BC ELECTION 2013 — VICTORIA CANDIDATES ANSWER TOUGH QUESTIONS
MAY 9 - 15, 2013
Great Scot
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MIGHTY MEN HURL HAGGIS AT THE 150TH HIGHLAND GAMES DRAGON BOATS PADDLE ON | THE SEXY SIDE OF ELECTIONS | ILL TONE RHYMES 39:19
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MONDAY MAGAZINE MAY 9 - MAY 15, 2013 mondaymag.com
NEWS & VIEWS > THE WEEK
EDITORIAL
Fashionable way to stop violence The sexier side of elections t’s never easy to start over. That’s the sentiment one Victoria organization is intimately aware of, especially when it comes to escaping domestic violence and abuse. It’s also the driving force behind the upcoming Victoria Women In Need (WIN) DANIELLE annual fundraiser, Fashion with POPE Passion, on Sat., May 11. news@ Now in its fifth year, the mondaymag.com event will benefit the 100 Women Campaign, with a goal to generate enough funds for 100 women to participate in the new Self Sufficiency and Transformations Programs that WIN began offering on April 15. “Women in these programs will be able to experience one-on-one support to move forward toward making positive choices in their lives,” says Clare Yazganoglu, WIN executive director. “They are not Band-Aid solutions, but long-lasting, and women learn that they matter.” Transformations is an eight-day educational program that offers women the opportunity to learn effective communication skills, personal boundaries and new approaches to relationships and wellness in their lives. Sixteen women participated in the first run, which was developed in collaboration with Gabriola Island’s The Haven Centre for Growth, and WIN hopes to run a second program in the fall. The expanded Self Sufficiency Program offers one-on-one support, practical training and financial assistance to women to assist in achieving self-sufficiency goals. “We created the programs to meet the needs of women in Victoria. Being able to work with women in this enduring and transformative way is truly rewarding, and something we have been working towards for many years,” says Yazganoglu, who adds community support is responsible for the more than 1,000 women per year WIN has supported to move out of crisis for the last 20 years. The fashion show, which includes outfits designed straight from the WIN stores and local fashion sponsors, is put on by ma-luxe & The Studio Collective. Community models will include Victoria personalities and auction items will be available throughout the event: getaways, gift baskets, beauty care, jewelry, clothing, retail gift certificates and WIN vintage items. Attend the show Sat., May 11, 6:30-11pm at BMW Victoria (95 Esquimalt). Tickets are $80 and include “pink carpet” entry, fashion show, dinner by Food for Thought Catering, live music by Carpe Diem and a swag bag filled with goodies. Purchase tickets at winfashionwithpassion.com.
can’t count the number of conversations I’ve had that have turned away from politics. You know the moment: the wine at the table has all but dried and the host makes a retreat for the dishes before things get heated, a casual encounter with a stranger leans into small talk about the election until weather suddenly becomes more important, a debate with a friend is dashed with: “Do we really need to talk about this?” Yes, we do. Some of you are already fingering the page right now, ready to turn onto the horoscopes, weekly poll, film DANIELLE POPE reviews, escorts. Thanks for reading this far, because you know what I’m going to news@mondaymag.com tell you: this election is important. It’s true, voters’ polls, electoral ballots and campaign trails don’t turn everyone on — though I know at least a few political activists who have what some might call an unhealthy zest for the adrenaline of an election — but until even the skeptics realize the importance of that little penciled check mark, we are all in trouble. Alice Walker, the African-American author who wrote The Color Purple, said: “The most common way people give up their power is by thinking they don’t have any.” Complaining is easy, and it’s the best start to a great many conversations: What about those taxes? The HST should have stayed/gone. Can you believe those Medical Service Plan premiums? Can you believe those clear-cut developments up the Malahat? Can you believe the overcrowding of hospital beds? Can you believe asking, “Who will you vote for?” ends the conversation? The system is frustrating — even when your party gets in, the political acne doesn’t always clear up within a couple of days, or even years — but the real condition we suffer from is voter apathy: an entire nation of people who have forgotten how powerful they are. Elections BC exposed that voter participation has crashed from more than 70 per cent of eligible provincial voters chucking in their ballots in 1983 to just 51 per cent doing so in 2009. So, maybe we are more satisfied with our way of life than ever before. We have full confidence in our politicians, we are happy with the status of our economy, our environment, our health care and our social services. We don’t like making choices. We trust our government always knows best. Funny then, that all those complaint-laden conversations exist between friends from the middle-aged apathetics to university-age executives to seniors with more gumption than time. For a province full of people who have some things to complain about, it’s a wonder that pundit predictions suggest this May 14 election will be as voter poor as any. But we could still prove them wrong. No matter your candidate or party, do something for yourself that will turn on this provincial election: realize you have the power to choose. Use it. M Find out all you need to know at: elections.bc.ca/ge2013.
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OILY MESSAGES NOT SO SLICK Before you let your provincial vote be swayed by the burning questions in this week’s feature story, take note that one group is especially keen for voters
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Fashion will be the draw for Women In Need to talk about and fundraise for domestic violence prevention programs.
to ask the hard stuff — and get cozy with sending letters to your politician of choice. Tanker Free BC is asking voters to send emails to all premier candidates to express concern about Kinder Morgan’s pipeline expansion plans in B.C. before it’s a done deal. The direct-link email, which can be found pre-written on the group’s site or can be personally edited, urges the candidates to say no to tanker traffic and yes to “supernatural B.C.” Sign on yourself at: tankerfreebc.ca/email. A final call for all novice and experienced paddlers interested in joining the second-annual LIV Your Life Project dragon boat race to fund menstrual kits for girls in Malawi, Africa. Organizer Kyla Plaxton put out the call for participants in March, and already 160 people have filled eight of the 10 boats with community members, school groups and organizations from Island Sexual Health and Women In Need to GoodLife Fitness. Plaxton’s goal this year is to raise $40,000 through personal fundraising, prizes and the race on Sat., May 11 9am-1pm at Selkirk Waterway (2940 Jutland). Race day will also see a booth from Wannawafel, a kids corner, spoken word and hip-hop performances and a silent auction. Race registration 8-9am, $5. “Come and be together and support our girls around the world,” says Plaxton. To join, contact Plaxton: 250-885-0566, livyourlifevolunteer@gmail. More: ilovemyperiod.com. M
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NEVER HAS SO MUCH RESTED ON A VOTE This week’s A+ goes to all those who vote in B.C.’s 40th provincial general election on May 14 (advance voting May 8-11). Who’s it going to be, Victoria?
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NEWS & VIEWS > OPINION
STREET SMARTS Are you able to forgive a politician’s past?
KIERAN REPORT
Clark’s fact-free campaign sinks t the start of the election campaign Christy Clark was on the ropes. Her Families First strategy and her Canada Starts Here Jobs Plan were running on empty. Her caucus was mutinous. The best people in her cabinet opted for retirement over defeat.
