THURSDAY
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AUGUST 15, 2013
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Vol. 61, Issue 158
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St. Eugene staff join union The 84 employees at the resort voted last week to join the BCGEU SALLY MACDONALD Townsman Staff
Employees at St. Eugene Golf Resort and Casino have voted to join the B.C. Government and Service Employees’ Union. The 84 staff consist of cashiers, guest service representatives, front desk representatives, slot attendants, dealers
and housekeepers. On Wednesday, August 7, the employees took a vote about joining the union, which came down 41 to 22 in favour. The union will represent the workers to give them a strong voice in addressing key issues at the workplace.
See CASINO, Page 5
Delay for east entrance project
Council puts off funding a roadside pullout at Cranbrook’s east entrance ARNE PETRYSHEN Townsman Staff
SUBMITTED
Lola and Jeza Baher decorate “Protodoe” at the Artrageous Gallery in Cranbrook on Saturday, Aug. 10. Protodoe is the Cranbrook and District Arts Council’s submission to the Urban Artsy Deer project. The gallery was open Aug. 10 and 11 for the Columbia Basin Culture Tour. See more on Page 3.
At ARTHUR’s
We
City council decided to pull back on a roadside pullout proposal put forward by the Highway 3/95 Revitalization Committee. The committee recommended giving the Ministry of Transportation and Infrastructure (MOTI) the go-ahead to develop a new highway pullout at the east entrance of town, near the welcome sign. MOTI has $80,000 set aside for the pullout, but
would leave the rest up to the city to pay – which city staff estimated could be as high as $200,000 to $300,000. Coun. Bob Whetham doubted the city was ready to do a project like this. “As much as I’d like to see entrance improvements on the eastern approach to Cranbrook, I really question whether we have the wherewithal to do it at this time,” Whetham said.
See COUNCIL, Page 4
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daily townsman / daily bulletin
Page 2 Thursday, August 15, 2013
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daily townsman
Local NEWS
Arts council takes part in culture tour
Mike Buckley’s band Locomotive Ghost will join Good Ol’ Goats for Sept. 7 show at the Stage Door Arne Pe tryshen Townsman Staff
Cranbrook and District Arts Council (CDAC) celebrated the 2013 Columbia Basin Culture Tour Aug. 10 and 11. To celebrate the Columbia Basin Culture Tour, where museums, galleries and artists open their studios to the public for free, the CDAC extended its opening hours on Saturday and Sunday. Over the weekend, visitors to the gallery contributed to the interactive exhibit ‘Protodoe’. Part of the ongoing Urban Artsy Deer project, ‘Protodoe’ is the CDAC’s very own contribution to the project. Not only that, she was the first deer cut for the cause, hence the ‘Proto’ in ‘Protodoe’. Despite the mechanical name, visitors to the gallery embraced ‘Protodoe’s’ feminine side by decorating her using paper, paint markers, oil pastels, crayons and glue to give her lady-like flourishes, including dangly earrings and a floral bouquet. Visitors to the gallery were treated to free nibbles and refreshments. After all, decorating such a fashionable doe takes a lot out of a creative spirit. CDAC president and artist Mitchell Pocha brought a work-in-progress to the gallery space to work on throughout the day. He invited young and old art enthusiasts alike to help contribute to his polymer sculpture and answered questions about his tools and process. Thank you to all the visitors who visited the gallery over the weekend of the tour and contributed to ‘Protodoe’, who will continue to be added to in the CDAC gallery space up until Art in the Park. You will be able to see the collaborative effort in Rotary Park on August 24; she’s anxious to see who will win best in show! Currently there are a few doe left to purchase and decorate from the CDAC office if you would still like to be in the running for a chance to win a prize. Completed deer must find their way to Rotary Park before 1 p.m. on August 24 in order to be eligible for judging, so don’t miss your chance. Deer Quest forms are also still available from the office. You still have time to try and find all of the registered deer in Cranbrook in the shortest space of time for the chance to win $50 and bragging rights. Contact Helen Duckworth at the arts council at 250-426-4223 or email cdac@shaw.ca.
A band with Kootenay roots will be coming to town to play in September. That band is Locomotive Ghost, who will be playing a show with Cranbrook’s the Good Ol’ Goats on September 7. Locomotive Ghost member Mike Buckley is from Cranbrook. It will be his first time playing here in a number of years. “So we’re excited to have a sort of homecoming show,” Buckley said. “We’re playing the same bill with the Good Ol’ Goats. We’ve never played with or met them before, but we were actually in the same CBC Searchlight contest. We didn’t make it as far; we made it to the regional southern Alberta finals.” But through that contest, Locomotive Ghost became aware of them. “We just thought, if we’re going to play a show in Cranbrook, those would be the number-one guys to play with,” he said. “We’re really excited to share the show with them.” The show is happening at the Stage Door and Buckley said it’s also the band’s first theatre style show. “Up until now we’ve
Jack Hebditch Feb. 27, 1941 Aug. 14, 2007 We love you and we miss you every day. We cherish our many treasured memories. Your loving family.
Page 3
Hometown boy returns for concert
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Thursday, August 15, 2013
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played hundreds of bars and cafes, and some less traditional venues in the past year or so. We started doing some community events and stuff in Calgary, but never ever made it into an actual theatre, so we’re pretty excited.” Buckley and fellow band member Ben Nixon studied music at Selkirk College in Nelson and moved to Calgary about two and a half years ago. The band is now based out of Calgary and delves into many musical styles. “Generally speaking it’s folk rock; we’ve been calling it modern folk groove recently.” Buckley said. “Between the four of us, we have quite a broad array of musical influences and backgrounds.” He said as the project has moved along it has become a lot more of a collaboration between the band members. “When we began, it was mostly myself writing the majority of the songs, but now it has sort of become a shared responsibility to all contribute to the creation of the songs,” he said. The band all has day jobs but is touring western Canada to promote a seasonal project. “We’re actually re-
Locomotive Ghost will perform on Sept. 7 in Cranbrook. leasing four seven-inch EPs on vinyl, one for each season,” he said. “We’re halfway through that. We’ve released Spring and Summer. Autumn will be released on October 19.” The EPs squeeze about six or seven minutes on each side, so Buckley said they’ve managed to get four songs on each.
“Each season we approached intentionally, writing a different style of music to evoke the feeling of the given season,” he said. “The Spring album is probably more folk and country influenced, whereas the Summer album is a little more pop. The upcoming Autumn record is a little more on the heavy side, with a lot
Submitted
more electric guitars and some synth, just a little more modern sounding, I’d say. The Winter one is our attempt at writing out an orchestral album.” The show is Saturday, Sept. 7 at 8 p.m at the Studio/Stage Door. It’s $20 and tickets are pre-purchase only at www.locomotiveghost. com.
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Page 4 Thursday, August 15, 2013
daily townsman
Local NEWS
Council to include east entrance in 2014 budget talks Continued from page 1
Sally MacDonald photo
Investors Group presented a $250 donation to the Cranbrook Kimberley Hospice Society on Wednesday, August 14. Pictured, left: society president Don Davidson accepts the cheque from Investors Group’s Chris Franklin.
Land Act: Notice of Intention to Apply for a Disposition of Crown Land FrontCounter BC Cranbrook has accepted an application made by the Regional District of East Kootenay of Cranbrook, BC, on behalf of the Ministry of Forests, Lands and Natural Resource Operations (MFLNRO), Kootenay Region, for a Licence of Occupation for the purpose of a dry fire hydrant situated on Provincial Crown land near Jim Smith Lake and containing 25 feet long by 8 inches in width more or less. The MFLNRO File Number that has been established for this application is 4405178. Written comments concerning these applications should be directed to FrontCounter BC, 1902 Theatre Road, Cranbrook B.C., V1C 7G1 or email to: AuthorizingAgency.Cranbrook@gov.bc.ca Comments will be received by FrontCounter BC until September 13, 2013. FrontCounter BC may not be able to consider comments received after this date. Please refer to our website: http://www.arfd.gov.bc.ca/ApplicationPosting/ index.jsp -> Search -> Search by File Number: 4405178 for more information. Be advised that any response to this advertisement will be considered part of the public record. For information, contact the FOI Advisor at the Ministry of Forests, Lands and Natural Resource Operations regional office in Cranbrook
“The funding support from the ministry would be very attractive, but what would our contribution have to be at this point? And where would we find the funds to do it? So as much as I’d like to see it, I don’t think I can support it.” Coun. Diana J. Scott didn’t support the recommendation either. “I’d love to see a new sign, but I certainly have a lot of concerns about a new pullout,” she said, noting that the Chamber of Commerce is just a couple of blocks away. “In the end it’s monetary as well. It’s nice to know the ministry would give us some
funds for this, but I don’t think we’re at this point yet and I think we need to do a lot more thinking before we consider something like this.” Coun. Denise Pallesen agreed with the other councillors. “It’s not in our current five-year planning, though MOTI does have some funds,” Pallesen said. “It’s exactly one kilometre from that sign to where the chamber would be offering a duplicate service.” She suggested seeing if MOTI would put some funding into the area behind Lordco, near the chamber. “I don’t have a prob-
RDEK Public Hearing Notice Bylaw 2479
Bylaw Amendment - Mayook The Regional District of East Kootenay (RDEK) Board of Directors is considering an application by Daniel Brian May and Mike and Davianna Haslam to amend the Fort Steele – Bull River Land Use Bylaw. If approved, the amendment will change the designation of the properties to accommodate a 3 lot subdivision. The subject properties are located on Highway 3/93 about 16 kms east of Cranbrook and are shown on the attached map. Bylaw No. 2479 cited as “Regional District of East Kootenay – Fort Steele – Bull River Land Use Bylaw No. 1804, 2005 – Amendment Bylaw No. 14, 2013 (Mayook / May & Haslam)” will amend the land use designation of Part of the subject properties from RR-16, Rural Residential (Extensive) Zone to RR-8, Rural Residential (Country) Zone. A public hearing will be held at:
Regional District of East Kootenay 19 – 24th Avenue South Cranbrook, BC Thursday, August 22, 2013 at 4:00 pm
The Board has delegated the holding of this hearing to Directors for Electoral Area C and the City of Cranbrook. If you believe that your interest in property is affected by the proposed Bylaw, you may prior to the hearing: • inspect the Bylaw and supporting information at the RDEK office in Cranbrook from 8:30 am to 4:30 pm Monday through Friday, excluding statutory holidays; • mail, fax or email written submissions to the addresses/numbers shown below; or • present written and/or verbal submissions at the hearing. SUBMISSIONS CANNOT BE ACCEPTED AFTER THE PUBLIC HEARING. All written submissions are public information pursuant to the Freedom of Information and Protection of Privacy Act. This notice is not an interpretation of the Bylaw. For more information, contact Tracy Van de Wiel, Planning Technician, at 250-489-0306, toll free at 1-888-478-7335, or email tvandewiel@rdek.bc.ca. 19 - 24th Avenue South, Cranbrook BC V1C 3H8 Phone: 250-489-2791 Toll Free: 1-888-478-7335 Email: info@rdek.bc.ca Website: www.rdek.bc.ca
lem with us replacing our sign, but I think it’s nice looking, it’s always neat and tidy, the grass is always mowed,” she said. “I would rather see more funds put into the chamber at some point if there is an appetite to expand on the east entrance.” Coun. Sharon Cross suggested that since this is outside city boundaries, and if MOTI wanted to move ahead, maybe the RDEK would fund the pullout. Mayor Wayne Stetski noted that the city wouldn’t likely have the money to do the project right away. “I think we’ll have a discussion when this comes to the 2014 budget as to whether this is something we want to pursue or not,” Stetski said. He explained that the committee went and looked at the area and decided that having a highway pulloff at that location would be a good idea. “They are talking about a picnic area, signage – a ‘Welcome to Cranbrook’ sign – but it would be run basically as a highway pulloff,” Stetski said. “They (MOTI) have money to contribute towards highway pulloffs in their budget, but that’s it.” He said the committee had put thought into expanding the truck stop safety area just up the road, but MOTI replied that it’s illegal to turn left across the double solid line, so in order to make the pullout there, they would have to build something similar to the Gladstone Provincial Park turnoff at Christina Lake. “You have to come in off the highway, around and back in,” he said. “Those are very expensive options.” The mayor said he thought the pullout at the sign is a good concept, but said the city doesn’t have the money to do it now. The recommended motion was defeated, but the mayor put forward another motion to defer any decisions to the 2014 budget discussions, which passed.
daily townsman
Local NEWS
Wasa accident sent three to hospital C AROLYN GR ANT Kimberley Daily Bulletin
The accident near Wasa on Tuesday, August 13 sent a total of three people — one from Wasa and two from Invermere — to hospital. One of those, a woman from Invermere, who was the female passenger in the minivan, was airlifted by STARS air ambulance to Calgary from the scene with serious, but not life-threatening, injuries. She had been trapped in her vehicle and was extricated by the Kimberley Fire Department road rescue unit. The other two people involved in the accident were taken to East Kootenay Regional Hospital in Cranbrook by ambulance.
