 2,000 personal consultations with businesspeople. “There’s no provision, regrettably, in the legislation for
leniency,’’ said Yamamoto. “So businesses really are obligated if they are selling a product or service that attracts the tax, they have to collect it. But it’s not the Ministry of Finance’s intent to audit all of these businesses.’’ She said the ministry wants to help speed the process in any way it can. B.C. chamber of commerce president John Winter said he believes the majority of businesses will be signed up by April 1, but he expects in-store issues in the first few days as customers examine their receipts to see if they were charged taxes or not charged. “My sense is it’s going to be chaotic,’’ he said. “There’s going to be a lot of cash register discussions.’’ The provincial government struck a deal with the federal government to pay back the $1.6 billion in the months after the HST was defeated in the referendum. The money will gradually be returned over the next five years, interest free. Falcon said at the time that getting a break on the interest would save the province $100 million. “Obviously, in a perfect world, I wish we didn’t have to pay back anything,’’ the minister told reporters in January last year as he announced the agreement.
Great April Fools pranks of the ages Sally MacDonald Townsman Staff
H
appy April Fools Day! Lucky for you, we are not going to trick with you a wacky news story that we have made up – although it’s awfully tempting to pass up on the one day of the year when we can embellish the truth. Still, what kind of newspaper would we be if we failed to even acknowledge April Fools Day? You’d be questioning every article in today’s paper, looking for the one that stands out as a little too far-fetched. So instead, let’s take a look at some of the best pranks people have fallen prey to over recent years, according to the World Wide Internets. Tech companies like to get onboard with April Fools Day. Google in particular has crafted some clever pranks over the years. In 2011, Google announced that people with Gmail accounts could now choose a “sent” time on each email they compose – including times in the past. So, for example, if you woke up at 3 a.m. realizing you had missed your sister’s birthday, you could quickly dash off an email and select the sent time as, say, 6 p.m. the previous night. It’s a genius idea, but sadly, time-travelling emails are still a figment of our imagination. Also in 2011, Google UK “released” on April 1 a program that could translate animal-speak into English. So when your dog
starts barking inexplicably, you simply press a button on your smart phone, hold it up to the animal’s mouth, and listen as the dog explains what the problem is. Last April Fools Day, Google Australia said it had found a solution to mapping the vast expanses of the Australian outback. It would strap wireless cameras to the heads of kangaroos which would automatically upload street view footage of the desert. This year, Google pranked the world through YouTube, which it now owns. Over the weekend, YouTube announced that it would be shutting down, as it was actually just an elaborate eight-year talent contest to find the world’s best home video. The winner will be announced in 10 years, they said. It’s a little far-fetched, but the world’s best home video is surely to be found on YouTube – if only you could sit through all the baby’s-first-bath and doghas-a-bone videos to find it. In the world of newspapers, The Guardian newspaper out of the U.K. announced in 2009 that it would cease being a print newspaper. That part is not very farfetched. What raised a red flag was the subsequent announcement that The Guardian would produce the news solely in 140-character Twitter posts. That prank is one to make us journalists shudder. A particularly classic April Fools prank was produced by fast-food chain Taco Bell back in 1996. It announced that it had purchased the U.S. Independence artifact the
Liberty Bell, and was consequently renaming it the Taco Liberty Bell. When it comes to personal pranks, my favourite is the story of a young woman who got married about a week before April Fools Day with an officiant. A couple of days after the ceremony, the woman filed her marriage certificate at city hall to have the marriage officially registered. Then on April Fools Day, as the couple were preparing to leave for their honeymoon, she receives a call from city hall – it shows up on call display as the appropriate number. A clerk tells the woman that her marriage is not legal and travelling under her married name would constitute fraud. The frazzled couple rush to city hall, where clerks know nothing about it and reassure that their marriage is legitimate. Turns out the woman’s brother had gone to the effort of buying a device that changes the source phone number on an outgoing call, as well as a voice alteration device – all to prank his unsuspecting sister as she was about to leave on her honeymoon. It’s enough to make me thank my lucky stars I don’t have a brother! Whatever mischief you have played or been subject to today, we hope that everybody enjoys a good laugh this April Fools Day. Sally MacDonald is a reporter at the Cranbrook Daily Townsman.
Monday, APRIL 1, 2013
Page 5
What’s Up?
KIMBERLEY AND CRANBROOK COMMUNITY CALENDAR
UPCOMING Wed April 3rd GoGo Grannies Travelogue. Very exciting Gorilla trek in Rwanda. Join Allister and Denise Pedersen as they take us on a photo journey of this gorilla trek, many other animals and exotic bird watching. Entry is by donation. 7:00pm, College of the Rockies Lecture Theatre. Info: Norma at 250-426-6111. 2013 FREE PUBLIC SWIM - SHUT DOWN - No swims April 3 & 17. The GoGo Grannies of Kimberley are having a fund raising African Dinner on April 6 at 6 pm at the Old Bauernhaus. There will be an Silent Auction, Door Prizes and Great Food also a No Host Bar. Contact Ruth at 250-427-2706. SOCIAL - DANCE held monthly at the Cranbrook Seniors HALL on 2nd St. South, APRIL 6th with music provided by the GREAT CANADIAN BARN DANCE of HILL SPRING, ALBERTA. Come out from 7-11 with friends and family for a night of Great Dance and fun! Call 250. 489. 