The pollsters had her trailing the NDP’s Adrian Dix by as much as 20 points. Her chances of holding her own VancouverPoint Grey riding were slim and none. Clark’s only course of action was to demonize Dix as a political felon and a jobs killer and to tell a whoppingly audacious lie about the fiscal health of the province. Bold to a fault, Clark plastered her big lie on the BRIAN side of her campaign bus — “Debt Free BC” KIERAN — and put the pedal to the metal. bkieran@ With mere days left until the polls open mondaymag.com next Tuesday, the most recent Ipsos Reid survey shows the gap between the Liberals and the NDP narrowed to 10 points. That is down from a 19-point gap at the start of the campaign. Pollster FIND THE M AND WIN Angus Reid has the difference A PRIZE FROM MONDAY MAGAZINE between the two parties at an even slimmer seven points. Each week we hide a “M” on the cover. By my deadline earlier this Last week it was hidden inside the “O” of Monday . week, ThreeHundredEight.com, a Prove that you’ve found the “M” sophisticated website that analyand get it into our office to win! Drawn Monday at noon. Submit entries to: ses a variety of polling data, was 818 Broughton St., Victoria, V8W 1E4 with daytime predicting an NDP victory over phone number or fax it to our number at 250-386-2624. the Liberals by 46 seats to 38 (with one independent). That’s nowhere near the crushing defeat Winner this week: DARYL NOULLETTE predicted four weeks ago.
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Yes, if they’ve gone through the analysis and come to a better place.
ThreeHundredEight shows the NDP continuing to have a strangle-hold on Vancouver Island (12 seats to two for the Liberals) and a comfortable margin of victory in Metro Vancouver (25 seats to 14). However, data for the Interior suggests the Liberals will thump the NDP by a margin of more than two to one (22 seats to nine). Clearly, in the Interior, where resource communities live or die according to the province’s economic and fiscal well-being, voters want to believe the big lie has a ring of truth. Those of you who are wavering should consider these facts: When Liberals came to power in 2001, the total provincial debt was about $36 billion. Today, that debt is about $62 billion. And, the rate of annual debt growth will peak this year at almost 12 per cent. In the space of two short years Clark’s administration has added $10 billion to the total debt. That jump is unprecedented in provincial budgeting history. The Liberals’ 2013/14 Budget and Fiscal Plan really puts the lie to the bus banner. It states: “As government continues its capital investment program and given the impact of reverting to a PST/ GST system, total provincial debt, including commercial Crown self-supported debt, will reach $69.4 billion by 2015/16.” The question too few have asked is how this mounting and crippling debt squares with Clark’s promise that B.C. will be “debt free in 15 years.” The answer is, it doesn’t. Dix is spot on when he says Clark has been running a “fact-free campaign.” M
JORDAN BOWER, Victoria
Depends on how they use it in their campaign. MELISSA HAMAR, Victoria
Yes. Anyone can be forgiven. RYAN GOODER, Victoria
No. If you’re a politician you should know what you’re doing. LISA DALZIEL, Victoria
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MONDAY MAGAZINE MAY 9 - MAY 15, 2013 mondaymag.com
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Due to a technical error, last Monday's Partial Recall neglected to mention our fabulous M Award sponsor Long & McQuade Musical Instruments which provided special golden ukuleles as prizes. Each year, a unique prize is awarded to more than 40 M Award winners, this year Long & McQuade stepped up and offered to come on as a prize sponsor, donating the awards for the celebration. The staff of Monday and the award recipients are very grateful for Long & McQuade's generosity.
MONDAY GUIDE Email your listing info to calendar@mondaymag.com or enter it online at mondaymag.com
EVENTS CALENDAR ✓ EVENTS
MARKETS
THURS. MAY 9 PSYCHIC CIRCLE SPRING FAIR Palmistry, mediumship, clairvoyance, tarot, clairsentience, numerology, channeling. To May 12. During mall hours at the Bay Centre (1150 Douglas). $35-$50. 250-478-4226. ALL CANDIDATES DEBATE - The Fairfield Gonzales Community Association hosts an all candidates debate for the riding of Victoria Beacon Hill with moderator John Farquharson. 7-9pm at Fairfield Community Place (1335 Thurlow).
SAT. MAY 11 ENERGY EXPO HOLISTIC HEALTH AND METAPHYSICS - Get inspired on your journey of self discovery by celebrating alternative medicine, energy healing and metaphysics. 20 workshops, lectures and demonstrations included in $10/ day admission. 12-5pm SATURDAY and SUNDAY at James Bay Community Centre (140 Oswego). Redgatehealingstudio.com for more information. ORGANIC PLANT SALE - The Greater Victoria Compost Education Centre hosts its tenth annual organic plant sale. 10am-2pm at 1216 North Park. Free admission. SPRING VINTAGE FAIR - Vintage and retro clothing, jewellry, housewares, records and more. 10am-4pm at 1303 Fairfield. $3. QUADRA VILLAGE DAY- Celebrate the vibrant neighbourhood of Quadra Village. 9:30am-1pm on Kings Road between Quadra and Dowler. Free fun for the whole family.
MON. MAY 13 RIGHT TO SLEEP COMMUNITY FORUM - Adversely Affected By The City Of Victoria's 7am-7pm tent prohibition? Come to the community forum to chat about the way forward. 3pm at Greater Victoria Public Library Conference Room (735 Broughton). Free.
ETHICAL TRADE MARKET The Didi Society is hosting the second annual Ethical Trade Market to celebrate World Fair Trade Day. 10am-4pm SATURDAY at Fernwood Community Centre (1240 Gladstone). Free. SUNDAY MARKET AT BASTION SQUARE - See an eclectic mix of arts, crafts, imports, entertainment and farmers selling their locally grown produce and fruits; homemade breads, pastries, honey, preserves, chutneys and relishes; free range eggs and more. To Sept. 22. SUNDAYS 11am-4:30pm at Bastion Square and Langley. Free.
SHAKE IT UP! -A preivew for Fired Up, presenting signature contemporary works in clay. Opening reception 6pm at Eclectic Gallery (2170 Oak Bay). COASTAL MAGIC -Phillipa Hudson presents a recent commission for the Fairmont Chateau Lake Lousie in three large paintings. Artist reception 7pm at Eclectic Gallery (2170 Oak Bay).
FRI. MAY 10 BITS AND PIECES - Oak Bay fibre artist Jill Croft opens an exhibit of her work at Avenue Fabric Studio (1841 Oak Bay). Opening reception 5-8pm. The exhibit of traditional quilts, fabric collage, ornaments and animals runs until May 24.
MUSIC
WORDS SAT. MAY 11
THURS. MAY 9
A COWHERD IN PARADISE - Be prepared to laugh, learn, and be inspired by this true story of one Chinese Canadian couple’s search for love, family, and forgiveness by May Q. Wong. 2pm at Cowichan Library (2687 James, Duncan). Free.
NOH MEETS CANADA- Tsunao Yamai and ensemble present a talk and performance of Japanese Noh. 7:30pm at Metro Studio (1411 Quadra). Free.
SUN. MAY 12 BRAILLE CLASS FOR THE PUBLIC - Right on the Dot is back! Learn the basics of reading Braille, whether you are blind or sighted. This sevensession course is fun for everyone. SATURDAYS, May 4-June 22. 2:304pm at Esquimalt Recreation Centre (527 Fraser, Viewfield Room). $12 per class, $84 for whole course. Blind and visually impaired people can take the class for free or by donation. 250-4128500, blindway.ca.
FRI. MAY 10 SPACEPORT UNION- Progressive art rock with visuals by Photon. With Man Made Lake and Nicole Linde. 9pm at The Cambie (856 Esquimalt). $6. HANDSOME DISTRACTION- A Mighty Roar CD release party with Deluge and Trace the Sky. 9:30pm at Lucky Bar. $12.
