SLOW-PITCH AIMS AT SAFETY PAGE 5
RAW THEATRE TO HIT STAGE PAGE 8
COUNTRY RUN RESULTS PAGE 9
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TUESDAY, JUNE 18, 2013 • MERRITT NEWSPAPERS
Kinder Morgan crews excavate the soil contaminated by a crude oil spill from its TransMountain pipeline on Thursday about 40 kilometres southwest of Merritt near Kingsvale. A spokesperson from Kinder Morgan estimates that the leak, which sprung from a defective section of pipeline, wasn’t sudden, and could’ve been slowly seeping oil for weeks. The National Energy Board confirmed about five barrels of crude oil had spilled. Michael Potestio/Herald
TransMountain pipeline springs leak near Merritt By Michael Potestio THE HERALD
reporter@merrittherald.com
The TransMountain pipeline may have been slowly leaking for an extended period of time before Kinder Morgan Canada crews found crude oil on the ground. Hugh Harden, Kinder Morgan Canada’s vice-president of operations, said it’s difficult to say how long
oil had been escaping. “I would say it was a matter of days or weeks rather than months or years,” Harden said. “It was a very, very, very slow leak. It’s almost classified as a weep.” He said Thursday crews were expected to install a permanent repair sleeve, allowing the line to reopen by Friday evening. Harden said the leak was found because
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Kinder Morgan crews arrived to check that section of the pipeline after an in-pipe inspection device flagged it as having a potential defect. They noticed an oily patch the size of a wagon wheel on Wednesday in the Kingsvale area, about 40 kilometres southwest of Merritt, and called the control centre, which shut down the
pipeline. The company originally estimated the spill at 12 barrels — or 2,000 litres — of crude oil, but after a couple of days of examination, dropped that number to about half at between five and six barrels. On Friday, the National Energy Board confirmed the leak to be less than six barrels, according to com-
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was no damage done to any watercourses or threats to the public, noting the spill was located in a remote area. The size of the spill they identified on the surface was two metres wide by two metres long, Galarnyk said. He also said residents within a kilometre of the spill were notified the same day the spill was discov-
ered, as were local police and fire authorities. The pipeline was still shut down as of Friday, but Galarnyk said Kinder Morgan was hopeful it would get the pipeline turned on again that same day. He said Kinder Morgan also notified its shippers of the short-term shutdown.
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munications advisor Rebecca Taylor. Kinder Morgan media relations spokesperson Andrew Galarnyk told the Herald that the leak was fully contained on Thursday and that repairs on the pipeline were nearing completion by Friday as crews worked through the night to fix the problem. He also said there
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2 • TUESDAY, June 18, 2013
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Some things are just better together. MOTOCROSS MANIA (From left) Professional motocross racers Camille Baker and Rachel Springman answer questions from students at Merritt Central Elementary School at an assembly on June 7. The women were two of five racers, including Springman’s brother Kyle (right), who spoke at the school-wide assembly on teacher Sheldon Stuttard’s invite.
to wear the safety gear and you have to be careful,” he said.
“I’ve been riding and racing motorcycles since I was in Grade 7 myself,” Stuttard said. “It’s been a lifelong passion of mine, and I just wanted to share it with the kids at my school.” Stuttard said fun and safety were the main focus of the talk.
Stuttard said he wanted to present this assembly after the success of a similar assembly to students at the Coquihalla Middle School when he was a teacher there two years ago.
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TUESDAY, June 18, 2013 • 3
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NICOLA VALLEY NEWS
LNIB, Kinder Morgan to meet over leak
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Five-barrel spill happened on Lower Nicola band’s traditional land From Page 1 “We’re hoping to get it back up and running as soon as possible. For a short-term shutdown there’s no impact on the market or on consumers, but at the same time, we need to work with the National Energy Board before we can put the line back into service,” Galarnyk said. Galarnyk said the company still has to confirm the exact cause of the leak. “That’s something that’s still under investigation and we won’t know for certain for some time yet,” Galarnyk said. Although he did not know how old this specific section of the TransMountain pipe is (as various repairs and maintenance have been done on the pipeline over the years), Galarnyk did say the pipeline in general has been in operation since 1953. Galarnyk said Kinder Morgan had maintenance crews working in the area several days prior to the leak discovery. On Wednesday, a crew member noticed what looked like a patch of crude oil on the right-of-way. Upon further investigation, the substance was confirmed to be crude oil and as a precaution the pipeline was shut down, Galarnyk said. “We identified this release, we determined that it was minor in nature and we responded immediately by shutting the line down and initiating repairs,” Galarnyk said. He said unfortu-
nately spills like this happen, but it’s something they are prepared to handle. “We train regularly for this. We are prepared in the rare occasions that these events do occur and I think we continue to provide the assurances that we do take the operation, the safety, and the maintenance of our pipeline and the surrounding communities seriously,” Galarnyk said. The National Energy Board said in a press release that it received an incident report late Wednesday afternoon, and the pipeline had been shut down to prevent more oil from being released into the environment. “There is no immediate safety concern for local residents and precautions are being taken to ensure continued public safety,” the NEB said in a press release. “Our emergency response team is on site,” NEB Communications Advisor Rebecca Taylor told the Herald. “They’re overseeing the immediate response and making sure that it’s all going appropriately.” Taylor added that the first member of the response team to make it to the site is based out of Kelowna, and that the NEB has emergency response team members all over the country. On Thursday, Taylor said Kinder Morgan was excavating the contaminated soil and monitoring soil and water samples for contamination, as well as conducting wildlife
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REMEMBER WHEN? From the Herald archives: June, 1934 Pine From Here will be Shipped to South Africa
This Kinder Morgan photo shows the extent of the Kingsvale spill. Kamloops This Week
assessments. “So far, no concerns have turned up,” she said. “They’re on top of the monitoring and our people are there making sure they’re doing what they’re supposed to.” Kinder Morgan has proposed expansion and twinning of the pipeline, which carries crude oil from Edmonton to a dock in Burnaby. The pipeline has run through the Merritt area for 60 years. If twinned, it would nearly triple in capacity, from 300,000 barrels per day to 890,000 barrels per day. Lower Nicola Indian Band expresses concern over leak In the wake of the Kinder Morgan oil spill, the Lower Nicola Indian Band is expressing its concern over the Trans Mountain oil pipeline.
Jacob Beaton, media relations officer for LNIB, said in a press release the band has confirmed the spill is located within their traditional territory. He also said the LNIB staff are investigating the incident and communicating with Kinder Morgan. The band requested to have a meeting between its chief and council and Kinder Morgan CEO Ian Anderson to discuss the spill. Galarnyk confirmed this meeting will take place and is scheduled for June 28. “Our initial thoughts were that we would like to have a meeting with the CEO of Kinder Morgan to explore the idea of having an emergency spill or damage facility here in Merritt,” LNIB Coun. Robert Sterling told the Herald. This way, the Merritt area wouldn’t
need to rely on Kinder Morgan’s emergency facilities located outside the area, Sterling said. “If we had something a little more local, I think the community would feel a little more safe,” Sterling said. In the aforementioned press release, the band says it would like to see this proposed spill response facility staffed with properly trained LNIB members. Sterling said he’s not sure if this could occur through established emergency response crews — such as fire crews from the Lower Nicola Indian Band or City of Merritt — or if it would require specialized training and crews. “I’m not sure if this is something that could fall within the training of our emergency response people that exist already in our system, or if this would call for specialized training and specialized people who would need
to be independent from our emergency crews at this point,” Sterling said, “but I’m sure that’ll come up in our meetings with them following this incident.” Sterling also said the band expects the proposed facility to be one Kinder Morgan would foot the bill for. The LNIB is evaluating Kinder Morgan’s handling of the leak to ensure the area is cleaned up completely. Sterling said the band’s executive director, Arnie Narcise, and biologist Dave Caswell visited the site on Thursday. “The one thing that we found out is that we’d like to be participants in the assessment, the procedures and be an active participant in making sure that our community and our environment is safe,” Sterling said. With files from Surrey Leader’s Jeff Nagel
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A new note of optimism was struck at the Nicola Pine Mills here this week when news came of an order for 100,000 feet of pine for shipment to Durban, South Africa. Part of the order will be filled from the Penticton Sawmills plant and part from Merritt. Shipping dates from Vancouver are June 22 and July 22. The order is worth about $5,000 and being for export is an indication of further orders being received from the same source. The box factory resumed operations in a small way on Tuesday and the plant is getting tuned up for bigger business as the demand improves with the season. R.S. Warr is manager of the Nicola Pine Mills here and the South African order is largely due to his persistent selling campaign conducted during shutdown months.