Cpl. Chris Newel of the Kimberley RCMP said the accident occurred just before 10 a.m. “On scene investigation found a one-ton dump truck pulled onto the highway from the village of Wasa and proceeded north,” Newel said. “A northbound vehicle (minivan) came up on the truck several hundred meters north of the intersection and struck the rear left corner, forcing it into the ditch.” Newel says East Kootenay Traffic Services is conducting the investigation and a Collision Reconstructionist has done a forensic scene examination. Highway 93/95 was closed briefly as emergency personnel dealt with the accident.
Casino workers to negotiate contract Continued from page 1 “We’re thrilled to welcome these new members from St. Eugene Golf Resort & Casino into the BCGEU. With a union on their side, these members know they will have the support they need to
get the wages, job security and respect that they deserve,” said BCGEU president Darryl Walker. Next, St. Eugene staff will elect a negotiating committee, develop bargaining priorities
and sit down for contract talks with their employer. There are more than 1,200 casino workers in the BCGEU, including Gateway casinos in the Okanagan, Burnaby, and New Westminster.
Ta r g e t e d I n i t i a t i v e f o r O l d e r W o r k e r s Job Skills Training Opportunity
Thursday, August 15, 2013
Page 5
Grand Forks mystery marks three-year anniversary Submitted
Three years after Owen Kiernan Rooney disappeared, his family and the RCMP continue their efforts in the search and are once again requesting the public’s assistance. His family has devoted their time, energy and life savings in trying to locate Owen or determine where he may have headed. He was last seen at the Grand Forks Hospital on August 14, 2010, when he mysteriously vanished. Prior to his disappearance, Owen attended the Shambhala Music Festival near Salmo. The event was just held once more over the weekend of August 3 to 8, 2010. Owen’s family, along with the RCMP, are asking once again for the public’s help, particularly those who attended the event, in garnering new tips and leads to locating Owen or where he may have gone.
The RCMP and Rooney family will continue to work together and share the goal of finding Owen. Owen is 5’9” (175 cm) in height and is 161 lbs (73 kg). He has blue eyes, short brown hair and has two tattoos. One is on his left shoulder blade, about three inches across, of a circle with a Celtic star around it. The other tattoo is on his right calf, a logo of a triangle with a kangaroo inside and the words “Australian Made” underneath. This calf tattoo is about the size of the bottom of a coffee mug. Anyone with information regarding Owen’s whereabouts or any details on his disappearance, however insignificant the information may be, are asked to contact the Grand Forks RCMP at 250-442-8288, their local police service, Crimestoppers at 1-800-222-8477 or through the website that the family Top: Owen Rooney. Bottom: Police have set up, www.find-owen. have released this image resembling com. a tattoo on Owen Rooney’s calf.
3
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Who is this for?
Participants must meet the following eligibility criteria: • Unemployed • Aged 55 – 64 (in some circumstances, unemployed workers aged 50 – 54 or 65 and up may also participate) • Be legally entitled to work in Canada • Require new or enhanced skills for successful integration into new employment • Live in an eligible community/region • Be ready and committed to returning to work
What will you get?
Participants may be eligible to receive: • Class-based skill development – including job searching and career planning • Funding to access training at local educational institutions/trainers • Income support for the duration of in-class training • Targeted wage subsidy for on-the-job training
When is it?
• Sept 9 - Dec 12, 2013
Funded by the Governments of Canada and British Columbia through the Targeted Initiative for Older Workers For more details, contact Kimberley Campus by phone at 250-427-7116 x3752 or email at kimberley@cotr.bc.ca.
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PAGE 6
THURSDAY, AUGUST 15, 2013
OPINION
DAILY TOWNSMAN / DAILY BULLETIN
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SUMMER READING CHALLENGE
The Great Gatsby’s little sister
A
fter the hectic pace I’ve set over the past few weeks of my reading challenge, I ground to a halt this
week. I was worn down by the quick summer reads I had chosen for the past month or so, and leery to pick up another book. In fact, I took a few days off, which was a mistake because when I finally did pick up “The Rules of Civility”, it required far more attention to each passage than I have needed to pay to books recently. So my Sunday deadline slipped past, and I found myself writing this review on the edge of deadline. I suspect I will be doing that for the rest of the challenge now – which is far less enjoyable. *** “The Rules of Civility” by Amor Towles is like “The Great Gatsby”’s little sister. A little less poetic, a little more innocent, and set in the opulent high rises of Manhattan’s Upper East Side rather than the mansions of Long Island. Yet its themes, its morals and its voice is strikingly similar. It is, of course, lavish praise to compare the debut work from modern-day New York author Towles to F. Scott Fitz-
SALLY MACDONALD gerald’s great American classic. Let me take a moment to justify that praise. After a “proletariat” New York upbringing, Katey Kontent sees 1938 begin with her gregarious roommate Eve Ross in a dive jazz bar, trying to make three dollars stretch as far as it possibly can. In walks a well groomed young man in an expensive coat; Eve whispers “dibbs” as Tinker Grey sits down beside them. They quickly form a friendship, and the connection is cemented just a few days into the new year when the three are in a car accident that leaves Eve permanently scarred. To carry the Gatsby comparison forward, Tinker is Gatsby, Eve is Daisy and Katey is Nick. Over the heady days of 1938, the three friends come in and
out of each other’s life. The relationships between the three are at once loving, self-destructive, uplifting and surprising. There are far too many beautifully crafted, flawed but interesting characters to mention. Each one has a profound impact on Katey, who as narrator somehow manages to be both cynical and full of wonder. In a single year, these characters – with Tinker and Eve at the forefront – influence Katey’s life in drastic ways. She is a profoundly different woman at the conclusion of the year than at the commencement. And that’s saying nothing about the events in Tinker and Eve’s lives. In fact, the prologue of the novel has Katey at a photography exhibition in the 1960s, where photos taken on the subway in the late 1930s are displayed. She happens upon two photos of Tinker: one in 1938, at the tail end of the Depression, where he is wellgroomed and wealthy but world-weary; and one in 1939, where he is poor, dirty, underweight, yet bright, alert and smiling. The tale is set in the opulent apartments and dining rooms of Manhattan, where the “rules of civility” are played out at every table. This setting also harkens back to Gatsby, espe-
LETTERS TO THE EDITOR
cially when Katey travels to Long Island for a party. But it’s Katey’s assessment of the people who inhabit this scene that reminded me the most of Gatsby’s Nick Carraway – the incorruptible force that observes the best and worst of human nature. “To the unpracticed eye they all looked of a piece – exhibiting poise secured by the alchemy of wealth and station. But aspiration and envy, disloyalty and lust – these too were presumably on display, if only one knew where to look.” Circumstances bring those around Katey to a fever pitch, only to self-combust and transform into a truer version of themselves. With such heavy literary influences, Towles could hardly go wrong. But he does more than simply mimic Fitzgerald; he creates another world just as rich, just as beautiful, just as profound. His prose is not quite at the same level; there is no “borne back ceaselessly into the past”. But with every page I turned in this novel, I was enveloped more by the era, the city, the heroine, her flawed companions, and her fallen idols. Sally MacDonald is a reporter at the Cranbrook Daily Townsman.
Letters to the Editor should be a maximum of 400 words in length. We reserve the right to edit, condense or reject any contribution. All letters must include the name and daytime phone number of the writer for verification purposes. The phone number will not be printed. Anonymous letters will not be published. Only one letter per month from any particular letter writer will be published. Email letters to editor@dailytownsman.com. Mail to The Daily Townsman, 822 Cranbrook St. N., Cranbrook, B.C. V1C 3R9. In Kimberley, email editor@dailybulletin.ca. Mail to The Daily Bulletin, 335 Spokane Street, Kimberley, BC V1A 1Y9.
daily townsman / daily bulletin
Opinion/Events
I agree totally with Mr. Bennett’s comments as reported in the Townsman. My wife and I live on 60 acres of non-farmable land with a marvelous Rocky Mountain view and, in spite of RDEK subdivision approval, have been repeatedly blocked by the ALR. They refuse to look at the property in question, which consists of rock bands every 30-40 feet, soil composed of glacial till with 30 per cent rock, and an area microclimate which only receives 6-8 inches of moisture per year. Our grasses can support three cow-calf pairs for 3-4 months per year (if we had water for them). This is not a farmable situation, although the ALR hides behind their mantra that their mandate is to preserve valuable farmland. No farmer on this rocky hillside has made a living. ALR, by all means preserve lands which have farming potential, but just because lands were captured within the ALR’s 1972 legislation boundaries doesn’t mean they were viable “farmlands”. The ranchers we met with to obtain RDEK approval all recognized the lack of viability of our area and its very dry microclimate. A two-hectare piece carved off the bottom of our lands adjacent to an established subdi-
I
vision in no way affects the farming agribusiness located on this area. We are caught in a catch 22 by an autocratic non-elected ALR board, which appears to answer to no one. Our 60 acres cannot generate enough income to qualify for farm status. To play the “farming game” would destroy the fragile bunch grasses and encourage even more weed invasions. As it is we are spending large sums of money on weeds coming from established farms and government Crown lands around us. The ALR needs accountability; they need to actually look at property in question, and stop hiding behind their legislation which states their mandate is to protect farm land, when in fact what they are protecting are rocky outcrops. Just possibly their time would be better spent protecting the river bottom lands and Fraser Valleys of the province. Roger and Sharon Mitchell Wycliffe
Forest thinning Not so long ago a certain travel article described Cranbrook as being less than beautiful and Cranbrook City Hall and residents were very upset. I think Cranbrook is beautiful but I also think there is only a
few vital assets that allow us to make that claim. To me the most important one is that we are surrounded on all sides by easily accessed forests and trails that have been cared for and nurtured by citizens of the area for well over a century. The amazing thing to me is, rather than considering it an important resource that should be guarded and even enhanced, our community leaders view it as a dangerous deficit to the community that should be eliminated. I once lived in a beautiful area where enjoying the surrounding forest was an everyday event. But I took it for granted and one day it was gone, replaced by a sterile and featureless “thinned” forest much like the desolate “10 kilometre buffer” picture in Sally MacDonald’s article. The loss to me, and that community, was severe and unrecoverable. I’m sorry to discover that the City of Cranbrook and the RDEK have fallen into that trap so easily – and so quietly. Mr. Robert Gray certainly has experience and credentials to talk about reducing forest fuel, but his interest is the logging industry. The B.C. government is pro-logging too and if you ask a logger to care for your Community Forest or to recommend fire safety methods, of course the solution will al-
ways involve cutting down the trees and converting them to cubic meters of “fiber”. Rather than reducing the threat, the danger may even be more severe after “forest thinning”. Experience in several areas of the U.S. has shown that fires in dry grass and exposed low undergrowth propagate far faster and are more uncontrollable than fires in heavier timber on flat land, and after the proposed thinning in our area, dry grass, small trees and low undergrowth will probably be the case also. There will always be a danger of fire but it’s a threat we’ve faced successfully for many decades. Our surrounding forest is already considered second growth, it’s on flat land with good access and available water supplies. It’s a valuable resource that is worth protecting as it has been for 150 years. Mr. Gray’s presentation seemed to concentrate largely on the financial aspects of the project. Will it be revenue neutral or will it make money? I have no doubt somebody will make money. The only other thing I know for sure is that if the project proceeds as Mr. Gray describes, the Cranbrook area will lose something forever that money can’t buy. Mike Walsh Cranbrook
The quandry with urban wildlife
Coun. Bob Whetham
n some places it’s bears, in others it’s beavers or geese. Here in Cranbrook, it’s an overabundance of deer. In many parts of North America and overseas, species that until recent times were the focus of conservation efforts have adapted to life in the suburbs and flourished. While wildlife has become habituated to people, their presence has also become a source of increasing confusion and conflict. Part of the issue is changing public attitudes. Species that for centuries were hunted as a source of food or clothing are now regarded by many as outdoor pets. For their part, these creatures are simply taking advantage of rich, urban habitats furnished with lush lawns, flowers and shrubbery. Lacking predators and with an abundance of food, their numbers have increased to the point where they have become a nuisance and at times a menace. Developing acceptable programs for wildlife management to address growing public frustration and concern is an emotional and divisive challenge that has fallen to municipal councils to resolve. So how did we get here? Local circumstances vary but Jim Sterba, the author of “Nature Wars”, describes two general trends that stand out. One involves the post war shift away from farms and rural areas to cities where the majority of people now earn their livelihoods indoors. As the population has become more urbanized, it has also become increasingly disconnect-
ed from the natural world. Associated with these changes, there has been a decrease in hunting and, despite what we are taught about Darwin, a widely held belief that if it were not for human interference, wildlife would live in a natural state of harmony with each other. The other major factor is urban sprawl. Without protection and suitable habitat to support them, game animals would not choose to live amidst their traditional predator, homo sapiens. Our stewardship of large, landscaped suburban lots is not about raising crops but about providing “a stage for living” where the focus is on preserving the appearance of natural surroundings. The tree cover and edge conditions so carefully tended by people are also favoured by deer. Experience in Michigan has found upwards of 65 animals per square mile in the suburbs as compared to a mere 15 animals per square mile in the wild. Education can help to reduce deer-human conflicts but does not address their unchecked proliferation. Removing them still means they have to be taken somewhere, and sterilizing them is not practical nor are the drugs allowed in Canada. So what to do? Wildlife control by lethal means is controversial and it took the crash of US Airways flight 1549 into the Hudson River after geese were sucked into both engines for opposition to a long sought reduction program to be overcome. A crisis had to occur before steps could be taken to address the problem.
