THURSDAY OCTOBER 24, 2013
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DAN MILLS PHOTO
Thick fog has blanketed the Cranbrook area most mornings this week, and is likely to persist through Sunday — so exercise care in your weekend driving. See our foggy weather update on Page 2.
Old brick building causes heritage stir Old electrical building served as a rallying point for the revival of Heritage Association, Councillor says A RNE PE TRYS HEN Townsman Staff
The Baker Hill Heritage Association is operating again after a number of years on hiatus. At City Council’s regular meeting Monday, Coun. Angus Davis said that the association had its first meeting last week. “What I think really brought some of the interest to get the heritage association going was the topic of the preservation of the old building behind City Hall,” Davis said.
“I think the young people who were active in getting this old building behind us were in attendance at the Baker Hill inaugural meeting again.” Davis said that, initially, preservation of the old brick electrical building wasn’t high on his list of things he wanted to see done. But seeing the group get its earnestness back and the brick building become a rallying point, was something Davis seemed glad to see.
College working to improve maternity conditions in Kenya S A L LY M AC D O N A L D Townsman Staff
“Maisha” means “life” in Swahili. And in practical terms, the MAISHA partnership between the College of the Rockies and a Kenyan university hopes to bring life to the hundreds of Kenyan mothers and babies who die in childbirth each year. With $1.6 million in federal government funding, the College of the Rockies is partnering with the Dedan Kimathi University of Technology for five years in the Maternal Access and Infant Survival for Health Advancement (MAISHA) program. The program’s goal is to re-
duce the number of deaths of women and babies in Kenya’s Nyeri and Migori regions. To achieve that, the College of the Rockies and Kimathi are working together to train nursing staff and community health workers, to improve health education, and to provide basic obstetric care equipment. Since MAISHA’s launch in September 2012, three nursing instructors from Kimathi have been trained so that they can lead a five-day course, Emergency Obstetric and Neonatal Care, and they have taken 85 nurses through the course. Those three instructors, Joyce Jebet, Salome Mukui, and James Ndambuki, are in Cran-
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brook this week to gather information about how they can improve their services in Kenya. MAISHA works with eight health care facilities in two regions of Kenya: Nyeri and Migori. The areas are vastly different from each other both geographically and socially. When MAISHA began, 950 rural expectant mothers were asked to discuss care during pregnancy. “It’s amazing what a pregnant women has to go through in Kenya. There are no health benefits, there is no universal health care,” said Graham Knipfel, COTR’s manager of international business development.
See MAISHA, Page 3
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Page 2 Thursday, OCTOBER 24, 2013
daily townsman / daily bulletin
Local NEWS
Irish Dance Institute Presents
Dan Mills photo
FOGGY MOUNTAIN SMACKDOWN: Two bucks square off on a foggy morning on 12th Avenue in Cranbrook.
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Fog will persist until Sunday
Environment Canada warns that fog will remain over the Cranbrook area until Sunday
Dr. Jeffery Williams and staff are pleased to welcome Dr. Brent Davis to our office Dr. Davis has experience in general dentistry, orthodontics, children’s dentistry and hospital dentistry. Dr. Williams will continue to focus on implant and cosmetic dentistry.
We welcome new patients. To schedule an appointment, call Ginger or Sharon at 250-489-4731 or toll free: 1-866-491-0031
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Take care on the East Kootenay’s highways this week as morning fog will persist until Sunday, meteorologists are warning. The fog and low cloud the Cranbrook area has experienced this week is caused by a strong ridge of high pressure that has stalled over British Columbia, Environment Canada said in a weather alert issued Wednes-
day, October 23. “Under this ridge stagnant weather conditions have led to extensive fog and low cloud as well as areas of patchy drizzle through many of the British Columbia Interior valleys,” reads the alert. “Daytime heating will allow the fog and low cloud to give way to sunny afternoons in many regions, but it is expected to reform during the cool overnight hours. ” The weather pattern is expected to shift this weekend, bringing an end to the foggy weather by Sunday. “ Motorists are encouraged to allow more time for travel, increase following distance, and slow down when driving in foggy conditions. ” To monitor the latest forecasts and weather warnings from Environment Canada, visit www.w eatheroffice. gc.ca.
