TUESDAY
< Bears on the move
Kimberley grizzlies seen in Marysville | Page 3
SEPTEMBER 17, 2013
Gala to launch the season > Performing Arts Company seeks support | Page 4
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Vol. 61, Issue 181
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Former Cranbrook men among Hell’s Angels arrested in Spanish bust KIM BOLAN Vancouver Sun
Two former Cranbrook residents are among the four Canadian Hells Angels accused of attempting to distribute 500 kilograms of cocaine in Spain. Two full-patch members — Jason Cyrus Arkinstall (formerly of Cranbrook, now of Mission) and Chad John Wilson of Haney — were among the men arrested in a coffee bar by Spain’s National Police. The othermen facing charges in Spain are Scott Smitna (formerly of Cranbrook) and Michael Dryborough, associates of the Hells Angels in Mission and Haney. Spain’s Interior Ministry revealed details of the investigation Saturday and released a video of the arrests of the four, but did not identify them by name or hometown. The video shows police running into the café, wrestling the men from their chairs to the ground and handcuffing them. Police did not say when the arrest happened. The Spanish government said the four were involved in an attempt to smuggle cocaine from Colombia to SUBMITTED
A SUMMER OF GOOD DEEDS: Natasha Rose, 8, had a summer of doing good for others. She raised money during a family garage sale to donate to the Calgary Zoo, supplementing that by selling her crafts and putting out a donation box. Natasha ended up raising $60 for the zoo. Just before school started, Natasha cut off her long hair and has donated that to “Locks of Love,” where it will be made into wigs for children who have lost their hair due to medical circumstances.
Cranbrook councillor heads to UBCM championing two-tiered policing A RNE PE TRYSHEN Townsman Staff
A motion that could see a two-tiered policing system put in place in the province will go before the Union of British Columbia Municipalities at a meeting this week. Coun. Sharon Cross first put forward the motion in council and was headed to the meeting in Vancouver, which goes from Sept. 16 - 20.
Cross said she put forth the motion as policing costs all over B.C. are rising. “With the new 20-year agreement (with the RCMP), the cost to municipalities is going to continue to rise and we felt that we needed to do something different in terms of looking at policing models,” Cross said. She alluded to Alberta, which has the Peace Officer Act. “What they really have is a
two-tier policing system,” she said. “The RCMP deal with major crimes: drugs, guns and gangs. “That allows the peace officers to deal with other provincial and municipal acts such as traffic safety issues, community engagement around youth, community outreach programs and bylaws.”
See UBCM , Page 4
Jason Arkinstall
the Galician coast of Spain on a sailboat. One of the B.C. bikers was on the vessel, while the others were waiting in Spain. The Canadian bikers were arrested in Pontevedra, a port in the northwest of Spain.
See ARKINSTALL, Page 3
Officer charged over Cranbrook shooting has first court appearance TOW N S M A N S TA F F
Court proceedings have began for a Cranbrook police officer charged over a shooting last October. Cst. Richard Drought did not appear in person for his first court hearing in Cranbrook Provincial Court on Monday, September 16. Drought faces charges of unlawfully discharging a firearm over an October 2 on-duty shooting in Cranbrook. Drought is represented by Vernon lawyer Richard Hewson. A senior prosecutor from Victoria is in charge of the case for the Crown. The court case will next be in Cranbrook court on Monday, October 21.
Cst. Drought has been charged with intentionally discharging a firearm into a motor vehicle, knowing that another person was in the motor vehicle, and of intentionally discharging a firearm while being reckless as to the life or safety of another person. The man injured in the incident was Nickolas Bullock. According to RCMP statements at the time, a police officer was stationed at the southwest end of Cranbrook conducting a road block when he saw a suspect vehicle. The officer tried to pull over the vehicle; when it did not stop, the officer gave chase.
See OFFICER , Page 3
Page 2 tuesday, SEPTEMBER 17, 2013
Weatoheurtlook Tonight 10
POP 80%
Friday 7
Local NEWS
Tomorrow 13 7
Thursday 18 6
POP 60%
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Saturday 15 4
Sunday 7
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daily townsman / daily bulletin
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Almanac Temperatures
High Low Normal ..........................18.2°.................4.7° Record .......................31°/1981 ..........-3°/1978 Yesterday......................24.3° .................14° Precipitation Normal..............................................2.1mm Record...................................17.3mm/1975 Yesterday ...........................................1 mm This month to date.........................24.6 mm This year to date...........................1346 mm Precipitation totals include rain and snow
Tomorrows
Oct 4
Oct 11 Courtesy Jerelynn MacNeil
Across the Region Tomorro w Prince George 17/7 Jasper 14/2
Edmonton 13/5
Banff 10/2 Kamloops 20/11
Revelstoke 15/8
Kelowna 18/7 Vancouver 17/13
Canada
Castlegar 17/8
today
Yellowknife Whitehorse Vancouver Victoria Saskatoon Regina Brandon Winnipeg Thunder Bay S. Ste. Marie Toronto Windsor Ottawa Montreal Quebec City Fredericton
p.cloudy p.sunny showers p.sunny sunny sunny m.sunny sunny sunny sunny sunny m.sunny sunny sunny sunny sunny
The World
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cloudy p.cloudy sunny showers tstorms showers p.cloudy rain p.cloudy showers showers showers tstorms showers m.sunny sunny
Calgary 11/4
M AT T D U S K LIVE IN CONCERT SEPTEMBER 20
7 : 3 0 p m K E Y C I T Y T H E AT R E CRANBROOK, BC CANADA
cloudy p.cloudy showers p.cloudy p.cloudy rain showers p.cloudy p.sunny p.cloudy sunny p.cloudy sunny sunny sunny sunny
6/3 13/2 17/13 17/12 18/6 17/6 22/7 25/10 20/14 20/12 21/14 23/18 21/8 21/9 18/9 21/7
p.cloudy sunny cloudy rain tstorms sunny showers p.cloudy p.cloudy showers showers m.sunny tstorms m.sunny sunny sunny
27/16 16/5 23/17 15/11 30/23 31/28 20/11 19/8 22/16 29/24 17/12 25/15 30/26 24/16 27/19 24/15
The Weather Network 2013
Labour Centre • 7:00 pm 250-426-7664
Grace Ethel Rosina Hale 1915 - 2013 With heavy hearts we announce the passing of Grace Ethel Rosina Hale (Bassett) born June 23, 1915 in London England who passed away on September 14th, 2013 in East Kootenay Regional Hospital.
Grace married Richard Hale on December 22, 1948. They immigrated to Canada with two young children and her mother-in-law in 1955 arriving in Aneroid, Saskatchewan, and relocating to Cranbrook in 1958.
W/ ELEANOR MCCAIN T I C K E T S AVA I L A B L E AT: K E Y C I T Y T H E AT R E . C O M BOX OFFICE: 250-426-7006
Grace volunteered as the trusted treasurer for Cranbrook Hospital Auxiliary for over 25 years. Tuesday was her volunteer Thrift Shop day which she did well into her 80’s. Grace’ s creative and artistic side took many forms. To name only a few: weaving, painting, sewing, drawing and gardening. Most dear to her heart was music, Grace was a true musician and felt it in her soul. She was a talented singer and spread the gift of her music to many people by teaching and playing piano. She also enjoyed, hiking and snowshoeing. Nature provided great pleasure and many hours were spent by herself and Richard at Fort Steele. Grace had two children she adored, loved and cherished. David her son, and Judith her daughter were the light of her life. Later she received the gift of 4 grand daughters, and in her 97th year she met and fell in love with her great grand daughter.
tomorrow
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AGM
October 8, 2013
E • RE C YCL
Grace served as the Manager of the American Red Cross at Shipdam Airbase in England from 1940 - 1945. She met the returning aircrew after they had completed their bombing raids on Germany. Grace would greet the crew with fresh coffee, donuts and she provided evening entertainment to them by playing piano and singing.
Cranbrook 13/7
tomorrow
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Cranbrook Food Bank
LE • REC YC
Grade 2 student Aiden Gareau sharpens his skills in the St. Mary’s Catholic School computer lab as he learns to use the new touchscreen laptops. The Parent Support Group has provided this lab through its fundraising activities.
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Grace leaves to mourn, her sister Vera Shaefer, her two children David Hale (Sue) and Judith de Lange ( Luke), 4 granddaughters Sandi, Heather, Clare, Misty (Peter Leibel) one great grand daughter Sydney, and also Hunter, who was very dear to her. She was predeceased by her loving husband Richard Hale in 2005 and her mother-in-law Olive Agnes Hale ‘Granny’.