Page 7
What’s Up?
Letters to the Editor Land Reserve
Thursday, August 15, 2013
Deer do not present the same level of hazard but statistics compiled over the past several years show that in Cranbrook, nearly twice as many have been killed as a result of collisions with vehicles than in the two culls carried out to date. No details on injuries or costs for damages are available but it is safe to say that for those who were involved, the experience was traumatic. Nothing in nature remains static and in the absence of a program to control the deer population, vehicle collisions and incidents of aggression involving humans and dogs can be expected to increase along with the prospect of attracting natural predators including coyotes and cougars. Even in animal-loving Britain, there are growing demands to cull the deer population for reasons of public safety as well as the need to reduce damage to woodlands and crops. One recent editorial quotes research calling for reductions of 50 to 60 per cent. Cranbrook’s experience with deer is a story that has already played out many times elsewhere. The issues are complex but one conclusion that can’t be avoided is the need to accept our responsibilities to manage and provide stewardship of the altered environment we helped to create. Bob Whetham is a Cranbrook city councillor. The opinions expressed represent those of the author and do not necessarily reflect the position of the City of Cranbrook.
KIMBERLEY AND CRANBROOK COMMUNITY CALENDAR
UPCOMING Strawberry Tea Party, Sat 17th Aug, 11.30am-1.30pm CDAC Artrageous Gallery, 104 135 10th Ave S, Cranbrook. How fancy! The CDAC is hosting a delicate, delectable tea party in the gallery space. All proceeds go towards the CDAC. Tickets available NOW from the CDAC office. Helen 250-426-4223/cdac@shaw.ca Kimberley Nature Park - Hike for Young Families - Sunday, Aug.18. Get the kids out into the Nature Park for a fun time around Eimers Lake. Children must be accompanied by a parent. Meet at the Higgins St entrance: 10am. Join leader Dave Quinn 250-427-5666 2013 FREE FAMILY SWIM Wednesday, August 21st, 6:00-7:00 PM is sponsored by Kimberley Health-Care Auxiliary. Children 18 years & under must be accompanied by an adult. Art in the Park, Saturday Aug 24th, 1pm – 10pm, Rotary Park, Cranbrook. Local bands, local food, local artists, local demonstrations a true celebration of arts and culture in Cranbrook! Including the Lion’s Club ‘Twice Loved’ Art Sale and the much awaited judging and prize ceremony for the Urban Artsy Deer Project. 7pm onwards it’s dancing under the stars. To register for your place as an artist or food vendor in the park, or for more info, contact Helen 250-426-4223 Kimberley Nature Park - Sullivan Challenge - Saturday & Sunday, August 24 & 25. Mountain Bike Race in the Nature Park.Check the following website for details & registration:- www.mevents.com . Leader - Charlie Cooper. 2013 FREE FAMILY SWIM Wednesday, August 28th, 6:00-7:00 PM is sponsored by Knights of Columbus. Children 18 years & under must be accompanied by an adult. ONGOING CRANBROOK QUILTERS’ GUILD hold their meetings every 2nd & 4th Tuesday of each month at 7:15pm upstairs in the Seniors’ Hall, 125-17th Ave. S. Everyone welcome. Info: Betty at 250-489-1498 or June 250-426-8817. Community Acupuncture. By donation – Each Tuesday 4-6 pm, Roots to Health Naturopathic Clinic, Kimberley Health Centre – Lower Level, 260 4th Ave. 778-481-5008. Please visit: www.rootsto-health.com for more info. Big Brothers Big Sisters of Cranbrook has found many new ways throughout the years to help bring in extra revenue so we can make the best matches for kids in our communities. One way you can help is by donating to our “Blue Bin” located outside to the left of Wal-Mart by the propane tanks. This bin is there for any clothing items or soft items you have laying around in your house. For more information please call (250) 489-3111 or email us at bigscran@bigbrothersbigsisters.ca To Saturday, August 31-ARTS ON THE EDGE 2013 EXHIBITION. Over 80 artworks in a variety of mediums by artists from the Kootenays and as far away as Calgary. The gallery is open from 1 to 5 p.m. Tuesday through Saturdays. Urban Artsy Deer Quest forms available at the Cranbrook & Distrcit Arts Council office; 135 - 10 Ave S, 426-4223. A fun family activity for summer months. See how many you can find. Winners announced August 24 at Art in the Park. Deer available for you to decorate. TENNIS ANYONE? Cranbrook Community Tennis Club is opening for the season at new Mount Baker High Courts. No Fees, No Dues, Just Tennis! 6:30-8:30pm, Wed & Sun nights. Info: Bev 250-421-7736 or Neil 250-489-8107. Cranbrook Branch of the Stroke Recovery Association of BC. Meetings are from 10:00am-1:00pm the 2nd and 4th Wed. in the lower level of the Senior Citizen’s Hall, 125-17th St. S. Bring bag lunch. Tootie Gripich, 426-3994. The GoGo Grannies meet the last Monday of each month at 7:00 at The College of the Rockies. Join us as we raise awareness & funds for Grandmothers raising their Grandchildren in countries devastated by Aids. Norma at 250-426-6111. ESL: CBAL hosts Conversation Cafe Tues 7-9pm, morning class Wed 10am-12noon & Evening class Wed 7pm-9pm. All sessions held at CBAL office 19 9th Ave S. Childcare upon request. All programs are FREE. FMI: Bruce 250-9192766 or khough@cbal.org The Compassionate Friends meet 2nd Tuesday each month at 4:00pm at the East Kootenay Child Care Resource and Referral Boardroom (in the Baker Street Mall parking lot) Info: call Laura @ 250 489-1000/Diane @ 250 489-0154 Do you have the desire to stop eating compulsively? OVEREATERS ANONYMOUS (a 12-Step Program) meets Wednesdays from 7-8 pm at Cranbrook United Church, 2-12 S. S., downstairs. Contact: cranbrookoa@hotmail.com. Bibles for Missions Thrift Store 824 Kootenay St. N., Cranbrook. Open Tues-Sat 10am-5pm. 778-520-1981. The Council of Senior Citizens Organizations (COSCO) is an advocacy group devoted to improving “The Quality Of Life” for all seniors. To become a member contact Ernie Bayer, ph 604-576-9734, fax 604-576-9733, email ecbayer@shaw.ca. Tai Chi Moving Meditation every Wednesday 3-4 pm at Centre 64. Starts November 7th. Call Adele 250-427-1939. Place your notice in your “What’s Up?” Community Calendar FREE of charge. This column is intended for the use of clubs and non-profit organizations to publicize their coming events — provided the following requirements are met: • Notices will be accepted two weeks prior to the event. • All notices must be emailed, faxed or dropped off in person. No telephone calls please. • NOTICES SHOULD NOT EXCEED 30 WORDS. • Only one notice per week from any one club or organization. • All notices must be received by the Thursday prior to publication • There is no guarantee of publication. Notices will run subject to space limitations.
CRANBROOK TOWNSMAN & KIMBERLEY BULLETIN COMMUNITY CALENDAR
Drop off: 822 Cranbrook St. N. • Drop off: 335 Spokane Street Fax: 250-426-5003 • Fax: 250-427-5336 E-mail: production@dailybulletin.ca
PAGE 8
THURSDAY, AUGUST 15, 2013
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Wakesurfing event features the best in the world Keenan Flegel, the reigning world champion, showed why he’s been on the podium more often that not TRE VOR CRWALEY Sports Editor
The Koocanusa Wakesurfing Challenge featured some of the best in the world in the sport, and it showed, attracting Keenan Flegel all the way from Florida. Flegel, who won the KWC in both the skim and surf pro events, is the reigning world champion, making the trip up from Fort Lauderdale a week before the event to help lead organizer and local pro rider Caroline Villeneuve put on a wakesurfing camp. A week later, it was time to get down to business on the water for the wakesurfing challenge, where he put his considerable skills to the test, where he is judged by his fellow riders. “This is the most fun event of the year,” said Flegel. “Everything’s laid back, awesome lake and I just love coming out here to have fun.” The KWC is a qualifying event for the Centrion World Wake Surfing Championship in Arizona at the end of
ISAAC HOCKLEY PHOTO
TREVOR CRAWLEY PHOTOS
Keenan Flegel hits the wake during his run on Saturday afternoon at Gold Bay. September. It was the same event that Flegel won last year. “The world championships is far and away the biggest event of the year and there’s always some nerves that come along with that,” said Flegel. “So sometimes you have a good day, sometimes you don’t, but over the last couple years I’ve won and I’ve lost, so it just depends
on how you’re feeling that day.” While Flegel and some of the pros came in from all corners of North America, there was also some local talent in the amateur events, with Isaac Hockley and Gabrielle Brass representing Cranbrook, while Emily Agate, Keya White and Lisa Klassen call Fernie home.
Carriers Needed! ROUTES IN CRANBROOK: 164 - Wattsville 157 - Innes Ave. 323 - Innes Trailer Park 302 - Larch & Spruce Dr, 15 St. S. 176 - 1st - 4th Ave, 22 St. S. 309 - Mt Pyramid Cres & Mt Fisher Dr 181 - 10th & 11th Ave, 12-14 St. 118 - 9th Ave, Baker St. - 4th St. 325 - Southview Dr. (available Aug. 19) ROUTES IN KIMBERLEY: 221 - Wallinger Ave (near Husky) 222 - Beale Ave, Mark St. 215 - Archibald St. 218 Fortier St.
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OWN THE PODIUM: Zoe Shields, Gabreille Brass and Missy Olivares get their chance on the podium for the Amateur Women Skim portion of the Koocanusa Wakesurfing Challenge last Sunday afternnoon. Amateur Women’s Skim Zoey Shields Virginia (USA) Gabrielle Brass BC (CAN) Missy Olivares California (USA) Amateur Women Surf Keya White BC (CAN) Lisa Klassen BC (CAN) Gabrielle Brass BC (CAN) Amateur Men Skim Chad Hudson AB (CAN) Phil Wilson BC (CAN) Isaac Hockley BC (CAN) Amateur Men Surf Adam May BC (CAN) Mike Bogdavovich BC (CAN) Isaac Hockley BC (CAN) Juniors Belle Boehm BC (CAN) Wyatt Dudley BC (CAN) Masters Tedd Witherell Washington (USA) Tom Soles BC (CAN) Jon Shields Virginia (USA)
Outlaw Men surf Ford Chupick Texas Grant Witherell Washington Shawn Wright Idaho Pro Women Skim Caroline Villeneuve BC Brittney Nyrose AB Tara Fortier Idaho Pro Women Surf Brittney Nyrose AB Caroline Villeneuve BC Emily Agate BC Pro Men Skim Keenan Flegel Florida Aaron Witherell Washington Sean Cummings California Pro Men Surf Keenan Flegel Florida Chris Wolter California Jimmi Sparling Idaho
Public Notice Trespassing on Teck Metals Ltd. private land can be extremely dangerous. Any unauthorized entry to Teck’s property in the Kimberley area, including land leased to others, the former Mine-Mill ore haulage way, Mine Site, Concentrator Site, old Fertilizer Site, internal roads and Mark Creek valley can be hazardous. It is a contravention of the Mines Act for unauthorized persons to be on the Mine Site property. Trespassing by anyone on Teck property is strictly prohibited. Persons who disregard fences and signs will be subject to prosecution under the Trespass Act and the Mines Act.
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Brady limps off Patriots’ practice field ASSOCIATED PRESS
FOXBOROUGH, Mass. - New England Patriots quarterback Tom Brady limped off the practice field Wednesday after appearing to hurt his left knee when he was hit after throwing a pass. Club president Jonathan Kraft told WBZ-FM that he made a call to check on Brady’s condition and it “hopefully did not appear to be that bad.” Brady tore the anterior cruciate ligament in his left knee in the 2008 season opener and missed the rest of the season.
daily townsman / daily bulletin
Sports
Thursday, August 15, 2013
Pitch perfect
Page 9
Boys and girls teams representing KEYSA at all age levels recently attended the Palouse Cup tournament in Idaho, where the collected a few medals. After it was all over, the U11 boys, U12/13 boys, U15 boys and the U15/16 girls teams all had some hardware draped around their necks.
daily townsman / daily bulletin
Page 10 Thursday, August 15, 2013
YOUR CITY WORKING FOR YOU! Thursday, August 15th, 2013 LOOKING TO USE A CITY PARK FOR YOUR EVENT? PLEASE BOOK AHEAD. Generally, there is no cost to use a City park for non-profit gatherings or events. All gatherings should be booked with Leisure Services. If you require the use of the Rotary Park bandstand or the Idlewild Park amphitheatre there is a fee. If you require custodial services like garbage collection, bleachers, grass cutting or the use of electrical services for your event, these requests be made at the time of booking. For more information including booking, rates and other requests please contact City of Cranbrook Leisure Services at 250-4890220.