SAT. MAY 11 MD WREN AND THE SICK KIDS- Homecoming show. 9:30pm at Logan's Pub (1821 Cook). $10.
TUES. MAY 14
WEDS. MAY 15
RUSSELL'S VINTAGE GRAND OPENING - All of Russell Books' antiquarian and vintage books will be browsable on shelves below the Hobby Shop (734 Fort). Local authors Esi Edugyan, Steven Price, and Marita Dachsel read at 7pm.
LINDEN SINGERS- Choral music from North, Central and South America with special guest Kelby MacNayr and friends. 7:30pm at Lutheran Church of the Cross (3787 Cedar Hill). 420/17/under 25 free.
STAGE
WEDS. MAY 15
WED. MAY 15 CHESS IN THE LIBRARY - Love to play chess? Drop-in for weekly chess in the library. Chess sets will be available to borrow from the Information Desk. No registration required. To May 22. WEDNESDAYS 9:30-11:30 am at the Greater Victoria Library Central Branch. (735 Broughton). Free. 250-382-7241. KNITTING CIRCLE - Whether you're experienced or new to knitting, join the casual drop-in knitting circle in the library. The circle is not facilitated; bring friends and neighbours to create the circle. WEDNESDAYS 1-2:30pm at the Greater Victoria Library Emily Carr Branch (3500 Blanshard). Free. 250-475-6100.
MULTI BOOK LAUNCH - Eight local authors release books for children and teens. 7pm at Union Pacific Coffee (537 Herald). Free.
GALLERIES THURS. MAY 9 ERASURE - Caite Dheere opens a solo exhibition of was encaustic paintings. Opening reception 7-9pm. Closing May 30 at Polychrome Fine Art (977-A Fort). Free. LIGHT SENSITIVE -Students from Western Academy of Photography showcase the best of the year. Runs May 9-16. Opening reception FRIDAY at 6pm at Dales Gallery (537 Fisgard).
THURS. MAY 9 LET ME CALL YOU SWEETHEARTThe Belfry Theatre makes the world premiere of Bruce Ruddell and Bill Henderson's new musical. Directed by Michael Shamata, Let Me Call You Sweetheart stars Elizabeth Duncan, Vincent Gale, Megan Leitch, Nicola Lipman, Donna Soares and Alec Willows. Inspired by a chance meeting at Salt Spring Island’s Harbour House Hotel, this charming new musical fuses nostalgic tunes with new compositions that swing and sway and syncopate. TUES to SAT at 8pm, SAT at 4pm and SUN at 2pm until May 19. Tickets start at $25 at 250-385-6815 or online at tickets. belfry.bc.ca.
METAMORPHOSES -Kate Rubin’s Advanced Performance Group has chosen this powerful exploration of how the human condition remains connected to history, myth, and love, regardless of the passage of time, for its 2013 offering. THURSDAY through SUNDAY at 8pm at Intrepid Theatre Club (1609 Blanshard). $12 THE GOLDEN DRAGON- Join Theatre Inconnu for a highly unique play set in an Asian restaurant that sees five actors portray 15 characters whose lives are inextricably linked. Plays WEDNESDAY to SATURDAY at 8pm and SATURDAY and SUNDAY at 2pm until May 18 at 1923 Fernwood. Tickets at ticketrocket.org or 250590-6291. BETTER LIVING -Langham Court Theatre previews action-packed Chalmers Award-winning dark comedy 'Better Living' by George F. Walker. TUESDAY to SATURDAY at 8pm and SATURDAY at 2pm until May 11. Tickets at boxoffice@ langhamtheatre.ca or 250-384-2142.
FRI. MAY 10 MISS SAIGON - The Victoria Operatic Society presents the Vancouver Island premiere of a new production of Miss Saigon. Runs THURSDAY, FRIDAY and SATURDAY at 8pm and SUNDAY at 2pm. Tickets start at $21 at rmts.bc.ca or 250386-6121. DARRIN ROSE - Host of Comdey Network's The Match Game, a regular cast member of CBC's Mr. D, and four-time Canadian Comedy Award nominee comes to the Victoria Event Centre. 7:30pm. $20.
SUN. MAY 12 PHILLIPS COMEDY NIGHT Hilarious stand up comedy hosted by Wes Borg, featuring Edmonton comic Matt Alaeddine. 8pm at Victoria Event Centre (1415 Broad) $10.
TUES. MAY 14 SIN CITY -This clever cast of improvisors is back with the third season of the live improvised weekly serial, Bedlam-by-Sea, set in a pub-hotel in a quaint seaside English village. Completely improvised over 21 weekly episodes. Directed live by Ian Ferguson. Starring Kirsten Van Ritzen, Wes Borg, Morgan Cranny, Christina Patterson, Chris Gabel, Robert Conway, Karen Brelsford, Charlie de Pape, Alan Penty, Christine Upright and Bill Nance. New musical director Alexander Brendan Ferguson improvises live musical scores and technical director Theodore R. Sherman returns on lights and sound. TUESDAYS doors 7:30pm, show 8pm at the Victoria Event Centre (1415 Broad). $15/$12, cash only at door.
More listings at mondaymag.com/calendar
COVER PHOTO: RAY SIOCHOWICZ (LEFT) AND PIPER WARREN FELLS PHOTO BY COLBY JOHNSON
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CITY WATCHDOG NEWS & VIEWS > OPINION Coal: not in anyone’s backyard, thank you very much
SIMON NATTRASS snattrass@ mondaymag.com
hink about coal for a moment. What comes to mind — 18th century industrial barons? Towering black plumes of smoke? Steam engines? For many who have never even spoken of coal except as a Christmas gift for naughty kids, the idea that its use continues despite alternatives is baffling. In fact, two new mines are currently seeking approval on the southern Island. Both would be located in the heart of the Comox Valley, just a few hours drive from The Capital. Named after the animals whose
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habitat they threaten, Raven underground mine and Bear open pit mine are proposed by Compliance Energy Corporation. Meant to start operations in 2011, the projects have been mired in bad PR while awaiting approval from the BC Environmental Assessment Office. The devastation that comes with mining is old news for a public bombarded with apocalyptic images of the Alberta tar sands landscape. Living near a mine means a higher risk of contracting cardiopulmonary, lung and kidney diseases, hypertension and mercury poisoning,
yet CEC and partners continue to claim the mines pose no risk. Raven and Bear would also gouge deep into the Valley’s watershed, threatening not only human and nonhuman inhabitants, but the holiest of the holy: the local economy. It should come as no surprise that a majority of Comox Valley residents oppose the mines. While a three hour drive doesn’t exactly place the Raven and Bear mines in our back yard, it’s time to make these projects our problem before this century’s Black Gold Rush makes its way to our neck of the woods. M
MAY 2013
GENERAL ELECTION Remember to Vote. Tuesday, May 14 is General Voting Day. Do You Have This Card?
Bring Identification Under the Election Act, voters must prove their identity and residential address in order to receive a ballot or register to vote in conjunction with voting in a provincial general election or by-election. Voters may present identification, or use a process known as vouching. Some acceptable types of identification and information on the vouching process are found below.
This card tells you where you can vote in the 2013 Provincial General Election. Take it with you when you go vote. If you do not have this card, visit the Elections BC website at elections.bc.ca, or call 1-800-661-8683 (toll-free).