2720. alcohol-free premise Ladies Double Dart Tourney April 6th 2013, Cranbrook Legion. Registration 9:30, Start 10:00. More info Rob Martin 250-489-1273. Don Johnson Memorial Dart Tourney, Eagles Nest - Cranbrook Eagles Hall, April 6th 2013. Registration- 9:30 am. Start- 10:00 am. For more info contact Lloyd 250-426-2442. Mountain View District - Girl Guides of Canada will be selling our Spring Cookies on Saturday, April 6 at Wal-Mart, Safeway, Save-On Foods and Tamarck Centre, from 10am to 4pm. The Rocky Mtn Fly-Fishers invite you to our meeting April 9, 7:00 pm in the Superstore Community Room. Guest speaker: H. Lamson (Fish Biologist). Limited seating: 250-489-3013 or 778517-3996 to reserve. April 10th. Kimberley Garden Club April Meeting program: Growing and Using Edible Herbs and Flowers. Selkirk High School Library 7-9 pm. New members welcome. Info: Nola 250-427-1948. Home Grown Music Society presents the 30th Anniversary Celebration Coffee House on April 13 at Centre 64 at 7:30 pm. Tickets at the Snowdrift Cafe in Kimberley. “Walking the Camino de Santiago” Lorna and Suzanne invite you on a photographic journey of our 800 km pilgrimage from St Jean-Pied-de-Port in France across Spain to Santiago de Compostela. Sunday, April 14 at 7:30 pm. Kimberley United Church, 10 Boundary St. (corner of Boundary & Wallinger) Admission by donation. Proceeds to Kimberley United Church. Cranbrook Community Theatre wishes to transport you into spring with their upcoming production, Enchanted April. Directed by Terry Miller, Enchanted April runs for ten nights, April 12 & 13, 17-20 and 24-27, 2013 at the Studio/Stage Door, 11-11th Ave S, Cranbrook. Tickets available at Lotus Books. East Kootenay Historical Association Meeting, Sunday Apr. 14, Heritage Inn, 12 noon. Guest speaker: Angus Davis. Phone Marilyn 250-426-3070 or Skip 250-426-3679. ONGOING Bibles for Missions Thirft Store welcomes spring! Come celebrate with us - bright colors, outdoor items, clothing - weekly colored tag sale, or ‘fill a bag’ with bonus bargains. 824 Kootenay St. N., Cranbrook. Open Tues-Sat 10am-5pm. 778-520-1981. Royal Canadian Legion Branch 24; Friday Meat Draw: 4:30- 6:30, Saturday Meat Draw: 3:30-5:30. The Compassionate Friends meet 2nd Tuesday each month at 4:00pm at the East Kootenay Child Care Resource and Referral Boardroom (in the Baker Street Mall parking lot) Info: call Laura @ 250 489-1000/Diane @ 250 489-0154 Do you have the desire to stop eating compulsively? OVEREATERS ANONYMOUS (a 12-Step Program) meets Tuesdays from 7-8 pm at Cranbrook United Church, 2-12 S. S., downstairs. Contact: cranbrookoa@hotmail.com. The Council of Senior Citizens Organizations (COSCO) is an advocacy group devoted to improving “The Quality Of Life” for all seniors. To become a member contact Ernie Bayer, ph 604-576-9734, fax 604-576-9733, email ecbayer@shaw.ca. The Cranbrook Kimberley Hospice Society seeks volunteers to help us provide services to persons at the end of life and their families. Training is provided. Call 250-417-2019, Toll Free 1-855-417-2019 if interested. Cranbrook Quilters’ Guild hold their meetings on the 2nd and 4th Tuesdays each month at 7:15 pm upstairs in Seniors Hall, 125-17th Ave. S. All skill levels welcome. FMI Betty 250-489-1498 or June 250-426-8817. Mark Creek Lions “Meet and Greet” the 1st and 3rd Wednesday, from 6:00-6:30 pm. Dinner to follow at Western Lodge. FMI: 250-427-5612 or 427-7496. Tai Chi Moving Meditation, Wednesdays from 3-4pm at Centre 64, Kimberley. Call Adele 250-427-1939. The Cranbrook Senior Floor Curling is looking for new members. Curling is Monday and Wednesday afternoons, upstairs in the Curling Rink. Info: Dave at 250-426-5387. KIMBERLEY North Star Quilters meet 2nd and 4th Monday of each month at 7pm downstairs Centennial Hall, 100 4th Avenue. Everyone welcome. 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OPINION
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Greenhouse gas leaks from trust
T
he Pacific Carbon Trust orchestrated a months-long campaign of calls and letters to discredit a report from B.C.’s Auditor General on its first two big carbon offset projects, before it could be released. Just as the audit report was about to be made public, the trust, a Crown corporation created at taxpayer expense, participated in the leaking of selected critical letters to media outlets. Then the Speaker of the B.C. legislature, Bill Barisoff, made a final, clumsy effort to delay the release of the report. As soon as it was out, Environment Minister Terry Lake tried to discredit it, by blustering about all the highly paid experts who swore up and down that a forest reserve near Kootenay Lake, and a gas flaring reduction project near Fort Nelson, were bona fide carbon offsets worth $6 million of taxpayers’ money. The audit states in plain language, with charts and timelines, that the $6 million was basically given away for nothing. I look forward to further audits on this carbon offset scheme, assuming it survives after the May election, because these two projects aren’t the only boondoggles. The Pacific Carbon Trust was set up in 2008 as part of former premier Gordon Campbell’s climate change program. To
make the B.C. government’s operations “carbon neutral,” the government and all of its agencies were required to pay the trust $25 per tonne for their carbon dioxide emissions from fuel use. In 2011 alone, B.C. universities paid $4.46 million to the trust. B.C.’s 60 school districts paid a total of $5.36 million the same year, and the province’s six health authorities paid $5.79 million. The money is supposed to go to BC VIEWS projects that capture carbon, thus “offsetting” the Tom heating of schools, the fuel Fletcher burned by ambulances and so forth. The 55,000-hectare forest reserve is known as Darkwoods. The audit shows that the Nature Conservancy of Canada decided in 2006 to buy it, using $25 million of federal taxpayers’ money. The deal closed in 2008, the same year the Pacific Carbon Trust was formed. From 2008 to 2010, the trust bought 450,000 tonnes of carbon offset, based on independent evaluations that all rested on the assumption that Darkwoods would be clear-cut logged. Since the forest was already owned by Canada’s leading conservancy, this assumption makes no sense. Was the conservancy going to log it, or flip it to someone who would, after accepting $25 million in tax money to acquire it? Legally, it could not.