M Y F U N N Y VA L E N T I N E THE CHET BAKER SONGBOOK M AT T D U S K . C O M T W I T T E R @ M AT T D U S K FA C E B O O K M AT T D U S K PA G E
In our hearts you always stay, Loved and remembered every day. A Celebration Of Grace’s Life, with an afternoon tea, will be held on Wednesday, September 18, 2013 at McPherson Funeral Home in Cranbrook at 2:00 pm Arrangements entrusted to McPherson Funeral Service. Condolences for the family can be offered at: www.mcphersonfh.com
daily townsman
Local NEWS
tuesday, SEPTEMBER 17, 2013
Page 3
Grizzlies reported in Marysville Monday C A R O LYN G R A N T Daily Bulletin
Townsman file photo/Annalee Grant
Members of the Independent Investigations Office scour the scene of an incident in Cranbrook on Oct. 3, 2012. The IIO’s report has led to charges against a local RCMP officer.
Officer makes first appearance Continued from page 1 That chase ended in a rural Cranbrook driveway. The officer allegedly discharged his firearm. Bullock, 26, was allegedly injured but appeared in Cranbrook Provincial Court one week later. The 17-year-old female oc-
cupant of the vehicle was not injured. Civilian police watchdog the Independent Investigations Office was called in to investigate the police-involved shooting. On April 3, the Independent Investigations Office forwarded a report to the Criminal Justice Branch, which they do only
when they feel there may be grounds to lay charges. Meanwhile, Bullock has pleaded guilty to four charges in relation to the same incident, including dangerous operation of a motor vehicle and flight from a police officer. He will be sentenced in Port Coquitlam on Tuesday, October 8.
In the continuing saga of Kimberley’s wandering bruins, two grizzly bears were spotted in Marysville just before 6 a.m. Monday morning. Sharon Ekskog says her husband saw them walking down 310th Avenue in Marysville as he was heading to work. “He called to let me know,” she said. “They weren’t aggressive, they were just lumbering down the street making the dogs go nuts.” The bears have been spotted around Kimberley daily for the past week or so. They have been reported along Rotary Drive, along Mark Creek and near
Arkinstall a high-profile Hell’s Angel POLL
Kay MacIntyre photo
Conservation officers are hoping to be able to relocate two grizzlies, currently at large in Kimberley. McKim School. Conservation officers want to avoid putting the bears down if at all possible. They do have traps out but so far have been unsuccessful in luring the
of the
high-profile Hells Angel. He was most recently in court in Calgary, where he was acquitted in 2011 of uttering threats against police. The judge in the case said Arkinstall was “physically abused” by officers during his arrest and that an anonymously recorded video contradicted the testimony of the cops. In B.C., Arkinstall also successfully challenged a law that allowed city electrical inspectors to search houses for marijuana grow operations without warrants. Surrey city inspectors and police first attempted to enter his house back in 2005, but Arkinstall refused to let them in. They tried again 2006 and 2007 on the grounds that the high power consumption could mean pot was growing inside and the neighbourhood at risk.
Arkinstall agreed to allow inspectors in, but not Surrey RCMP. The inspectors would not go in unescorted. BC Hydro later cut off the family’s electricity, leading to a three-year court battle. Arkinstall, 40, has an extensive criminal record and has been convicted of offences ranging from assault causing bodily harm to trafficking in cocaine, for which he was sentenced to 18 months in jail on July 28, 2005. Wilson, the other full-patch Angel arrested in Spain, pleaded guilty in South Dakota in 2009 of being an alien in possession of a firearm. He was sentenced to four years in prison. Wilson was earlier acquitted, along with fellow HA member John Midmore, of attempted murder for an Aug. 8, 2006 gunfight with members of the rival Outlaws biker
gang. Wilson and Midmore claimed they acted in self-defence when they wounded five people linked to the Outlaws. At the time, Wilson was a member of the San Diego chapter, but he returned to B.C. and joined the Haney group.
WEEK
“Do you think marijuana should be legalized in Canada?”
YEs: 65% NO: 35%
This week’s poll: “Are you excited about the upcoming Kootenay Ice season?” Log on to www.dailytownsman.com to make your vote count. This web poll is informal. It reflects opinions of site visitors who voluntarily participate. Results may not represent the opinions of the public as a whole. Black Press is not responsible for the statistical accuracy of opinions expressed here.
TRANSIT future Cranbrook Transit
Proposed Route and Service Changes We want to hear from you! Drop in to our open houses: Wednesday, September 18
2:00 – 5:30pm
Cranbrook Transit Exchange
Thursday, September 19
9:30am – 12:30pm Tamarack Mall
12th Ave at Baker, in front of Safeway Close to the Food Court
Or visit www.bctransit.com click Transit Future and use the online survey to send us your comments by September 22.
3208
Continued from page 1
Officials alleged the drug conspiracy was linked to a member of the San Diego chapter of the Hells Angels, of which Wilson is a former member. Police had been aware of the conspiracy for several weeks and had been watching since July 30 as the operation unfolded. Officers searched two vans loaded with cocaine and then arrested the Canadians. Police also seized encrypted smartphones. Two other people were arrested at another location. Spain’s National Police worked with the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration, Europol and French officials on the investigation. The Vancouver Sun has learned the RCMP was contacted after the arrests to provide information on the four men. Arkinstall has been a
bears into one. They hope to be able to relocate the bears. As long as the bears don’t exhibit any aggressive behaviour, CO’s will continue to track them.
Page 4 tuesday, SEPTEMBER 17, 2013
daily townsman
Local NEWS
UBCM motion calls for 2-tier policing Continued from page 1 Cross said when Alberta implemented the Act, Okotoks hired four peace officers to start. The officers worked directly with the RCMP in
the same building. “Okotoks realized a tremendous cost savings, to the point where the peace officers were self-supported through
all the ticketing and things they engaged in,” she said. “It really offset the municipal costs of policing.” She said she hopes to see the motion suc-
ceed to open the door for the province to look at a new model. There is the draft B.C. Policing and Safety Plan, which suggests looking at more special
New performing arts company launching season with gala
File
“Classical Enchantment” on September 28 features virtuoso violinist Pablo Diemecke and others ception meet-the-stars session and a chance to mingle with the board. It’s going to be exciting. We are hoping the public will want to get dressed up and make it a night out.” James says that the past season of Kimberley Summer Theatre had a budget of upwards of $170,000. Going to a full season will require a quarter million dollar budget. “People may not realize that 65 per cent of that will come from ticket sales. Grant bodies have been incredibly generous but that’s only about 20 per cent of the budget. It takes community support — whether buying tick-
BUDGET 2014 CONSULTATION
ets or making a donation. There were some very generous people who surprised us this summer. “My plan is to build a strong donor base.” James also plans to use the gala as a launch pad for the rest of the season. There are plans to bring in Jeff Hyslop, who sang the Phantom in London. He also plans to bring in Jackson Davies from the Beachcombers for a run of Norm Foster’s gold comedy ‘The Foursome’ next spring. “I think it’s very exciting that people from outside want to come here and be a part of this. We’re excited to be presenting all year.”
SELECT STANDING COMMITTEE ON FINANCE AND GOVERNMENT SERVICES Chair: Dan Ashton, MLA (Penticton) Deputy Chair: Mike Farnworth, MLA (Port Coquitlam)
What are your priorities for the next provincial budget?
NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING The all-party Select Standing Committee on Finance and Government Services is inviting submissions on the Budget 2014 Consultation Paper, prepared by the Minister of Finance. The Committee is holding a public hearing in Cranbrook on September 30, 2013 from 1:00 pm to 5:00 pm at the Fernie Salon, Prestige Rocky Mountain Resort, 209 Van Horne Street South. To register, please contact the Parliamentary Committees Office. British Columbians can participate by attending a public hearing, answering an on-line survey, making a written submission, or sending the Committee a video or audio file. The consultation process concludes Wednesday, October 16, 2013. For more information, please visit our website at: www.leg.bc.ca/cmt/finance or contact: Parliamentary Committees Office, Room 224, Parliament Buildings, Victoria, BC V8V 1X4; tel: 250.356.2933, or toll-free in BC: 1.877.428.8337; fax: 250.356.8172; e-mail: FinanceCommittee@leg.bc.ca Susan Sourial, Committee Clerk
ties don’t have that.” The motion has been approved by Cranbrook City Council and the AKBLG. At the moment, municipalities pay the RCMP, but Cross said the ticketing is shared with the province. “We already hire them, so why doesn’t the municipality just take that over with the
second tier?” she said. “In Cranbrook we don’t have a full contingent and that’s kind of been the case for a while. So we kind of pay the overhead costs but are not getting the full benefits.” She said this would free up the RCMP to pursue major crimes. “It’s a major issue all over B.C.” she said.