OTE%&
Download our App for iPhones and iPads to find a voting location near you. BC Has More Ways to Vote All voters can: Vote in any district electoral office from now until 4 p.m. (Pacific time) on General Voting Day, Tuesday, May 14, 2013. Vote by Mail You can ask for a Vote by Mail package from your district electoral office or through the Elections BC website at elections.bc.ca. Vote at advance voting Voters can attend any advance voting location in the province from 8 a.m. to 8 p.m. (local time), Wednesday, May 8 through Saturday, May 11. All advance voting locations are wheelchair accessible. Vote on General Voting Day Voters can attend any general voting location in the province from 8 a.m. to 8 p.m. (Pacific time), Tuesday, May 14, 2013. How to Vote • Choose only one candidate. • Mark your ballot with an or
.
Who Can Vote? You can vote if you are: • 18 years of age or older, or will be 18 on General Voting Day (May 14, 2013) • a Canadian citizen, and • a resident of British Columbia for the past six months You can Register When You Vote If you aren’t already registered, you can register when you vote. You will need identification that proves both your identity and current residential address.
Option 1 A single document issued by the Government of BC or Canada that contains the voter’s name, photograph and residential address, such as a BC driver’s licence, BC Identification Card (BCID), or BC Services Card. Option 2 A Certificate of Indian Status as issued by the Government of Canada. Option 3 Two documents that together show the voter’s name and residential address. Both documents must show the voter’s name. At least one of the documents must also contain the voter’s residential address. Please note: Digital or electronic documents (e.g. e-bills) are acceptable. Hand-written information on a document, photocopies or electronic scans/photos of a paper document are not acceptable. The following are examples of the document types authorized by the Chief Electoral Officer for the purposes of voter identification (the list of documents is illustrative, not exhaustive). Other specific documents (not listed below) may be authorized by the Chief Electoral Officer. For questions about the acceptability of a specific document, please contact Elections BC. Government-issue identity document Examples: healthcare card, birth certificate, Social Insurance Card, passport, citizenship document/certificate, Old Age Security Identification Card, Canadian Forces identification, Firearm Acquisition Certificate, firearm Possession and Acquisition Licence, Veterans Affairs Canada Health Care Identification Card, Correctional Service Canada Offender Identification Card.
School/college/university-issue document Examples: admissions letter, report card, transcript, residence acceptance/confirmation, tuition/fees statement, student card. Other documents examples • • • • • • • • • • •
Provincial Where to Vote card Bank/credit card or statement Residential lease/mortgage statement Insurance statement Public transportation pass Utility bill Membership card Hospital bracelet/document Prescription medication container Attestation of residence Personal cheque (printed by bank)
Option 4 Voters without identification can be vouched for by a voter in their electoral district who has identification, or a direct family member or someone who has legal authority to make personal care decisions for the voter. Future Voters Elections BC encourages you to bring your children with you when you vote. Show tomorrow’s voters how our electoral process works. Any Questions? For more information visit Elections BC’s website at elections.bc.ca or call toll-free 1-800-661-8683.
OTE%&
Get our App for iPhones and iPads to find the closest voting place and for information you need to vote.
Other government-issue document Examples: property tax assessment, income tax assessment notice, government cheque, government cheque stub, statement of employment insurance benefits paid, Canada Child Tax Benefit Statement, statement of Canada Pension Plan benefits, statement of Old Age Security.
elections.bc.ca 1-800-661-8683 TTY 1-888-456-5448
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MONDAY MAGAZINE MAY 9 - MAY 15, 2013 mondaymag.com
PROVINCIAL POLITICS > B.C. ELECTION 2013
DANIELLE POPE news@mondaymag.com
Your election, your choice LOCAL ORGANIZATIONS ASK CANDIDATES THE TOUGH QUESTIONS lenty of tough issues rest on this election, which is why Monday decided to ask some of our favourite organizations to grill the candidates with questions pertinent to their cause.
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Environment “In many ecosystems of B.C., old-growth forest is incredibly scarce — 91 per cent of valley bottom ancient forest growth on the southern coast has been logged of the classic monumental trees. Are you willing to commit to fully ending old-growth logging in any regions or ecosystems of B.C.?”
Health + Social Services “What will you do to move forward on the implementation of safer consumption services in places of high need, like Victoria?”
“What investment will your party make to help end homelessness?”
Civil Liberties “What are you prepared to do to increase police accountability and respond to the ongoing tragedy of murdered and missing women, and the shocking Human Rights Watch Report on the crisis of policing with respect to aboriginal girls and women in Northern British Columbia?”
Ken Wu , Executive Director, Ancient Forest Alliance
Alan Rycroft, Community Relations, Victoria CoolAid Society
Micheal Vonn, Policy Director, B.C. Civil Liberties Association
Yes. It is a policy of BC Greens that we stop all old-growth logging in B.C.
BC Greens support the use of evidence-based harm-reduction practices such as needle-exchanges, substitution treatments and safe consumption sites. Our drug policies would be ensured in all regions.
Greens believe we need to restore confidence in law enforcement; law enforcement must be subject to reasonable limits and undergo periodic reviews. We will establish a provincial police service with a citizen’s assembly to make recommendation on policing and law enforcement.
BC Greens will phase out MSP premiums and fund the public health system from general revenue. We also see that a significant part of the problem is a lack of preventative care and action. Greens would increase tobacco taxes and institute a “junk food tax.” We support local economies, which includes reinvesting in our agriculture and eating more local produce.
A BC NDP government will address the recommendations made by the Missing Women Commission of Inquiry. We will also introduce measures to reduce poverty, establish a Ministry of Women’s Equality, and enhance support services for women and children.
Since 2001, the Liberals have increased MSP rates eight times. Reversing those increases would cost about $1 billion per year, and that is not possible at this time. We believe that issues of obesity are important and will promote a healthy lifestyle for all British Columbians through increased health education.
Today’s BC Liberals are committed to improving the safety of vulnerable women. The Honourable Steven Point, former lieutenant governor of B.C., has been selected to chair a new advisory committee on the safety and security of vulnerable women. He will work with government as it implements the recommendations from the Missing Women’s Inquiry report.
Today’s BC Liberals are committed to providing British Columbians with a health care system that meets the demands of a population that is both changing and aging. Any changes to MSP rates would require a commensurate tax increase in other areas. We have no plans to implement a tax of this nature.
I would favour the appointment of a fully public inquiry into the conduct of the police with respect to the scandalous breaches of duty and application of justice. The Communist Party would put all necessary resources into solving the cases of missing women across B.C.
Abolish MSP premiums and other regressive user fees. Finance the removal of MSP premiums with the restoration or pre-2001 tax rates on the wealthy and the corporations to add $2 billion annually to provincial revenues. Establishment of public health education program designed to prevent obesity by developing, high-fibre, low-fat, well-balanced diets requiring less meat. Promote the consumption of local, organically grown, non-GMO veggies, fruits and whole grains.
We will commit one per cent of B.C.’s budget to solving the housing crisis. We will mandate BC Housing to purchase existing units in stalled projects to provide an immediate pool of housing and support the development of new, non-profit co-operatives.
JANE STERK, GREEN
The BC NDP is committed to protecting our province’s environment and coasts and will take measures to protect significant ecological areas including wetlands, estuaries and valuable oldgrowth forests.