CITY & BC TRANSIT OFFER FREE RIDES TO CRANBROOK FARMER’S MARKET The City of Cranbrook and BC Transit are offering FREE RIDES to the Saturday Cranbrook Farmers’ Market. Passengers must indicate to their driver they are going to or coming from the market in order to ride for free. From now until August 31, 2013 the summer Cranbrook Farmers’ Market runs 9 am to 1 pm, but the free bus rides are from 8:30 am to 1:30 pm. That gives early birds and last minute shopper’s equal access to transit time.
ANIMAL CONTROL BYLAW EXCREMENT Under this bylaw, it is unlawful for an animal, under the control of the owner or person, to defecate on any City street, lane, park or other public place unless the excrement is removed immediately. If you are identified not picking up after your pet, you can be liable to a minimum $50 fine. Visit our website and click on ‘Bylaws’ for more on all of our City bylaws.
The free rides will continue when the fall Farmers’ Market schedule begins with hours from 10 am to 1 pm September 7 to October 12, 2013. For more information on transit in Cranbrook please call 250.417.4636 or consult www. bctransit/regions/cra
REMINDERS... Monday September 9, 2013 – Regular Council Meeting @ 6pm Monday October 7, 2013 – Regular Council Meeting @ 6pm
Watch the latest
Cranbrook City Council meeting when you want. Visit www.cranbrook.ca
LOW FLOW TOILET REBATE APPLICATIONS AVAILABLE NOW! For more information and applications about the Low Flow Toilet Rebate program, visit the City of Cranbrook website at www. cranbrook.ca or stop by City Hall.
Working Toward A Greener Community
daily townsman / daily bulletin
travel
Thursday, August 15, 2013
Page 11
Take a cruise from Montreal to Boston Maritime Travel’s Carla Nelson recommends an eastern seaboard tour of New England and Canada
A
really nice cruise vacation that I experienced a few years ago was actually close to home, relatively speaking. An eastern seaboard cruise opens your eyes to the fascinating history, culture and scenic beauty of Canada and New England. There are several itineraries and durations offered, the most popular being Boston to Montreal or vice versa. This is typically a seven-day cruise. The season is May to October. Fall foliage cruises are most popular but you really need to book for October to see the changing colours – September is usually too early. Pack a windbreaker and umbrella because this is also technically hurricane season, so weather could be a bit unsettled! Otherwise, the other months are beautiful and warm. If you are beginning in Boston, try to add on a couple of days there. It is a beautiful city, easy to get around, with lots of great seafood restaurants (including the Union Oyster House, the oldest restaurant in North America). Make sure you have time to take in a baseball game at Fenway Park. Even if you’re not a baseball fan (which I’m really not), the atmosphere is electric as it is a compact park and the antics of those in the Green Monster section are not to be missed. Having the whole stadium sing ‘Sweet Caroline’ at seventh inning stretch is also pretty cool. After embarkation in Boston, you will cruise
to Bar Harbor, Maine, or as the New Englanders say it – “Baah Haabaah”. There are historic residences, museums and more seafood. And a great coastal hike, spotting wildflowers and lighthouses along the way. You enter Canadian waters for the rest of the cruise, arriving in Halifax. Since the cruise industry starting visiting the port of Halifax, the waterfront has been refurbished with great boardwalks, shops, and restaurants. Of course, you’ll want to visit Citadel Hill (you’ll be there for the noon cannon blast!) and beer tasting at Alexander Keith’s Brewery. Next stop is Sydney in Cape Breton Island. Cape Bretoners are just the friendliest people! I may be a bit partial as I was born in Nova Scotia and lived in Cape Breton for several years. There is a lovely historic church from the 1800s right near the port and lots of little markets. Next stop – Anne of Green Gables! Prince Edward Island – full of potato fields, beaches, and stunning scenery. And how did we get there? Cruised right under the Confederation Bridge, seemingly with only inches to spare! Cool experience. The final stops are in Quebec. Not only is Quebec City quaint and European with cobblestone streets, outdoor bars and cafes, and horse and carriage rides, it has tremendous Canadian history. One must visit the Plains of Abraham battlefields and fortresses.
bUy LOW SELL HIGH RIGHT NOW WE’VE GOT SUPER DEALS ON OUR CLASSIFIED ADS.
To advertise or subscribe in Cranbrook, To advertise or subscribe in Kimberley, 426-5201, ext. 0. 427-5333 • 12:30 - 4:30 pm.
Cruising up the St. Lawrence River on a large ocean vessel is amazing, with great scenery all the way to Montreal. Sightsee Old Montreal and finish up with fab shopping on St Catherine’s Street. For more information, talk to Master Cruise Counsellor, Carla Nelson, Branch Manager, Maritime Travel, phone 250-4894788.
Quaint Bar Harbor, Maine, is popular for its seafood and a beautiful coastal hike.
Tuesday
sepT 10 Kimberley ConferenCe
CenTre TiCKeT informaTion:
www.meeTKimberley.Ca
250-427-6802
Submitted
Page 12 Thursday, August 15, 2013
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daily townsman / daily bulletin
NEWS
Calgary Zoo loses FACTS second penguin
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C ANADIAN PRESS
CALGARY — A second Humboldt penguin in as many days has died at the Calgary Zoo from what a veterinarian says appears to be a bacterial infection. The zoo says threeyear-old Juntos died Tuesday night despite feverish attempts by animal care workers to save the animal. Another three-yearold named Guillermo died on Monday. Both penguins came to the Calgary Zoo from an animal park in Syracuse, N.Y. The Humboldts make their summer home in the outdoor exhibit at the popular Penguin Plunge. It was one of the first exhibits to reopen two weeks ago after severe flooding damaged much of the zoo in June. The zoo has three other species of penguin, but so far only the
Bill Gravel and Canadian Press
Sergei Belski, Calgary Zoo
Humboldt penguins at the Calgary Zoo. Humboldts appear to have fallen ill. “I have conducted the post-mortem examinations on both penguins and, while we are waiting for confirmation, the results are most consistent with an infection caused by the bacterium Chlamydophila psittaci,” Dr. Doug Whiteside, the zoo’s senior staff veterinarian, said in a release Wednesday.
“Test results will confirm this diagnosis, but in the meantime we are treating the remaining eight Humboldts and two gentoos that share the outdoor exhibit to do our best to prevent further losses.” Whiteside said the disease has caused outbreaks in other zoos and has been detected in wild Humboldts and other bird species. It can be latent for months or years.
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Phone: 250-417-6022 Fax: 250-417-6026 bill.bennett.mla@leg.bc.ca
Flood Aid a bigbudget ‘old-fashioned Prairie barn raising’
Sale ends August 17th, 2013
#11, 10th Ave South Cranbrook BC 250.489.4661 www.highcountrysports.ca
CALGARY — Comedian Brent Butt is calling it the musical equivalent of an old-fashioned barn raising. A fundraising concert for Alberta flood relief is expected to draw 30,000 to Calgary’s McMahon Stadium Thursday to hear such blockbuster Canadian acts as Nickelback, Jann Arden, Randy Bachman, Tom Cochrane, Matthew Good and Corb Lund. Butt has agreed to be the master of ceremonies for the event which organizers believe could raise $2 million for flood relief. “I think it’s going to allow people to be celebratory in a way — it’s not like a memorial. In a way it’s a big shiny, modern, multimillion-dollar version of an old Prairie barn raising,” Butt said. The Saskatchewan-born creator of the TV show “Corner Gas” has a couple of siblings that live in Calgary and started his comedy career in the city before eventually moving to Toronto. “It’s kind of fun for me to participate in this — my duties are really to keep the show moving along loosey-goosey. It’s not like I’m having to go out and do a bunch of standup,” he said. “This is really a musical concert so for me it’s about keeping the show moving, crack wise when I can and try and make people laugh now and then. I’m not look-
ing to make light of the situation at all. I’m looking to lighten the situation. It’s a pretty easy gig.” The main organizer of the event, Peter Jurisic, said the show will run a total of five hours and still, a number of performers had to be turned away. “It’s great talent. It’s diverse. It’s world class. It’s homegrown. We’re going to have some unique collaborations on stage,” Jurisic said. “I know how successful aid concerts have been in the past and I thought this was a very profound event that affected southern Alberta and we should do something that is fairly significant to see if we could build something big.” Winnipeg’s Bachman doesn’t fit the homegrown criteria, but he said he feels a tie to southern Alberta. “Being a Winnipeg kid, I’m sure I’ve played every town in the Prairies, and if I can help bring awareness to the devastation, and the ongoing need for repair, I’m happy to be involved,” he said. Bachman said it was hard not to be drawn into the tragedy that impacted thousands of families. Lund, who grew up in southern Alberta, has already played a number of flood benefits and wrote and recorded “Blood, Sweat and Water — A Song for Southern Alberta” with the proceeds going to flood relief.
PSYCHIC FAIR August 13 • 4pm-10pm August 14 • 12pm-10pm August 15 • 12pm-10pm August 16 • 12pm-10pm
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daily townsman / daily bulletin
Thursday, August 15, 2013
NEWS
Page 13
Legacy totem pole first to tower over Gwaii Haanas in 130 years C ANADIAN PRESS
GWAII HAANAS, B.C. — Ten months ago, a 7.7-magnitude earthquake struck B.C.’s coastal Haida Gwaii, triggering tsunami warnings and halting hot water from flowing into Hot Springs Island in Gwaii Haanas. Haida legend has it the quake was the work of a supernatural being — its translated name is Sacred One Standing and Moving — who is believed to hold up the Haida Gwaii and is responsible for the tremors that strike the islands. An image of the Sacred One, symbolizing the powerful quake last year, has been carved into the soft red cedar of a totem pole commemorating other ancient and modern historic events in Gwaii Haanas that will rise above Lyell Island on Thursday, the first time in
ph: Don Weixl
130 years that a pole has been raised in the southern part of the archipelago that forms what was formerly known as the Queen Charlotte Islands. The 13-metre legacy pole — with an additional three metres of it underground — is meant to celebrate the 20th anniversary of the Gwaii Haanas Agreement, a partnership established in 1993 that allows the government of Canada and the Haida Nation to co-manage and protect the region. “Twenty years ago, the era was such a different time. It was an era of conflict,” said Peter Lantin, president of the Haida Nation. “For Canada to come (on board) with the Haida Nation to protect Gwaii Haanas is quite significant.” Haida Gwaii is made up of more than 150 islands about 90 kilome-
tres west of British Columbia’s north coast. Lyell Island, on Gwaii Haanas, was where dozens from the Haida Nation gathered to block a logging road in 1985 to protest against logging. About 70 people were arrested during the demonstration. Two years later, the area was designated a heritage site, and the Gwaii Haanas National Park Reserve was created. The 1985 blockade is represented by five people standing together, locking hands, in the totem pole. Lantin called the 1993 agreement between the federal government and the Haida Nation “an agreement to disagree on title,” as both parties assert ownership over the land. But the unique partnership “really looks at co-management of the land as a vehicle to
work together,” he said. The agreement is represented by a sculpin fish at the bottom of the pole, and an eagle at the top, to symbolize an area that is protected “from ocean floor to mountain top,” said Edenshaw, who is now putting some finishing touches on his work. A grizzly bear, dogs, a raven and three Haida Gwaii watchmen are also part of the pole. The carving began a year ago and was done in Skidegate on Graham Island, the largest island in the archipelago. Ernie Gladstone, the park’s field unit superintendent, said the logistics around raising a pole in Gwaii Haanas, which is only accessible by air or by water, are challenging. The legacy pole was transported from Skidegate to Lyell Island on a barge. “In Gwaii Haanas, we don’t have any paved roads, we don’t have lots
of people down there, and we need to bring people in,” he said. “They’re not going to be there forever, they’re going to return to the earth where they originated from in the first place.” Lantin said the legacy pole is as much about celebrating the Haida nation’s relationship with Canada as it is about preserving its culture. When small pox wiped out the vast majority of the Haida Nation living in Gwaii Haanas more than a century ago, the art of carving totem poles died with them, he said. “It’s taken a long time for us to get back into the swing of it,” he said. The pole raising is planned for Thursday, where about 200 people are expected to pull the pole up with five ropes. It will be followed by a celebration later in the week.
daily TOWNSMAN DAILY townsman / DAILY daily BULLETIN bulletin
Page 14 PAGE 14 Thursday, THURSDAY, AUGUST August 15, 2013
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PAGE 16
THURSDAY, AUGUST 15, 2013
NEWS
DAILY TOWNSMAN / DAILY BULLETIN
Man loses job after asking for marijuana drop-off on Twitter MICHELLE MCQUIGGE Canadian Press
TORONTO — An online search for marijuana has turned into a job hunt for one Canadian Twitter user. Sunith Baheerathan caused an online stir when he issued a tweet requesting prospective pot sellers to bring some of their wares to a Mr. Lube location in a Toronto suburb. That location was Baheerathan’s place of employment until Tuesday, according to both the company and Baheerathan’s own tweets. Baheerathan first raised eyebrows when he expressed his workplace craving in a public tweet and appealed
directly to those who may be able to satisfy it. “Any dealers in Vaughan wanna make a 20sac chop? Come to Keele/Langstaff Mr. Lube, need a spliff,” he wrote. But the tweet soon turned into a viral sensation when it caught the attention of local police, who lost no time in contributing to the online chatter. “Awesome! Can we come too?” read the retort from the York Regional Police’s official twitter feed. Moments later the twitter exchange was a trending topic in Toronto. Shortly after that, Baheerathan found himself looking for work.