At the Cranbrook Library
C AROLYN GR ANT editor@dailybulletin.ca
Evolving Kimberley Summer Theatre from a summer season into a year-round venture — the Kootenay Performing Arts Company — requires a tremendous amount of commitment from the board and company director Tony James. It also requires a leap of faith — faith that local audiences will support the venture. That support can be shown immediately by simply purchasing a ticket for the upcoming gala at the Kimberley Conference Centre on September 28 — Classical Enchantment. The gala will feature violin virtuoso Pablo Diemecke, along with ballet dancer Sarah Murphy-Dyson and others. There will be a private, invitation only event at Chateau Kimberley on Friday evening, master classes with the performers on Saturday afternoon and the gala on Saturday evening. Tickets are available at the Platzl box office and by calling 250-427-4080. “This gala is first and foremost a fundraiser,” James said. “There will be a silent auction, and a full two-hour performance with some really moving pieces including a Pablo solo with Sarah dancing. There will be a post-re-
provincial constables, auxiliary bylaw officers and private security. “However, the special provincial constables would be provincial employees and not municipal employees,” she said. “What we want is to have more responsibility and accountability for our policing. Under our current arrangement municipali-
Jeff Guinn takes a surprisingly fresh and in-depth look at Charles Manson’s formative years in his new biography titled ‘Manson.’ ‘Stormbringers’ is the second book in Philippa Gregory’s Order of Darkness series written specifically for YA readers. Preschool Story Time this Wednesday at 11 a.m., 1:15 p.m., & 6:30 p.m., will be all about Friends! Due to enthusiastic response, Toddler Story Time now has two sessions on Friday: one at 10 a.m., and one at 11 a.m. Please note the 11 a.m. session is simply a repeat of the 10 a.m. session. The Friends of the Cranbrook Public Library and the Sunrise Rotary Club volunteers are working industriously to get everything ready for the Annual Fall Book Sale. This event will be held at the Ktunaxa Nation Gym from Wednesday, Oct. 2, to Sunday, Oct. 6. There is still time to bring in your donations for this sale. Items must be in good condition. Please bring books, DVDs, CDs, videos and books on tape to the front circulation desk in the Library. At this time we can’t accept encyclopedia sets of National Geographic magazines. However, we especially appreciate pocket books. The Cranbrook Public Library will be hosting a weekend scrapbooking crop and crafting on September 27, 28 and 29, 2013 — Friday evening starting at 4:30 p.m. and ending at 5 p.m on Sunday. This is a crafting weekend so beading, quilting, knitting, painting and other crafts that can be done in a half table are also welcome. Patrons are being asked to preregister by emailing Deanne at dperreault@ cranbrookpubliclibrary.ca or signing up at the front desk and to pay when they register – $50. The fee will include a snack Friday evening, lunch and dinner on Saturday and lunch on Sunday. There will also be prizes. Please contact Deanne at 250-4264063 for more details. Book Bites resumes again this week on Wednesday, September 18, at 3:45 p.m. This group is for kids aged 9 to 12. Mermaids are this month’s theme, so there will be a discussion about mermaid books, a mermaid craft, and mermaid snacks. A sign-up sheet is available at the Library’s front desk. On display this month is the unique and stunning charcoal and colour art pieces by P.J. Gilhuly.
Adult Newly Acquired Shelf: Criminal Procedure – Stephan Couglan Youth Criminal Justice Law – Nicholas Bala Annotated Canada Pension Plan & Old Age Security Act Aboriginal Self-Government in Canada The Laws of Government – Craig Forceses Puerto Vallarta – Justin Henderson Eyewitness Travel: Cuba – Irina Bajini Mike Selby No Bake Makery – Christina Krumsick The Autistic Brain – Temple Grandin Help Your Kids with English – Stewart Savard Poems to Perform – Julia Donaldson Manson: The Life & Times of Charles Manson – Jeff Guinn (bio) The Curiosity – Stephen Kiernan (fic) MaddAddam – Margaret Atwood (fic) Letters from Skye – Jessica Brockmole (fic) The Girl You Left Behind – Jojo Moyes (fic) Hidden – Catherine McKenzie (fic) Blindsided – Fern Michaels (fic) The Orenda – Joseph Boyden (fic) True Love – Jude Deveraux (fic) Never Go Back – Jack Reacher (mys) Anonymous Sources – Mary Louise Kelly (mys) How the Light Gets In – Louise Penny (mys) Children of the Revolution – Peter Robinson (mys) The Eye of God – James Rollins (mys) The Never List – Koethi Zan (mys) Bones of the Lost – Kathy Reichs(mys) The Given Sacrifice – S.M. Stirling (sci fic) George Gently: Series 2 (DVD) In Search of A Golden Sky (DVD) Jericho (DVD) Coal Miner’s Daughter (DVD) Wildest Arctic (DVD) Wildest Antarctica (DVD) Young Adult & Children’s: The Hungry Student Cookbook Tallstar’s Revenge –Erin Hunter Stormbringers – Philippa Gregory Butterfly – Sonya Hartnet Electricity – Steve Parker Earth – Susanna Van Rose Invention – Lionel Bender Shell – Arthur Alex Mike Selby is Reference Librarian at the Cranbrook Public Library
daily townsman / daily bulletin
Opinion/Events
My wife and I were returning from a short holiday in the U.S. and had just passed through Cranbrook returning to Lacombe, Alberta. We were driving an older model motorhome, which broke down at Fort Steele and would not restart. We contacted RiteWay RV mobile services and Rob was there very shortly, even though he had another commitment in about an hour or so. It was very hot but he crawled inside and out of the motorhome trying to locate the problem. He finally did and managed to jury rig a temporary electrical connection to get us back to Cranbrook. He then proceeded to lead us back to town (he had to cancel his prior commitment) to Farbrook Auto Wrecking where a new ignition switch was found very quickly. As if he hadn’t done enough already, he came to the campground where we had stayed overnight and again jumped started the engine and led us once again back to Farbrook’s. And, thanks to the great service there, we were on the road home again in an hour. Just wanted to give a great big thank you to Rob and also the boys at Farbrook Auto Wrecking for going above and be-
yond for us complete strangers! So good to know there are such good people in the City of Cranbrook! We definitely plan on returning! Anne and Murray Nixon Lacombe, Alberta
Area C business
In July I had a visit from the BC tax assessor to look at my property. He told me that, in his opinion, my business was going to be re-allocated as commercial or industrial. I asked what that would do to my taxes, and he said “a substantial increase.” He also indicated that he had already visited a number of small business operations in Area C, and they may also be changed. I immediately sent Bill Bennett a letter, and a copy to Rob Gay, Area C Director. Bennett’s office researched my questions and gave me some advice. Rob Gay has yet to respond. On Friday, Sept. 13, there was an article on Page 1 of the Townsman that cleared this up for me. The Mayor of Cranbrook says “keep industrial business
inside the city.” There will now be only two categories of home-based business allowed in Area C — such as child care and bed & breakfast — but major homebased businesses such as portable sawmill, trade contracting and metal working would not be allowed. Each of these would be approved on a site to site basis. Cranbrook City Council decided it would not recommend approval of the Regional District’s bylaws that would permit major home-based businesses in Area C. Mayor Wayne Stetski, Councillors Sharon Cross, Gerry Warner and Bob Whetham voted in favour, while Councillor Angus Davis was opposed. The City needs to know that the population of Area C spends a lot of money in this city. There is a population of 5,713 (as of 2011) living in Area C that will be directly affected by this. It’s probably the worst thing that could happen to the area. You need to read the article in the Townsman and perhaps plan on attending RDEK meetings, where you can voice your opinions. This will affect Area C first, maybe the other areas after. Bill Luke Area C, Cranbrook
Rape is an African problem L ast May, with considerable trepidation, I wrote an article about what seemed to be extraordinarily high rates of rape in Africa. The original data came from a study by South Africa’s Medical Research Council in 2009 which found that more than a quarter of South African men — 27.6 percent — admitted that they had committed rape. Almost half of those men had raped two or three women or girls. One in thirteen had raped at least ten victims. Over the next couple of years, I ran across a couple of other less detailed studies suggesting that the problem was not just South African. A report from the eastern Congo in 2012 said that over a third of the men interviewed — 34 per cent — had committed rape, and an older report from Tanzania found that 20 per cent of the women interviewed said they had been raped (although only onetenth as many rapes were reported to the police). So I wrote a piece called “An African Iceberg” in which I said that this was a phenomenon that needed urgent investigation continent-wide — but it did occur to me to wonder if there were similar icebergs in other developing countries. The only figures that were available for developing countries elsewhere were official ones, and those normally only record the number of women who tell the police they have been raped. Most don’t. Women are reluctant to report rape in any society, and in traditional societies much more so. The South African study was the only one that had adopted the strategy of asking men directly. Maybe if the same sort of study were done in other continents, I thought, it would return equally horrifying figures. And lo! Somebody else had the same thought, and the resources to do something about it.