JOHN SHAW, BC COMMUNIST PARTY
We believe harm reduction is the best approach to the use of illegal drugs. A supervised injection site is regulated under the federal government. We would discuss the need for a site if an application came forward with the support of the community. A $210-million B.C. Family Bonus is part of our plan to lift 8,000 families out of poverty. Other steps: cutting child-care cost by $2,000 for parents of toddlers; indexing increase to income assistance to CPI and building 1,500 units of affordable housing.
CAROLE JAMES, NDP
KAREN BILL, LIBERAL
Katrina Jensen, Executive Director, AIDS Vancouver Island
Old-growth forests are not disappearing. There are more than 25 million hectares of old-growth forests in B.C. About 4.5 million hectares are fully protected, representing an area larger than Vancouver Island. Conserving old growth is an important part of long-term resource management. By law, forests that reflect the working definition of old growth must be retained in ecological units to meet biodiversity needs.
BC Liberals believe in a continuum of supports and programs to address challenges people with addiction issues face. Harm reduction is one of the approaches supported. We have funded and continue to fund a number of harm-reduction initiatives.
Yes, all regions of the province containing old-growth forests should be protected and maintained. The provincial government must ban raw log exports, and legislate the processing of timber locally for export as lumber or value-added products under public ownership and control.
I am in favour of establishing safer injection sites in places of high need, and I would work to counteract any campaigns in the media against these sites with a program of public and community education involving neighbourhood associations, advocacy groups and local levels of government, etc.
We will continue to work with partners to address homelessness in the region. Our government has and will continue to invest significant capital dollars into new and renovated supportive housing.
The Communist Party would commit to the construction of 5,000 new social housing units annually in the province. It would extend support to co-op and other non-profit housing alternatives.
Economics “What is your plan for Medical Services Plan (MSP) premiums — do you have a tangible way to freeze or reduce them? And would you, in the next four years, introduce a fat or sugar tax in B.C.? How will you deal with issues of obesity?” Jordan Bateman, B.C. Director, Canadian Taxpayers Federation
MONDAY MAGAZINE MAY 9 - MAY 15, 2013 mondaymag.com
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MONDAY GUIDE > ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT
City Something
MARY ELLEN GREEN arts@mondaymag.com
TOP PICKS
OUR
FOR MAY 9 – 15
DARRIN ROSE our-time Canadian Comedy Award nominee Darrin Rose is making his way to the Victoria Event Centre (1415 Broad) with his Still Chasing Manhood stand-up comedy tour. Rose is host of the Comedy Network’s Match Game, plays Bill the bartender on CBC’s Mr. D and is a regular on MuchMusic’s Video on Trial. Still Chasing Manhood includes all-new material about sibling rivalry, dating and struggling to live up to the ideal of manhood. Fri., May 10 at 7:30pm. $20. M
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MONDAY MAGAZINE MAY 9 - MAY 15, 2013 mondaymag.com
COLBY JOHNSON
Warren Fells, Pipe Sergeant of the Greater Victoria Police Pipe Band prepares for the Highland Games.
150TH VICTORIA HIGHALND GAMES AND CELTIC FESTIVAL he longest-running cultural festival on North America’s West Coast happens right here in Victoria and it’s celebrating its 150th anniversary this week. The Victoria Highland Games and Celtic Festival, taking place at various venues around town May 11-19, is marking the occasion with a special Chief of the Games — His Royal Highness, Prince Andrew The Duke of York. “It’s a real coup for us,” says Jim Maxwell, president of the Victoria Highland Games Association, which hosts the annual celebration. “The 150th will be the largest games yet, with events scheduled over a nine-day period.” HRH The Duke of York will be making public appearances May 18 and 19 at the games’ opening and closing ceremonies at Topaz Park, where he’ll both welcome athletes and spectators and award trophies and prizes. The Highland Games and Celtic Festival features more than just the heavy event athletics, with music, dance, food and drink on offer. “We always try to make it a family-oriented event,” says Maxwell, who notes there will also be two beer gardens on site during the games featuring Lighthouse Brewery’s Highland Challenge Scottish Ale, brewed specifically for the festival (also available in growlers), as well as a Whiskey Tasting School, featuring three sessions each day (registration at victoriahighlandgames.com) for the big kids. Events kick off Sat., May 11 with the annual Victoria Tartan Parade, featuring more than 10 pipe bands from across the Pacific Northwest, highland dancers, heavy event athletes and members of local Scottish organizations parading from Centennial Square (11am departure), down Government Street to the legislature lawns where the caber will be tossed. Anyone with Scottish ancestry is welcome to march in the parade wearing their tartan, along with any Scottish breed dogs (contact jmaxwell@shaw.ca for more information). The second annual kilted golf tournament takes place Sun., May 12 at Olympic View Golf Club, with a shotgun start at 3pm. Thurs., May 16 Spirit of the West will get Sugar
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Nightclub rocking (Doors at 7pm). Tickets are $35 and are available at Lyle’s Place and ticketweb.ca. The Clan Torchlight Ceremony (Fri., May 17) is a unique opportunity to acknowledge the clans involved in the games and festival. Starting at 8pm, the games duty pipe band will perform on the legislature steps, after which representatives from each clan will light their torch and form a Scottish Saltire (also known as St. Andrew’s Cross). This event is open to the public and free to attend. Other events include sheepdog herding trials, haggis hurling, kilted mile run, a steady stream of music and dance entertainment. New this year is the Canadian Invitational Drum Major Championship, with the best from Scotland, Northern Ireland, U.S.A. and Canada competing for the top prize. “We’ve carved our own niche in heavy events and drum majors,” says Maxwell. “We hosted the World Heavy Events Championship in 2010 and that really helped establish us. We can invite the top athletes and they will come.” The heavy events will feature 12 of the best athletes, including the Scottish, English and World champions, alongside some of the top ranked athletes from the U.S.A and Canada. Also new this year is the closing ceremonies, Sun., May 19. Beginning at 4:30pm, the spectacle will include a massed pipe band performance as well as a performance by the six-time world champion pipe band from Simon Fraser University, and of course, HRH the Duke of York. The first Victoria Highland Games took place in 1864. Today, the games are organized by a 40-member board with the help of more than 400 volunteers. If the weather is good, organizers expect to see up to 25,000 people through the gates. Tickets for the Highland Games are $15 for adults and $12 for students and seniors. Children under 12 are free. Advance tickets are available for $12/10 or $20 for the weekend at The Strath Ale, Wine and Spirit Merchants (919 Douglas), Loghouse Pub Liquor Store (2323 Millstream) or Vision 2000 Travel Group (4480 W. Saanich, cash only). There is free parking at Mayfair Mall. M
MONDAY GUIDE > MUSIC
MARY ELLEN GREEN arts@mondaymag.com
Hip hop head brings hope back to Victoria VANCOUVER EMCEE RHYMES ABOUT STRUGGLE WITH ADDICTION lthough he's been through the ringer fighting a battle he became a certified audio engineer. He also produced and with “poly addiction,â€? Vancouver emcee Ill Tone is engineered the album himself. Bringin’ the Hope Back with his debut album of the Fresh off a tour opening for Masta Ace, Ill Tone is Bringin’ the same name, released Feb. 26 on Urbnet Records. Hope Back to Victoria, when Battle of the Bridge hosts the emcee Written at the height of his addiction, the album for an all ages CD release party Sat., May 11 at Incite Screen offers both hard-hitting beats and hard-hitting truths, often con- Printing (2514 Douglas), featuring Nox, Skulastic, DJ M-Traxx, trasting heavy lyrics with mellow beats, and vice versa. K-Y, S.I.Q (South Island Queenz) and Vibestreet Dance. Doors “In some cases that’s done on purpose, like ‘Charlene’ for at 7pm. Tickets $15 at the door. Stream the album here: http:// example,â€? says Ill Tone. I’ve never used this word, but it’s almost urbnet.bandcamp.com/album/bringin-the-hope-back. M jaunty, while the topic value is pretty heavy.â€? “Charleneâ€? laments the pressures young women face today. The fictitious character “Charleneâ€? flirts with boys and ultimately with disaster, prostituting herself for crack. “I’ve met a thousand Charlenes in my life,â€? says Monday-Sunday Ill Tone. “There’s way more pressure on young girls $3 from 11pm-1am to live up the image of the sex icon, and I just felt Oak Bay compelled to write about it ‌ when I was in school Recreation I knew girls like that, and even now, I know girls whose life didn’t end up so well. I’m not the first Centre Pool person to write a song along those lines, and I hope 250I’m not the last. It needs to be said.â€? 595Ill Tone recorded the album while a student at SWIM Pacific Audio Visual Institute of Vancouver, where
A
MIDNIGHT SWIM
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Ill Tone brings the hope back to Victoria Fri., May 11.