4 • TUESDAY, June 18, 2013
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NICOLA VALLEY NEWS YARN IN THE YARD
Drivers urged to yield to buses, obey traffic law By Michael Potestio THE HERALD
reporter@merrittherald.com
B.C. Transit is concerned with the lack of yielding to buses in the city of Merritt. The organization points out that it’s the law to yield to a bus and not simply a common courtesy. Nicola Valley Transportation Society manager Jan Oswald told the Herald that Merritt drivers simply do not slow down and yield to buses as they should.
‘‘
we’re going to end up having an accident and it’s not going to be my driver’s fault, it’s going to be the person who refuses to stop,” Oswald said. The B.C. Transit press release on the issue states the law, under the Motor Vehicle Act, section 169.1, is to yield to B.C. Transit and other vehicles that fall under the B.C. Transit Act when the transit operator signals or gives other displays of intention to re-enter the traffic flow.
‘It’s getting worse and worse all the time and with summer coming now, we’re going to end up having an accident and it’s not going to be my driver’s fault.’ — TRANSPORTATION SOCIETY’S JAN OSWALD
It has become such a problem that Oswald reached out to B.C. Transit and requested they put out a press release on this issue. “I asked them to release it because we have problems in this city because people will not obey the traffic rules,” Oswald said. She said people will usually just ignore a bus when it is trying to pull out from a stop and simply drive past it, cutting it off from rejoining the traffic flow. Oswald also said the situation is getting worse and with summer just around the corner, a collision could end up happening — and if one does, the bus driver won’t be the one at fault. “And it’s getting worse and worse all the time and with summer coming now,
Oswald said she gets complaints all the time from Merritt bus drivers. Last year at this
Sheila Schwan of the Merritt Knitters and Weavers Club practices her craft on an old-fashioned spinning wheel. June 8 was International Knitting Day and the lone member of the club was on hand at the Baillie House for their knitting in public event. She said the reason for the event was to try and support the craft by putting it on display in public. Schwan said she loves to knit and when she was a kid, knitting was even taught in grade school. She was later joined for one other knitter for the event. Schwan attributed the low turnout to the hustle and bustle of peoples’ daily lives, but mentioned some crafts wear out while others revive. Michael Potestio/Herald
time, she would get up to eight complaints a day from her drivers who were involved in incidents where they were forced to break due to vehicle traffic failing to yield to their buses. Oswald said the traffic flow on Voght Street is horrible. “And the two stops that my buses have, the one in front of Subway and the one in front of city hall, are the worst ones in town for people ignoring the buses and pulling right by them,” Oswald said. She also noted that the bus stop at city hall can be deceiving because it looks like there are two lanes there, when really it’s only one lane, and
therefore not wide enough for passing. Cars will sometimes go around a bus at the city hall stop and cut them off before trying to make a right on to Nicola Avenue, Oswald said. Oswald said an incident at the Voght Street bus stop in front of the Subway a couple of weeks ago prompted her action. A bus was trying to pull out from the stop when a car drove right out in front of it and cut it off from reentering traffic. The vehicle even pulled out into the oncoming lane just to go around the bus, flipping the bus driver the bird in the process, she said. “And that’s not the
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first time it’s happened — it’s happened lots,” Oswald said. She said transit has been in Merritt for about six years now but people still complain about the buses stopping in the street, but that’s all part of what transit does. The message Oswald wants the public to know is to obey the rules. “Obey the traffic laws and stop for the buses,” she said.
NOTICE TO MEMBERS
Conayt Friendship Society Regarding Resolution on Constitution and By-Laws to be Presented at the AGM DATE: Wednesday, June 26, 2013 PLACE: 2164 Quilchena Ave TIME: 5:30 - 7:30 pm
TUESDAY, June 18, 2013 • 5
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NICOLA VALLEY NEWS
Slow-pitch tourney to stop violence Fred Feistmann, Investment Advisor
As of Market Close on June 14, 2013
Indexes
Currencies
12187.36 $CAN/US 15070.2 $US/CAN 1626.73
S&P/TSX DJIA S&P 500
Money Rates Canada Prime 1 Year GIC 5 Year GIC 10 Yr. CDA Bond
3.00% 1.81% 2.40% 1.90%
0.983 1.017
Commodities Gold am/pm Ă„x London 1391.25 Copper Highgrade 3.19 Lumber (day session) 289.50 Live Cattle 119.15
Mutual Funds
Twelve teams took part in the inaugural “Stop the Violence� slow-pitch tournament over the weekend at Central Park. The tournament was hosted by the Coldwater Indian Band to promote its Journeys Into Tomorrow Transition House for women and children leaving abusive living situations. Emily Wessel/Herald
By Emily Wessel THE HERALD
newsroom@merrittherald.com
Coldwater Indian Band held its first ever slow-pitch baseball tournament to raise awareness for its Journeys Into Tomorrow Transition House, a shelter for people leaving domestically abusive situations. The theme of the 12-team tournament was “Stop the violence.� The band also set up tents with information as well as resources from other health organizations. “Basically, it’s to spread awareness about our house; just to get the word out that we’re here,� Coldwater Indian Band’s Sharon Collins said. “The reserves know we’re here, but it seems like the main part of Merritt is still unaware that we even exist.� The day also featured a bouncy giraffe for kids. “It’s set up like a family event but it still promotes our house,� said Collins, the program director for the house. The teams enjoyed sunny and warm weather for the two-day
tournament, which ran roughly from 9 a.m. to early evening. Two of the teams even came out from Lytton. Collins said the tournament appeared to work to start a wordof-mouth awareness campaign in the area, and organizers are excited about the event becoming an annual one. “The aim is to get bigger and bigger every year,� Collins said. Collins said the transition house is also looking at a day camp for kids at Rotary Park in August. “It’s also to get awareness to children that we do exist,� she said. Collins said the house has been in operation for over 20 years. It serves the five First Nations in the Nicola Valley and the city of Merritt. “Our primary function is to provide shelter for women and children fleeing violence. We also can do some assistance with the agencies in town for counselling. To get women settled in town, if they wish to, or get them to Kelowna if they want to go there, is our primary job,� she said.
Employees at the house also work closely with the hospital, RCMP, victim services and other social agencies to help their clients. Collins said there is a no-questions-asked policy when people are seeking shelter.
The house runs on federal grants from the Aboriginal Affairs and Northern Development department and receives no provincial monetary support, Collins said. The house can accommodate a dozen people at a time, but
Collins said it’s not easy to estimate an average number of clients. “Some days we’re so full, and other days we’re not,� she said. The house location is secret to protect the women and children from unwanted people finding them.