The new report, conducted under the auspices of four United Nations agencies cooperating as “Partners for Prevention”, was published last week in the online version of “The Lancet Global Health”, a respected British medical journal. The study was undertaken quite specifically to learn if the South African figures were duplicated in developing countries outside Africa. The researchers chose six countries in the region: China, Gwynne Asia-Pacific Cambodia, Bangladesh, Sri Lanka, Indonesia and Dyer Papua New Guinea. As in the South African study, the word “rape” was not used in the questionnaire. The 10,178 men interviewed were asked if they had ever “forced a woman who was not your wife or girlfriend at the time to have sex” or “had sex with a woman who was too drunk or drugged to indicate whether she wanted it.” There were further questions about forcing a wife or girlfriend to have sex (which is also rape), about gang rape, and about raping males, but for simplicity’s sake let us stick with the questions about what the researchers called “single perpetrator rape” of a woman who was neither wife nor girlfriend. The answers varied from country to country, but the overall picture was clear. Africa (or at least South Africa) is all alone out there. In most of the Asian countries involved in the study, between 2 and 4 per cent of the men interviewed said that they had raped a “non-partner” woman. That falls into the same range that prevails, one suspects, in most developed countries (although their reported cases of rape are much lower). There were some local peculiarities, like the fact that in rural Bangladesh men are more likely to get raped than women.
Page 5
What’s Up?
Letters to the Editor
Cranbrook service
tuesday, SEPTEMBER 17, 2013
China came in surprisingly high, with 6 per cent of the men interviewed admitting to rape, but that may be related to the growing surplus of males in a society where the gender ratio has become very skewed: there are 99 large Chinese cities where more than 125 boys are born for every 100 girls. But Papua New Guinea was right up there with South Africa: 26.6 per cent of the men interviewed had committed “single perpetrator rape” of a non-partner woman. And the other numbers were just as startling: 14 per cent of PNG men had participated in a gang rape, and 7.7 per cent had raped a man or boy. So Asia as a whole is quite different from Africa on this count — but PNG is practically identical. What is so special about Papua New Guinea? It is a country with an extravagantly large number of different tribes and languages. It is an extremely violent country, where most people live in extreme poverty. It is a place where the law is enforced only sporadically, and often corruptly. And it is a place where traditional tribal values, patriarchal to the core, reign virtually unchallenged among a large part of the population. Remind you of anywhere? Well, you already suspected that this was at the root of it, didn’t you? You just didn’t want to say so, for fear of being accused of being racist, anti-African or something of that sort. But it does need to be said, loudly and repeatedly. Women and girls are more likely to be the victims of sexual violence in Africa than almost anywhere else, and the only way to change that is to change the behaviour of African men. By persuasion if possible, but also by enforcing the law. Gwynne Dyer is an independent journalist whose articles are published in 45 countries.
KIMBERLEY AND CRANBROOK COMMUNITY CALENDAR
UPCOMING The East Kootenay Railway Pensioners Association will be having a Social Luncheon at 12:30 pm on Tuesday Sept.17th, at the Arthur’s Sports Bar &Grill ( Day’s Inn ), 600 Cranbrook St.N, Cranbrook BC. All Railway Retiree’s and Spouses are welcome. RSVP by Sept.13th. Info: Secretary Frances Allen at 250-426-2720, Bill Belding at 250- 426-5006 Sept 17th-21st Tues–Fri, 11-5pm, Sat 10-2pm. Pinwheels for Peace to celebrate International Peace Day 2013, visitors to the gallery can make a pinwheel to plant in the CDAC peace pot. Fun, free, family activity! CDAC Office and Gallery 135 10th Ave S, 250-4264223/cdac@shaw.ca/www.cranbrookanddistrictartscouncil.com Symphony of the Kootenays, Annual General Meeting. Wednesday, September 18 at 7:00pm. Christ Church Anglican, Cranbrook. 46 13th Ave S., Cranbrook. Music by Jeff Faragher from 6:30 to 7:00, light refreshments following. Information: 250-489-4932 2013 FREE FAMILY SWIM Wednesday, September 18th, 6:00-7:00 PM is sponsored by Kimberley Medical Clinic. Children 18 years & under must be accompanied by an adult. WHAT IS CFUW? Discover how CFUW champions women’s issues on local, provincial and national stages. 7pm, Thursday, Sept. 19. Manual Training Centre. PUBLIC INVITED. Light refreshments. Girl Guides of Canada Trefoil Guild is hosting a “Camp warming” open house on Sunday September 22nd at 8055-Wycliffe Rd from 1:00pm to 3:00pm. Monetary donations or Canadian Tire Money gratefully accepted. For more info email: guiderpamela@ gmail.com Cranbrook Community Theatre is proud to present a CCTalk with Candice Fiorentino on Sunday, September 22nd at 5:00 pm at the Stage Door Theatre on11th Ave. This is a free event. Come out and hear Candice talk about her experiences as a working actor. More info at www.cranbrookcommunitytheatre.ca Funtastic Singers Drop-In - Tuesdays starting September 24th, 6.458.15pm. CDAC Gallery, 135 10th Avenue South, Cranbrook. Casual and friendly singing drop-in for vocal enthusiasts, no experience necessary. Helen 250-426-4223 / cdac@shaw.ca SOCIAL ~ DANCE at the Seniors HALL, 2 St. S. on THIRD Saturdays, starts up September 21, to the music of ‘Chapparal’ at 7 pm. Refreshments served. JAM SESSION, on LAST Saturdays kicks off on September 28 from 1:30 to 4. All are welcome to drop-in for great live music, song, & ‘ice-cream’ ! For updates call 250.489.2720. Thursday, September 26: It’s Contest Night at Cranbrook First Toastmasters! Come on out and enjoy a laugh filled night as Toastmasters compete in Humorous and Table Topics Contests. 7 PM in Room 210 at the College of the Rockies. For more info, e mail pamelaryan@telus.net or phone 250-489-4464 (days). ONGOING Country music and two stepping every Thursday night from 8pm to 11pm. Everyone welcome. At the Eagles Nest (upstairs), Fraternal Order Of Eagles Hall, 715 Kootenay St N, Cranbrook. (250) 426-5614 Dance/Practice: every Saturday. Practice from 7 to 8 PM, dancing until 11 PM. Dance With Me Cranbrook Studio, 206-14 A 13th Street, South, behind Safeway. “Volunteers are needed to assist staff with childminding while parents attend programs at the Kimberley Early Learning Center. Come play!! Weekly or monthly for 2 hours. Diana 250 427-0716” Royal Canadian Legion Branch 24; Friday Meat Draw: 4:30- 6:30, Saturday Meat Draw: 3:30-5:30. Bibles For Missions Thrift Store is changing seasons. Fall clothing, hoodies, costumes, snow suits & boots. Shop early for Christmas. Surprise sales. Open Tues-Sat, 10am-5pm, 824 Kootenay St. N., Cranbrook. Mark Creek Lions “Meet and Greet” the 1st and 3rd Wednesday, from 6:00-6:30 pm. Dinner to follow at Western Lodge. FMI: 250-427-5612 or 427-7496. 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: Donna at 250-426-7136. School Days Art Exhibition, CDAC Office and Gallery 135 10th Avenue South. Tues – Fri 11-5pm Saturday 10-2pm 250-426-4223 / cdac@shaw.ca / www.cranbrookanddistrictartscouncil.com East Kootenay Women Executives & Entrepreneurs (EKWEE) meet the first Monday of every month at the Heritage Inn, Dining Room Annex, 7:00PM. Join us for off the menu dinner 5:30 -7:00. Pay your own tab. Networking, share accomplishments, education. Bev Campbell 778-481-4883 Canadian Cancer Society- if you have spare time and would like to volunteer, interested applicants can call 250-4268916, drop by our office at #19-9th Avenue S, Cranbrook or go to www.fightwithus.ca and register as a volunteer. Funtastic Singers Drop-In Singing group; free to attend-just for fun! No experience necessary! CDAC Office&Gallery 135 10th Ave S, Tuesdays starting September 24th 6.45-8.15pm 250-426-4223 / cdac@shaw.ca / www.cranbrookanddistrictartscouncil.com 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.