LE • REC YC
S a l ly M ac D o n a l d Townsman Staff
daily townsman
Local NEWS
Thursday, OCTOBER 24, 2013
Page 3
MAISHA hopes to bring life to hundreds Continued from page 1 “The roads usually would be dirt. If it’s the middle of the night there may not be an emergency hospital available. And there are cultural pressures around traditional birth attendants – and decision making, too,” Knipfel said. The Nyeri region is in central Kenya’s highlands, about the elevation of Lakit Lookout. “They are people who are a bit affluent compared to Migori, in terms of having access to education and access to social amenities like good hospitals,” explained Salome Mukui. About 97 per cent of people in Nyeri have at least a Grade 8 education. Households earn a living from farming coffee and tea and raising dairy cows. The average family has two children. “You find the women are empowered, they can have a say in their reproductive health, and family planning uptake is quite high,” said Mukui. In Nyeri, about 51 babies out of every 1,000 die in infancy. The Migori region is in western Kenya, close to Lake Victoria, where it is hot and humid. “In Migori when we
Sally MacDonald photo
Nursing instructors from Kenya’s Dedan Kimathi University of Technology at the College of the Rockies’ Cranbrook campus on Monday, October 21. Pictured, left to right: Joyce Jebet, James Ndambuki, and Salome Mukui. did the survey we found a majority of households are peasant farmers,” said Mukui. “They have a lot of land, but if you want to be a farmer you need money in order to plow and seed.” Poverty is much higher than in Nyeri. About 95 babies out of every 1,000 die in infancy. About 149 out of every 1,000 die before reaching age five. The average family has four children.
“Because of that poverty level, you find mothers are not able to go to the health facility for delivery. One: because of the economic factors, and also because of the infrastructure in the region. It’s quite poor. The roads are impassable,” said Mukui. If families own a vehicle, it’s usually a motorbike travelling on muddy or dirt roads. “So you can imagine
Curl for Kids Sake most important fundraiser of the year for BBBS Submit ted
Local businesses and residents are getting their curling arms ready for Big Brothers Big Sisters’ annual fundraiser — Curl for Kids Sake 2013. It’s BBBS’s most important fundraising event of the year taking place November 1 and 2, 2013, at the Cranbrook Curling Centre. Teams from all over the Cranbrook and Kimberley area have been collecting pledges online and on pledge forms to raise money for community mentoring programs. This year’s Curl for Kids Sake fundraising target is $20,000, and Big Brothers Big Sisters is counting on the campaign to finance more than 20 per cent of the
agency’s youth mentoring services in 2013/2014. “We truly appreciate the efforts of the teams and sponsors participating. The pledges the teams collect and contributions received is what makes our youth mentoring programs possible” said Dana Osiowy, Executive Director of Big Brothers Big Sisters of Cranbrook. “Our local agency has more than 15 children and youth on waiting list for a Big Brother or Big Sister. This campaign not only raises money, it also raises awareness for our organization and the programs we offer. Curl for Kids Sake is a meaningful way to directly help kids and it’s also
great fun!” There are spots still available. All it takes is a team of four, a pledge form and an outfit from your favorite decade. Also this year, the event is a celebration of Big Brothers Big Sisters 100th Anniversary. The Curl for Kids Sake campaign is dedicated to driving local funds towards local kids in need of amentoring relationship. Donations ultimately strengthen the community by helping children and youth to learn, grow and succeed. To get full details and find out how to participate or donate call 250 489-3111, or visit www. cranbrook.kintera.org/ curl to register a team!