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Brands Sionna Cdn. Eqt10.55 IA Clarington Cdn. Eqt 25.45 IA Clarington Glbl. Eqt 14.86 CI Harbour Fund 22.04 Dynamic Cdn Value Cls 13.26 Fidelity Asset Allocation 24.87 Fidelity Disp Cad Eqt 27.17
Fid Intnl Portfolio Ivy Cdn Fund Ivy Foreign Fund Bissett Cdn Equity RBC Balanced Fund RBC Cdn Div. Fund CI Signature Select Cdn
27.22 29.07 34.84 78.12 12.54 50.70 19.63
THIS WEEK’S MARKETS .... The S&P/TSX Composite closed at $12,187.36 last week. In the U.S., the S&P decreased 1% to close at $1,626.73. Oil was up 1.9% to close at $97.87/ bb, while natural gas futures declined 0.4% to close at $3.76/ MMBtu. Gold bullion ďŹ nished the week at $1,390.15, up 0.5%. The Canadian dollar rose 0.3% against the US dollar, closing at $.98/USD. The 2 year Canadian benchmark bond decreased to 1.09% and the 10 year bond decreased to 2.12%. South of the border 2 year US treasury yields decreased to .270%
Canadian Common A&W Revenue Royalties 21.40 ATCO Ltd. 44.97 Arc Resources Ltd. 26.72 BCE Inc 44.16 Barrick Gold Corp 19.84 Ballard Power Sys 1.81 Bonavista Energy Corp 14.59 Bombardier 4.68 Bank of Montreal 60.15 Bank of Nova Scotia 56.82 Can. National Railway 99.88 Canadian Tire (NON VTG A) 80.03 Cameco Corporation 21.23 CIBC 77.18 Canadian Utilities Ltd. 37.75 Can. Real Est. Trust 42.80 Can. Nat. Res. Ltd. 29.20 Enbridge 44.63 EnCana Corporation 17.78 Finning 22.01 Husky Energy Inc. 27.99 Imperial Oil 39.51 Kinross Gold Corp 5.92 Loblaw Companies 47.55 Maple Leaf Foods 13.27 Molson Coors Can Inc. 50.63 Manulife Financial 15.73 Pembina Pipeline Corp. 32.75 Potash Corp of Sask 41.03 Pengrowth Energy Corp. 5.13 Power Financial Corp. 30.08 Precision Drilling Corp 9.03 Rogers Comm Inc. 45.35
Royal Bank 59.99 Research In Motion Ltd. 14.67 Sun Life Financial Inc 29.96 Shaw Comm Inc 22.69 Shopper’s Drug Mart 44.98 Suncor Energy Inc 30.96 Toromont Inds Ltd 22.29 Toronto Dominion Bank 81.32 Transcanada Corp 46.73 Telus Corp 34.72 Tim Hortons Inc 53.59
U.S. Common
Alcoa Inc. American Express Co. Mellon Corp Cisco Systems Inc. Deere & Co. Walt Disney Co. (The) Gap Inc. General Electric Co. Home Depot Inc. Johnson & Johnson Macy’s Inc. Microsoft Corp. Sprint Nextel Corp PÄzer Inc. Pepsico Inc. AT&T INC Staples Inc. United Tech Corp Walmart Stores Inc. Wendy’s Arby’s Gr.
8.12 72.97 29.13 24.09 84.88 63.80 41.48 23.52 76.59 84.91 48.48 34.40 7.32 29.09 82.13 35.91 16.04 94.02 74.87 5.96
Fred is an Investment Advisor with RBC Dominion Securities specializing in efÄcient money management strategies. Any questions or comments can be directed to him at 1-800-774-9631 or e-mail fred.feistmann@rbc.com
DID YOU KNOW. . . . that honey is one of the only natural foods that never goes bad. This article is supplied by Fred Feistmann, an Investment Advisor with RBC Dominion Securities Inc. RBC Dominion Securities is a member company under RBC Investments. The member company and Royal Bank of Canada are separate corporate entities that are afÄliated. Member CIPF. (tm) Trademark of Royal Bank of Canada. Used under license. ŠCopyright 2012. All rights reserved.
6 • TUESDAY, June 18, 2013
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HERALD OPINION What ails the NDP? Plenty TOM FLETCHER B.C. VIEWS VICTORIA – After 34 NDP MLAs were sworn in to continue a stretch of opposition that will reach at least 16 years, leader Adrian Dix took a few questions about his future. The party’s provincial council will meet June 21 to set the terms of reference for a review of the party’s dismal election performance, Dix told reporters. He repeated
that his performance won’t be spared, and ticked off some conventional wisdom about the NDP campaign. Dix mentioned the alleged lack of “negative” ads, the local campaigns (read candidates), the decreasing reliability of polls and, when pressed, his surprise decision to come out against the proposed twinning of the TransMountain oil pipeline. Like last week’s hysteria over a tiny leak in that pipeline, these are great sound bites for the short attention spans of the modern media. But they don’t explain much.
See ‘NDP’ Page 7
“Small” spill could spoil expansion proposal
Emily Wessel Merritt MUSINGS The leak on the TransMountain pipeline about 40 kilometres southwest of Merritt on Wednesday made national headlines, but it wasn’t for
Publisher Theresa Arnold production@ merrittherald.com
the size of the spill. Rather, it was for its timing. The roughly 1,000 litre crude oil spill was the 79th reported by pipeline operator Kinder Morgan to the National Energy Board since it began operating the pipeline 60 years ago. Between that first year and last year, the largest spill the company reported on the line was a 1,587,000 litre crude oil spill at the Edmonton tank farm in 1985, according to the list of spill reports on its website. But again, it’s not the size of this relatively small
Production Shel Hein production2@ merrittherald.com
oil spill that caught the attention of news outlets and their readers/listeners/ viewers, but its timing. Kinder Morgan recently pitched plans to the province to twin and expand the pipeline to nearly triple its capacity from Edmonton to Burnaby. While this proposal generally garnered less criticism in the province than Enbridge’s proposal for the Northern Gateway pipeline through northern B.C. at first, this leak could change all that. Enbridge pipelines reported 34 spills and leaks in 2001 alone, totalling
Editor Emily Wessel newsroom@ merrittherald.com
MERRITT HERALD 2090 G
25,980 barrels of oil — about 4.1 million litres. As the old argument goes, these are simply the risks we take when we live with a dependency on black gold. We risk our groundwater, our soil, and our wildlife. But, as the other side of the argument goes, we risk it for the sake of Canada’s economy, which affects all aspects of daily life for all Canadians. But do we have to accept that our fate is sealed by oil dependency? The debate around oil dependency is extremely polarizing, and a “little spill” like this one has
brought that to the forefront of the TransMountain expansion plans. In the blue corner, we have the environmental doomsayers. For them, an oil pipeline represents certainty of an environmental disaster, and is only a matter of time. In the red corner, the armchair economists posit that our dependency on oil has sealed our fate. These are the risks we assume in the name of Canada’s economy. But somewhere in the purple area of ambivalence between them sits a conflicted portion of the
Reporter Michael Potestio reporter@ merrittherald.com
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Canadian population that sees both as true, and is therefore the target of both sides’ persuasive tactics in the war to resolve that dissonance. Modern psychology posits that people who hold ambivalent attitudes are more receptive to processing information than people with stauncher attitudes, and, fittingly, it’s those people in the purple who are targets of each side of the debate’s most convincing arguments.
See Thursday’s edition of the Merritt Herald for part 2.
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This Merritt Herald is a member of the British Columbia Press Council, a self-regulatory body governing the province’s newspaper industry. The council considers complaints from the public about the conduct of member newspapers. Directors oversee the mediation of complaints, with input from both the newspaper and the complaint holder. If talking with the editor or publisher does not resolve your complaint about coverage or story treatment, you may contact the B.C. Press Council. Your written concern, with documentation, should be sent to B.C. Press Council, 201 Selby St., Nanaimo, B.C. V9R 2R2. For information, phone 888-687-2213 or go to www.bcpresscouncil.org
TUESDAY, June 18, 2013 • 7
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YOUR OPINION Happy(ish) ending to illegal suite saga in sight Letter writer feared homelessness after eviction Dear Editor, Heroes are alive and well in Merritt. Just when visions of tents and sleeping bags were dancing through my head, along with a trip to a campsite, somewhere, anywhere — up they popped. These wonderful people will forever live in my heart as their help is in direct opposition to the meanness that lives in the hearts and minds of others. I won’t mention the names of these heroes, as they would probably, as with most heroes, not wish it. However, they know who they are, and I
would sooner thank them privately. Brandon and I have been offered a ‘legal’ and sweet little home to reside in, and we are so very grateful. Of course, the cost of changing residences comes to the fore, but there are no complaints there. Just a tighter budget, but things do balance out. I’ve lost 20 pounds (due to the stress), but Brandon has gained 10. He’s a professional table-begger. I sign this off in wonder — I bet I’m the only person to be turfed out of an illegal
residence three times over! Once by the city, and twice by the ‘landlord’ who thought that an almost-30-day notice (yeah, that was illegal too) was too much time, and shortened it up to a 10-day eviction notice. Much difficulty with all this, as I’ve nearly always owned my own homes. Possibly I’ll still be in that campsite for a few days yet as the 10 days is over a week short of moving day. But I haven’t had a vacation in years — too busy moving — heh heh.