Now at the Belfry April 16– May 19, 2013
LET ME CALLYOU SWEETHEART A romantic musical comedy Book and lyrics by Bruce Ruddell Music and lyrics by Bill Henderson
WORLD PREMIERE
ALEC WILLOWS AND NICOLA LIPMAN IN LET ME CALL YOU SWEETHEART
Tickets 250-385-6815 or www.belfry.bc.ca 1291 Gladstone at Fernwood
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MONDAY MAGAZINE MAY 9 - MAY 15, 2013 mondaymag.com
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FOOD&DRINK
MORE ONLINE… mondaymag.com @MondayMag Find us on facebook
In praise of a maverick CAFE BRIO FOCUSES ON REGIONAL PRODUCTS AND NATURAL FLAVOURS f you’re under 30, I suppose that a menu offering locallysourced food and a wine list composed of more than Chianti, Mateus and couple of kinds of Liebfraumilch offered in a room without starched linens must be something you take for granted. Well don’t. The next time you’re eating a salad that PAM GRANT isn’t 99 per cent iceberg lettuce, pause for a moment and consider pamgrant@ what life was like before Silvia Marcolini and Greg Hays joined mondaymag.com forces to drag Victoria’s restaurant scene kicking and screaming out of the Salmon Oscar era. Hays opened the Herald St. Café in the early 1980s and was the first restaurateur to introduce pricing innovations that make high end wines more accessible, such as the straight $10 mark up per bottle, winning awards from Mondavi Winery, Decanter Magazine and the Vancouver International Wine Festival. Marcolini, who prefers to stay out of the forefront of articles such as this must be mentioned nonetheless, as she has worked with Hays since 1982 and left her mark on the ambience of Herald Street. They sold their interests in 1992 before tackling a rebranding of the Marina Restaurant in Oak Bay. After a few years they began to scout locations for their next project, finding a space on the edge of downtown the following year, with Marcolini envisioning the design, exterior and interior. Now a fixture on the edge of downtown, Café Brio opened 16 years ago this month. Current Chef Laurie Munn was busy biking his way across Europe and North America in those days, after graduating from the Pacific Institute of Culinary Arts in 1999. He then worked at some of the most acclaimed and award-winning restaurants on the West Coast, including Burnaby’s Pear Tree Restaurant, Victoria’s Paprika Bistro and Vancouver’s bis Moreno, where his modern approach to Italian food brought bis Moreno national attention, winning second place in EnRoute’s annual best new restaurant competition in 2004. Brio’s menu focuses on regional products, with simple sauces with the natural flavours found in local ingredients, such as wild seafood ordered on a daily basis and Alberta AAA beef. Though everything in Munn’s kitchen is made from scratch, there something I might like even more about his menu. How many times have you been to a restaurant and struggled between two or three dishes,
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MONDAY MAGAZINE MAY 9 - MAY 15, 2013 mondaymag.com
only to order more than you actually wanted? You won’t have that problem here, because just about everything comes in two sizes. On a recent warm evening I visited for dinner on the vine-clad patio, which, though close to Fort Street, is a very pleasant place to escape for the night. We started with glasses of chilled Spanish cava and Olives Ascolane, a dish that harkens from Marcolini’s home town of Ascoli Piceno, Italy and prepared for the restaurant by her mother. I could happily spend an evening on the patio here, sipping a selection of wines from Hays’ ample list and eating these gems — warm green olives stuffed with gently spiced meat, encased in a crisp breaded shell — with some housemade salumi, but of course it would be difficult to do that without sampling the rest of the menu. Asparagus soup and salads were given due consideration, but the aromas from nearby tables incited a direct move to pasta — spaghettini scented with garlic, fresh tomatoes and basil for me and bucatini PROVIDED alla carbonara with Chef Laurie Munn outside Cafe Brio on Fort Street smoked bacon
Celebrating
Continued from Page 10 for Don, each with plenty of Grana Padano. Continuing, I was torn between a few dishes: roast chicken breast, served with crispy terrine greens and crushed potatoes, slow cooked veal breaded with roast shallots, mushroom and white wine jus and crisp roesti, and the one which ultimately won out — slices of tender rib steak served with du puy lentils and salsa verde. Don was more decisive, immediately honing in on his choice of pan roasted sole with a quenelle of truffled cream, asparagus puree, spot prawn reduction and crispy rice cake. We paired these dishes with glasses of a robust Cotes du Rhone and surprisingly complex Verdejo. We weren’t going to have dessert but we couldn’t resist the call of a dark chocolate and Meyer lemon parfait, an ample dish we were grateful we had decided to share once it arrived. Café Brio continues its original goal of excellent food and service which is both informed and friendly — staff are hired for their skills, not their trendy hair cuts. It’s a casual atmosphere and makes the perfect choice for groups (ask about the meal with six dishes chosen by the chef, served family style for $42 per person) or a quick bite (or two) at the bar. M
years!
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3 Course Dinner Tues. - Thurs. Nights $35 Changing Weekly
CHECK WEBSITE FOR DETAILS!
Chez Michel Restaurant
DRINKUP DE VINE WINE arm weather brings sandals, beach time and chilled wine, a position with which De Vine winery owners John and Cathy Windsor might agree. Seeing the potential in the 24-acre Saanich property a number of years ago, they rolled up their sleeves, and with guidance from winemaker Ken Winchester, planted Pinot Noir, Pinot Gris and Vancouver Island’s largest planting of Gruner Veltliner, a luscious Austrian white. Drop by 6181B Old West Saanich Road in Saanichton and try samples of a trio of summery wines before you buy in their beautiful tasting room. The 2011 Gamay Rosé ($18) is a crisp and refreshing summer sipper with ample fruit and a snappy finish. The 2011 Roussane ($21) from the heart of the Black Sage Bench offers the perfect balance of fruit balanced with bright acidity, while the VRM ($20) — is a tantalizing tipple offering the classic Rhone-inspired fusion of Viognier, Roussanne and Marsanne grapes and is styled after the white wine of Chateauneuf de Pape, with a bouquet of jasmine and honey mingled with citrus and spice. De Vine’s tasting room is open weekends from 12-5pm until June when summer hours kick in and the doors will be open daily. Visit devinevineyards.ca for more information, including retail locations, or call 250 665-6983. M
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Tues to Sat from 5:30 pm 1871 Oak Bay Ave.