(I would add that the assumption that logging releases all of the carbon in a forest is also false. Lumber actually sequesters carbon for longer than trees, which eventually die and rot.) The audit found a similar case against EnCana’s flare reduction program, which the company used on many wells before the trust started offering money. EnCana was saving money as well as reducing emissions without collecting offsets. Therefore, the audit concluded, neither of these projects was a credible offset because the emissions savings would have occurred anyway. Here’s the next Pacific Carbon Trust project that should be audited. In a complicated transaction, the trust bought offsets from something called the Great Bear Carbon Credit Limited Partnership. Yes, this is the world-famous forest on B.C.’s North Coast that was subject to a preservation deal hammered out between the Coastal First Nations, the B.C. government and three U.S.-backed environmental groups. That was in 2006. The offset purchases were in 2009 and 2010, years after detailed preservation areas were mapped and codified in law. Again, the trust paid for forest that was already preserved. Tom Fletcher is a columnist for Black Press and BCLocalnews.com. tfletcher@blackpress.ca
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KOOTENAY ICE
Crosby out indefinitely with broken jaw after puck hits him in mouth
PITTSBURGH - Sidney Crosby has a broken jaw and is out indefinitely after being hit in the mouth with a puck during a win against the New York Islanders on Saturday. The Pittsburgh Penguins said on the team website Sunday that Crosby had surgery Saturday night, and there will be an update on his status later in the week. Crosby, the NHL’s leading scorer, was struck in the face during the first period of the Penguins’ 2-0 win. Slow-motion replays showed multiple teeth flying out of his mouth after the puck struck him during his first shift. The team said Crosby had “major dental work” and will have more done later in the week. Crosby has 56 points (15 goals, 41 assists) and holds a 10-point lead in the scoring race. He has not missed a game yet this season after being limited to 22 regular-season games over the prior two calendar years because of concussion-like symptoms and neck issues after absorbing big hits in consecutive games Jan. 1 and Jan. 5, 2011. Midway through his comeback season, Crosby said he was feeling so good he “doesn’t even think about” the risk of concussion or head or neck injury anymore after two years in which it dominated his life. Teammates expressed similar sentiments. Associated Press
Jacobs defeats Finland, stays unbeaten at men’s curling worlds VICTORIA - Brad Jacobs and his Canadian rink got points for messy housekeeping Sunday at the world men’s curling championships. The Sault Ste. Marie, Ont., skip remained unbeaten after two draws as he came back to beat Finland’s Aku Kauste 8-6. Jacobs overcame an early 4-1 deficit by putting up plenty of junk instead of deploying his usual clean, takeout-based game. “It wasn’t a typical game for us,” said Jacobs, who is competing at the worlds for the first time. “We like to try to build a lead and peel, as everyone knows. “We did that in the first game (a win over China), but this game was totally the opposite. But it’s nice to have a game like that, too, where you have to come back to win.” He and his rink of third Ryan Fry, second E.J. Harnden and lead Ryan Harnden forced Kauste to make several misses as his rink fell to 0-2. Canada maintained a share of first place with Sweden (2-0). In the only other game on the morning draw, Norway’s Thomas Ulsrud edged Sven Michel of Switzerland 8-7. Canadian Press
Murray rallies past Ferrer for Sony Open title KEY BISCAYNE, Fla. - Andy Murray has erased a championship point and rallied past David Ferrer 2-6, 6-4, 7-6 (1) in the final of the Sony Open. One point from defeat in the last set, Murray skipped a forehand off the far baseline to stay in the match Sunday. He then dominated the tiebreaker, while Ferrer appeared to cramp and collapsed to the court after one rally. CBS cut away from the final when it went to the tiebreaker to join the start of the NCAA tournament game between Michigan and Florida. The network later showed a replay of match point. Murray also won the title in 2009. His path to this year’s championship was made easier because Roger Federer and Rafael Nadal skipped the tournament and Novak Djokovic lost in the fourth round. Associated Press
AMY BRACKEN PHOTO/EDMONTON SUN
Kootenay Ice forward Brock Montgomery gets in the face of Edmonton Oil Kings goaltender Laurent Brossoit during WHL action at Rexall Place in Edmonton on Friday night. The Ice are out of the WHL playoffs following a 4-1 loss, which gave the Oil Kings a 4-1 series victory.
Oil Kings put Kootenay on ice Edmonton wins playoff series against Kootenay on Friday night with a 4-1 victory at Rexall Place TRE VOR CR AWLEY Sports Editor
For the second straight year, the Oil Kings were just too tough to handle. Drawing the Eastern Conference’s top team again this WHL post-season, the Kootenay Ice fell in five games after losing 4-1 to their hosts in Rexall Place on Friday night in Edmonton. Edmonton advances into the second round, where they will face the Medicine Hat Tigers—a team that swept the Memorial Cup hosts in the Saskatoon Blades in four games. Despite the score, it was a close contest till the final period, as Edmonton only led by one goal with less than five minutes remaining in the game. The Oil Kings led by one goal after the first period, but the Ice put on the pressure in the middle frame and managed to tie it up. “It looked like we were a little tentative and we needed to not feel our way through the game,” said Ice head
coach Ryan McGill. “We just needed to get more effort.” The Ice turned it up in the middle frame, but the Oil Kings pulled ahead just after the halfway mark. Edmonton scored an insurance goal with 3:08 remaining in the game and also notched an empty netter for a 4-1 final. Kootenay went on the powerplay early, after Sam Reinhart got mixed up with Keegan Lowe, dragging Travis Ewanyk into it, who drew the extra minor. The Ice’s power play was dangerous the whole night, but didn’t find the back of the net, as Edmonton maintained their 100 per cent penalty kill all series. “We were more effective, we moved the puck better, we gave them a different look,” said McGill. “We had one breakaway on the powerplay late in the third period, so not much more we can do, other than score.” Luke Bertolucci struck first in the latter half of the period, walk-
ing out from the sideboards and roofing a shot on the short side of Ice goaltender Mackenzie Skapski.
The game opened up in the second period, as Kootenay began playing with a sense of urgency and desperation. The team was rewarded nearly three minutes in, when Jakub Prochazka redirected a cross-ice pass from Jaedon Descheneau past Oil Kings goaltender Laurent Brossoit. Kootenay poured on the pressure, as Collin Shirley had a chance right in front of the net, while Sam Reinhart had a quality scoring opportunity in the slot, but Brossoit came up huge for the Edmonton squad. The game remained
knotted for nine minutes, but the Oil Kings pulled ahead when Curtis Lazar used his speed to get behind the Ice defence, and roofed a backhander over Skapski’s glove after getting a feed from Dylan Wruck. Kootenay had a glorious chance to draw even on an odd man rush shortly after, but Jordyn Boyd’s shot went just wide of a gaping net. Reinhart also had a partial breakaway, but couldn’t settle the puck to get a decent shot on net. “I thought we played real good in the second period,” said McGill. “I thought we generated lots of scoring chances, and we just didn’t bury our chances, but that has to come through second and third efforts.” More Kootenay pressure came in the third period, but the momentum halted when Ice defenceman Jagger Dirk was whistled for a hit from behind on Mitch Moroz. The Ice rearguard was slapped with a five-minute major and a game misconduct for the play.