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TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 17, 2013
OPINION
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Bills come due at BC Hydro
W
hen Christy Clark became premier in 2011, one of her first priorities was to delay steep increases in BC Hydro rates. BC Hydro was heading to the B.C. Utilities Commission to apply for rate increases totalling 32 per cent over three years. This, obviously, was a problem for an unelected premier whose single message was that she was good for families, and who faced an election in two years. The government’s Mr. Fix-It, Rich Coleman, first tried to delay a couple of expensive seismic upgrades, adding to the long history of political fiddles that pushed off expensive problems. BC Hydro’s engineers soon convinced him that if the creaky old Ruskin and Campbell River dams were to bust in a quake, it wouldn’t be good for families downstream. Coleman scraped up some internal savings in the vast utility and met Clark’s pre-determined target of keeping rate increases below four per cent in the pre-election period. Mission accomplished, as George W. Bush might have said. Then last week, an August working paper on the need for BC Hydro rate hikes was leaked. It showed BC Hydro making a case for new increases totaling 26 per cent
over two years. The leak came via the Canadian Office and Professional Employees local 378, the BC Hydro inside staff union that has a history of mostly juvenile attacks on the B.C. Liberal government. Bill Bennett, the current energy minister, spent the next couple of days repeating to anyone who would listen that this initial proposal had already been rejected, and that work was well along to make the rate increase more palatable. BC VIEWS Perhaps it’s back to where it was in 2011. Tom COPE 378 and the NDP Fletcher played their rehearsed roles. Both tried to blame the situation on private power contracts. The union and its political front are less concerned about rising power bills than they are about holding onto the state monopoly on electricity generation. Energy industry lawyer David Austin calculates that of the proposed 26.4-percent increase, about 3.5 per cent can be attributed to BC Hydro buying power from private sources, at prices competitive with new public power sources such as the Site C dam. Most of it comes from the overdue repairs to those old dams, other costly projects including the addition of turbines to two Columbia River dams, and deferred debt from previous political meddling. In August I reported that as many as 20
LETTERS TO THE EDITOR
of BC Hydro’s existing private power purchase contracts will be cancelled or deferred. This was also seized upon to portray private power as the root of all evil, both financially and environmentally. In fact the attrition rate on these projects has always been about one out of three. This is what happens when the risks of expanding the provincial electrical grid are shared with private investors. These run-of-river and wind projects were promoted to maximize clean energy sources, as well as to spread the grid to remote areas. This was Gordon Campbell’s climate change strategy. Then came the gas boom. Clark seized upon liquefied natural gas exports as the key to future prosperity, and the government soon declared burning gas “clean” as long as it facilitates LNG production. Bennett now acknowledges that gasfired power plants are an option for the future. They are cheaper than hydro, small or large. Bennett’s two tasks are to supply industry with cheap power and get consumer rates under control. It looks as if the gas is being turned up, and Site C is moving to the back burner. Tom Fletcher is legislative reporter and columnist for Black Press. Twitter: @tomfletcherbc E-mail: tfletcher@blackpress.ca
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SPORTS BRIEFS Stampeders first team to snare a CFL playoff berth CALGARY - Head coach John Hufnagel hasn’t always been satisfied with the performance of his Calgary Stampeders in games this season, but he can’t argue with the results. Calgary tops both the league and the West Division at 9-2 and is the first team this season to secure a playoff berth. The Stampeders have worked for their wins with a constantly rotating cast of characters. All CFL teams deal with injuries in a season, but the theme of Calgary’s season so far is resiliency. The employment of three different starting quarterbacks has been well documented, but the Stampeders have also been forced to cover gaps on the offensive line, at receiver and in the defensive backfield when starters went down. It begs the question how much better Calgary would be if they weren’t routinely plugging holes in their lineup. Canadian Press
Tim Thomas agrees to tryout deal with Florida Panthers SUNRISE, Fla. - Tim Thomas wanted back in the NHL. The Florida Panthers wanted goaltending help. It might be a perfect match. The two-time Vezina Trophy winner agreed to a tryout deal with the Panthers on Monday, nearly a year and a half removed from his last game in the NHL. Thomas will be on the ice with Florida for practice Tuesday, and Panthers general manager Dale Tallon said his talks with the star of Boston’s run to the 2011 Stanley Cup convinced him that the move was right. “He really wants to play and he really wants to lead and he really wants to be the starter and he wants to win and he wants to win now,” Tallon said Monday while the Panthers faced Nashville in a preseason doubleheader. “I was very impressed with him. His attitude is terrific. I liked everything that he had to say and I liked his approach. We try to strive to get better every day and I think a good Tim Thomas makes us a better team.” Associated Press
HOME OPENER FRIDAY SEPT 20 MAGNETIC SCHEDULE NIGHT
SPORTS
Kootenay will carry a few extra players into the regular season for a longer look TRE VOR CR AWLEY Sports Editor
It’s crunch time in the WHL as prospects look to solidify their fulltime spots as the regular season looms. It’s no different for the Kootenay Ice, which has whittled down their roster and now carries 24 players—two goaltenders, eight defencemen and 14 forwards. Of that total, 18 are returning veterans from last year. Forwards Hudson Elynuik, Zach Zborosky and Matthew Alfaro, along with blueliners Troy Murray, Dylan Overdyk and Jordan Steenbergen are the remaining holdovers from camp hoping to stick around for their rookie WHL seasons. Throw in Russian D-man Rinat Valiev,
who hasn’t arrived yet due to visa issues complicated via a strike from the Canadian foreign service workers strike, and competition for fulltime spots gets a lot tighter. Alfaro, 17, is in his third Ice camp and is pushing for a role up front. He’s made an impact on the scoresheet, scoring twice in four preseason games. “This was my third WHL camp, so I was a little more experienced before coming in previous years,” said Alfaro, “and unlike last year, I had expectations on myself, put a little more pressure on myself to make this team, because I know I can.” Alfaro comes to Kootenay from AAA Midget in Calgary, where he played with the North-
MONTE STE WART Canadian Press
SURREY, B.C. - The B.C. Lions are preparing for the possibility that quarterback Travis Lulay won’t play in a key game against Saskatchewan because of a shoulder injury, but a decision on who would take the snaps in Lulay’s place is still up in the air. B.C. coach Mike Benevides said Monday the club will prepare offensive packages for backup signal-caller Thomas DeMarco and nominal No. 3 Buck Pierce. “I’m going to get
both of those guys, both Buck and Thomas, prepared right away,” said Benevides at the club’s practice facility. DeMarco, a second-year pro, has more knowledge of B.C.’s offensive system. But Pierce, a nine-year veteran in his second stint with the Lions after being acquired in a trade from Winnipeg last week, has more CFL experience. Benevides said he was not ready to make a declaration on who would start if Lulay can’t play. Lulay was injured on the weekend while running for a 14-
Thursday September 26th • 7:00 pm Kimberley Athlete Conference & Training Centre
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stars, tallying 31 points in 33 games. Though he’s chipped in offensively in the preseason, he still had to adjust to a few things. “Speed,” Alfaro said. “When I got the puck back in Midget AAA, I could take the time to make the play, now I’m in the dub, I need to know before I get the puck. “Less time and space. More physical, too.” Alfaro scored in Kootenay’s 8-6 loss to the Everett Silvertips in the
Tri-City tournament, and also lit the goal lamp in Coleman against the the Hitmen last Sunday. The defensive corps is a little younger this year, which will be led by overager Jagger Dirk. Returnees include Tanner Faith, Matthew Thomas, Landon Peel and Clint Filbrandt, who is coming into his sophomore year after being acquired in an off-season trade from the Americans. Jordan Steenbergen, at 17, is the elder of the remaining defensive prospects, as Dylan Overdyk and Troy Murray are both 16. Overdyk was Kootenay’s second-round pick in the 2012 WHL Bantam Draft, behind Troy Murray, who went 10th overall in the opening round.
The blueliner played AAA Bantam hockey with the St. Albert Sabres in the AMBHL last year, scoring five goals and posting seven assists in 32 games. This was his second time at training camp and his first real crack at making the team for his rookie season “It’s really intense competition, definitely some of the highest I’ve seen before, so it was nice to be a part of it,” said Overdyk, on his training camp experience. “…You’re mostly competing against guys who’ve played in this league before, so you definitely got to elevate your game. You got to change the way you play your game too, to an extent, but mostly, it’s remained the same.”