a mother in labour on a motorbike,” she said. In Migori, many pregnant woman work on the farm until they go into labour. “More often than not, the women are saying they still find they still have to struggle, go to the farms, work hard in the farms, look for food, and sometimes they will work hard until they go into labour,” said Mukui. Things are a little different in Nyeri, explained Joyce Jebet. “Because the women are empowered, the women from the study say they are even able to hire a house help when they are pregnant. Because they have their own money, they can make their own decisions,” she said. “In Nyeri, we found the level of male involvement is good. Some of the men were
even complaining they were not allowed to go to the delivery room,” added Mukui. MAISHA is working with nurses in rural health facilities to better prepare them for helping maternity patients and babies, by taking them through the national Emergency Obstetric and Neonatal Care program. “We are trying to build on their capacity to be able to take care of these patients and reduce the mortality and the newborn deaths,” said James Ndambuki. The MAISHA program is also training community health workers, who are mostly volunteers. “They are really the frontline in the community and in households. They are able to assess families, see children. Some of the (major) killers for children in these areas are
malaria and diarrhoea. By working and training community health workers we are able to deal with those areas of health concern as well,” said Moritz Schmidt, COTR’s international project coordinator. “In the emergency obstetrics training, we also have an aspect on neonatal which is part of infancy. So when we give them the skills to take care of emergency cases in neonatal then you are likely to see good outcomes at the end of it,” added Ndambuki. Schmidt recounted a story he heard during a visit to Kenya in September. A woman arrived at a health care facility in a very hard to reach area in the middle of the night. There was one nurse on duty, who did not have the emergency obstetrics training. However, she was able to call on a
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fellow nurse who did have the training. “They were able to deal with that at a very remote facility – a twin breach delivery, which is a complicated scenario, especially when you are an hour away from any hospital on a muddy dirt road. That was entirely due to that nurse’s training in the five-day emergency obstetrics course,” said Schmidt. “That was one of those moments where you know we are doing something that will help.” The College of the Rockies has also conducted assessments on what equipment is needed at these rural health care facilities. “Some of the equipment will include delivery kits, basic equipment to help the facilities that right now don’t necessarily have those basic things – (such as) sterilization equipment,” said Schmidt. “It’s fairly fundamental equipment to help them with their outcomes and improve maternal and child health at those facilities.” The MAISHA project has just begun, with training only being held over the past two months. Until now, the two institutions have been busy on ground work. “It seems like a long time but it really takes that amount of time to have a clear picture of what’s happening on the ground,” explained Schmidt. “With all this hard ground work we will be able to better measure the results that we have,” said Knipfel. For more information, visit www.cotr. bc.ca/MAISHA.
Page 4 Thursday, OCTOBER 24, 2013
daily townsman
Local NEWS
Kimberley ski hill job fair coming Nov. 2 C AROLYN GRANT Daily Bulletin
Is it too early to think skiing? Not according to the folks at the Kimberley Alpine Resort. Plans for the 2013-2014 season, which opens December 14, are well underway. One of the new runs
on the mountain this year is a beginner/easy way down from the top of the North Star Quad to the base. Inexperienced skiers can have difficulty with the lower mountain headwall on the Main Run, which is quite a steep pitch. Now you can avoid that on
the Alpine Slide run, a new Green run. In addition to that, Kimberley was up against Red Mountain in the first round of the Powder Magazines 2014 Ski Town Throw Down. Kimberley Alpine Resort will also be featured in that magazine’s Novem-
ber edition Resort Guide. But before the ski season begins the Resort will be looking to take on staff. They will hold their annual job fair at the Stemwinder Bar and Grill on Saturday, November 2, 2013 from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. The Resort
is looking for lift operators, daycare, food and beverage servers, guest services, parking attendants and more. Please bring your resume (complete with references) to the Job Fair, along with any
other required documentation (work visa/ permit, Social insurance number,etc.). Representatives from various departments will be on hand to talk to candidates about available jobs. Interviews will be
scheduled for candidates following a successful preliminary interview process. There are a number of Para-Alpine events coming up this winter as well as junior speed events.
Sally MacDonald photo
Students in Cranbrook’s youth project, CBKyouth, spread positivity at Parkland Middle School on Monday, October 21. The committee, aged between 12 and 18, got together at the school at 6 a.m. to “chalk the block” by writing encouraging messages in chalk for students to read as they arrived at school.