A man short for five minutes, the Ice penalty kill went to work, and came up huge, denying Edmonton on every single opportunity during their powerplay. “It was real big, because we generated offence off it, and we generated offence after it,” said McGill, “but once again, we didn’t bury our opportunities when we got our powerplay.” Brossoit bailed out his team with the save of the game late in the contest, when he kicked out a pad to stop a shot from Luke Philp, who came in all alone when the Ice had the man-advantage. However, the Oil Kings added the insurance marker with three minutes remaining after Stephane Legault picked up a rebound on Skapski and stuffed it in. Lazar notched the empty netter a minute later to crush any hope for the Ice. Skapski ended the game with 32 saves, while Brossoit turned away 24 shots for the Oil Kings.
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ARIES (March 21-April 19) Once more, you are energized and ready to go. Others respond to your efforts. Opportunities pop up left and right; know that you are fortunate. Trust yourself to know which way to turn. A call comes in from out of left field that makes you smile. Tonight: Hang out. TAURUS (April 20-May 20) Go with the moment, but be sure to include a friend or loved one in your plans. You might be in the throes of anger and trying to suppress your feelings. Know that they will come through anyway. The other party happily will work through this rift with you. Tonight: Togetherness. GEMINI (May 21-June 20) Defer to a partner or an associate who seems to have a lot to share. This person might want to have an open discussion with you. Relate to him or her directly, especially if you feel angry or frustrated. Clearing the air will energize you. Tonight: Go for what you want.
CANCER (June 21-July 22) You might want to approach a personal matter differently. You’ll open up to a positive change, mainly because your sixth sense pushes you in that direction. You are in a period where you make the right choices. Tonight: Back away from a controlling authority figure. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) You might want to rethink a personal issue. What you might have believed was happening likely will be true, and it will result in a wonderful opportunity that comes forward. You could be delighted as a result. Friends are a source of good news. Tonight: Ever playful. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) Tension builds around a family member, real estate or a matter relating to your home. You can only push so much. You are making a judgment that is increasing the pressure. Understand that you cannot control others, nor should you even try to. Tonight: Make it easy. LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) Be aware of your limits. By hon-
For Better or Worse
oring boundaries, everyone will get along much better. News from a distance encourages you to try something different or open up to new possibility. You might need to pull back some in order to get the big picture. Tonight: At a favorite spot. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21) You have a tendency to go overboard. Hold back, as you might not be interested in what comes down your path in the long run. What is behind your sudden desire to go wild? You might gain more self-control when you find that answer. Tonight: Run some errands on the way home. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21) You beam and draw many people toward you. When you see your options more clearly, the way you handle a personal matter could change radically. A person who seems to bring you luck will suddenly appear. Be happy for the ease at present. Tonight: Head home early. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) You could feel off-kilter right now. Assume a low profile -- at least for a little while. Observe
what is happening on the home front. You might wish for a change of pace and/or a more peaceful atmosphere. Just go with the moment. Tonight: Nap, then decide. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18) Zero in on your priorities. Someone you interact with could find you to be very touchy or difficult to deal with. This person lets you know what he or she feels in no uncertain terms. Do you really want a fight? Let go of the issue. Tonight: Try to make it an early night. PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20) A boss could anger you. You might not feel free to really express what you are thinking. Follow your intuition, and give the situation some time. Get feedback from a trusted friend or an adviser. Timing can make all the difference. Tonight: Burn the candle at both ends. BORN TODAY Singer Susan Boyle (1961), actress Debbie Reynolds (1932), TV personality Jon Gosselin (1977) ***
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Annie’s Mailbox by Kathy Mitchell and Marcy Sugar Dear Annie: I am an elementary school teacher. This year I have two 7-year-old students with major behavior issues. Both of them have threatened to bring a gun to school and shoot me and their classmates. As shocking as it is to hear this from such young children, the response from the people in charge is worse. I reported these threats multiple times, and nothing has been done. No one has even spoken to the boys about their behavior. I was told the kids are young and most likely don’t have access to guns. Yet these kids have older siblings who can obtain guns for them. In light of current events, I take these threats seriously. I’ve spoken to the principal, vice-principal, school social workers and the boys’ parents. They all tell me I need to “focus on the positive things the kids do.” Am I crazy, or are they? What should I do? Quitting my job is not an option. -- Worried Teacher Dear Teacher: While it is not uncommon for young children to make such threats, they normally do not follow through. However, there is a slim possibility that one of these boys will bring a weapon to school and attempt to use it, especially if he hears news reports about other school shootings. The bigger problem is the “major behavior issues.” We realize you are fearful, but an alarmed approach is not productive. Are these boys receiving any kind of ongoing counseling or assistance? Perhaps if you approach this as a way to help the children develop better coping skills, the school will address it more directly and effectively. Dear Annie: Please let your readers know of an easy way to support our troops. When buying a new cellphone, donate your old one to the nonprofit Cell Phones for Soldiers through cellphonesforsoldiers.com. Cell Phones for Soldiers was founded in 2004 by Robbie and Brittany Bergquist of Norwell, Mass., when they were 12 and 13 years old. The organization converts proceeds from used cellphones into prepaid phone cards for our troops overseas. They have donated more than 181 million minutes to our troops, many of whom could not otherwise afford to call home. Please support those individuals who support our country. -- Bay St. Louis Dear Bay St. Louis: Thank you for mentioning this very worthwhile organization. We hope our readers will keep it in mind when getting a new cellphone. Dear Annie: I was perplexed by the recent letter from “Mr. Manners” about bits of food that a diner drops on the plate. He expressed disgust that people pick up the bits with their fingertips, and you concurred that it was proper etiquette to use one’s knife to retrieve the droppings. I can display more grace picking up such bits with my fingertips than anyone can with forks and knives. And what about the centuries-old practice of sopping one’s bread in leftover juices? However, my real question is: In the grand scheme of things, what difference does it make if a person picks up food bits with the fingers? -- Durant, Okla. Dear Durant: You may have misunderstood the original letter. When eating peas and other small, hard-to-capture foods, it is best to get them onto one’s fork by using a knife or a piece of bread, rather than pushing them with one’s fingers. It’s unappetizing to watch someone use their fingers. And yes, you can sop bread in leftover juices, as long as you don’t make a slurpy mess of it. Annie’s Mailbox is written by Kathy Mitchell and Marcy Sugar, longtime editors of the Ann Landers column. Please email your questions to anniesmailbox@comcast.net, or write to: Annie’s Mailbox, c/o Creators Syndicate, 737 3rd Street, Hermosa Beach, CA 90254. To find out more about Annie’s Mailbox and read features by other Creators Syndicate writers and cartoonists, visit the Creators Syndicate Web page at www.creators.com. COPYRIGHT 2013 CREATORS.COM
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Wednesday Afternoon/Evening
New SpriNg ArrivAlS ISOTONER Cabanas Slippers Assorted Styles & Colours Scarves & Jewellery
Baker St. Mall 250.489.8464
Need help with current events?