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ALPHÉE DES ÉTOILES ALPHÉE OF THE STARS (ENGLISH SUBTITLES) Un film de / A film by Hugo Latulippe MAY 8
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Un film de / A film by Xavier Dolan MAY 9
MAI 19 H / 7 PM
SUR LE TAPIS ROUGE ON THE RED CARPET
Colombe Raby
LIGHT SENSITIVE - Student Exhibition Starts May 9 - Dales Gallery
directrice artistique / artistic director
Venez la rencontrer ! Come meet her!
Cinecenta (University of Victoria) | INFO: 250 388-7350 - francocentre.com
MONDAY MAGAZINE MAY 9 - MAY 15, 2013 mondaymag.com
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MONDAY GUIDE > FILM
ROBERT MOYES arts@mondaymag.com
Craig (James Cromwell, best known as the farmer in Babe) presides over several thousand acres and espite the overwhelming preponderance of has been self-sufficient all his life, whether it’s raisyouth-centric movies these days, some notable ing his own cattle and chickens or felling and milling cinema with geriatric themes has emerged in the last old-growth spruce for his various building projects. few years, including such fine films as Amour, Away Morrison’s father was a superb shipbuilder, and his From Her and Cloudburst. Now add to that list Still son has inherited all those joinery skills as well as a Mine, a heartfelt and marvelously acted award-win- powerful work ethic. And so, when it becomes clear ning drama set in New Brunswick. It is based on the that Irene (Genevieve Bujold), his beloved wife of true-life story of Craig Morrison, an 89-year-old farm- 61 years, is now unsafe in the rambling, two-storey er who suddenly finds himself fighting two battles. farmhouse where they raised their seven children, Not only is his wife’s dementia presenting a variety of the land-rich but cash-poor Craig decides to build challenges, but Craig is confronted by a fusspot build- them a new, more appropriate one-level home nearing inspector who is determined to stop him from by, one with beautiful views of the Bay of Fundy. building a new house on his own property, one that Advised by his son that he needs a permit from will better provide for his wife’s needs and comfort. the planning office in town, Craig ambles in – only to come across an overzealous inspector who initially demands $400 in fees and then proceeds to harass him through every step of construction, citing him for ridiculous violations and ultimately declaring that if Craig doesn’t respect the “stop work” order and address the alleged shortcomings he will have the halfbuilt house bulldozed. As all this is going on, Irene’s health worsens and the need for the mssociety.ca new house becomes more urgent. And so this decent, hard-working — and undeniably stubborn — man finds himself headed to court, a hostage to bureaucratic tyranny, where a judge will decide if Craig is going home or going to jail. Although in many ways a small story, Mine is a solid triumph for serious cinema. It’s the best film yet from veteran Canadian director Michael McGowan (One Week, Saint Ralph), who deftly counterpoints the threat posed by the exasperating building inspector with the much more dire challenges presented by a marriage that has run smoothly for decades but has now hit an obstacle that has changed everything. He also captures the complexities of a family crisis where a husband, out of loyalty to a wife who refuses to “move into town,” finds himself at odds with his wellintentioned and justifiably concerned kids. Most of all, Mine is a marvelous love story: unsentimental, well observed, and rooted in these two unique people whose lives have been shaped by the particularities of being New Brunswick farmers. This film is a distinct pleasure to recommend. M
A BATTLE ON TWO FRONTS
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MONDAY MAGAZINE MAY 9 - MAY 15, 2013 mondaymag.com
STILL MINE ★★★★ PG 13 - 102 minutes Opens Friday at The Odeon
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THE PERFECT Overnight, Bike Get-Away for Victoria Residents Arbutus Cove is a beautiful waterfront boutique guest house located on the galloping goose trail 37 kilometers from Victoria in the Sooke Basin. A 3 hour ride. 3 private deluxe rooms, each with their own entrances, queen beds and full bathrooms share a huge waterfront deck with hot tub. A 15 minute walk takes you to the 17 Mile Pub for supper and a breakfast is served for your departure. $ 125 ( for 2) Web site: w w w. a r b u t u s c o ve g u e s t house.com E-mail: info@arbutuscoveguesthouse.com . 250-642-6310
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MONDAY MAGAZINE MAY 9 - MAY 15, 2013 mondaymag.com
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Based on an Incredible True Story OFFICIAL SELECTION
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5030/50 */5&3/"5*0/"'*-. '&45*7"-
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ACADEMY AWARD® NOMINEE
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MONGREL MEDIA PRESENTS A MULMUR FEED CO. PRODUCTION STARRING JAMES CROMWELL, GENEVIÈVE BUJOLD, CAMPBELL SCOTT, RICK ROBERTS, STORY JULIE STEWART, JONATHAN POTTS, GEORGE R. ROBERTSON, BARBARA GORDON AND ZACHARY BENNETT IN”STILL MINE” CASTINGBY JOHN BUCHAN, C .S .A . AND JASON KNIGHT, C .S .A . EDITOR MARGUERITE PIGOTT MUSIC COSTUME DIRECTOR OF PRODUCTION SUPERVISOR JODY COLERO DESIGNER SARAH MILLMAN COMPOSERS HUGH MARSH, DON ROOKE, MICHELLE WILLIS EDITOR RODERICK DEOGRADES DESIGNER TAMARA DEVERELL PHOTOGRAPHY BRENDAN STEACY, C .S .C . WRITTEN AND ASSOCIATE EXECUTIVE PRODUCER NADIA TAVAZZANI PRODUCER RICHARD HANET PRODUCERS MICHAEL McGOWAN, AVI FEDERGREEN, JODY COLERO AND TAMARA DEVERELL DIRECTED BY MICHAEL McGOWAN , , PRODUCED WITH THE PARTICIPATION OF TELEFILM CANADA, THE ONTARIO MEDIA DEVELOPMENT CORPORATION, THE NORTHERN ONTARIO HERITAGE FUND CORPORATION, ASTRAL’S HAROLD GREENBERG FUND AND IN ASSOCIATION WITH THE MOVIE NETWORK: AN ASTRAL MEDIA NETWORK, MOVIE CENTRAL: A CORUS ENTERTAINMENT NETWORK, MONGREL MEDIA, THE CANADIAN FILM OR VIDEO PRODUCTION TAX CREDIT AND THE ONTARIO FILM AND TELEVISION TAX CREDIT.