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This all-powerful NDP provincial council is a case in point. A glimpse into its inner workings was provided by a summary of an NDP policy development workshop called “Imagine Our Future” that was leaked by the BC Liberals in the final days of the campaign. The workshop took place in November 2010, coincidentally at the same provincial council meeting where the revolt against former leader Carole James tumbled into the open. While 13 caucus members were knifing
their leader for reasons they still can’t or won’t articulate in public – a glaring problem in itself – the backroom policy brainstorm revealed a deeper malaise. Among the “dream tree” notions put forward in the workshop was “free” postsecondary tuition and public transit, along with raising wages and lowering fees for daycare. This isn’t a dream tree, it’s a money tree. Remember, this is the NDP’s ruling body, not a high school “social justice” class or an Occupy Vancouver squat.
Bertha Hanschke Merritt
Showing a glimmer of adult supervision, the workshop table on “equitable tax policy” even identified the problem. Its first recommendation: “Increase our economic and financial literacy to gain credibility.” The “public ownership” table really got radical. Scrap public-private partnerships, the basis of most government construction today. “Nationalize” independent power projects, in the Venezuelan style of state seizure of private assets. And perhaps most incredibly, tear up the trade agreement between Saskatchewan,
Alberta and B.C. that harmonizes transport truck regulations and so forth. In the real world, the four western premiers met this week in Winnipeg. And the three-province project now called “New West Partnership” will continue to dismantle archaic inter-provincial barriers. Why would the NDP be secretly against that? Because it’s also a “labour mobility” agreement. This harkens back to a supposed golden age in Canada, when two corporate titans shared the beer busi-
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ness, producing identical bland lager from identical factories in identical stubby bottles. Inter-provincial trade in these stubbies was strictly forbidden, requiring each province to have a big unionized brewery to make uniformly bad beer for the proletariat. This is the power of a monopoly union. And because of it, this was how governments tried to “create jobs.” It’s a bygone era to which many core NDP supporters stubbornly cling. This explains the party’s revival of a “job protection commissioner” for forestry. Which brings us
to the proverbial root cause of the B.C. NDP’s woes. Its largest financial donor is the B.C. Government and Service Employees’ Union, which donated $1.4 million to the party in the past eight years, nosing out the Canadian Union of Public Employees and the Hospital Employees’ Union. Former HEU and BCGEU presidents now sit in the NDP caucus, critics for health and “green” jobs respectively. Tom Fletcher is legislative reporter and columnist for Black Press and BCLocalnews.com.
June 29 & 30, 2013 WHEN: GATES OPEN at 10 am Saturday and Sunday RACING STARTS 2 pm Saturday NOON on Sunday Street stock welcome must register by 10 am Saturday
YES: 61% NO: 38%
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8 • TUESDAY, June 18, 2013
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ENTERTAINMENT
One-act plays take centre stage on troupe’s tour By Emily Wessel THE HERALD
How’s your hearing? Ask an Audiologist.
newsroom@merrittherald.com
A Vancouver theatre performance group is bringing three one-act plays to Merritt on Saturday night. Carolyn Palaga, MSc, Aud (C) The six-actor company Theatre Merritt Hearing Clinic in the Raw will A division of Carolyn Palaga Audiology Ser vices Ltd. deliver the three plays on a two-hour Authorized by: bill, with music by WCB Call Monday - Friday Blues for the Road, First Canadian Health a guitar-and-vocals Veterans Affairs duo. The troupe’s Registered under 2076A Granite Avenue, Merritt artistic director, Jay (Located at Nicola Valley Chiropractic) the Hearing Aid Act (B.C.) Hamburger, said the three plays have some challenging themes, and he is curious to see how they’ll be received on their four-stop tour. “We held a run Open House Volunteers Wanted Theatre in the Raw’s Roger Howie performs in the one-act play Talk Medicine which the Vancouver troupe will bring to Merritt. Submitted through today of one Highland Valley Copper’s Open House Committee is tenth live theatre tour started up in a cafe about men trying to and so forth, without of the shows and I seeking “letters of interest” from local non-pro¿t orgathe troupe has done. in 1994, and since come to grips with giving it away,” he was almost in tears,” nizations for volunteers to assist us at this year’s Open “I’m just fascinated then, has evolved their fathers and the said. “Rather than Hamburger said. House on Monday, August 5, 2013. to see the response of from experimental relationships between doing some bouncy, “Some of this stuff The volunteer members may be asked to assist in one bringing these shows shows to its current fathers and sons — of our concession stands, preparing hot dogs, assist really hits. That’s what sexy musical, we’re with parking and distributing informational handouts etc. into Merritt. It’s been mandate, which is living up to standards we’re looking for; we’re bringing a show in One representaive must have a Food Handler’s Certi¿a labour of love, but and how that plays out focused on thoughtthat’s timely and it’s not looking for huge cate in the food areas. we’re willing to take provoking content about something that’s in their relationships commercial success, If selected, a monetary donation for services rendered the chance. If we get over commercial with women,” he said. would be issued directly to your organization. we’re looking for more going on now.” people thinking, we’ve “It’s about how we can success. The Merritt The other play, of the content. I think If interested in being part of this fun day, please submit done most of our job,” Live Theatre Society fall into patterns and Talk Medicine, is a that’s in the DNA of a “letter of interest” before July 5, 2013 to the attention of: HIGHLAND VALLEY COPPER Hamburger said with a how damaging that can worked with the this particular troupe.” monologue of life 2013 OPEN HOUSE COMMITTEE laugh. troupe to set up the be.” experiences told by One of those plays c/o Jacqui Schneider Theatre in the Hamburger said the Merritt stop on the a taxidermist. The is Maybe Miles, which P.O. Box 1500 Logan Lake, B.C. V0K 1W0 Raw will hit the stage four-town tour, which company gets some play was written by tells the story of an at the Culture Club also hits Cawston, of its performance Calgarian Sheryl