PREVIOUS PUZZLE ANSWER MM SRC
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Prince Prince Fools Trial Sens Union C’est ça la vie
Oh Sit! Telejournal
Top 10 30 vies Épi
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Trial Nou
It’s Within You!
It’s Within You!
It’s Within You! In the Prestige Hotel Join us April 6th for
Spring Awakening Retreat
250-417-0505
PROFESSIONAL TAX SERVICES • Convenient, Affordable & Accurate • Maximize Your Deductions! • Book Your Appointment ASAP * Basic individual tax returns start from $65 ** Basic are slip based only with a limited number of slips *** All tax returns are billed on a time basis
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Certified General Accountant 1017 16th St. S. Cranbrook, B.C. V1C 5V2 Phone: 778-520-0022 Fax: 778-520-0023 Email: lmccga@shaw.ca
Read the DAILY newspaper for local happenings!
250-426-5201
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Communication Center for the Kootenays! Talk to a Real Person 24/7.
April 3
Word Wild Elec News Busi PBS NewsHour Nature NOVA Eat, Fast-Live Greatest Good Charlie Rose # # KSPS-PBS Sid News News CTV News Arrow CSI: Cri. Scene American Idol News News Daily Colbert $ $ CFCN Ellen Show The Doctors News ABC News News Ent Insider Middle Su Mod How- Nashville News Kim % % KXLY-ABC Rachael Ray Dr. Oz Show News CBS News Inside Ac Survivor: Cara Criminal Minds CSI: Cri. Scene News Late & & KREM-CBS Dr. Phil Judge Judge News News News Million. J’pard Wheel Dateline NBC Law & Order Chicago Fire News Jay _ _ KHQ-NBC Ellen Show Hocke NHL Hockey SportsCentre That’s Hcky 24 CH SportsCentre SportsCentre ( ( TSN SportsCentre MLB Baseball Sportsnet Con. Hocke Blue ) ) NET Sportsnet Con. MLB Baseball From Rogers Centre in Toronto. The Young News News News Hour Ent ET Survivor: Cara Go On Office Chicago Fire News + + GLOBAL BC Ricki Lake Under Frontiers of Travels-Tanger La Boheme Frontiers of , , KNOW Rob Clifford Ceorge Arthur Martha Wild Ani Dragons’ Den News News News Ex Georg Cor Mr. D Ron Arctic Air National News Georg ` ` CBUT Reci Ste News News News News ET Ent Chicago Fire Survivor: Cara Go On Office News Hour Fi ET J. 1 M CICT The Young News News News Hour ET Ent Chicago Fire Survivor: Cara Go On Office News Hour ET J. 3 O CIVT The Young 4 6 YTV Squir Side Spong Spong Spong Spong Victo Young Young Boys Spla Zoink’ Gags Gags Boys Young Weird Spla Steve Harvey Simp Ray Theory Two Theory Two American Idol News Rock Sunny TMZ 6 . KAYU-FOX Ricki Lake Piers Morgan Cooper 360 E. B. OutFront Piers Morgan Cooper 360 E. B. OutFront 7 / CNN Situation Room E. B. OutFront Cooper 360 Deadliest Deadliest Fighting Police Videos Police Videos Police 8 0 SPIKE (3:30) Fighting Hunt Hunt Hawaii Hawaii House Hunters Hunt Hunt Hawaii Hawaii House Hunters Living Flea 9 1 HGTV Holmes/Home Water Homes Duck Duck Duck Duck Duck Duck Duck Duck Duck Duck Duck Duck Duck Duck Duck Duck : 2 A&E The First 48 Pick UnSta Gags Gags Rules Rules Funny Videos Gags Gags Rules Rules Funny Videos Rules Rules < 4 CMT Kort ER Anna’s Storm Property Bro Cand Love Love It-List It Cand Cand Love It-List It Love It Date- Me Property Bro = 5 W Rookie Blue Swarmed NCIS NCIS Hawaii Five-0 NCIS NCIS ? 9 SHOW Hawaii Five-0 Silver Rush Silver Rush Silver Rush Bering Gold Silver Rush Silver Rush Silver Rush @ : DISC How/ How/ Daily Planet Nightmares Big Brother Matchmaker Matchmaker Big Brother Matchmaker Big Brother A ; SLICE Debt Debt Intervention Hoard-Buried Obses Obses Hoard-Buried Obses Obses Hoard-Buried Obses Obses B < TLC Obses Obses Obses Obses Hoard-Buried The Mentalist White Collar Homeland (:15) Flashpoint Criminal Minds Criminal Minds White Collar C = BRAVO Criminal Minds Flashpoint After Hours ReGenesis Past Perfect Truth Abt Char (:45) The Chronicles of Riddick Trem D > EA2 The Player Jim Johnny Johnny Adven Gum Regu Regu Incred MAD Ftur Family Amer. Robot Family Dating E ? TOON Scoob Loone Jim ANT Phi Austin Jessie Good ANT Shake Good Win Austin Gravity Win Warth Lizzie Raven Cory Prin F @ FAM Wiz Fill in theWPCH gridOffice so thatOfficeeveryTheory rowTheory (nine Brown cells wide), every Payne column Payne Brown Sein(nine SeincellsFamily Family Amer. Head of State Mexi G A Sein cells Match byN’Rad. Gas theGags H B tall) and COM everySein box (three threeCom cells)Theory contain digitsJust/Laughs 1 through 9Match in Simp Theory Com Sugar Sammy Daily Colbert (3:30)isGuys andone Dolls solution for Henry V puzzle. Hamlet (:15) Richard III I C any order.TCMThere only each Duck Duck Stor Stor Repo Repo Duck Duck Stor Stor Repo Repo Duck Duck Minute to Win K E OUT Mantracker Cajun Cajun MASH MASH Amer. Pickers Pawn Pawn Amer Amer Swamp People Yukon Gold Pickers L F HIST Pickers Stargate SG-1 Paranormal Wi. Stranded Inner Castle Star Trek: Voy. Ripley Paranormal Wi. M G SPACE Inner Ripley Castle CSI: Miami The Transporter (:01) True Lies (:02) Out of Sight N H AMC CSI: Miami O I SPEED NASCAR Hub Pass Pass Stunt Stunt Drag Drag Truck Truck Stunt Stunt Drag Drag Truck Truck Unique Whips Weird Friend Friend ’70s ’70s Rose. Rose. Debt ET Friend Friend ’70s ’70s 3rd 3rd P J TVTROP Weird Seeds of Destruction (:05) Colombiana Rogue Rogue Marvel’s the Avengers W W MC1 The Flowers of War Maury Family Family News News Two Two Arrow Supernatural KTLA 5 News Friend Friend ¨ ¨ KTLA Cunningham Rules Rules Rules Rules News at Nine Vampire Rules Rules Rock Scrubs Rock Sunny ≠ ≠ WGN-A Chris Chris Funny Videos William Shatner, World Idle Hands (:35) Serial Mom So I Married-Murderer Idle Ø Ø EA1 Clash (:25) Batman Forever Served Downton Abbey Twice-Lifetime The Big Country Super Popoff ∂ ∂ VISN Twice-Lifetime Murder, She... Eas
Page 9
9:30 to 4:30 (early reg. deadline, Mar. 29) Add a spa treatment to your day Check out online at www.newenergywellness.ca or call us at
4:00 4:30 5:00 5:30 6:00 6:30 7:00 7:30 8:00 8:30 9:00 9:30 10:0010:3011:0011:3012:0012:30
Cbk. Kim.