Courtesy Jerelynn MacNeil
St. Mary’s School students Reid (Grade 3), Keanu (Grade 2), and Conner (kindergarten) decorate a very cool pumpkin for themselves. This was a buddy activity between different grade levels. This is a way the school builds multi-aged friendships between children.
Brick building sparks association revival Continued from page 1
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“I support whatever they want to do with it,” Davis said. “We need people like that in the community.” The heritage association was in operation for a number of years, but Davis said in the last four or five years it’s been sitting dormant. The association was started by Gerald Hudson about 15 years ago. Davis said Hudson and number of people really did a lot of good things for the community. “Every year there was a tour of different heritage homes in the community,” he said. “This would end with tea
down at the Anglican Church hall.” There was also a professional study of heritage qualities done in the Baker Hill area. Davis said that study highlighted things like the large walls created around the turn of the century. “Things like that we just don’t pay attention to on a daily basis,” he said. “The city declared the Baker Hill area a heritage area, and this is something that when Mr. Hudson started this association was high on his list of priorities – that any work going on in the Baker Hill heritage area ... anybody wanting to
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make renovations to their homes and new homes being constructed would have to have a certain heritage quality to it.” On Monday night, Davis also talked about a petition by residents opposed to the city’s proposal to remove crosses and other grave markers during the winter months at the cemetery. The residents say the markers may be an obstacle in the summer to mow the lawn, but don’t see a justifiable reason to remove the markers during the winter. “I think the people that signed the petition are serious about it and it means something to them,” he said. Over the weekend, Davis visited the cemetery in Nelson and noticed that there were many more adornments on the grave sites. “Historically cemeteries were a place of gathering, besides being a place of interning bodies,” he said. “A lot of communities use them as gathering places.”
daily townsman
Thursday, OCTOBER 24, 2013
Local NEWS
Page 5
Haunted trains Pucks will fly Friday in support at the museum of Friendship Hockey Team
The Museum of Rail Travel in Cranbrook is marking Halloween this year by decorating its rail cars Sally MacDonald Townsman Staff
Get your spook on next week at the Canadian Museum of Rail Travel. For the first time, the museum is holding a Haunted Trains event this year on Sunday, Monday and Tuesday next week. Each evening from 5
p.m. to 9 p.m., you can stop by the museum and tour five “haunted” trains. “We are decorating three of the cars scary and spooky. We will have spooky music and people in there as well, dressed up (scaring people),” said Damon Colgan, the museum’s executive director.
BizPal aims to cut business red tape: Cranbrook joins program Barry Coulter
Starting and running a business in British Columbia municipalities just became easier thanks to BizPaL, an online business permit and licence service that saves time spent on paperwork and helps entrepreneurs start up faster. On Wednesday, it was announced that Cranbrook has also joined the program, becoming the one of 113 B.C. Municipalities to do so. “Small businesses are one of the key economic engines of the province, and we need to ensure they have the support they need to succeed and grow,” said Naomi Yamamoto, Minister of State for Tourism and Small Business, in a press release. BizPaL provides entrepreneurs with simplified access to information on the permits and licences they need to establish and run their businesses. Cranbrook’s business owners now have access to simplified information about the permits and licences they need.