encounter between a The organization selected will be noti¿ed on or before July 12, 2013. Princeton and Spences Saturday night. Tickets material from its Melnyk and has university professor are available by calling Bridge, and ends one-act play-writing a tough theme, and a former student (604) 708-5448 or with four back-tocontest, and that all Hamburger said. in an unusual context. (604) 708-5477, or at back performances three of the plays are “She [the “This young girl, theatreintheraw.ca. original. The company in Vancouver. It’s the playwright] is talking who’s working in a lap dance place, has a customer and after a * few minutes of doing a dance for him, she recognizes that it’s her former professor,” Hamburger said. • Windows are completely blacked out in areas of the house: “She’s lost her stipend es • No-ones living in the residence or have odd times for college and she’s of coming and going. going for her master’s • May have potting plants, fertilizer bags or waterr degree, so she wants lines around the property. ng sounds • Odd power lines running to the house or humming to continue with her of generators. education and this is a • Extra security on house and yard. way of earning.” • An odd odour coming from the home While there are If you think your neighbour may be growing drugs contact the elements of humour local police or call crimestoppers to make an anonymous tip which could result in payment if an arrest or warrant is obtained. in all of the pieces, Anyone with any information on this crime or any others is asked to contact the Hamburger said, the Merritt RCMP at 378-4262 or Crime Stoppers at 1-800-222-TIPS. show The Suspect is This message brought to you by the Merritt Herald reminiscent of George at the Shulus Community Arena Orwell’s 1984 and touches on themes of Tickets $50 until June 28th the Occupy movement. “There’s a little bit $75 After June 28th of a chill there. This Advertising: sales@merrittherald.com is a story in which Publisher: publisher@merrittherald.com Tickets available at Lower Nicola Band ofÀce somebody says an Editorial: newsroom@merrittherald.com & Shulus Community Arena off-the-cuff remark, www.merrittherald.com Ph: 378-4241 • Fax: 378-6818 and all of a sudden, *Jackpot based on 300 people in attendance 2090 Granite Avenue, P.O. Box 9, Merritt, B.C. the agent’s in the For more information please contact room and there’s an interrogation and so on Joe Quewezance at 250-525-0084
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MERRITT HERALD
TUESDAY, June 18, 2013 • 9
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5 km 1. Tristan Sandhu 2. Craig Asselstine 3. Parker Finch 4. Don Parno 5. Arnie Gray 6. Steve Rempel 7. Taylia McKeown 8. Jenna Kane 9. Valerie Cox 10. Sky McKeown 11. Jessica Janzen 12. Dolores Duke 13. E. Richardson 14. Beckett Finch 15. Emily Whitecross 16. Tyra Gage 17. Spencer Vaughan 18. Darian Krajci 19. Janelle Gage 20. Kari Gage 21. Felize Omori 22. Colin Gage 23. Evelyn Luce 24. Wendy Silverwood 25. C. Stiles-Freeman 26. Sajjin Lali 27. Peter Clark 28. Tammy Caruso 29. Tanya Starrs 30. Riley Thomsen 31. Rene Thomsen 32. Chandelle Agar 33. Jennifer Lisle 34. Brenda Curnow 35. Melanie Knutson 36. Rachel Janzen 37. Colleen Tabata 38. Colleen Reynoldson 39. Heidi Bassett 40. Christine Thygesen 41. Megan Dunsmore 42. Niah Prowal 43. Tim Kroeker 44. Karianne Kroeker 45. Andrea Janzen 46. Helen Jordo 47. Alexander Howard 48. Diane Twan 49. Mary Wong 50. Les Tabata 51. Erika Doyon 52. Aidan Dunsmore 53. Hailee Harkies 54. Rob Dunsmore 55. Corinna Francis 56. Roxanne Stewart 57. Angela Basaraba 58. Jennifer Whitecross 59. Jamie Rempel 60. M.A. Meulenkamp 61. Amy Grainger 62. Stacey Krajci 63. Harry Howard 64. Jill Schultz 65. Erin Thomsen 66. Rose Howard 67. Paige Asselstine 68. Helen Asselstine 69. Nona Tickner 70. Alice Kasza 71. Mckenzie Manning 72. Jersi Emmerick 73. Brent Manning 74. Pamela Clark 75. Donna Cortez 76. Olivia Boven 77. Justine Kroeker 78. Sandra Skappak 79. Rita Anderson 80. Julie Munro 81. Brenda Gustafson 82. Mary Ramsey 83. Terry Strande 84. Jennifer Rotvold 85. Rani Hothi 86. Isaac Asselstine 87. Graeme Asselstine 88. B.L. Watkinson 89. Mike Bontron 90. Neyda Hewton 91. Stacy Zakall 92. Edward Watkinson 93. Maia Zakall 94. Colleen Mullin 95. Koen Hales 96. Hannah Howard 97. Tracy Dunsmore 98. Tammy Denning
M23 M44 M13 M52 M44 M28 F12 F11 F52 M40 F20 F55 F11 M10 F12 F11 M11 M12 F9 F41 F11 M42 F35 F50 F45 M9 M61 F34 F32 M16 M51 F32 F44 F47 F43 F18 F54 F55 F34 F37 F11 F10 M42 F9 F51 F35 M7 F54 F42 M57 F32 M8 F11 M44 F46 F48 F35 F40 F34 F51 F27 F42 M46 F33 F14 F10 F8 F37 F52 F19 F7 F9 M27 F60 F31 F12 F14 F35 F43 F34 F56 F55 F51 F31 F49 M6 M46 F7 M39 F39 F33 M37 F8 F36 M8 F8 F46 F45
Vancouver New West Merritt Merritt Merritt Princeton Merritt Merritt Merritt Merritt Merritt Kamloops Merritt Merritt Merritt Merritt Merritt Merritt Merritt Merritt Merritt Merritt Kamloops Merritt Kamloops Merritt Merritt Merritt Merritt Merritt Merritt Merritt Merritt Merritt Merritt Merritt Kamloops Merritt Merritt Merritt Merritt Merritt Merritt Merritt Merritt Merritt Merritt Merritt Merritt Kamloops Merritt Merritt Lower Nicola Merritt Merritt Merritt Merritt Merritt Princeton Kamloops Merritt Merritt Merritt Merritt Merritt Merritt Merritt Merritt Merritt Merritt Merritt Lower Nicola Merritt Merritt Kamloops Merritt Merritt Merritt Merritt Merritt Merritt Merritt Merritt Merritt Merritt Merritt Merritt Merritt Kamloops Lower Nicola Merritt Merritt Merritt Merritt Merritt Merritt Merritt Merritt
18:27 21:00 23:00 23:02 23:27 24:03 25:02 25:54 26:01 26:08 26:17 26:53 26:59 27:02 27:14 27:16 27:27 27:54 28:06 28:06 28:06 28:19 28:32 29:15 29:28 29:34 29:51 29:53 30:10 30:14 30:14 30:20 30:21 30:28 30:29 30:31 30:34 31:12 31:13 31:16 31:38 31:45 32:02 32:06 32:16 32:25 32:26 32:49 32:52 33:11 33:18 33:36 33:39 33:47 33:51 33:54 34:24 34:55 35:01 35:02 35:05 35:14 35:17 35:21 35:22 35:30 35:35 35:35 35:55 35:56 36:02 36:06 36:07 36:16 36:26 36:33 36:37 36:59 37:00 37:08 37:31 37:49 37:56 38:20 38:54 39:02 39:05 39:19 39:21 39:27 39:27 39:29 39:41 39:51 39:51 39:59 40:03 40:03
2013 Merritt Country Run Complete Results 99. Jaime Etchart 100. Arjun Singh 101. Lenna Lutz 102. Jaxsin Vaughan 103. Corbin Vaughan 104. Chelsea Vaughan 105. Ella McKeown 106. Crystal Neville 107. Tianna Collins 108. Melissa Pinyon 109. Ali Antoine 110. Miriam McFarlane 111. Shawna Walker 112. Allysia Rodgers 113. Gwendy Rodgers 114. Laurie Manning 115. Leah Collins 116. Robin Brown 117. Tosha Illingworth 118. Tami Desimone 119. Jeet Panghali 120. Noreen Cross 121. Karen Abbott 122. Debbie Tancsa 123. Joan Negrin 124. Stefan Zabek 125. Michelle Zabek 126. Michelle Coulombe 127. Beth Warawa 128. Julie Pehr 129. Mandie Schuler 130. Jenene McLeary 131. Colin McLeary 132. Nancy James 133. Patty Heisler 134. Tyler Mohoruk 135. Brian Whitecross 136. Jayna Whitecross 137. M. Evdokimoff 138. Simone Chenoweth 139. Juanita Little 140. Calvin Little 141. Joanne Street 142. Vic Cavaliere 143. Assunta Cavaliere 144. Danaya Neil 145. Jennifer Neil 146. Carolyn Jorgenson 147. Gwendy Lamont 148. Bernice Asselstine 149. Sabrina Chan 150. Rhea Little 151. Linda Davidson 152. Jamie Szabo 153. Sabina Ahuja 154. Brenda Black 155. Christina Gillett 156. Callie Langlois 157. Gayle Munz 158. D. Charbonneau 159. Brooklyn Gray 160. Leah Garica-Gray 158. Kate Creighton