102 102 105 105
Monday, APRIL 1, 2013
• Work Alone Check-In Service • Emergency Service • Basic Answering Service • Dispatch Service • Pager Rental / Service 218-B 1525 Cranbrook St. N., Cranbrook, BC V1C 3S7
P: 250-426-2201 • F: 250-426-4727 •TF: 1-800-665-4243
Something’s been puzzling me. Q. How can I get advertising for my business so it’s covered in both newspaper and online media for one great price? A. If you live in Cranbrook area, call 250-426-5201, then press ext. 214 and speak with Erica.
Thursday’s answer
She has all the pieces to your puzzle! 250-426-5201 www.dailytownsman.com
250-427-5333 www.dailybulletin.ca
Protect our earth. The Cranbrook Daily Townsman and the Kimberley Daily Bulletin promote recycling. We use vegetable-based inks, and our newsprint, tin and aluminum waste is recycled.
Oh Sit! Telejournal
Thursday’s
dailyTOWNSMAN/DAILY townsman / daily bulletin DAILY BULLETIN
Page 10 Monday, APRIL 1, 20131, 2013 PAGE 12 Monday, April
Your community. Your classifieds.
Share Your Smiles! Annalee and Josh are smiling because they are together.
250.426.5201 ext 202
bcclassified.com fax 250.426.5003
INDEX IN BRIEF FAMILY ANNOUNCEMENTS COMMUNITY ANNOUNCEMENTS TRAVEL CHILDREN EMPLOYMENT BUSINESS SERVICES PETS & LIVESTOCK MERCHANDISE FOR SALE REAL ESTATE RENTALS AUTOMOTIVE ADULT ENTERTAINMENT LEGAL NOTICES
AGREEMENT It is agreed by any display or 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. 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 revised, 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. 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:
Announcements
Help Wanted
Personals
Versatile Painting & Sandblasting in KITIMAT is looking for qualified, experienced Journeymen Painters/Sandblasters. Must be highly motivated, energetic and work well with others. Please send resume to: guy@versatilepainting.ca
KINDLY requesting the British Lady I met in the Cranbrook Safeway Store Parking Lot, on Tuesday March 28th, 2013 at 11.00 a.m., having three small, barking-up-the-back-seat-doggies in Her vehicle, decorated with a unique emblem on the Driverâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s door, to contact me at dailyfairlysharingallwithall@gmail.com
... . Thank You.
KOOTENAYâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;S BEST ESCORTS *For your safety and comfort call the best. *Quality and V.I.P Service Guarantee *Licensed studio New - Lily, 26, Blonde, blue-eyed beauty, BBW New - Scarlett, 20, Sweet, pretty, petite strawberry blonde. New - Dakota, 20, Hot busty red head. (250)417-2800 in/out calls daily Hiring
RELAX & ENJOY
Adult fun, great conversation & more. Mature 30â&#x20AC;&#x2122;s, fit & curvy, sexy redhead. Private in-call. Day specials. Also, magic hands.
Amy
250-421-6124
Cranbrook ~no rush~
email classifieds@dailytownsman.com
Services
Home Care QUALIFIED CARE-AIDE or LPN required for morning/bedtime routine. Client has M.D. and is on a ventilator. Shift rotation includes weekends. Email resumes and inquiries to ggrennie@telus.net or call 250-489-4928.
Contractors
GIRO
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Merchandise for Sale
Bicycles GREG LEMOND road bike 55 cm. (medium). Shimano Tiagra components. Black and red tires/neoprene tape. New: $1500. Asking: $750.Phone 250-426-6120
Furniture Employment Help Wanted
OAK, KITCHEN dining nook, $400. Custom built, great condition. Corner bench with 2 chairs. Call 250-489-3108 SINGLE SIZE, older, adjustable bed, in good working order. 38â&#x20AC;? wide x 6â&#x20AC;&#x2122;6â&#x20AC;? long. $175. Call 250426-6853
Drop off your photo and name(s) of subject at the Cranbrook Townsman or Kimberley Bulletin office or email your high-resolution jpeg to production@dailybulletin. ca. Photographs will appear in the order they are received.
Heavy Duty Machinery A-STEEL SHIPPING DRY STORAGE CONTAINERS Used 20â&#x20AC;&#x2122;40â&#x20AC;&#x2122;45â&#x20AC;&#x2122;53 in stock. SPECIAL 44â&#x20AC;&#x2122; x 40â&#x20AC;&#x2122; Container Shop w/steel trusses $13,800! Sets up in one day! Also Damaged 40â&#x20AC;&#x2122; $1950 Call Toll Free Also JD 544 & 644 wheel loaders JD 892D LC Excavator Ph. 1-866-528-7108 Free Delivery BC and AB www.rtccontainer.com
Misc. Wanted Local Coin Collector Buying Collections, Accumulations, Olympic Gold & Silver Coins + Coin Guy: 778-281-0030
Tools TRI-MOUNTAIN SERVICE CENTRE Mechanical & Shop Liquidation Hoists, Snap-On alignment machine - c/w hoist. Smoke; power steering flush, brake flush, transmission flush, coolant flush and recycle machines. Brake lathe, hand tools (some never used), 2 customer vans, Snap-On Modis and Genisys scanners.