“Just got the call of termination,” he tweeted to a friend. An employer at the Mr. Lube location mentioned in Baheerathan’s controversial tweet, who would not share his name, confirmed that Baheerathan had been fired yesterday but would not say whether his dismissal was related to his online activities. Phone calls to the head office of Mr. Lube in British Columbia were not immediately returned. Baheerathan responded to an interview request by retweeting it to his followers alongside several messages expressing consternation at
his firing. “I’ve lost complete hope in society man. There’s killers/rapists/people missing and all they care about is a dude asking for weed,” he wrote in one tweet. “Gotta watch what you tweet nowadays, even the freedom of speech & the right to an entitled opinion isn’t safe,” read another. Social media consultant Amber MacArthur doesn’t believe freedom of speech has much to do with the issue. Companies are unlikely to look kindly on any employee that brings them unwanted attention, she said. “There is that perception
Police used social media skills to warn a Mr. Lube worker. that employees can be free to say whatever they want, but the reality is an employer does have the right to dismiss an employee if the em-
ployee has connected their name with some kind of activity... that doesn’t reflect well on them, and this is a perfect example of that.”
daily townsman / daily bulletin
Thursday, August 15, 2013
NEWS
AP Photo/FUNAI
In this frame grab taken from video shot in 2011 by Brazil’s National Indian Foundation (FUNAI) and released on Wednesday, Aug. 14, 2013, a Kawahiva Indian carries arrows in the Amazon jungle in Brazil.
Video shows isolated tribe deep in Amazon ASSOCIATED PRESS
RIO DE JANEIRO, Brazil — A newly released video captures the first fleeting images of an indigenous tribe living in Brazil’s Amazon jungle that is thought to have had very little contact with the outside world. The images show several members of the Kawahiva tribe walking through dense foliage. Naked men carry bows and arrows, and a woman totes a child on her back. The woman runs away after noticing the camera, and one
man briefly doubles back to investigate. Loggers first reported the existence of the Kawahiva in 1999. A reservation was created last year in the western state of Mato Grosso, but members of the tribe still face grave threats from loggers and farmers. The video was shot in 2011 by the government’s agency overseeing indigenous matters, but was only released on Wednesday.
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Page 18 Thursday, August 15, 2013
daily townsman / daily bulletin
NEWS
Bolivian man, 123, could be oldest person ever C arlos Valdez Associated Press
FRASQUIA, Bolivia — If Bolivia’s public records are correct, Carmelo Flores Laura is the oldest living person ever documented. They say he turned 123 a month ago. The native Aymara lives in a straw-roofed dirt-floor hut in an isolated hamlet near Lake Titicaca at 13,100 feet (4,000 metres), is illiterate, speaks no Spanish and has no teeth. He walks without a cane and doesn’t wear glasses. And though he speaks Aymara with a firm voice, one must talk
into his ear to be heard. ``I see a bit dimly. I had good vision before. But I saw you coming,’’ he tells Associated Press journalists who visit after a local TV report touts him as the world’s oldest person. Hobbling down a dirt path, Flores greets them with a raised arm, smiles and sits down on a rock. His gums bulge with coca leaf, a mild stimulant that staves off hunger. Like most Bolivian highlands peasants, he has been chewing it all his life. Guinness World Records says the oldest living person verified by
original proof of birth is Misao Okawa, a 115-year-old Japanese woman. The oldest verified age was 122 years and 164 days: Jeanne Calment of France, who died in 1997. Guinness spokeswoman Jamie Panas said it wasn’t aware of a claim being filed for the Bolivian. ``I should be about 100 years old or more,’’ Flores says. But his memory is dim. Flores’ 27-year-old grandson Edwin says Flores fought in the 1933 Chaco war with Paraguay but he only faintly remembers.
GOLF Guide
The director of Bolivia’s civil registrar, Eugenio Condori, showed The Associated Press the registry that lists Flores’ birthdate as July 16, 1890. Condori said birth certificates did not exist in Bolivia until 1940. Births previously were registered with baptism certificates provided by Roman Catholic priests. ``For the state, the baptism certificate is valid,’’ Condori said. He said he couldn’t show Flores’ baptism certificate to the AP because it is a private document. To what does Flores owe his longevity? ``I walk a lot, that’s all. I go out with the animals,’’ says Flores, who long herded cattle and sheep. ``I don’t eat noodles or rice, only barley. I used to grow potatoes, beans, oca (an Andean tuber).’’ The water Flores drinks originates on the snow-capped peak of Illampu, one of Bolivia’s highest. He says he doesn’t drink alcohol, but im-
bibed some in his youth. He’s eaten a lot of mutton, and though he likes pork it is hardly available. He fondly remembers hunting and eating fox as a younger man. Flores says he has never been farther afield than La Paz, 80 kilometres (50 miles) away, and has never been seriously ill. He sorely misses his wife, who died more than a decade ago. Of their three children only one is still alive: Cecilio, age 67. There are 40 grandchildren and 19 great-grandchildren but most have left Frasquia, a dozen homes a twohour walk from the nearest road. Edwin Flores, who lives next door with his wife and their two children, says his grandfather worked for the rancher who owned Frasquia until 1952, when the state seized major holdings in an agrarian reform and parceled them out to peasants. Although electrical power arrived three
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Donkeys bray and sheep and cattle graze. Most everyone is elderly or middle-aged. The young people are mostly gone.
Man found asleep at wheel of car at fast-food drive-thru NEWSTEAD, N.Y. — You want a wake-up call with that? State police say troopers were called to a western New York McDonald’s last weekend for a report of a man asleep behind the wheel of a car in the drive-thru lane. When troopers arrived at the fast-food restaurant in the Erie County town of Newstead at about 2 a.m. Saturday, they found the
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years ago, time seems to have stood still in Frasquia. Peasants still prepare chuno, or dehydrated and chilled potatoes, and till the soil with ox-driven plows.
Associated Press
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He doesn’t have a birth certificate, but officials believe Carmelo Flores Laura is 123 years old.
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32-year-old driver sleeping at the wheel of his car with the engine running. The troopers woke him up and gave him sobriety tests, which he failed. Police say he was charged with driving while intoxicated for having a blood-alcohol content of 0.14 per cent, nearly twice the legal limit of 0.08 per cent. Troopers say the man lives in Newstead, a rural town 20 miles east of Buffalo.
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daily townsman
Thursday, August 15, 2013
Page 19
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daily townsman / daily bulletin
Page 20 Thursday, August 15, 2013
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ARIES (March 21-April 19) You might want to give in to a whim after an important conversation about living well. You are responsible and accept more than your fair share of responsibilities. Some lightness could help you enjoy your life more and improve the quality of your work. Listen to your inner voice more often to prevent negativity. Tonight: On a roll. TAURUS (April 20-May 20) Give yourself the opportunity to confirm an insight before you act on it. Communication easily could go on overload. Listen to news and be aware of the possibilities opening up before you. If you look carefully, you will see an unusual path. Tonight: Share with a favorite loved one. GEMINI (May 21-June 20) Be receptive and not the initiator. You often are the force in communicating; being the receptor is different, especially if you have to integrate everything you hear. You like to spin information and get feedback. This situation is different. Tonight: With your friends.
CANCER (June 21-July 22) Pace yourself. You have a lot of ground to cover. You have the energy and the wherewithal to do just that. Others remain responsible and give you plenty of feedback. Try not to be defiant with a boss or older relative or friend. Tonight: Exercise. Walk the dog. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) A brainstorming session could straighten out a misunderstanding and bring strong results. You might see where the problem developed. Recognize that your past choices might have been off for someone else. Regroup and walk in another person’s shoes. Tonight: Add that special unique quality associated with you. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) Consider a home office or increasing the time that you spend there. You can develop a high level of efficiency if you are able to concentrate and eliminate distraction. You could find home a better place to work from. Communication flourishes, providing a lot to think about. Tonight: Think weekend plans. LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22)
For Better or Worse
You are more in contact with others than you have been in a while. How you view a situation could change once you open up a discussion. What you believed to be a given just might not be. Your sense of accomplishment emerges once you bridge a gap. Tonight: Return calls, then decide. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21) Be aware of your financial bearings. Honestly decide what might be extravagant and what is possible. Reflect on your choices and directions. Find an expert or two, and be open to his or her feedback, even if you do not like it. Tonight: Weigh the pros and cons of a decision. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21) You might be tripped up by a situation that you choose to look at wearing your rose-colored shades. You will gain insight if you are willing to be more realistic and listen to others’ feedback. You cannot change someone, but you can change your response to him or her, allowing the other person to see an issue. Tonight: As you like it. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) Use the moment to reflect and
gain more information. You might be involved with some research, while some of you will be gaining their information from their skills of observation. Asking the right question also is helpful. Trust your judgments. Tonight: Lie back again. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18) A meeting could be exciting, as you hear the most unanticipated news. Yes, you do have reason for celebration, but you also must look in another direction, integrating this news into your life. The change could be dramatic. Tonight: Doing exactly what you want. PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20) You might not be as sure of yourself as you would like to be. In fact, you often might be confused. A boss or superior could be making you more uncomfortable in a discussion without intending to. The issue is you are not grasping certain details with your rose-colored shades on. Tonight: Living it up. BORN TODAY Actor Ben Affleck (1972), chef Julia Child (1912), daughter of Queen Elizabeth II and Prince Philip, Princess Anne (1950)
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Rhymes with Orange
By Hillary B. Price
Annie’s Mailbox by Kathy Mitchell and Marcy Sugar Dear Annie: My husband has a 12-yearold daughter from a previous marriage. We don’t get to see “Emma” too often. She lives with her mother in another state, and Mom keeps her summers so packed that she cannot visit. The problem is that this year Emma visited my father-in-law for an entire week, and he didn’t once let her do anything with us. It was very upsetting. My husband and I have three young children together, and Grandpa spends NO time with them at all. Yet he managed a week with Emma and didn’t include us. Our 5-year-old was hurt that Grandpa spends time with his older sister but never does anything with him. Can I do anything about Grandpa playing favorites? It kills me to see my children hurt because of it. I also want my children to have a good relationship with their half-sister. I’ve talked to my husband, but he doesn’t know what to do, either, and it’s causing a great deal of stress in our home. -- Upset Daughter-in-Law Dear Upset: You surely realize that Grandpa “hoards” Emma in an effort to make up for the divorce and also to be sure that his ex-daughter-in-law will continue to allow the girl to visit. Your husband should speak to his father and explain how hurt the other grandchildren are that he doesn’t spend any time with them. You both should encourage Grandpa to come over more often. More importantly, if your husband doesn’t get to see Emma because Mom is deliberately preventing it, he should speak to his lawyer about amending the visitation arrangements. Dear Annie: I am an older single guy and have a question. The women I’ve dated repeatedly say, “I can’t make a decision, because I don’t know where I will be in five years.” Now, we’re not talking about marriage proposals, but about other decisions that often come up. I’ve never heard a guy say something like that. No one knows where they will be in five years, and the decisions one makes today often affect that. Is this some form of decision avoidance? -Just Curious Dear Curious: What type of questions are you asking that provoke them to contemplate their lives five years down the road? Either they believe your questions require some type of commitment they aren’t willing to give, or they are trying to tell you that a commitment from you is exactly what they are looking for. Dear Annie: I’m writing in reply to “KC,” who was horrified to discover that her ancestors owned slaves and didn’t know how to explain it to her mixed-race nieces. I believe that KC is very much afraid that somehow, after many, many generations, her family history will taint her as a racist. My family, too, fought and died in the Civil War on both sides. Some were slave owners. The youngest died from neglect and disease at age 17 in a Union POW camp. There has been a member of my family in every war since the American Revolution. My son is the seventh generation serving in the military, and I’m proud of my family history. Just because some owned slaves does not make me a racist. I know right from wrong. I live in a culturally diverse neighborhood and have close friends of many races. People should not erase the bad parts of their family history. They are just facts, not a reflection of who they are now. Thanks for letting me have a voice. -- K. Annie’s Mailbox is written by Kathy Mitchell and Marcy Sugar, longtime editors of the Ann Landers column. Please email your questions to anniesmailbox@comcast.net, or write to: Annie’s Mailbox, c/o Creators Syndicate, 737 3rd Street, Hermosa Beach, CA 90254. To find out more about Annie’s Mailbox and read features by other Creators Syndicate writers and cartoonists, visit the Creators Syndicate Web page at www.creators.com. COPYRIGHT 2013 CREATORS.COM
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Page 22 Thursday, August 15, 2013
KOOTENAY ADVERTISER GaraGE SaLE MaP wAlmART
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Thursday, August 15, 2013 BULLETIN Page 23 DAILY TOWNSMAN/DAILY
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Obituaries
It is with an empty space in our lives that we mourn the passing of our sister Anne Dallyn (nee Turner). Ann was born in England but attended school and married in Cranbrook. She lived in Terrace, BC for a number of years where she worked and owned a couple of corner stores that served pizza and pumped gas. She was pre-deceased by her mother Rita Williams (Mah), her daughter Wanda, and her husband Ron. Ann will be missed by her brothers and sisters, children and grand children that live throughout BC. Ann passed away at Mills Memorial Hospital, July 30th, 2013 in Terrance BC. The family in Cranbrook will hold a celebration of life for her, August 17th, 2013 in Cranbrook BC.