With Lulay injured, Lions prepare backup QBs
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A motion will be presented to allow additional changes to the Bylaws to finalize a previous motion to elect a minimum of 7 and a maximum of 10 directors. These subsequent changes will be made to the following sections as indicated: Section 14(G) “Election of directors (3 - 5 new)”, Section 29 “No less than three (3)” and Section 38 “four (4) directors”.
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yard touchdown in a 36-14 victory over the Montreal Alouettes. Lulay was not at the practice facility while reporters were present. Benevides said the QB was getting an MRI exam and could be examined again Tuesday. The coach hopes to be clear on Lulay’s status by Wednesday, when the Lions return to practice.
“On Wednesday, I’ll have a clearer idea of what I want to do,” said Benevides. “We’re going to get both (DeMarco and Pierce) prepared, because it’s going to take both of them to win a football game.” The Lions (7-4) have a chance to gain a share of second place in the West Division when they visit the Roughriders (8-3) next Sunday in
Regina. Lulay told a Vancouver radio station Monday that his shoulder “stiffened up” overnight following the win over Montreal. He also told The Canadian Press on Sunday that he was feeling stiffness, but Benevides said a team doctor was encouraged by the range of motion that the QB’s shoulder displayed following the game.
Zach Johnson gets 1st win of the year at BMW Championship DOUG FERGUSON Associated Press
LAKE FOREST, Ill. Zach Johnson is having a September to remember, and there’s still one very big week to go. In one tournament, he made a 25-foot birdie putt on his final hole to earn the last spot on the Presidents Cup team. In the next one, Johnson made a bunch of big putts in the final round of the rain-delayed BMW Championship for a 6-under 65 for a two-shot victory
over Nick Watney. Next up? His win Monday at Conway Farms gave Johnson the No. 4 seed going into Tour Championship, giving him a clear shot at the FedEx Cup and its $10 million prize. “It’s hard to grasp the last two weeks of golf,” Johnson said. “It’s not like you have to win every week to win that FedEx Cup. You’ve just got to win at the right times, or play well at the right times. And I like the momentum I
have for next week.” Johnson’s 10th career win came at the expense of Jim Furyk, who endured another dose of final-round disappointment. Furyk, who had a one-shot lead, has failed to win the last six times he had at least a share of the lead going into the last round. He holed a 12-foot birdie putt at No. 10 to build a twoshot lead, but played the last eight holes in 2-over and wound up with a 71 to finish alone in third.
daily townsman / daily bulletin
Page 8 tuesday, SEPTEMBER 17, 2013
COMICS Horoscopes
CANCER (June 21-July 22) You often defer to others and then get angry because you feel as if they walk all over you. ARIES (March 21-April 19) You could be unusually verbal, Who do you have to blame but but you also will choose to hold yourself? Establish boundaries. back more of your feelings. You Take some of the edge off your might express some of your energy, for everyone’s sake. Tostronger emotions to a close night: Let your mind wander to confidant; otherwise, mum’s your favorite type of music. the word. Start working on a LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) project that has been on your You’ll feel the downward spiral mind. Tonight: Take time for of working very hard and not getting your way with a key yourself. matter. This realization will TAURUS (April 20-May 20) You finally will focus on what happen at the last minute and you want. A meeting could be force you to regroup. A family provocative -- mainly because member’s unpleasant mood of the mix of people involved. won’t help. Tonight: Take your You could be overserious and cues from someone else. withdrawn, as you have a lot VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) to think about. Worry less; the Your popularity soars, and with odds are in your favor! Tonight: this status comes opportunity. Some of you might act like a kid Catch up on a pal’s news. in a candy store. Take advantage GEMINI (May 21-June 20) You like to demonstrate your of the moment. It’s not often ability to make waves. Right that you have prospects like now, all eyes are on you. You’ll this. To others, you might seem take the lead in a project, and a bit withdrawn. Tonight: In the others will observe. How much flurry of the moment. of your dramatic personality do LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) you want involved? Only you You’ll be determined to handle can decide what is appropriate. a personal matter directly and efficiently. Put what is happenTonight: Till the wee hours. by Jacqueline Bigar
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For Better or Worse
ing between you and someone else on hold. You have other priorities that you need to attend to. Do not worry so much about your finances. Tonight: A project awaits you at home. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21) Many people might view you as being distant or stern right now, but you simply are trying not to fall off course. You can’t always be serious, so try not to crush your inner child’s spirit. Schedule some free time. Tonight: Indulge in some lighthearted fun. You need a change of pace. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21) You might want to retreat, which will surprise even you. Whether you’re not feeling well or you’re quietly reviewing a changing situation, you will benefit from some time away from all the action. Consider working from home and/or staying close to home. Tonight: Treat yourself. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) Study different alternatives, and feel free to ask questions that relate to the situation at hand. Your decision will be solid, and you will have gone through the necessary process. An associate
or friend could have difficulty opening up. Give this person space. Tonight: Out late. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18) Your ability to see the light at the end of the tunnel might be necessary when dealing with a money matter. Others will feel invigorated by your vision. You might be overtired and worried about a personal matter. Tonight: Treat a friend or loved one to dinner at a favorite restaurant. PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20) You express so much enthusiasm through your body language that others will see you in a positive light. Once a conversation begins, others might respond much more positively than you thought possible. News from afar could surprise you. Tonight: Whatever knocks your socks off. BORN TODAY Singer/songwriter Hank Williams (1923), 15th Chief Supreme Court Justice Warren E. Burger (1907), former Supreme Court associate justice David Souter (1939) ***
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Rhymes with Orange
By Hillary B. Price
Annie’s Mailbox by Kathy Mitchell and Marcy Sugar Dear Annie: Last year, my husband and I attended my cousin’s annual summer barbeque. After we arrived, I looked for a place to tie up our dog in the backyard and noticed a few dead rats. They appeared to have been there for some time. I made mention of this to my cousin’s husband, but he made no attempt to remove them even though they were only a few steps away from the barbeque pit. I tied my dog several feet away from the dead rats. Later, when we returned home, our dog started scratching. This continued for several days until we noticed his fur was falling out. I believe he contracted mange from the dead rats. We’ve been invited to their “last nice weather barbecue,” but I am reluctant to go. My husband says we should go regardless, but I feel that if they don’t care to get rid of the dead rats in their backyard, they shouldn’t expect to entertain guests there. And also, the guest bathroom is never clean when we visit. What do you think? -- Disgusted in the Midwest Dear Disgusted: We think your cousin and her husband are not particularly meticulous about their cleaning and don’t care if you notice. And while your dog may have contracted mange from something in their yard, there’s no way to be certain now. You can contact the health department in your city and report the conditions (most municipalities like to know if there is an increased rat population). But that may not solve your problem, which is whether or not to attend another barbecue there. We say give them one last chance -- but don’t bring your dog. Dear Annie: My 55-year-old niece hasn’t held a job in more than five years. She is bipolar and on medication and is also dependent on painkillers. Her mother kept her husband’s ashes in a box for years, and after her mother died 13 years ago, my niece told me she “just couldn’t let him go.” This man is not her biological father. But he was a Korean War veteran and deserves to be interred with full military honors at the Great Lakes National Cemetery along with his wife’s remains. It was his wife’s wish to be buried with her husband. Even the husband’s surviving brother and sister have expressed shock and disbelief that his cremains are still in a closet. They want him to be given a proper burial. The military cemetery will provide a niche, a plaque and a service, all of which would cost my niece nothing. Yet, she won’t do it. Is this the behavior of a normal human being? Or is she being selfish and controlling? -- Speaking for Another Lost Veteran Dear Speaking: Well, if she is bipolar and on painkillers, she may not be entirely rational about this. We assume your niece inherited whatever belonged to her mother, including her stepfather’s ashes. And although he was not her biological father, she still may have been very attached to him. Instead of being angry and demanding, consider being kind and understanding. Sympathize with her desire to keep the ashes. Explain how she would be honoring her stepfather by giving him a military burial, and that her mother would wish to be with her husband. You may not think she deserves such consideration, but you are more likely to get the result you want if she doesn’t feel obligated to defend herself. Dear Annie: I laughed at the letter from “Wondering in Clinton Township,” whose sister gets all bent out of shape when she receives a letter addressed to “Aunt Frances” instead of “Mrs. Frances Smith.” Right now, I am holding a letter addressed to “Grandma Bobbie” and another addressed to “Aunt Grandma.” I really don’t care how it’s addressed, just as long as they write to me. -Fort Myers, Fla. 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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ACCENTUS IS hiring experienced Medical Transcriptionists to work from home. Candidates must have 1 year of acute care experience. Apply today! Send resume to: hr@accentus.ca
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Sympathy & Understanding Kootenay Monument Installations Granite & Bronze Memorials, Dedication Plaques, Benches, Memorial Walls, Gravesite Restorations, Sales & Installations
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Drop off your photo and name(s) of subject at the Cranbrook Townsman or Kimberley Bulletin office or email your high-resolution jpeg to production@dailybulletin.ca. Photographs will appear in the order they are received.