Obituaries
Obituaries
Sympathy & Understanding Kootenay Monument Installations
Bootleg is also looking for servers and line-cooks. Fax or send resumĂŠ to: Bootleg Gap Golf, PO Box 130 Kimberley, BC V1A 2Y5 Fax: (250) 427-4077 admin@bootleggapgolf.com Applications accepted until Friday, April 5th, 2013.
IN-HOME CONSULTATION OR VISIT OUR SHOWROOM
1885 Warren Avenue Kimberley, BC V1A 1R9 250-427-7221 www.mcphersonfh.com
6379 HIGHWAY 95A TA TA CREEK, B.C. 1-800-477-9996
www.kootenaymonument.ca
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250-417-2019
Toll Free 1-855-417-2019
Viewing by appointment. Call Ed:250-426-8167 or 250-417-9254.
Rentals Apt/Condo for Rent 2BDRM, 1 1/2 BATH apartment for rent, in Canal Flats. Great view, parking, F/S, D/W, microwave. $775 + utilities & D.D. Available immediately. Call (250)3495306 or (250)489-8389.
Ph: 250.426.6006 Fx: 250.426.6005 2104D 2nd Street S. Cranbrook, BC theflowerpot@shaw.ca
KIMBERLEY Chapman Camp - 2 BR apt. for rent. $650 incl. util. Avail April 1. Great location - backs onto Rails to Trails. Upstairs unit with new flooring and paint. No smoking, no pets. Ref. reqd. Bob 250-427-5132
Eternally Remember Your Loved One
Headstones B Grave Markers B Urns B
We will help you create a special memorial including personalized engraving and installation. 2873 Cranbrook St., Cranbrook
in Kimberley BC, requires a Front End Supervisor for the Bootleg Grill.
Responsibilities: -Participate in the recruitment, selection, and training of staff -Supervise and schedule front end food and beverage staff -Order and maintain inventory control cost -Process payables -Should have Front End Supervisor and Administration Experience For a full job description please see our website: BootlegGapGolf.com
Granite & Bronze Memorials, Dedication Plaques, Benches, Memorial Walls, Gravesite Restorations, Sales & Installations
2200 - 2nd Street South Cranbrook, BC V1C 1E1 250-426-3132
B
Bootleg Gap Golf
Obituaries
250-426-6278 kootenaygranite.com
Have you considered a lasting legacy? Reasons people choose to give through community foundations.
7
#
We multiply the impact of gift dollars by pooling them with other gifts and grants.
Your Gift is a Gift for Good and Forever. 250.426.1119 www.ourfoundation.ca cdcf@telus.net
In times of grief, these caring professionals are here to serve and comfort your family.
DAILY TOWNSMAN/DAILY BULLETIN daily townsman / daily bulletin
Rentals
Transportation
Transportation
Duplex / 4 Plex
Auto Financing
Trucks & Vans
FOR rent - 4 bedroom, 2 bathroom unit in duplex. Nonsmokers, pets negotiable. Excellent location close to Hospital, college, rec plex and bus route. 2 parking stalls per side. Call 250-919-1300 or tarafg@outlook.com
2008 Chevy Silverado 1500 LT Crew Cab 4x4
Our classified ads are on the net! Check it out at www.bcclassified.com
Great condition. V8, 5.3L, automatic, A/C, cloth interior, cruise, power window/locks/ mirrors/drivers seat, keyless entry, Satellite Radio, OnStar, CD with aux input, Jack Rabbit retractable tonneau cover, bed liner, 60,000 km.
Suites, Lower BRIGHT, LOWER, large
1 bedroom suite for rent in Marysville. Includes W/D, satellite TV and utilities. $650./mo. N/S, N/P. Suitable for professional single or couple. 250-427-9603 or 250-908-0095
Business/Office Service
$
19,999
Call 250-581-1348
Business/Office Service
Business/Office Service
SERVICES GUIDE Contact these business for all your service needs!
To advertise using our “SERVICES GUIDE” in the Cranbrook Daily Townsman, Kimberley Daily Bulletin and The Valley, call us at 250-426-5201, ext. 202. ALL YOUR
FLOORING
CONSTRUCTION NEEDS
INSTALLATIONS.
New or Renovation.
Wholesale Prices. Carpet ~ Lino Laminate ~ Hardwood.
Framing-Roofing-Siding, Decks-Interior finishing. Hardwood and Laminate Flooring Need a quote? Give me a call.
Kevin. 250-421-6197
Installations conducted by Certified Journeyman Installer. Certification available upon request.
*All work guaranteed.* Enquiries: 250-427-3037 or cell: 250-520-0188
DUSTAY CONSTRUCTION LTD
~Ask for Ben~
Canadian Home Builders Association
IS YOUR COMPUTER SLUGGISH OR HAVING PROBLEMS?
Award Winning Home Builder Available for your custom home and renovation needs. You dream it, we build it! www.dustayconstruction.com 250-489-6211
EAST KOOTENAY TREE SERVICE CERTIFIED ARBORIST ~Dangerous Tree Removal ~Stump Grinding ~Ornamental Tree Pruning ~Shaping and topping hedges, fruit trees. ~Free chips and delivery
Fully insured Free estimates Seniors discount Roy Anderson 250-489-1900 1-877-219-2227
TREE PRUNING Spring is here.
*Time to get your trees pruned. *Shade trees, fruit trees, and tree removal. *For quotes, call Mike:
250-426-3418 or 250-919-1840.
It’s time for a tune-up! Why unplug everything, send away & wait when SuperDave comes into your home? Specializes in: *Virus/Spyware Removal, *Troubleshooting, *Installations, *PC Purchase Consulting. SuperDave offers affordable, superior service & most importantly; Honesty. SuperDave works Saturdays & evenings too! Call SuperDave (250)421-4044 www.superdaveconsulting.ca
LEIMAN
Monday, 1, 2013 PAGE Page 13 11 Monday, AprilAPRIL 1, 2013
Obituaries Obituary HILL, Robert Robert “Bob” Hill passed away on Friday, March 22, 2013 while in Grande Prairie. Bob is lovingly remembered by his family; partner, Lori Hemming; daughter, Dianna Bonder; 2 granddaughters and sister, Lynda Hill. Bob was a hotel manager and owner in numerous places in Alberta and BC including Calgary, Bowden, Red Deer, Banff, Edmonton and Kimberly. A Celebration of Life will be held at the Best Western Regency Room, 121 Edmonton Trail SE, Airdrie, AB on Thursday, April 4, 2013 from 1:00 pm to 3:00 pm. Flowers are graciously declined. If you would like, donations may be made to any of the Rotary Clubs. Messages of condolence may be left for the family at www.myalternatives.ca
Want the L AT E S T news, sports, politics and entertainment?