Cornely, Leona Margaret (Nonie) 1920 - 2013 On the afternoon of Tuesday, August 6, 2013, Nonie Cornely passed from this life at the East Kootenay Regional Hospital at the age of 93 years.
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In Memoriam
In Memoriam
MARLEEN ELAINE EDNA WILLIAMS
(nee L’Heureux) Dec. 9, 1945 - Aug. 15, 2011 In the passage of time it has been two years, Yet my heart still struggles to believe. We always had faith. You were almost home... Why is it that you had to leave? Though I try to accept that God had His plan, You had so many reasons to live. So many friends and family who cared, So much more love you could give. Now your spirit is free from the bounds of time, And love is forever, your light always shines. One day I’ll find you...somewhere beyond the sea, For I believe in you, and I know that we will be.
Love you always, Steve
Obituaries
Drop off your photo and name(s) of subject at the Cranbrook Townsman or Kimberley Bulletin office or email your high-resolution jpeg to bulletinprod@ cyberlink.ca. Photographs will appear in the order they are received.
Obituaries
Obituaries
Anne Dallyn (nee Turner) 1943 - 2013
~Amy~
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Nonie was born on March 9, 1920 in Cranbrook and was one of 7 children born to Lee & Rose Heric. Lucille, Marion, Nita, Peter and Corky along with her parents proceeded her. Sister Joan survives (Hermiston, Oregon). Nonie was a licensed dental assistant. Her passions included painting, photography, embroidering, reading, music, watching curling briers, Tiger and her pets. Nonie leaves to cherish her memory, Children: Brian Kostiuk (Linda), Dolores Hicks (Bob), Kym Kostiuk (Cheryl) (Roseanne Ballard, deceased 1990); Grandchildren: Ken Kostiuk (Toni), Sheri Kostiuk (Jody & Tim Ballard, deceased), Kevin Kostiuk (Tammy), Kim Kostiuk, Karolyn Fruncello (Dom), Catherine Farrell (Ross), Glen Kostiuk, Candice Kostiuk, Kelly Ballard (Julie), Dennis Ballard (Anne) and Darcy Ballard; Great Grandchildren: Todd (Maria), Tyler (Teresa), Chris (Allison), Kayla (Steve), Shaun, Shelsi, Joel, Krista, Wanda (Dave), April (Scott), Jacqueline, Bryce, Shane, Tiffany (Brendon), Samantha and Alexander; Great Great Grandchildren: Lucan, Jade, Bo, Jodi, Keleah, Aron, Jacob, Tyler, Brena, Makala, Quiana, Janasy, Javon and McKenzie; Great Great Great Grandchildren: Dominic & Mia; Nieces: Patty, Michelle and Cindy; as well as special friends Sarah and Jack, Ken and Joan, Anna Mae and George, and Eve. A family gathering was conducted at Crawford Bay, BC on August 10 and August 11. Nonie’s ashes were united with Roseanne, Myron, Jody & Tim Ballard. Nonie was given last rights before passing and anyone wishing to can have a Mass said. Special thanks to Dr. Linda Smith for her wonderful care of Mother, all the nurses at EKRH and Health Care workers at Joseph Creek & The Green Home.
SNIFF out a new
CAREER
Esther Lush It is with deep sorrow we announce the passing of our dear mother and sister, Esther. Born in Manitoba 1942, deceased in Cranbrook Hospital July 31, 2013. There will be no service at Esther’s request. In lieu of flowers, please make a donation to the Canadian Cancer Society.
SULLIVAN, NANCY A. 1920 - 2013 It is with great sadness that we, the family of Nancy Allison Boyak South Sullivan announce her passing on Saturday, August 10, 2013 at the age of 92 years. She passed away peacefully in her home with her family at her side. Nancy passed away after a short time of pain and she is now free of pain and suffering. She was born in Bodmin, SK, the second daughter of Amy Buckland and Leslie South on September 17, 1920. She leaves to mourn the last six of her family of nine children: Kathleen (Joe), Rose Anne, John (Kay), Mary, Loretta (Herb), Rod (Sandi) and daughter-in-law Hiltje. She also leaves to mourn 19 grandchildren and 17 great grandchildren. She was predeceased by her parents, Leslie South and Amy Buckland South (who died in childbirth), plus her siblings Catherine, Tom and Leslie South, brother-in-law Alex South, her sister-in-law Linda Agnew South and by her husband of 38 years, Jim Sullivan (1978), her sons Gregg (1975), Paul (2003), Phil (2013) and her last remaining cousin in England, Kathy Reid who passed away in April of this year at 96. Mom made the best bread and cinnamon buns and always had some ready when family came to visit. When Dad was asked if he would marry again, his reply was “Only if she could make homemade bread like your Mother.” Mom also taught herself to read and knit at the same time. She was a good provider and knew how to make ends meet all the time. She was an avid gardener and was called “Farmer Brown” by one of the seniors at the Kimberley pool. She passed the love of gardening on. She was also a great seamstress and made many of our clothes. She taught her daughters and many grand-kids how to knit as well. She was a Brownie and Cub leader in both Stony Plain, AB area and Kimberley, BC. She volunteered at the Kimberley Food Bank and Kimberley Public Library from the time she moved here in 1990. She was well known for making “critters” as she called them (stuffed toys). Many of her family received them and she also donated them to the church for their bazaars. She has knitted and crocheted many afghans for us to cherish. She will be greatly missed by her remaining children, grandchildren and great grandchildren as well as her sister- in- law Margaret Gurtler South and Dad’s cousin Grace Alberts Kennedy. She leaves many nieces and nephews, which include both great and great greats. The family would like to thank Father John and Father Peter, Dr. Dupreez, the ladies of the Kimberley Home Care Support and her friend Lucy for the care and support shown to Mom in her last days. Memorial donations may be made in Nancy’s memory to the Kimberley Helping Hands Food Bank, 340 Leadenhall St., Kimberley, BC V1A 2L3 or the Kimberley Public Library, 115 Spokane St., Kimberley, BC V1A 2E5. A Celebration of Nancy’s Life will be held on Friday, August 16, 2013 at 11:00 am at the Holy Trinity Catholic Church, 200 Boundary Rd., Spruce Grove, AB - North of Hwy. 16, western outskirts of Spruce Grove. Condolences may be left for the family at www. markmemorial.com Mark Memorial Funeral Services in care of arrangements (250) 426-4864
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Cards of Thanks
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INVERMERE, BC I have worked for Golden Life for 7 years. Working for a company that really understands resident wellness has made it a very rewarding career. I would recommend this job to anyone.
E careers@glm.ca P (250) 489-0667 GOLDENLIFE.CA
The eyes have it
Your Gift is a Gift for Good and Forever. 250.426.1119 www.ourfoundation.ca cdcf@telus.net
Help Wanted
Claire Jacklin,RN Director of Care
Have you considered a lasting legacy? Reasons people choose to give through community foundations.
Education/Trade Schools
Join us:
EMPLOYMENT OPPORTUNITY
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Employment
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Fetch a Friend from the SPCA today! spca.bc.ca
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Register Online at www.bcdailydeals.com
BCDaily
DAILY TOWNSMAN/DAILY Thursday, August 15, 2013 BULLETIN Page 25
PAGE Thursday, 15, 2013 daily 22 townsman / dailyAugust bulletin
Employment
Services
Services
Merchandise for Sale
Real Estate
Real Estate
Rentals
Help Wanted
Financial Services
Paving/Seal/ Coating
Heavy Duty Machinery
For Sale By Owner
Open Houses
Homes for Rent
NOTICE
A-STEEL SHIPPING DRY STORAGE CONTAINERS Used 20â&#x20AC;&#x2122;40â&#x20AC;&#x2122;45â&#x20AC;&#x2122;53 in stock. SPECIAL 44â&#x20AC;&#x2122; x 40â&#x20AC;&#x2122; Container Shop w/steel trusses $13,800! Sets up in one day! 40â&#x20AC;&#x2122; 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
Immediate Possession.
OPEN HOUSE BY OWNER
4BDRM, 2BATH house in Marysville. Available Sept. 1/13. 5 appliances, pellet stove, N/P, N/S. $950./mo + utilities. Call 250-427-4278
INSIDE SALES/ PURCHASING
BLACKTOP NOW!
Guillevin International Co. is seeking an ambitious, customer focused individual with a minimum Grade 12 education and preferably 2 - 4 years experience in a similar Inside Sales and/or Purchasing Role. Preference will be given to candidates that have some electrical products experience. Responsibilities will include customer service in person and over the phone, providing price, product and delivery information, coordinating project requirements, ensuring adequate inventory, analyzing buying opportunities and evaluating new product lines. The successful candidate will be highly motivated, a strong team player with demonstrated learning abilities. We offer an attractive benefits program, which includes profit sharing. Please forward your resume to: Lee Armstrong Guillevin International Co. 1 â&#x20AC;&#x201C; 716 Industrial Road Cranbrook BC V1C 4C6 Fx: (250) 426-5025 www.guillevin.com We thank all candidates, but only those short-listed will be contacted.
NO JOB TOO SMALL
Driveways & Parking Lots 1-888-670-0066 CALL
mountbaker56heritage@gmail.com
CALL NOW!
POWER PAVING
SERVING ALL THE KOOTENAYS Merchandise for Sale
Fruit & Vegetables GARLIC & DILL. 250-422-9336
Firewood/Fuel
GIRO
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Help Wanted
Newer 4 bedroom, 4 bath executive home close to Community Forest in Park Royal. Double garage, fenced yard, RV parking, A/C, fireplace, shed. Walk-out basement with lots of windows has room for in-laws in self-contained basement suite with separate entrance, bath & kitchen. Priced to Sell
FREE ESTIMATES!
Contractors
Hotel, Restaurant, Food Services MT. Baker Heritage Restaurant at Cranbrook, BC hiring Food servers. Starting wage $10.50/hr F/T. No formal edu or exp reqâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;d. Must speak English . Greet patrons, Take orders, relay to kitchen staff, Serve Japanese style food and beverages, Present bill and accept payment. Day, Evening and Weekend shift Send your resume to
421-1482
Want to Rent
Order early, limited supply, Pine firewood, standing dry, BIG 7 axle loads, delivered 60 km radius of Galloway, $1400 per load. Out of area, call for pricing. (250)429-3248
Furniture
ELECTRONIC LA-Z-BOY recliner. Blue, $600. (reg. $1500). Call 250-427-3405 or 250-919-6055
Help Wanted
Help Wanted
$417,000
Property Guys Listing ID # 266262
(250) 919-3047
BEAUTIFUL 3300 sq/f custom built home, 10 acres, 10 min. dâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;town Cranbrook $509,900 priced to sell, to view call Rob 587-216-2334 or OPEN house Sat Aug 17th 11-4 pm
Mobile Homes & Parks
Real Estate Duplex/4 Plex DUPLEX FOR RENT: Cranbrook. Newly renovated 3bdrm, partly finished basement, F/S, W/D included. Single car garage. $900./mo. + utilities & DD. N/P-N/S. Available Aug 1/13. Phone 250-489-8750 or 250-4231983.