F36 M43 F46 M7 M7 F37 F8 F37 F16 F29 F34 F50 F32 F26 F45 F29 F16 F32 F31 F53 F49 F53 F38 F45 F68 M47 F46 F45 F69 F31 F31 F56 M58 F71 F31 M30 M43 F9 F37 F43 F39 M7 F51 M59 F69 F10 F24 F51 F77 F82 F44 F9 F26 F29 F30 F50 F8 F42 F59 F55 F7 F38 F13
Merritt Kamloops Kamloops Merritt Merritt Merritt Merritt Lower Nicola Merritt Merritt Lower Nicola Kamloops Kamloops Merritt Merritt Merritt Merritt Lytton Merritt Merritt Merritt Merritt Kamloops Merritt Merritt Merritt Merritt Lower Nicola Merritt Merritt Cochrane Lower Nicola Lower Nicola Merritt Merritt Merritt Merritt Merritt Merritt Merritt Ashcroft Ashcroft Merritt Merritt Merritt Merritt Merritt Abbotsford Kelowna Merritt New West Ashcroft Merritt Merritt Merritt Merritt Merritt Merritt Merritt Merritt Merritt Merritt North Van
40:10 40:12 40:32 40:36 40:36 40:42 40:50 40:56 40:57 41:47 41:48 41:56 43:06 43:08 43:09 43:18 43:57 44:11 44:20 44:48 44:51 45:07 45:14 45:20 46:19 47:45 47:47 47:50 47:55 48:02 48:29 48:29 48:30 50:02 50:03 50:04 50:24 50:24 51:06 52:07 52:35 52:40 52:42 52:45 53:31 53:31 53:32 53:37 54:03 54:06 54:08 54:15 54:51 54:52 57:59 58:03 1:01:48 1:02:01 1:03:10 1:03:11 1:04:00 1:04:00 1:04:47
M44 F30 M31 M26 F16 F38 F17 F39 M49 F51 M24
Ashcroft Merritt Merritt Merritt North Van W. Kelowna Merritt Kamloops Kamloops Kamloops Merritt
42:06 45:24 46:51 47:03 48:01 48:49 50:51 51:19 51:33 53:11 53:28
10 km 1. Wayne Little 2. Tiffany Anderssen 3. Jordan Goerlitz 4. Eric Brown 5. Bella Creighton 6. Stephanie Moore 7. Jodie Peachey 8. Sabrina Sinclair 9. Vince Cavaliere 10. Karen Henning 11. Beshoy Meleka
12. Andrea Reynolds 13. Stacey McQuarrie 14. Chris Lougheed 15. Christina Pehr 16. Erika Strande 17. Wade Fisher 18. Brandon Hanghofer 19. Lexi Thorne 20. Trevor Ball 21. Lap Wu 22. Ron Neden 23. Fred Street 24. Tanya Knippelberg 25. Lisa Hawkins 26. Merrill Livesey 27. Nathalie Lambert 28. Aaron Clarke 29. Susan Connaty 30. Judith Urquhart 31. Jo Berry 32. Philippa Thiessen 33. Christine Antonishyn 34. Kate Garthewaite 35. Melissa Kooijman 36. Mark Springford 37. Vera Swaine 38. Jessica Jones 39. Linda Woodbury 40. Karen Willies 41. MaryAnne Waters 42. Brittany Brabant 43. Tanya LeClair 44. Katrina Cavaliere 45. Scott Noble 46. Joanne Noble 47. Arnold Boudreau 48. Wendy Boudreau 49. Lissa Goodman 50. Gaylan Kokoska 51. Carole Atkins 52. Joan Jennings 53. Leilani Lacasse 54. Katarina Desimone 55. Tia Creighton 56. Andrew Creighton 57. Heather Fader 58. Jim Fader 59. Thai-lin Kral 60. Gary McRae
F29 F39 M35 F26 F25 M41 M19 F21 M42 M59 M65 M58 F35 F34 F38 F45 M39 F57 F61 F47 F42 F32 F28 F37 M28 F49 F50 F67 F68 F55 F19 F40 F45 M52 F49 M64 F60 F53 F46 F59 F69 F51 F20 F40 M44 F50 M52 F43 M74
Vancouver Abbotsford Kamloops Lower Nicola Merritt Merritt Kamloops Kamloops Merritt Merritt Armstrong Merritt Kamloops Merritt Merritt Kamloops Merritt Langley Lytton Kamloops Kamloops Langley Logan Lake Coldstream Merritt Kamloops Kamloops Kamloops Kamloops Kamloops Merritt Kamloops Kamloops Surrey Surrey Kamloops Kamloops Kamloops Kamloops Kamloops Kamloops Kamloops Merritt North Van North Van Merritt Merritt Merritt Merritt
54:01 54:02 55:27 55:47 55:48 55:55 56:03 56:22 56:28 56:39 56:45 57:40 57:51 58:19 58:34 1:02:14 1:02:38 1:04:06 1:04:07 1:04:07 1:04:19 1:04:46 1:05:10 1:05:19 1:07:34 1:07:42 1:07:57 1:10:24 1:11:59 1:12:11 1:12:23 1:15:52 1:15:52 1:16:37 1:16:37 1:17:42 1:17:42 1:20:05 1:20:05 1:21:40 1:21:40 1:21:41 1:25:21 1:27:36 1:27:36 1:46:13 1:46:17 1:48:43 1:52:31
M35 M25 M33 M52 M40 M42 F25 M47 M18 M45 F26 M68 M34 M38 M52 F35 M44 M58 M25 M49 M26 F28 M28 M78
Merritt Kamloops Westwold Merritt Merritt Vernon Fergus, Ont. Merritt Penticton Merritt Merritt Merritt Merritt Kamloops Kamloops Merritt Merritt Summerland Merritt Kamloops Merritt Lower Nicola Trail Kamloops
1:18:37 1:32:01 1:35:34 1:37:37 1:46:03 1:47:17 1:47:59 1:52:34 1:53:30 1:56:40 1:58:59 1:59:00 1:59:05 2:02:46 2:04:26 2:05:26 2:06:05 2:06:26 2:09:54 2:11:07 2:11:13 2:13:45 2:32:00 2:39:42
21 km 1. Hans Aabye 2. Ryan Pidhirniak 3. Martin Kratky 4. Jonathan Peachey 5. Ravi Singh 6. Steve Morris 7. Emily Anderson 8. Duncan Ross 9. Brandon Datoff 10. Dave Fahlman 11. Emmie Clements 12. Darch Oborne 13. Corey Korom 14. Andy Heer 15. Howie Goodman 16. Kelly Donaldson 17. Eric Carriere 18. Patrick Amundsen 19. Stuart Milne 20. Kent Kokoska 21. Robert D’Alessandro 22. Amy Riley 23. Carl Schrader 24. Bruce Butcher
COUNTRY RUN FUN! (Photos from top) Race director Mary Jorgensen with 5K winner and B.C. Lions’ trainer Tristan Sandhu. Marathoner Darch Oborne, 68, from Merritt ran the 21K. Joan Jennings, 69, from Kamloops took on the 10K run. Eight-year-old Paige Asselstine from Merritt tackled the 5K with a smile. Ian Webster/ Herald TROPHY WINNERS! Country Run award winners (from left): Tiffany Anderssen, Jodie Peachey, Jenna Kane, Taylia McKeown, Martin Kratky, Craig Asselstine, Hans Aabye, Emily Anderson, Kelly Donaldson, Wayne Little, Bella Creighton, Valerie Cox and Emmie Clements. Missing: Tristan Sandhu, Parker Finch, Ryan Pidhirniak, Jordan Goerlitz, Eric Brown and Stephanie Moore. Ian Webster/Herald
10 • TUESDAY, June 18, 2013
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SPORTS
It was a busy weekend of sports RUGBY The Merritt Barbarians got two tries from Cameron Graham (left, with the ball) in a decisive 36-17 home field victory over the visiting Vernon Jackels on Sunday at Voght Park. Other Merritt scorers were Eric Schmidt, Jonathan Cooke and Zach Wright. Ian Webster/Herald
TRACK & FIELD Over 200 athletes from six area elementary schools converged on Voght Park on Friday for the annual district track and field championships. Bench’s Teanna George (right) employed the seldomseen scissors technique to win the Grade 7 girls’ high jump at 1.27 metres. Ian Webster/Herald
LACROSSE The Nicola Valley Thunder bantam lacrosse team prepped for the upcoming zone championships this coming weekend with an impressive 4-1 victory over the Penticton Heat on Sunday at the Shulus arena. (Left) The Thunder’s Parker Finch runs the ball up the floor against the Heat. Heather Koppe/Penticton
STOCK CARS (Right) Dale Calder (16) and Jake Mills (75) duke it out on turn two in the Hobby division dash event (5 laps) at the Merritt Speedway on Saturday. Prince George’s Grant Powers won the race, and took the main event (25 laps). Ian Webster/Herald