“BizPaL is an important tool to encourage community investment and economic growth, and offers an opportunity to showcase Cranbrook as business-friendly, helping our local entrepreneurs succeed,” said Bill Bennett, MLA for Kootenay East Launched in 2005, BizPaL is a partnership among federal, provincial, territorial and municipal governments. The service is designed to cut through the paperwork and red tape that small business owners encounter. “We want Cranbrook to be known as a welcoming place for businesses to establish and grow,” said Cranbrook Mayor Wayne Stetski. “Partnering with the federal and provincial governments through BizPaL is an important step in reducing barriers to business in our community.” Area business owners and entrepreneurs can access the service by visiting the provincial website at: www.bcbizpal.ca or the Government of Canada website at: www.bizpal.ca/
There will be another two train cars decorated for younger children, he went on. “It’s going to have Candy Land and Fairy Land, and a few Disney characters in there as well. And we’ll have some people in there dressed up, related to the different themes – fairies and someone handing out candy as the children finish.” Outside the trains, there will be fun Halloween activities, including face painting and a colouring contest, with prizes for the winners. And you can keep warm with hot chocolate during the experience. “I think it’s going to be a really fun experience, something really different,” said Colgan. “I’m thinking of new ways for the community to experience the trains.” Haunted Trains will be held on October 27, 28 and 29 from 5 p.m. to 9 p.m. at the Canadian Museum of Rail Travel in Cranbrook. Entry is $5 per person at the door. Children aged two and under are free.
Courtesy Jane Davies
On October 25, East Kootenay Community Credit Union (EKC) will hold its community Puck Toss at the Kootenay Ice home game at Western Financial Place in support of the Team Canada/Cranbrook Colts 2015 Friendship Hockey Team .EKC’s puck toss will support the teams’ fundraising efforts for the friendship team to travel to Australia. The pee wee-aged hockey players will participate in the 2015 Friendship Hockey Tournament in New Castle (N.S.W.), Australia. The tournaments last 10-12 days and the players are billeted to local families. Challenges like language and food result in great cultural experiences. The tournament attracts up to 20 teams from around the world. The purpose of the tournament is to share the game of hockey around the world in a non-competitive, non-hitting environment where the focus is placed on sharing knowledge of game, teaching hockey skills abroad and sportsmanship. Winning the tournament is not based on
Legion Remembrance Day Wreaths Attention Cranbrook Businesses
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Royal Canadian Legion # 24 Cranbrook BC
game scores, but on least penalty minutes, skit performances and overall sportsmanship shown both on and off the ice. In many places outside of North America it is difficult and very expensive to source good quality hockey gear. In many instances over past years, Cranbrook players have donated all their personal hockey equipment to children of billet families in foreign countries in order to assist them in the development of their
The ice surface at Western Financial Place is covered after the Great Puck Toss. players and programs. Friendship Hockey has been going on in Cranbrook for 25 years, with tournaments host-
ed every two years. Each country takes a turn to host the tournament. Cranbrook hosted on behalf of Canada in 2005.
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PAGE 6
THURSDAY, OCTOBER 24, 2013
OPINION
DAILY TOWNSMAN / DAILY BULLETIN
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Russia & the Maldives: Short-term thinking
S
hort term beats long term most of the time, even when people understand where their long-term self-interest really lies. Take, for example, that well-known pair, Russia and the Maldives. Five years ago, it was hard to find senior people in the universities and scientific institutes in Moscow who were even willing to discuss climate change. But the great heat-wave of 2010, which killed one-third of the Russian grain crop, seems to have changed all that. It was Russia that insisted on putting a reference to geo-engineering, the highly controversial array of last-ditch measures to combat global warming, into the last paragraph of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change’s recent report. The Russians get it now. And yet … On 18 September the Greenpeace ship Arctic Sunrise stopped near the drilling platform Prirazlomnaya, the first rig to drill for oil off Russia’s Arctic coast, and launched four inflatable boats. Their aim was to hang a banner on the platform denouncing Russian plans to exploit the oil and gas reserves of the environmentally sensitive Arctic, especially since burning all that extra oil and gas will speed up the warming process. There were no weapons aboard the ship, and Greenpeace’s protests are always non-violent. None of the protesters tried to climb up the legs of the platform or damage it in any way. But armed Russian security forces abseiled down from helicopters and took them all prisoner. The ship and all its crew were arrested and taken to the nearest Russian port, Murmansk. A month later, all thirty crew members, volunteers who come from Britain, France, Canada, Russia, Brazil, New Zealand and eleven other countries, are still in prison. Half of them have already been charged