Renovator/Handyman Special, double your investment. 1977 14x56 Fleetwood remodeled 2-bdrm mobile home, drywall 90% complete, lino down in kitchen & bath, 5-appl, recent hot water tank, 10x10 storage shed. Finish to your liking, asking $15,000 obo. Private Sale. To view, call (250)489-8825
Pets
Pets
Oh Dogâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s
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Must see, unique, extensively upgraded, 2400 sq. ft. home. 3 Bdm. 2 bath, Jacuzzi tub in bedroom, large rooms with open concept, wrap around decks, with breakfast bar, view, in great location, with double detached garage and low maintenance yard. You will be surprised!!!! Listed on PropertyGuys.com 266361
WANTED: SHORT-TERM accommodation; room or suite, close to Hospital. September to December. Responsible young male. N/S, N/P. 250-861-8465 or 250-212-8663
Transportation
Cars - Domestic
2004 Chrysler Intrepid
Small Ads work! Recreational TIE LAKE CABIN. 4 seasons. On .56 acre. Backs onto crown land. Single garage. Please call 403-308-6134 TIE LAKE PROPERTY. 0.55 acre, close to public access. Power, well, septic, storage building. Reasonable. Phone 403-608-6014.
Well maintained, clean, A/C, 170,800 km, new winter tires, 75% summer tires.
$3,500 firm (250) 426-5122
Open Houses
Open House
SATURDAY August 17th 1:00 - 2:00 pm â&#x20AC;˘ 1305 12A St S
Updates throughout, tile, laminate, basement entry, family room, storage, 2bdrm below, 3bdrms up, 2bath, covered deck, carport, huge yard & multiple parking even for R.V/ Motorhome. Great View! 2390408 $289,900Â Hosted by: Melanie Walsh
911 Baker Street â&#x20AC;˘ Cranbrook, BC 1-250-426-3355 â&#x20AC;˘ Toll Free: 1-888-629-4002
Rescue and Adoption
Garage Sales
250-429-3453 ! " !#
Saturday, August 17th  12:00 â&#x20AC;&#x201C; 2:00 PM 805 13th Street S. $299,000
Garage Sales
the place to pick up the special dog for your family wendysmith429@gmail.com
Legal
Legal
Land Act: Notice of Intention to Apply for a Disposition of Crown Land FrontCounter BC Cranbrook has accepted an application made by Stephen and Barbara Ney of 2223 Deer Side Drive SE Calgary Alberta T2J 5L7, on behalf of the Ministry of Forests, Lands and Natural Resource Operations (MFLNRO), Kootenay Region, for a Licence of Occupation (Residential-Private Moorage) for the purpose of installation of a dock (existing) situated on Provincial Crown land on Tie Lake described as Lot A DL4590 KD Plan NEP 22088. The MFLNRO File Number that has been established for this application is 4405389. Written comments concerning this application should be directed to the Natural Resource OfĂ&#x20AC;cer at FrontCounter BC, 2 Theatre Road, Cranbrook, B.C., 9 C 7* or email to Authori]ingAgency. Cranbrook@gov.bc.ca. Comments will be received by FrontCounter BC until September , 2 3. FrontCounter BC may not be able to consider comments received after this date. Please refer to our website http:// www.arfd.gov.bc.ca/ApplicationPosting/index.jsp>Search>Search by File Number: insert Lands File Number for more information. The application will be available for viewing at FrontCounter BC OfĂ&#x20AC;ce in Cranbrook. Be advised that any response to this advertisement will be considered part of the public record. For information, contact the FOI Advisor at the Ministry of Natural Resource Operations regional ofĂ&#x20AC;ce.
1. Multi family, 321 23rd Ave S, Sat, Aug. 17, 9am-1pm, kidâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s clothes, shoes, toys, soccer shoes, ski boots, hockey/figure skates, home decor, all nice stuff, no junk. NO EARLY BIRDS. 2 day Yard Sale, over 900 items, no prices, make offer, everything must go. 18 - 15th Ave S, front of building, Sat & Sun, Aug 17 & 18, 9am-4pm Aug 17, 3248 Jim Smith Lk. Rd., 10-4, furniture, household, tools, misc. GARAGE SALE: #2 Trickle Ridge Place, Kimberley. Saturday and Sunday, August 17 & 18. 9am - 4pm. Fridge, stove, dishwasher, electronics, tools, clothing and misc. household. Something for everyone! Sat, Aug 17, 7am-1pm, 903 4A St S.
GARAGE SALE: Saturday Aug. 17th. 8:30am to 2:00pm. In the alley behind 411 14th Ave. S. (near Woodland Grocery) Supports Educational Project in Cameroon, Africa. Multi family, Sat, Aug 17, 9am-3pm, 408 15th Ave S. NO EARLY BIRDS please. Lots of toys, beautiful twin bed, household items, etc. Sat, Aug 17, 8am-2pm, 2917 Kokanee Drive, furniture, household goods, etc. Sat Aug 17, 8 am, 312 33rd Ave S, household, lots of kids & sports gear including bikes. Sat, Aug 17, 8am-4pm, #25 2124 30th Ave, Pines Trailer Court, Gold creek area, van, quad, outboard motor, fishing gear, tools, bar fridge & misc household Sat & Sun Aug 17 & 18, 8am11am, 2124 30th Ave S., Pines Trailer Court.
DAILY TOWNSMAN/DAILY BULLETIN Page 26 Thursday, August 15, 2013
daily townsman daily bulletin Thursday, August 15,/ 2013 PAGE 23
Sport Utility Vehicle
Trucks & Vans
Recreational/Sale
FOR SALE BY OWNER.
1981 TERRY Travel Trailer. Good condition, fridge, stove, shower. $4800 OBO. 250-4261868.
2009 Toyota RAV-4,
For Sale 2002 GMC Sierra 4X4
LE • REC YC
LE • REC YC
LE • REC YC
Transportation
4246 km,
FWD, like new, mint condition.
$16,000. Call Ron at 250-489-4891
LE • REC YC
Business/Office Service
Business/Office Service
Fully loaded 3/4, tow package with transmission cooler and five point hitch. Excellent condition only two owners. Brand new winter tires only used half a season. Asking $11,000. Call 403 803-8959
Business/Office Service
SERVICES GUIDE Contact these business for all your service needs!
To advertise using our “SERVICES GUIDE” in the Cranbrook Daily Townsman, Kimberley Daily Bulletin and The Valley, call us at 250-426-5201, ext. 202. ATTENTION WORKING,
DOG OWNERS.
A service that is reasonable, reliable and bonded. Taking care of all your dogcare needs, and providing a quality of life you’ll feel good about. -Dog walks ~At-the-park ball games ~Baths, minor hair touchups, nail care. ~Overnight’s And best of all, ~Dog doo removal & cleanup of your yard each visit! CALL FOR A CONSULTATION
250-426-7457
FLOORING
INSTALLATIONS. Wholesale Prices. Carpet ~ Lino Laminate ~ Hardwood.
IS YOUR COMPUTER SLUGGISH OR HAVING PROBLEMS?
LEIMAN
CUSTOM HOMES
It’s time for a tune-up! Why unplug everything, send away & wait when SuperDave comes into your home? Specializes in: *Virus/Spyware Removal, *Troubleshooting, *Installations, *PC Purchase Consulting.
Certified Journeyman Carpenters
SuperDave offers affordable, superior service & most importantly; Honesty. SuperDave works Saturdays & evenings too!
Reliable Quotes Member of the new home warranty program.
Call SuperDave (250)421-4044
www.leimanhomes.ca
www.superdaveconsulting.ca
Kevin 250-421-0110 Krister 250-919-1777
Join an
elite preschool
AND RENOVATIONS
Established custom builder for over 30 years.
setting.
TIP TOP CHIMNEY “Sweeping the Kootenay’s Clean”
Repairs to damaged floors, wrinkled carpets, etc.
is offering limited spots for September registration. Ages 32 months to Kindergarten. Subsidies welcome.
*All work guaranteed.*
(250)426-4318.
Certified Journeyman Installer.
Enquiries: 250-427-3037 or cell: 250-520-0188
~Ask for Ben~
The Little Acorn Preschool
TRIPLE J
WINDOW CLEANING
~Residential~
CLASSIFIEDS WILL SELL WHAT YOU WANT SOLD!
CALL: 426-5201 EXT. 202
Excellence in Delivery = Results!
For a brighter outlook, call Jim Detta
SERVICES
Chimney Sweeping Fireplace & Woodstove Servicing Visual Inspections and Installations Gutter Cleaning Available Call for Free Estimate from a W.E.T.T Certified Technician Richard Hedrich 250-919-3643 tiptopchimneys@gmail.com
250-349-7546 **ask about our gutter cleaning service**
CLASSIFIEDS HELP YOU SELL
CALL: 426-5201 EXT. 202
The Cranbrook Daily Townsman and the Kimberley Daily Bulletin have been publishing for 100 years and have been instrumental in providing the East Kootenay area the very best in local news, sports, entertainment, events and happenings that matter to our communities. In addition, the Townsman and Bulletin have developed a strong on-line news source that keeps our readers informed seven days per week, 24 hours a day with breaking news updates. Our customers expect the very best and our commitment is to deliver the very best. It starts with producing an exceptional community newspaper filled with great local stories in an easy-to-read tabloid format. Then we support it with eye-catching design, provide a good balance of advertisements to inspire the reader to seek sales and service opportunities and finally, ensure that delivery standards are at the highest level. Call For Home Delivery in Cranbrook: 250-426-5201 ext 208. Call For Home Delivery in Kimberley: 250-427-5333.
AP Photo/ Hampshire Police
Cat hair was found around the body of David Guy, right, who was found hidden in a trash bag on a British beach in July 2012. Detectives matched the hair to a cat belonging to the man’s friend, David Hilder, left.
Cat DNA helped convict killer R aphael Sat ter Associated Press
LONDON — Fingerprints are not the only thing that killers can leave behind — add cat hair to that list. A British university said Wednesday that its DNA database of British felines helped convict a man of manslaughter, illustrating how the genetic material of pets can be used by crime scene investigators. “This is the first time cat DNA has been used in a criminal trial in the U.K.,” said Jon Wetton from the University of Leicester. “This could be a real boon for forensic science, as the 10 million cats in the U.K. are unwittingly tagging the clothes and furnishings in more than a quarter of households.” Although drawing DNA from human hair, saliva, or blood samples has long been a part of crime scene investigations, animal material has also provided invaluable clues. The Veterinary Genetics Laboratory at the University of California, Davis, has used animal DNA to catch criminals for more than a decade — including one case in London in which blood left at the scene of a night-
club stabbing was matched to a murder suspect’s bull terrier. In the latest case in Britain, investigators tapped the same lab to identify the cat hair discovered around the dismembered torso of David Guy, 30, who was found hidden in a trash bag on a British beach in July 2012. Detectives matched the hair to a cat belonging to the man’s friend, David Hilder, but because the genetic material was mitochondrial DNA — which can be shared among large number of animals — the strength of the match couldn’t be known. That’s where the cat DNA database came in. Wetton — who had previously helped to set up a similar database for dogs — worked with doctoral student Barbara Ottolini to create a repository of cat DNA for the Hilder case. They gathered samples of mitochondrial DNA from 152 felines across England over a six-week period. “Only three of the samples obtained matched the hairs from the crime scene,” Wetton said, suggesting that while the match wasn’t perfect, it was still a pretty good indication the hairs on the torso came from Hilder’s cat.
“No one’s going to be convicted on this alone, but if it’s helping to reinforce other sorts of evidence then you can paint a picture in the jury’s mind,” Wetton said. In this case there was a host of additional evidence — including traces of Guy’s blood discovered at Hilder’s residence in Southsea, in southern England — and it was enough to secure the 47-yearold’s conviction. On July 30, Hilder was sentenced to life in prison with a minimum of 12 years before he is eligible for parole. Authorities said in statements after the trial that Hilder and Guy’s relationship — and the motive for the latter’s killing — remain unclear. The two were neighbours, but prosecutors described their relationship as “love/hate.” They said the violence may have even been spurred by an argument over the cat. Wetton said he hoped the cat DNA database could serve in future cases. As for the cat itself — Tinker — police said it was alive and well and living with new owners.
US beauty queen gives up crown amid explosives charges ASSOCIATED PRESS
SALT LAKE CITY — A U.S. beauty pageant winner charged with tossing homemade bombs from a vehicle has relinquished her crown. Kendra McKenzie Gill tells KSL-TV that she and her friends feel terrible about the incident,
but she insists they were just playing a practical joke and never threw the explosives at people. Gill and three friends were charged last week with four felony counts of possession of an explosive device. Prosecutors say the 18-yearolds drove around town Aug. 2
and tossed plastic bottles of toilet bowl cleaner and shrapnel at people and property. Nobody was injured. Gill had been Miss Riverton, Utah. She said knew she’d probably have the title revoked and wanted to step down before it was taken from her.
daily townsman / daily bulletin
Thursday, August 15, 2013
Page 27
kia.ca
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Visit drivechangewithkia.ca to learn how you can help on August 21st, Drive Change Day.