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Check Theatre Directory for Showtimes. ENTERTAINMENT ONE
[14]
MONDAY MAGAZINE MAY 9 - MAY 15, 2013 mondaymag.com
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SUPPORT GROUPS SUPPORT GROUPS SUPPORT GROUPS EMERGENCY SERVICES Mustard Seed Food Bank 625 Queens Avenue Sandy Merriman House 250-480-1408 Streetlink Emergency Shelter Rock Bay Landing 535 Ellice St. 250-383-1951
St. Vincent de Paul Society 828 View Street
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Victoria Women’s Transition House 250-385-6611 Women’s Sexual Assault Centre 24 hour crisis & information 250-383-3232
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ll Signs: When I was last on Global CANCER JUNE 21-JULY 22 TV, I discussed a 30-year cycle. This You have a fortunate year ahead because cycle unfolds in two-to-three-year winlucky Jupiter will enter your sign for the first dows of time, with each window directing time since 2001-02. In the next few years, our focus to a different area of our life. many of you will have a love affair with (Often dramatically so.) Where we are someone of an age difference, especially right now is a “repeat” of what happened older. You might play a parental role. You around 1984 (for those old enough to might also have increased responsibilities remember). Read your sign below to learn with children or you will feel serious about more about how the next two-to-three creative projects. Whatever you do, you years will unfold in your life. Jorge Luis GEORGIA will want it to have meaning and you want Borges said, “You can’t measure time in NICOLS it to count. It will be easy to be disciplined days the way you can money in dollars in your approach to your creative efforts. because every day is different.” And this (Practice those arpeggios.) In large and is true. Nevertheless, cycles have flavours and areas small ways, you will see that your activity will give of emphasis. Read on if you want to know what lies form to something. This is your reward. ahead. Or stop right now if you want it all to be a LEO JULY 23-AUG 22 mind-boggling surprise. It’s time to address life’s most basic issues. Where are ARIES MARCH 21-APRIL 19 you going to live? You need a firm base. You want This year and next, you will be forced to come to terms a refuge. Those of you who remain where you now with the values of others. In fact, you will see just how live will do major repairs to fix up the place. This much your life is intertwined with someone else’s, espeis vital because this is basic to your existence - after cially in material terms. You might have to get along all, itís your home. Similarly, some of you will have with less support from others: money, goods, psychoa significant change in relationship with a parent or logical or emotional. While at times you may feel you an authority figure. This could be a time of goodbyes are undergoing loss - and you are - in a way, you are and moving on. You might take on a parental role in in boot camp to prepare for a marvellous career peak the relationship. Essentially, whatever you have been in about five years. This is actually a rebound effect of engaged in since 2005 has come to fruition. You’re having intense encounters with others in the last few getting ready to move out into the big wide world. years. Now the dust is settling and you are learning (Wanna pack a lunch?) how to take care of yourself, which is necessary before VIRGO AUG 23-SEPT 22 you go on to bigger and better things. You are entering a window of flux and change, which TAURUS APRIL 20-MAY 20 means you will change residences or jobs or both in Around 1999, you set off on a new path. Now you are the next several years. This might happen by choice dealing with the consequences. You are beginning to or because it was foisted upon you. Your daily milieu take your power, which you earned by busting your is going to be different, which means you are going to buns. However, as you assert yourself more powerfully be different. Because your external world will change, with your external world, this might upset the balance internally you will modify how you talk, think, speak of existing partnerships. Therefore, many of you will and communicate to everyone. Some of you might have intense disputes with partners and co-workers plunge into a world of foreign languages. All of this who might resist the change you are experiencing. is happening because you are putting the finishing Therefore, some partnerships will end. Those partnertouches on a project you began around 2007, which ships that are meant to last will endure but they will was reinventing a new you! undergo readjustments. People will start to expect LIBRA SEPT. 23-OCT. 22 greater things of you because you are moving toward Since around 2010, you have been on a new path and centre stage. recently, your focus has turned to money. (Like - where GEMINI MAY 21-JUNE 20 is it?) You might feel financially squeezed this year Youíve been wondering what to do with your life. and next because you have to discover what you really (“What do I want to be when I grow up?”) Now you value. In other words - what really matters? Part of will move forward with certainty and focus because this will be reflected in your material goods and even you’re entering a two-to-three-year window of hard your cash flow. Do you value what you own? Do you work. As your responsibilities increase, you might feel take care of what you own? You might be challenged you’re being tested as a human being. But in about to repair, maintain or give up things. This is because three years, all this hard work puts you in the limelight, our possessions reflect our unconscious inner values where all your efforts will pay off. Don’t waste your and sometimes weíre not aware of this until we are energy. Focus it with single-minded concentration. dealing with the external projection of these values. Along with this hard work will come money, later this (Spare change?) year and next. Well, of course! Aside from a sense of SCORPIO OCT 23-NOV 21 competition and joy of achievement - one does want a This is the beginning of a new phase in your life, little cash. Ya think? where your responsibilities will be great but your
achievements will be just as great. In the last 14 years, you were concerned with your external world: people, places and events. Now the first thing on your agenda is to get to know yourself. (“Hi, me.”) Earlier today, I read that we all have three eyes: Two to look outward and one to look inward. Since you will use this “third eye” for inner reflection and a deeper appreciation for who you are, this year and next are excellent times for psychotherapy or involvement in any kind of consciousness-raising groups. SAGITTARIUS NOV 22- DEC 21 For the first time since the mid-80s, you are in a two-tothree-year window where you will be giving up things - saying goodbye to people, places and possessions. It’s a time of letting go primarily of whatever is no longer relevant in your life. In other words, you’re cutting away the fat, the deadwood and whatever just doesn’t work anymore. So this is not a time of loss - it’s a time of lightening up to free you to begin a whole new cycle in 2015. You will also give up attitudes, prejudices and beliefs that are no longer appropriate to who you are today. (Of course, no one gives up dark chocolate.) CAPRICORN DEC 22-JAN 19 Integration is what you are learning now. For the last few years, you have been proud of your achievements. You worked hard to get where you are. But these achievements come with all kinds of strings attached. Everybody wants a piece of you! And let’s face it - you can’t be all things to all people all the time. Herein is your challenge. You have to figure out how to integrate the people and marvellous experiences that you want to maintain into your life without selling out. You have to maintain your integrity and your independence and be true to yourself, right? Tricky balance. AQUARIUS JAN 20-FEB 18 You are coming into your own. The next few years will be a time of harvest for you, a ripening of the seeds you planted in the last 14 years. It will be a time of responsibilities but also a time of pride and achievement. Now you know what you can do and this is confidence-building. You might graduate, get married, have a longed-for child, get a wonderful promotion or achieve some cherished dream that you’ve been working for. But take note: for a few, a time of harvest is a time when you see which crops did not grow. If this is the case, do not dwell on “failure” - cut your losses and move on. Let go and focus on something new. PISCES FEB 19-MARCH 20 Around 1994, you began to redefine who you were. After the millennium, you defined your home scene. After 2007, you defined your partnerships. And now you are preparing (this year and next) for a career peak around 2015. This is a serious time of preparation so that you will be performance-ready when your time of harvest arrives. Do not think you have all the answers. Take further training, courses or travel. Do whatever you can to enrich your life and learn more so that you have as many tools at your fingertips as you can have by 2015-16. You know the rules of the game, and now you have to hone your skills and become good at what you’re doing.
MONDAY MAGAZINE MAY 9 - MAY 15, 2013 mondaymag.com
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We believe in: a province where our College does not have to cut staff every year a province where students donâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;t have to choose between food & tuition a province where money does not decide who can go to school and who canâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;t 3FBTPOBCMF 5VJUJPO t 3FTUPSF VQ GSPOU HSBOUT t 3FEVDF JOUFSFTU SBUFT PO 4UVEFOU MPBOT t #FUUFS GVOEJOH GPS $PMMFHFT BOE 6OJWFSTJUZ T
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Authorized by the Camosun College Student Society, registered sponsor under the Election Act, 250-370-3590 [16]
MONDAY MAGAZINE MAY 9 - MAY 15, 2013 mondaymag.com