LITTLE BRITCHES Merritt’s Tryton Bose (left) is all business as he competes in the junior boys’ stake race at the B.C. Little Britches rodeo in town on the weekend. Over a dozen local cowboys and cowgirls, as young as two years of age, took part in the event which sees competition in barrel racing, pole bending, goat tail and calf tying, breakaway and dummy roping and steer riding. Ian Webster/Herald
YOUTH SOCCER Ten-year-old Olivia Schmid (right) makes a point blank save off a penalty shot while playing her very first game in goal. Her Orange team defeated the Pigeons 5-3 in Grade 6-7 youth soccer action on Saturday at the former Coquihalla Middle School playing fields. This coming saturday is the final weekend of regular MYSA play this season. Ian Webster/ Herald
TUESDAY, June 18, 2013 • 11
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Employment Business Opportunities ALL CASH Drink & Snack Vending Business Route. Complete Training. Small Investment required. 1-888-979VEND(8363). www.healthydrinkvending.co
Career Opportunities DEPUTY OPERATIONS MANAGER District of Kitimat, exempt staff position, with competitive compensation and full benefit package. Reporting to the Operations Manager, assists in planning, implementing and tracking the operations, repair and maintenance of the municipality’s infrastructure, including water and sewer; roads; parking lots; drainage; signage; sidewalks, parks, grass cutting, cemetery, equipment fleet. Candidates will have several years of experience in the municipal or related field and post-secondary education in Water Quality, Civil or Building Technology or related Trade Qualification. Submit resumes by July 12, 2013, 4:30pm, to Personnel, District of Kitimat, 270 City Centre, Kitimat, B.C. V8C 2H7, Fax 250-6324995, email dok@kitimat.ca PROJECT ENGINEER District of Kitimat, exempt staff position, with competitive compensation and full benefit package. Reporting to the Technical Services Manager, is accountable for the effective delivery of Engineering Services for the municipality. Candidates will be a professional Civil Engineer with a minimum of 3 years professional experience (preferably in a municipal environment). Submit resumes by July 12, 2013, 4:30pm, to Personnel, District of Kitimat, 270 City Centre, Kitimat, B.C. V8C 2H7, phone 250-632-8900, fax 250-632-4995, email dok@kitimat.ca. Further information can be obtained from our website at www.kitimat.ca
Drivers/Courier/ Trucking We require immediately Class 1 drivers for Canada and US for the following positions: • US Team drivers • Part Time /Casual Drivers for Canada/US • Drivers interested in a truck share program for Canada/US. We supply you with a paid company cell, fuel cards, all paid picks and drops, assigned units and regular home time. All you need is 3 yrs verifiable experience, clean abstract and a good attitude. Please indicate on your resume the position applying for. Please fax resumes and abstracts to 250546-0600, or by email to parris@ricknickelltrucking.com No phone calls please.
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Employment Help Wanted
Sales INVESTMENT SALES Reps wanted. Prefer Canadian Securities Course accreditation, or will provide training to experienced sales professionals. Call Pangaea Asset Management Inc. 1-800-668-3990 or email bfraser@emrcapital.ca
Trades, Technical
FULL TIME DRIVER REQUIRED Clean drivers abstract, Class 1 preferred but not necessary. Call for appointment 250-525-0275 An Alberta Oilfield Company is hiring dozer and excavator operators. Lodging and meals provided. Drug testing required. Call (780)723-5051 Edson, Alta. CANCEL YOUR Timeshare. No risk program. Stop mortgage and maintenance payments today. 100% money back guarantee. Free consultation. Call us now. We can help! 1-888-356-5248. GPRC IS now hiring Instructors for the following positions: Steamfitter/Pipefitter (Fairview Campus); Welding Instructor (Fairview Campus); Power Engineering Instructor (Fairview/Grande Prairie Campus). No teaching experience? No problem because we train you to become an Instructor! For more information on these positions visit our website at www.gprc.ab.ca/careers. GUARANTEED JOB placement: General Laborers and Tradesmen for oil and gas industry. Call 24hr free recorded message for information: 1800-972-0209 JANITOR WANTED (TNT Janitor Service). Part-to-full time employment. Must be able to be security cleared. Mostly evening work. Phone 378-6534 or mail resume to Box 2838, Merritt, BC, V1K 1B8 Secure Vernon company looking for Marine Mechanic, with good customer service, attention to detail, must have valid boat license, drivers license an asset. Fast paced environment. boatsrlife@gmail.com
Home Care/Support 24 hr. Live-In Support Required (Kamloops, B.C.) Dengarry Professional Services Ltd. is seeking experienced individuals or couples for contract to provide live in 24 hr. support for short term stabilization to adults with mental & physical disabilities in Kamloops. Applicant must have education and exp. either in behavioral and/or medical supports. Applicant will undergo a screening process including reference checks, Crim Check and drivers abstract. Housing & Utilities Incls. w/ A Remarkable Compensation Package. Please forward resume to Kristine Toebosch at ktoebosch@ dengarry.bc.ca or fax to 1-250-377-4581 or mail Attn: Kristine PO Box 892 Kamloops BC V2C-5M8
Income Opportunity NOW HIRING! Earn extra cash - simple work. P/T-F/T. Can be done from home. Acceptance guaranteed - No experience required, all welcome! www.BCJobLinks.com
EXPERIENCED PARTS Person required for a progressive auto/industrial supplier. Hired applicant will receive top wages, full benefits and RRSP bonuses plus moving allowances. Our 26,000 sq.ft store is located 2.5 hours N.E. of Edmonton, Alberta. See our community at LacLaBicheRegion.com Send resume to: Sapphire Auto, Box 306, Lac La Biche, AB, T0A 2C0. Email: hr@sapphireinc.net EXPERIENCED TECHNICIAN required to repair appliances. Also looking for apprentices to train. Positions available in Salmon Arm, Vernon, Kelowna and Pentiction. moe.andersons@shaw.ca HEAVY EQUIPMENT Technicians and Maintenance personnel needed for expanding pipeline company in Olds, Alberta for work in shop and jobsites throughout Western Canada. Fax resume to 403556-7582 or email: pdunn@parklandpipeline.com SMALL Pine Logging Ltd. Requires a full time buncher operator for immediate and full time work in the Williams Lake and Quesnel area. Good wedges and a full benefit package available. Must also be willing to stay in camp. Experience would be an asset. Please fax resumes to (250)398-8216 or email smallp i n e l o g g i n g @ ya h o o. c a . Thanks.