Offer(s) available on select new 2014 models through participating dealers to qualified customers who take delivery by September 3, 2013. Dealers may sell or lease for less. Some conditions apply. See dealer for complete details. All offers are subject to change without notice. Vehicles shown may include optional accessories and upgrades available at extra cost. All pricing includes delivery and destination fees up to $1,665, other fees and certain levies (including tire levies) and $100 A/C charge (where applicable) and excludes licensing, registration, insurance, other taxes and variable dealer administration fees (up to $699). Other dealer charges may be required at the time of purchase. Other lease and financing options also available. **0% purchase financing is available on select new 2014 Kia models O.A.C. Terms vary by model and trim, see dealer for complete details. ≠Bi-weekly finance payment O.A.C. for new 2014 Forte LX MT (FO541E)/2014 Rondo LX MT (RN551E) based on a selling price of $17,502/$23,482 is $96/$129 with an APR of 0% for 84 months, with a remaining balance of $0. Bi-weekly finance payment O.A.C. for new 2014 Sorento 2.4L LX AT FWD (SR75BE) based on a selling price of $28,482 is $156 with an APR of 0% for 60 months, amortized over an 84-month period. Estimated remaining principal balance of $8,138 plus applicable taxes due at end of 60-month period. Retailer may sell for less. See dealer for full details. ‡$2,500/$1,250/$1,750 cash savings on the cash purchase of an eligible new 2014 Sorento 2.4L LX AT FWD (SR75BE)/2014 Forte LX MT (FO541E)/2014 Rondo LX MT (RN551E) from a participating dealer between August 1-September 3, 2013, is deducted from the selling price before taxes and cannot be combined with special lease and finance offers. Some conditions apply. ΔModel shown Manufacturer Suggested Retail Price for 2014 Sorento 3.3L EX AT AWD (SR75HE)/2014 Forte SX AT (FO748E)/2014 Rondo EX Luxury (RN756E) is $34,195/$26,195/$32,195. Highway/city fuel consumption is based on the 2014 Sorento LX 2.4L GDI 4-cyl (A/T)/2014 Forte 1.8L MPI 4-cyl (M/T)/2014 Rondo 2.0L GDI 4-cyl (M/T). These updated estimates are based on the Government of Canada’s approved criteria and testing methods. Refer to the EnerGuide Fuel Consumption Guide. Your actual fuel consumption will vary based on driving habits and other factors. °The Bluetooth® wordmark and logo are registered trademarks and are owned by Bluetooth SIG, Inc. Information in this advertisement is believed to be accurate at the time of printing. For more information on our 5-year warranty coverage, visit kia.ca or call us at 1-877-542-2886. Kia is a trademark of Kia Motors Corporation.
daily townsman / daily bulletin
Page 28 Thursday, August 15, 2013
Jason
WHEELDON
P E R S O N A L R E A L E S TAT E C O R P O R AT I O N
“A Trusted Name in Real Estate since 1994.” EAST KOOTENAY REALTY
25-10th Avenue South, Cranbrook
jason@cranbrookrealty.com 250-426-8211 250-426-9482 www.cranbrookrealty.com 831 Mennie Road
6147 Wolf Creek Road
723 5th St. S.
2509 4th St. S.
1425 20th St. S.
2308 - 7th St. S.
Spacious 2 bed, 2 bath mobile home on 1.3 acres just a short drive to either Cranbrook or Kimberley. Spacious living room, family room & kitchen. Shop has 220 wiring, barn & loads of storage. RV parking.
Wasa location just a few blocks from the beach. Rancher style home with substantial renovations in the mid 90’s. Open floor plan with vaulted ceilings, oak kitchen, wood stove in LR. Offering close proximity to 4 seasons of recreation.
Two bed, one bath home located close to downtown amenities, schools and playground. Fully fenced back yard with alley access. Covered verandah out front. Upgrades include: roofing, hot water tank, heating system and electrical service.
Great family home in good location in lower highlands. This home has upgrades that include: newer roof, furnace, flooring and paint. Home has been renovated to an open concept floor plan. This home has 4 beds and 2 baths. Separate entry into full, fully finished basement.
Exceptional Southview home with high ceilings and great design. Grade level entry with large foyer, family room & guest bedroom. Open design on the 2nd level with gourmet kitchen & maple hardwood throughout. Attached double garage.
$269,900
$386,900
Serene setting within Brookview. This renovated 2 + 1 bedroom home features numerous updates to the main floor. Custom new kitchen with white raised panel cabinets, newer laminate wood flooring & updated trims. Partially finished basement. Nestled onto a quiet street with a park-like setting in the back yard.
316 6th Ave. S.
3117 6th St. S.
1640 Staple Crescent
Family oriented neighborhood on quiet residential street! Great 3 bed, 1 bath home on raised lot with partial fencing. Recently updated. Tiled kitchen, modern paint scheme. New roof in 2011 and furnace in 2008 Double paved driveway in back. Alley access.
Family home in great residential neighborhood backing onto Highlands School greenbelt. Custom designed 4 bed, 2 bath home with vaulted ceilings, open design including a country kitchen and family room. Fully finished basement. Double attached garage.
Family home with beautiful mountain views. This 3+2 bed, 3.5 bath home has seen many upgrades including paint, new roof last year, new garage door. Formal living/dining room as well as casual family room. Stunning kitchen with centre island and breakfast nook. Fully finished basement. Close to elementary school.
$396,000
$489,900
516 17th St. S.
2348 Michel Road
2413 2nd St. N.
3900 Read Road
1896 Countryland Drive
Quality, luxury and elegance combined within this 2 storey home currently under construction. This 4 bed, 3 bath home has been designed to enhance the dramatic scenery of Fisher Peak and the Steeples. Solid wood cabinetry, granite counters, tiled floors, hardiboard siding, smart trim, & much more.
2 bed, 1 bath home on half an acre in the Jim Smith Lake area. This home is fully renovated with vaulted ceilings and spacious floor plan. The land offers a good level of privacy. This home has seen many upgrades.
4 bed, 3.5 bath home on 0.36 acres backing onto Cranbrook Golf Course. This 2 storey home has formal living room/dining room as well as casual family room. Bright kitchen with eating area with sliders leading to fenced & landscaped back yard. Dble attached garage.
Home & acreage offered at a great price located just minutes from city limits. Spacious 3 bed, 1 bath home on 2.86 acres. Home features ample entertaining space. Property is fenced with additional outbuildings including a barn.
$424,900
$369,900
2008 built 2+1 bed, 2 bath home on .75 of an acre in quiet cul-de-sac. Quality built home has an open concept design. Custom oak cabinetry in kitchen. Spacious living room. Large rec room/games room downstairs. 24x26 detached shop, and two large sheds.
1609 6th Ave. S.
212 12th Ave. S.
2310 34th Ave. S.
$469,900
Executive home on 0.25 of an acre in great residential neighborhood close to schools. This 3+2 bed, 2.5 bath home features hardwood and tiled floors. Formal living room with adjoining dining room as well as casual family room. Beautiful oak kitchen with nook. Huge deck overlooking large manicured yard. Double attached garage.
Character and heritage evident in this home estimated to be constructed in the mid 1920s. Baker Hill home is classic architecture with turret and Victorian charm. Main floor has newer birch hardwood and renovated baths. Four bdrm, two bath home located close to city amenities and walking distance to downtown.
Spacious 3+1 bed, 2.5 bath home on 0.98 acres in Gold Creek. This home has large living room with wood fireplace. Kitchen has bright cabinetry, centre island and adjoining dining room. Large partially covered deck out back. Bright rec room. Large laundry room. Double attached carport.
$259,900
2503B Kootenay Place N
2 storey semi-detached home with custom quality in mind. This 3 bed, 2.5 bath home is conveniently located in the north within walking distance to shopping and many amenities. Open concept with gourmet kitchen. Spacious master with 5pc. ensuite. Fenced & landscaped.
$289,900
1700 5th St. S.
Located across the street from St. Mary’s School is this bi-level home with numberous updates including windows, exterior cladding and roof. 2+2 bed design. Attached basement garage and large covered deck. Central location. Modern amenities.
$239,900
$379,900
208-1201 Kokanee Dr N
D L O S
Spacious 1 bed 1 bath second floor condo in Sunshine Meadows. Living room has natural gas fireplace and door leading to balcony. Oak kitchen with cut out looking into dining area. Laundry and storage in suite. Safe, secure and affordable.
$179,900
$500,000
$134,900
$199,900
$259,900
428 12th St. S.
5553 Hidden Valley Rd.
105 19th St. S.
3 bed, 2 bath home within short walking distance to both elementary and middle schools. This home has hardwood flooring on the main floor. Large windows for lots of light. Many upgrades. Single attached carport. RV Parking. Alley access
10 acres of land fenced and x-fenced with newer 1.5 storey home of good design. This property is already set up for equestrian use or hobby farming with a barn/hay shed area. House has open living room/kitchen area. Loft master bedroom. Double attached carport.
Brand new 4 bed, 3.5 bath executive home in Elizabeth Lake Ridge. This home has a spacious open floor plan with vaulted ceilings and wall of windows to take in the beautiful mountain views & Elizabeth Lake. Attached double garage.
D L O S $229,900
$449,900
$419,900
D L O S $429,900
D L O S
$249,900
$269,900
2351 9th St. S.
3+2 bed, 3 bath home on manicured acreage features 2.5 acres including pasture area for horses. Home has large country kitchen with adjoining dining room. Spacious floor plan. 1500 Sq.Ft. shop complete with kitchen, bath, living area & wet bar.
$424,900
$389,900
9267 Langevin St.
721 Franklin Road
3581 - 49th St. S.
7814 Monroe Lake Rd.
2206 13th Ave. S.
212 15th Ave. S.
2 bed, 2 bath home on 0.28 acres in Wardner. This home features a large living room with vaulted ceiling and wood stove. Formal dining. Beautiful kitchen with large pantry and breakfast bar. Cozy family room with loads of windows. Spacious master bed. Beautiful views.
3 bed, 2.5 bath home on 5.69 acres in Silver Springs area. Rock to ceiling wood fireplace in living room. Beautiful kitchen with centre island, pantry, tile backsplash. Cozy family room with sliders leading to large deck in back. Main floor laundry. Spacious master. Double attached carport.
Country living all around. This beautiful 3 + 2 bedroom, 3 bath home is situated on 5 acres just a few minutes from town. Stunning kitchen open to living room. Formal dining room, cozy family room as well as fully finished basement. 1040 sq. ft. outbuilding with heated pool. Double attached carport, paved drive. Beautiful mountain views.
66’ of lakefront right on Monroe Lake. This 2 storey home is just steps from the lake and features 3 beds and 3 full baths. Main floor is open with large kitchen, dining and living room. Vaulted ceilings allow for stunning lake views. Spacious master with exercise area. Double attached garage. Decking on both levels.
Immaculate 2+2 bed, 3 bath home in newer Southview subdivision. This home features an open concept floor plan with vaulted ceilings and large windows. Main floor has hardwood and tile floors. Custom maple cabinetry in kitchen. Gas fireplace in living room. Large covered deck out back. Attached garage.
3 bed, 2 bath home in baker hill that has been rejuvenated with many updates including: newer exterior cladding, windows, roof, plumbing and electrical. Hardwood flooring. Double lot. 20x24 detached garage has been retrofitted with office area. Fully fenced. Alley access. Close to downtown.
1825 20th Ave. S.
4363 Lister Road
7956 Foothills Drive
904 16th St. S.
1421 20th St. S.
1925 3rd St. S.
Executive 2 storey home on 4.75 acres just outside the borders of the City. This home features 2500 Sq.Ft. above grade of custom finishing by a quality builder. 4 bed on the upper floor. 19x20 attached garage and 28x36 detached garage.
Located just 5 minutes from Ta Ta Creek and Wasa lies this newer executive bungalow set up for equestrian use. This quality 4-5 bed home is well appointed with spacious floor plan. Gourmet kitchen with centre island. Lands are set up with numberous outbuildings with fencing and x-fencing; perfect equestrian ground with automatic stock waterers.
Brand new 2 bed, 2 bath home in rural Mayook Station Estates subdivision. This home has open concept floor plan with hardwood and tile flooring. Full unfinished basement just waiting for design idea. Large covered deck. Triple attached garage. Short drive to Cranbrook with endless recreation opportunities.
Executive bungalow with panoramic views. This 4 bed, 3 bath home is custom built featuring numberous amenities including a full (unauthorized) in-law suite. Custom kitchen upstairs with oak cabinets and adjacent dining nook. Spacious backyard. Double attached garage.
Southview home with full renovations and upgrades. This 2+1 bed, 3 bath home has a spacious floorplan with sunken living room. Large master on the main floor. Cozy rec room down with freestanding ng fireplace. Nestled on a street with similar executive homes. Fenced yard with new deck. Double attached garage.
Renovated bungalow with lots of upgrades with double detached garage. Centrally located near Laurie Middle School. Bright floor plan with upgrades to flooring, paint, roof, electrical and furnace. Natural gas fireplace in LR. Country kitchen.
$269,900
$599,900
$419,900
$549,000
$589,900
$535,000
$899,900
$389,900
$439,900
$339,900
$269,900
$259,900