ALL CASH drink/snack vending business route. Complete training. Small invest. reqâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;d. 1888-979-VEND (8363). www.healthydrinkvending.co
Margaret Gertrude McLuckie (Nee Oliver) July 20, 1931 September 14, 2013 Margaret passed away peacefully, on the morning of Saturday September 14 at the age of 82, at The Pines Retirement home in Kimberley. Margaret was born and raised in White Rock, B.C. She later met and married William (Bill) McLuckie who predeceased her in May 2007. They lived in Williams Lake, moved to Fort Steele in 1965 and then to Cranbrook in 1969. During that time she made numerous friends throughout the area of Cranbrook, Kimberley and Wycliffe. She leaves behind to mourn her: Cheryl McLuckie, Robert (Bob) McLuckie, Barbara Rinehart (Earle), Hugh McLuckie, Patricia Hoy ( Terry), Brian McLuckie (Shawn), 8 grandchildren: Tim Rinehart, Steven Rinehart, Jodi Bretzer (Chris), Jason Hoy (Zoe), Thomas Hoy, Robert McLuckie Jr (BJ), Connor McLuckie, Jordon McLuckie, and 3 great grandchildren Jaymes McKenzie (Tim), Kennedy and Ethan Sande (Zoe). She will be sadly missed by her family and friends who all hold fond memories of their times spent with her over the years that they knew her. No funeral service will be held as per her wishes.
With deep regret we announce the passing of Gregory Robert Keith on September 11, 2013 at the East Kootenay Regional Hospital with his wife and sister by his side, after a lengthy battle with cancer. Greg was born in Saskatoon on July 30,1948 and raised in Regina. He followed his father into the engineering profession with a technologist diploma from Saskatchewan Institute of Applied Technology followed by an Engineering degree from the University of Manitoba. He started his carer working for his father at Keith Consulting and continued on to become the President of a successor company, Keith Project Management. He was working with LVM Highway Technical Engineering Services. His professional specialty was in the field of highways and transportation on domestic as well as projects abroad. Although Greg was dedicated to his profession he also pursued his many diverse interests. Throughout his life with Mary they travelled extensively to destinations such as Australia, the Orient, Mexico, Europe and the USA. Along with golf and curling his other life long passion was the restoration of cars and motorcycles. He was the driving force behind the annual â&#x20AC;&#x153;Madd Maxx, a motorcycle trip that took a group of old and new friends down numerous secondary roads, and countless adventures throughout Western Canada and the USA for the past 10 years. While at home bird watching, gardening and landscaping his Kimberley backyard filled Greg with joy. Greg is survived by Mary, his wife of 37 years, his best buddy Louie his dog, his sister Vicki-Lynn (Bill) McMorris, Mother in law Mary Stephen, Sister in law Jean(Ken)Selinger, from Regina, his brother Murray (Denise), Port Moody BC, brother in law Jim Stephen Kamloops and numerous nieces and nephews. Gregâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s easy going laid back personality attracted may loyal life long friends who will miss him greatly.
Send condolences via http://www.markmemorial.com in Margaretâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s name.
Special thanks to the East Kootenay Regional Hospital for the tremendous care and compassion shown towards Greg and Mary during recent stays. In lieu of flowers the family requests donations be made to the Oncology Dept of the East Kootenay Regional Hospital or a charity of choice.
In lieu of flowers donations may be made to the Canadian Diabetes Association.
A celebration of life will be held on September 28, 2013 at the Kimberley Elks Hall 1:00-4:00.
A celebration of Margaretâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s life will be held in Cranbrook for the family and friends, Wednesday September 18th from1 pm to 3pm at the home of Pat and Terry Hoy.
Ph: 250.426.6006 Fx: 250.426.6005 2104D 2nd Street S. Cranbrook, BC theďŹ&#x201A;owerpot@shaw.ca
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DAILY TOWNSMAN/DAILY tuesday, SEPTEMBER 17, 2013 BULLETIN Page 11
PAGE Tuesday, September daily 10 townsman / daily bulletin17, 2013
Employment
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An Alberta Oilfield Company is hiring dozer and excavator operators. Lodging and meals provided. Drug testing required. Call (780)723-5051 Edson, Alta. FIRST STEPS Day Care in Kimberley requires a Child Care Educator. Position is fulltime, 34.5 hours a week, ECE Certification required, Infant toddler designation preferred. Apply with resume to: First Steps Day Care, 570 Mark St., Kimberley B.C., V1A 2B8, Gina Blake, Ph 250-427-3876. HELP WANTED: Part-time cook for day shift. Apply with resume to The Cottage Restaurant. 13 9th Ave S. Cranbrook.
GREAT OPPORTUNITY IN SALES at In our no-pressure sales environment, the Brick believes success is a happy customer. We strive to provide detailed product information to ensure the customer selects products best suited to their needs as well as provide hassle free delivery options and great after sales service. If youâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;re someone who loves to interact with people, that is detail oriented and excited about on-going learning opportunities, come talk to us about the full time sales representative position currently available. Join our small team of 12 and help serve your East Kootenay neighbours as business is increasing and we need someone now! Sales are commission based with guaranteed hourly wage plus a great health dental beneÂżts package. Apply in person to: Shari Reid, Store Manager The Brick @ 501 Slater Cranbrook Monday to Friday 9am-4pm
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SEEKING EDITOR. Peak Publishing publishes The Powell River Peak Wednesday subscription newspaper, Friday TMC, Weekend Shopper and an online edition. Send resumes to Joyce Carlson, publisher@prpeak.com. Closing date: October 4, 2013.
We have available one casual position for office administration duties. Knowledge of Simply Accounting program is a must. Also available, full time position for production. Must be well natured, adaptable, some heavy lifting required.
North Country Catering has immediate openings for permanent full-time camp opportunities in Northern Alberta. Shift Rotation; 3 weeks in camp and one week home.
Employment
Must have references! Please apply in person to: Mrs. Palmerâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Pantry 236 Slater Rd. N. Cranbrook, BC.
ST. MARTIN DENTAL CLINIC Dr. Ernst H. Schandl Inc. Dental hygienist position available.
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Founded in 2000, NCC has become one of the largest independent management, operation & catering company in Western Canada. NCC is responsible for managing and operating remote work camps.
513-D Cranbrook St. N. Cranbrook V1C 3R5
Trades, Technical
Competitive Wages & BeneďŹ ts After 3 mos.
FRASER SHINGLES AND EXTERIORS. Sloped Roofing / Siding Crews needed at our Edmonton branch. Great wages. Own equipment is a MUST. For info contact Giselle @ 780 962 1320 or at email: giselle@fraserexteriors.com
Interested applicants are invited to forward resumes to: North Country Catering, Human Resources e-mail: hr@ northcountrycatering.com fax: 1-(780)-485-1550
GUARANTEED JOB Placement: General laborers and tradesmen for oil and gas industry. Call 24hr Free Recorded Message. For Information 1-800-972-0209.
Business/OfďŹ ce Service
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SERVICES GUIDE Contact these business for all your service needs!
The person who fills this position must be able to: t .VMUJ UBTL t 8PSL XFMM XJUI B UFBN BOE PO ZPVS PXO t -JGU QBQFS CVOEMFT t $MBTT -JDFOTF t 'PSLMJGU -JDFOTF BO BTTFU Please apply with resume, in person to: Bob Bathgate Kootenay News Advertiser OE 4U / $SBOCSPPL #$
To advertise using our â&#x20AC;&#x153;SERVICES GUIDEâ&#x20AC;? in the Cranbrook Daily Townsman, Kimberley Daily Bulletin and The Valley, call us at 250-426-5201, ext. 202. ANGLICAN CHURCH HALL Available for Special events, meetings or clubs. ~Full kitchen~
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Working in our distribution centre you are part of a team to ensure flyers and papers are ready for delivery in a timely and accurate manner. The person who fills this position must be able to: t .VMUJ UBTL t 8PSL XFMM XJUI B UFBN BOE PO ZPVS PXO t -JGU QBQFS CVOEMFT
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Home Improvements FLOORING SALE Millwright/Planerman
Tolko Industries Ltd. is currently seeking a Certified Millwright / Planerman to join our team at our Planermill Division in Lavington, BC. POSITION OVERVIEW: Responsible for the preventive maintenance, repair, installation and modification of planer equipment. QUALIFICATIONS: â&#x20AC;˘ Certified Planerman or Millwright with a Planerman endorsement â&#x20AC;˘ Planermill experience a definite asset â&#x20AC;˘ Superior Troubleshooting Skills â&#x20AC;˘ Excellent Organizational Skills â&#x20AC;˘ Hydraulic and Welding experience an asset â&#x20AC;˘ Strong safety background â&#x20AC;˘ Desire to work in a team environment â&#x20AC;&#x153;Our tradition of excellence is built on strong company values, a challenging environment, and continuous improvement philosophy.â&#x20AC;? We Are An Equal Opportunity Employer and this position offers an excellent pension and beneďŹ t program! READY TO APPLY! If you are interested in exploring this opportunity and being part of our community, please visit our website at:
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or e-mail: armstrong@tolko.com Submit your resume by September 22, 2013.