Work Wanted Avail. for any odd jobs. Fencing, roofing, painting, yard maintenance. No job too big or too small. Call Kyle 525-0116
Services
Financial Services DROWNING IN Debt? Cut debts more than 50% and Debt free in half the time! Avoid bankruptcy! Free Consultation. BBB Rated A+. Toll Free 1-877-556-3500 www.mydebtsolution.com GET BACK ON TRACK! Bad credit? Bills? Unemployed? Need Money? We Lend! If you own your own home - you qualify. Pioneer Acceptance Corp. Member BBB. 1-877987-1420. www.pioneerwest.com IF YOU own a home or real estate, Alpine Credits can lend you money: its that simple. Your credit/age/income is not an issue. 1-800-587-2161. M O N E Y P R OV I D E R . C O M . $500 Loan and +. No Credit Refused. Fast, Easy, 100% Secure. 1-877-776-1660.
Need CA$H Today?
Merchandise for Sale
Rentals
Auctions
Mobile Homes & Pads
RESTAURANT AUCTION Food Services Equipment. Consignments now being accepted. June 22, 11am at Dodds Auction, 3311 - 28 Ave. Vernon. View photos at doddsauction.com 250-5453259
Heavy Duty Machinery A-STEEL SHIPPING DRY STORAGE CONTAINERS Used 20’40’45’53 in stock. SPECIAL 44’ x 40’ Container Shop w/steel trusses $13,800! Sets up in one day! 40’ Containers under $2500! Call Toll Free Also JD 544 & 644 wheel loaders JD 892D LC Excavator Ph. 1-866-528-7108 Delivery BC and AB www.rtccontainer.com
2 bedroom mobile. Fridge, stove, washer, dryer, utilities included. Quiet park close to town. $950 per month. 250378-0887 3 bedroom mobile. Washer, dryer, fridge, stove, utilities included. Large fenced yard. $975 per month 250-378-0887
Private 2 bdrm lake front suite on Nicola Lake. $950/mon. includes util. satellite TV & internet. No-pets, no smoking Avail July 1/13. 250-378-5519
Transportation
No Credit Checks! Cash same day, local office.
www.PitStopLoans.com 1-800-514-9399
Legal Services CRIMINAL RECORD? Don’t let it block employment, travel, education, professional, certification, adoption property rental opportunities. For peace of mind and a free consultation call 1-800-347-2540.
CRIMINAL RECORD?
Legal Notices Notice to remove private land from woodlot license W0358. Please be advised that Roy Millar is proposing to remove 22 hectares of private land from woodlot license W0358 located in the vicinity of Hendy Creek inquiries/comments to this proposal must be submitted to Roy Millar 753 Tatlow Road, North Saanich B.C. V8L 5M1 by July 20, 2013. Only written enquiries received by the above date will be responded to. Information about this proposal can be obtained by contacting Roy Millar at 250-656-5130
For Sale 1978 Cadillac Coup deVille red interior white exterior vinyl top 2 dr sedan 29000 original miles 425 motor all original A1 shape $4900 obo phone 250-378-3648 cell 250525-1212
Trucks & Vans 1994 Jeep Cherokee 4X4 4 dr white good shape 6 cyl motor new tires 228000 km $2500 obo call 250-378-3648 cell 250-525-1212
Auto Financing Need a Vehicle?
Auto Financing Call the
Guaranteed Approvals • Good Credit? • Bad Credit? • No Credit? • Divorce? • Bankrupt?
IF YOU WORK,YOU DRIVE
Call Steve Today 1.855.740.4112 • murraygmmerritt.com
Misc. Wanted
Help Wanted
True Coin Collector Looking to Purchase Collections, Accumulations, Olympic Gold and Silver coins, Bills + Not melting down, Serious Collector. Call: Coin Couple 1-778-281-0030
Help Wanted
True Service
Real Estate
SALES & SERVICE
Mobile Homes & Parks
Kal Tire is the largest independently owned tire dealer in Canada. We offer a clean and safe work environment in a motivating and fun atmosphere with a competitive salary and benefits program.
RETIRE IN Beautiful Southern BC, Brand New Park. Affordable Housing. COPPER RIDGE. Manufactured Home Park, New Home Sales. Keremeos, BC. Spec home on site to view. Please call 250-4627055. www.copperridge.ca
IF YOU POSSESS... • A desire to excel in customer service • The ability to successfully work in a physically demanding team atmosphere • Willingness to learn
Apt/Condo for Rent
THEN KAL TIRE WANTS YOU TO BECOME PART OF OUR TEAM. Interested applicants should submit their resumes to Kal Tire, 2601 Nicola Avenue, Merritt, B.C.
KENGARD MANOR Spacious 1 & 3 bedroom apartments. DreamTeam Auto Financing “0” Down, Bankruptcy OK Cash Back ! 15 min Approvals
1-800-961-7022
Advertising Sales Representative Merritt Herald
www.iDreamAuto.com DL# 7557
Ph: 250-378-9880
Obituaries
Own A Vehicle? Borrow Up To $25,000
Cars - Domestic
Auto Financing
STEEL BUILDING - DIY Summer sale! - Bonus days extra 5% off. 20x22 $3,998. 25x24 $4,620. 30x34 $6,656. 32x42 $8,488. 40x54 $13,385. One end wall included. Pioneer Steel 1-800-668-5422. www.pioneersteel.ca STEEL BUILDINGS/ Metal buildings 60% OFF! 20x28, 30x40, 40x62, 45x90, 50x120, 60x150, 80x100 sell for balance owed! Call 1-800-4572206 www.crownsteelbuildings.ca
Ask about move-in incentives For appointment call
Legal
Estate Sale, ‘06 Buick Allure approx 88,000km, fully loaded too many options to mention. $7000. 378-4566/315-9632
Suites, Upper
Misc. for Sale
F/S, heat and hot water included.
Transportation
Elisa Lillian HAMM (TURNER) June 6, 1966 – June 10, 2013 of McLeese Lake B.C. (1420 Enright Road)
Sores with the eagles, as she watches over her husband Allen and sons Robert and Tyrone, daughter-in-law, sisters, brothers, mother, mother and father-in-law, sisters & brother-in laws, aunties, uncles, nieces, nephews, cousins, grandchild to be, all her friends and co-workers.
Guaranteed Record Removal since 1989. Confidential, Fast, & Affordable. Our A+BBB Rating assures EMPLOYMENT & TRAVEL FREEDOM. Call for FREE INFO. BOOKLET
In Elisa’s honour, a Celebration of Life will be held at their home on Saturday, June 22, 2013 - 2:00 p.m.
1-8-NOW-PARDON (1-866-972-7366) RemoveYourRecord.com
Lots of camping available. Bring tents, RV’s, boats and summer fun.
The Merritt Herald, an award winning twice-weekly newspaper, published in the Nicola Valley, is seeking a full time advertising consultant to join our team. This is a fantastic opportunity to develop a rewarding career in advertising and marketing. If you are a highly creative individual, with an ability to multi-task in a fastpaced team environment and have good interpersonal and sales skills, a valid drivers licence and reliable vehicle - we would like to meet you. While experience is an asset, it is not a prerequisite. To apply, please forward your resume with a cover letter to: Theresa Arnold, Publisher Merritt Herald 2090 Granite Ave., P.O. Box 9 Merritt, B.C. V1K 1B8 e-mail: publisher@merrittherald.com
MERRITT HERALD
12 • TUESDAY, June 18, 2013
www.merrittherald.com
SPECIAL MEETING NOTICE TO MEMBERS Nicola Valley Indian Services Association Society
THIS IS NOTICE TO: ANY MEMBER OR PERSON ENTITLED TO MEMBERSHIP IN
Lower Nicola Band
1. Upper Nicola Band 2. Lower Nicola Band 3. Nooaitch Band 4. Shackan Band 5. Coldwater Band Regarding Resolutions On Updating the Constitution, Bylaws And Articles DATE: Monday June 24, 2013 PLACE: Lower Nicola Indian Band Hall
TIME: 10:00 am To 2:00 pm
Shackan Band