CUSTOM HOMES AND RENOVATIONS
Reliable Quotes Member of the new home warranty program.
“I read world and local news.”
www.leimanhomes.ca Kevin 250-421-0110 Krister 250-919-1777
ROCKY MOUNTAIN ROOFING
“I turn to sports with Trevor Crawley.”
*Excellent rates on Asphalt Shingles, Metal Roofing & Standing Seam. *Torch-on Roofing *Cedar Shake Roofs & Repairs *Soffit & Fascia Installation *Siding Gutter Installation/Cleaning. *Vinyl & Hardieboard Siding
“I read my horoscope daily.”
LYNDELL’S
BUSINESS SERVICES
~Call Chad Sonley for a free estimate~
Want the latest too?
Keeping your business on track . Over 15 years experience.
250-464-9393 www.rockymountainroofing.ca
Subscribe for daily delivery.
Lyndell Classon
Institute of Professional Bookkeepers of Canada ~Full Cycle Bookkeeping ~Accounts Payables and Receivables ~Payroll ~Your office or pick up service available cell: 250-919-7244 email: lclasson@myflexi.net
822 Cranbrook Street North CraNbrook
Ten Reasons to Advertise on a Newspaper Website 1. Frequency: The online newspaper Web site user accesses the Internet almost twice as much as the general user. 2. Credibility: The credibility of the newspaper brand
Sell Your Home in the Classifieds. It Has Never Been Easier!
a photo of 1. Take your house.
2.
Use 25 words to describe it.
by or mail 3. Stop $40.00 + HST
Established custom builder for over 30 years. Certified Journeyman Carpenters
Cranbrook Kimberley Creston Fernie Marysville Wardner Wasa…
out your ad 4. Check in the newspaper and count all the calls coming in!!
$40.00 + HST includes 25 words, and photo. Extra words $1.00 each. Enclose photo. If you require your photo back, please include a self-addressed, stamped envelope. ALL ADS MUST BE PREPAID – Visa and Mastercard accepted. Your ad will run up to 2 weeks in the Cranbrook Daily Townsman (10 times), Kimberley Daily Bulletin (10 times), and the Valley (2 times). Ad can be cancelled at any time. Sorry, no refunds.
250-426-5201 ext 202
426-5201
extends to the advertiser. Fifty-nine percent of Web users agree that online advertising is more believable from a trusted Web site. Online, newspaper Web sites are the dominant local media site in most markets.
3. Targeted: If you want to focus on a particular backyard, advertising in an online newspaper is more personal, and more relevant because it is local. Newspapers also publish a plethora of niche sites (youth, women, movie fans, seniors, are illustrative) for virtually any demographic advertisers could possibly hope to reach. 4. Purchasing power: Sixty-two percent of newspaper
Web site users purchase online compared with 49 percent of general users. Thirty-nine percent of online newspaper users have incomes higher than $75,000; 65 percent own their homes. Fifty percent of online newspaper users have spent more than $500 online in the last six months, and 63 percent of online newspaper users prefer to find out about new products through the Internet.
5. Content: After e-mail, the most preferred Web
content is news, sports, financial information, entertainment news, and shopping – in that order. Sixtytwo percent of Internet users visit online newspapers for local news, compared with 39 percent for the local TV station Web site and 23 percent for the local radio station site. Not even Yahoo! or AOL’s Digital City can top this.
6. Retailers prefer newspaper sites: Sixty-five percent of retailers report that newspaper sites are efficient in assisting them in meeting marketing needs compared with other sites.
7. High profile: Research.net reports that, among top executives (CEO, CIO, CFO or owner/partner), Internet advertising ranked above over all other media measured for: “Where I prefer to find our about new products,” “Where I prefer to receive information about companies,” and “Where modern, up-to-date brands advertise.” At the same time, these early adopters of technology also skew younger than the traditional newspaper audience. Forty percent of online newspaper users are aged 18-35. 8. Reinforcement: Seventy-six percent of online newspaper users also read the newspaper in the past seven days, and repetition increases awareness. The Internet Advertising Bureau found that, by increasing the number of online banners from one to two per week, branding results on three key metrics increased 42 percent making online a great, inexpensive way to increase the branding lift of traditional campaigns. 9. Quality: Seventy-five percent of advertisers generally said newspaper Web sites’ advertising was as good or better than other Internet sites.
10. Mix: A variety of recent studies have demonstrated the power of online, when included in a mix with traditional media, to elaborate the brand message. Newspaper print and online products combined have the highest penetration and most desirable audience of any other local medium. SOURCE: Newspaper Association of America
250-427-5333
Call today and start online advertising.
335 Spokane Street kIMbErLEY
427-5333
Flyer Distribution Standards Association
250-426-5201
250-426-5201
822 Cranbrook St. N., Cranbrook
dailytownsman.com
250-427-5333
335 Spokane St., Kimberley
dailybulletin.ca
daily townsman / daily bulletin
Page 12 Monday, APRIL 1, 2013
IT’S BIG.
IT’S ON NOW. but only for a limited time.
BRAND NEW 2012 TOYOTA YARIS Five door hatch, automatic, air, power group, alloy wheels, 51 MPG
R$ED TAG 17,380 ta Rebate After Toyo
OR CHOOSE
0.9%
FINANCING
BRAND NEW 2012 TOYOTA CAMRY SE V6, dual exhaust, leather, power moon roof, loaded with all the options
G A T D E R $ 0,387 3 ta Rebate
After Toyo
OR CHOOSE
0.9%
FINANCING
BRAND NEW 2012 TOYOTA PRIUS 4 door hatchback, 4 cyl, automatic
R$ED TAG 25,153 ta Rebate After Toyo
OR CHOOSE
0.9%
FINANCING
BRAND NEW 2012 TOYOTA FJ CRUISER 4x4, urban model, V6, auto, running boards
G A T D E R$ 36,831 ta Rebate
After Toyo
COMPARE AT OVER $41,000
Local: 250-489-4010 Long Distance: 1-888-489-4010
www.alpinetoyota.com DL#30845
1924 Cranbrook St. N. Cranbrook, BC