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Working in our distribution centre you are part of a team to ensure flyers and papers are ready for delivery in a timely and accurate manner.
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Kimberley, Marysville, Meadowbrook only
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Over 300 Choices Lowest Prices Guaranteed! Laminates - $0.59/sq ft Engineered - $1.99 sq ft Hardwood - $2.79 sq ft
Overnight Delivery in most of BC!
www.kingofďŹ&#x201A;oors.com
1.877.835.6670
Paving/Seal/ Coating
NOTICE
BLACKTOP NOW! NO JOB TOO SMALL
Driveways & Parking Lots 1-888-670-0066 CALL
421-1482
FREE ESTIMATES!
CALL NOW!
POWER PAVING
SERVING ALL THE KOOTENAYS Merchandise for Sale
Fruit & Vegetables GARLIC & DILL. 250-422-9336
Heavy Duty Machinery A-STEEL SHIPPING DRY STORAGE CONTAINERS Used 20â&#x20AC;&#x2122;40â&#x20AC;&#x2122;45â&#x20AC;&#x2122;53â&#x20AC;&#x2122; in stock. SPECIAL 44â&#x20AC;&#x2122;X40â&#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
Misc. for Sale
DRAFTING TABLE, chair, light with misc drafting tools $100 firm. Lazy Boy recliner $4. 10hs Craftsman snowblower runs great, electric start $150.00. 15 horse Honda 4 stroke outboard motor, low hours. $1500.00 c/w tank and hose. 778-517-2121
STEEL BUILDINGS, Metal buildings 60% off! 20x28, 30x40, 40x62, 45x90, 50x120, 60x150, 80x100 sell for balance owed! Call 1-800-4572206 www.crownsteelbuildings.ca
Garage Sales
Phone 250-427-5139
TRIPLE J
WINDOW CLEANING
~Residential~
250-349-7546
Services
Trades, Technical
SEPTEMBER 21 GARAGE SALE
1805 13th Ave S, 8am-2pm Lots of household stuff, bedding, clothes (ladies size 14 & up), purses & some collectibles, Hockey & Sports cards (old stock from Mountain Top Sports Cards), etc.
Garage Sales
Page 12 tuesday, SEPTEMBER 17, 2013
features
DAILY TOWNSMAN/DAILY BULLETIN
Misc. Wanted Genuine Coin Collector Buyer Collections, Olympic Gold & Silver Coins etc 778-281-0030
Real Estate Recreational THE PALMS RV Resort www.yumapalmsrvresort.com Rated top 2% in America. 6-54-3 monthly specials. Starting at $637.50 month. (plus Tax/Elec.) Toll Free: 1-855PALMS-RV (1-855-725-6778)
Rentals Apt/Condo for Rent 1100 SQ. FT. condo in Kimberley available immediately. Steps to ski hill and Trickle Creek Golf Course. 2bdrm, 2 bath. Granite, stainless steel appliances, slate flooring, hot tub, fireplace. Main floor unit with green space off deck. No smokers. $1000./mo. Call 780-718-9083 or 780-218-7617. 2BDRM APT. in 4plex, laundry facilities, F/S, includes utilities. $900/mo + D.D. 250-426-5748
CEDAR PARK Apartments: 2 Bdrm. Elevator, on-site laundry, central location, live-in owner/manager. Heat & hot water included. No Parties, N/S. $750-$800/mo. (250)489-0134. LIONS MANOR, Kimberley. Seniors living, 55+. Two, 1bdrm apartments: $350./mo plus utilities & DD. N/S, No pets, no parties. Available Oct.1/13 (250)427-2970 MARYSVILLE, SPACIOUS 1 bdrm apt. in 4plex, laundry facilities, F/S. N/S. Includes heat. References req’d. $575./mo. + DD. 250-427-5532
Modular Homes
Tuesday, September 17, 2013
Some trouble with the jewelry Hello Wendy; I was wondering if you could help me solve a riddle about my mom’s jewelry. I am getting on in age and have a hard time walking around or I would come and see you. I have this ring of my mom’s — it’s quite nice and I have three grandchildren that are females. I don’t know which one I should give this ring to. Can you ask my mom which grandchild she would like to have her ring? Feeling Torn Dear Feeling Torn: Thank you for the names of your mom and your three female grandchildren. This has enabled us to answer your question.
When I contacted your mom she says she knows that you are quite confused about who to give the ring to. She also stated she has other jewelry that is just as fine. She feels it would be a good idea when you give the ring to your one grandchild; to give away some of the other jewelry at the same time, to the other two. She is pointing to her neck and I see a strand of pearls or stones of some kind and she is telling me they are authentic. She wants you to give the ring to your oldest grandchild. Your mom was quite close to her and she wants her to have the ring. There is also a bracelet with charms
on it that she would like you to give it to your youngest grandchild. Well, I guess the necklace goes to the middle grandchild. She is nodding and smiling at me that I have given you the correct information. Your mother sure has good taste or should I say your father was sure good in picking out jewelry for your mom. These three pieces of jewelry if you so choose to give to your grandchildren would be quite a nice gift from their great grandma. Oops, here comes your dad and he is waving to you. They were a happy couple and got along quite well. Hope this helps you. Wendy
ing room laying on the couch taking your ring off and putting it ASK WENDY on your coffee table. I think whoever was Wendy around the coffee Evano table the next day must have not seen it and it fell. Look under Hi Wendy: or around the couch I lost my wedding and the coffee table. It band about two weeks seems to be lodged ago. I remember taking somewhere in that area. it off because my hands We hope this inforwere swollen but I can’t mation helps you. Let remember where I put me know; I would be it. Can your guides help interested. me to find my ring? Wendy Worried Hi Wendy: Dear Worried: I came to you for a I am not all that reading about three good at finding things, I weeks ago and we were really don’t know why. talking to my husband However, I asked my in heaven and he knew guides and I immedi- how unkind he was to ately saw you in the liv- me when he was living.
M AT T D U S K LIVE IN CONCERT SEPTEMBER 20
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QUIET NON-SMOKING, nondrinking couple looking for place to rent. Two small dogs. (250)427-5599.
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Transportation
Cars - Domestic
2000
W/ ELEANOR MCCAIN
257,000km One family owner, automatic, needs transmission work.
T I C K E T S AVA I L A B L E AT: K E Y C I T Y T H E AT R E . C O M
Make an offer.
BOX OFFICE: 250-426-7006
Sport Utility Vehicle 1997 FORD Explorer Limited, black, well maintained. Great shape. 246,000km. 4wd. Offers! 778-481-2222
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Trucks & Vans
M Y F U N N Y VA L E N T I N E THE CHET BAKER SONGBOOK M AT T D U S K . C O M T W I T T E R @ M AT T D U S K FA C E B O O K M AT T D U S K PA G E
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For Sale 2002 GMC Sierra 4X4
Fully loaded 3/4, only 135,500 km’s, 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
Dear Forgetting and Forgiving: Yes, I remember you and we had a nice time talking to your husband and I think you understand now why he treated you the way he did. Really no excuses to treat you so miserably as he and we talked about. You were together in five past lives and they were not positive past lives as you have experienced in this lifetime. When I ask if you and he will be together again my guide gave me a positive yes answer. Ah, that Karma— it is a life teacher, is it not? Wendy
Fewer lines and wrinkles, thicker hair, stronger nails and denser bones.
7 : 3 0 p m K E Y C I T Y T H E AT R E CRANBROOK, BC CANADA
Want to Rent
250-426-3637
What I want to know and I forgot to ask is: will we be together again in another life and how many lifetimes did we share together? Forgetting and Forgiving
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2BDRM TRAILER, available immediately. $800./mo. plus utilities. Call 250-426-7343
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PAGE 11
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Merchandise for Sale
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