with “piracy”. It sounds ridiculous, but piracy carries a prison sentence of ten to fifteen years, and the Russian state is deadly serious. The crew have all been refused bail, and it will probably be months before they even stand trial. The Russian state has a long tradition of reacting badly when it is challenged, and the platform belongs to Gazprom, a state-owned firm, but Gwynne even so this is an extreme over-reaction. Dyer Besides, knowing how hard climate change will hit Russia, why did Moscow let Gazprom start drilling in the Arctic seabed at all? Because Russia’s relative prosperity in the past decade has depended heavily on exports of oil and gas. Because President Vladimir Putin’s rule depends on the continuation of that fragile prosperity. And because Russia’s onshore reserves of oil and gas are in decline. Russian scientists are well aware that the frozen seabed of the Arctic Ocean is already thawing and releasing huge plumes of methane gas that will accelerate warming further. President Putin is concerned enough about climate change to spend serious diplomatic capital on getting geo-engineering into the IPCC report. But warming is a long-term (or at least a medium-term) problem, and his political survival is short-term. Short-term comes first, so drill away, and if people protest against it, charge them with piracy. And if you think this is as stupid as politics can get, consider the Maldives. The Maldives are several hundred tiny islands in the Indian Ocean where most of the land is only about a metre (three or four feet) above sea level. As the sea level rises, most of the country will simply disappear beneath the waves.
You would think that the prospect of national extinction in two generations would concentrate anybody’s mind, and in the Maldives it did — for a while. In 2008 the long-ruling dictator Maumoon Abdul Gayoom was ousted in the islands’ first free election by Mohamed Nasheed, a young politician who put great emphasis on fighting climate change. Nasheed knew that his own country’s actions could have little direct effect on the outcome: China emits about 2,000 times as much carbon dioxide as the Maldives. But he also knew that the extreme vulnerability of the Maldives gives its decisions a high publicity value, so he pledged to make it the world’s first carbon-neutral country. He even held a cabinet meeting underwater, with all the ministers in scuba gear, to dramatise the country’s plight. Then, early last year, Nasheed was overthrown in a coup by senior police officers closely linked to the old regime. International pressure forced fresh elections early last month and Nasheed came in well ahead of the other two candidates. Various interventions by police and judges linked to the former dictator have complicated the issue, and the election will now be re-run early next month. Nasheed will doubtless recover the presidency in the end, but here’s the thing. In the whole election campaign, he didn’t mention climate change once. Neither did the other candidates. This is a country full of people whose grandchildren are going to have to live somewhere else because the whole place is going underwater, and they STILL don’t want to hear about climate change. You can’t just blame the politicians for the neglect. It’s just too uncomfortable for people to stay focussed on the issue for long. And by the way, opinion polls reveal that a majority of Russians approve of the piracy charges laid against the Greenpeace crew.
daily townsman / daily bulletin
Opinion/Events
A welcoming community I
was thinking about the word “welcoming” the other day. To welcome someone means “to greet their arrival with pleasure or kindly courtesy.” So how do we do that as a community? Due to space limitations I’ll break it down into two parts, Welcoming Business, which I’ll talk about today, and Welcoming People, which I’ll cover in December. Welcoming Business One of the comments I hear from time to time is that Cranbrook is not a welcoming place for business. When I ask “Why do you say that?” there is either no response or “I heard a rumour that Business X wanted to locate here Y years ago and the city turned them away.” While I find it hard to believe that any Mayor or Council would turn business away, I want to share with you what we are doing today to welcome business to Cranbrook. We are: • Working to get industry into our new airport industrial lands, focussing on aviation-based opportunities. • Encouraging business from our Asia Pacific Friendly City partners in China and South Korea to come to the East Kootenay to understand what great resources we have. A recent visit from a major Import Export Company from Taicang is hopefully just the start. • Interested in having Cranbrook recognized as one of five new Business Technology Centres Premier Clark announced will be set up by the Province. • Looking for new industrial land opportunities in Cranbrook. As some of you know our current industrial area is full and I know of at least one business looking to expand.
• Seeking to revitalize downtown through our bylaw which offers a five year 100 per cent city property tax exemption on new buildings and renovations in our downtown core. • Keeping our Development Cost Charges and our Building Permit Fees low compared to most other cities in British Columbia to encourage construction. Of the 115 communities that charge DCC’s Cranbrook ranks 13th lowest in BC for single family residential and industrial fees. Communities that have lower Wayne fees are generally those Stetski who have a large industrial base to tax like a major mine (I have thought about trying to annex one of the Elk Valley coal mines!). We are also responding to the Barriers to Business Report, that I asked the Chamber to prepare, by: • Joining “BizPal”, an on-line platform used throughout BC and across Canada to help entrepreneurs determine quickly what permits/licenses they require to develop or expand their business. • Completing a new community profile in partnership with the Columbia Basin Rural Development Institute. This gives prospective businesses insight into what we have to offer them. • Creating a new “Doing Business in Cranbrook” guide. In addition the “Guidebook to Relocating to Cranbrook, British Columbia” and the “Guidebook to Investing in Cranbrook, British Columbia” are being updated. • Reviewing and updating our Economic Development Strategy. The Economic Development Committee will be hosting a series of focus groups this fall/winter to
help set strategic priorities for Cranbrook for the next five years. • Working to improve the development and permitting process with new cleaner and clearer forms to be introduced when the new Building Bylaw is approved by Council. • Introducing a new checklist for every permit, which defines what is required to move the project forward. The checklist will be reviewed and signed off by the City representatives and the proponent. The bottom line is to make sure there are no surprises. • Pursuing the concept of Cranbrook becoming a small inland container port to better utilize our railway and highway transportation systems and encourage imports and exports into Cranbrook. This builds on the current economic development strategy to develop Cranbrook as a multi-modal hub for the region. • Organizing a workshop with Economic Practitioners to lay out a clear process for those wanting to set up a new business in Cranbrook, including who can help them along the way. • Personally visiting new businesses when they open their doors in Cranbrook. If you are a new business and I’ve missed you please call and let me know. I’d like to meet you and say thanks for believing in Cranbrook! There is a lot going on to make Cranbrook a welcoming place for business. If you have additional ideas I’d love to hear from you. Wayne Stetski is Mayor of Cranbrook The opinions expressed are those of the author and do not necessarily reflect the official position of the City of Cranbrook.
Pleasing the readers is a crapshoot
“Y
ou don’t stop laughing when you grow old, you grow old when you stop laughing.” G.B. Shaw It all started in the supermarket. There I was at the check-out having a long and interesting conversation with an old guy I felt I ought to know. He too probably felt he should know me, but was hesitant. It’s like that with old guys. We recognize one another as being of a similar age and assume that we’ve met before, worked together, played hockey together or even married into the same family. I can be very confusing. Anyway, as I was there faking that fascinating conversation and running out of steam, I was accosted by the much younger fellow ahead of me. He turned round and said, “You that guy writes in the paper? That curmudgeon (mispronounced) guy?” Cagily, I replied, “Depends.” My oldish companion had shuffled off and faded into the distance and I was faced by the man ahead of me. He was sporting the usual peaked cap, advertising a tractor company, a bush shirt that disclosed a vast amount of hairy belly, and jeans that, no doubt, would be exhibiting a large amount of the cleavage in his glutei maximi. I hoped he wouldn’t turn around and show me these muscles, as several ladies passing by had already no-
ticed and sneered disdainfully, the way that ladies can do so well. “How come you write such crap?” demanded my questioner. I felt a little surprised that he might be able to read. I asked him what he’d like me to write for his pleasure as, beyond his bulk, the check-out girl was making signals to me Peter that were not all that poWarland lite. She didn’t, however, throw up her arms in disgust. I shuffled forward a tad but my questioner, who was about the size of VW Beetle, wasn’t going to budge; he hadn’t finished with me. “Why don’tcher write about hunting?” I shifted the ten kilo bag of sugar in my arms, thinking ‘been there, done that’ and said, I don’t know anything about hunting any more, or guns or regulations.” The guy jumped eagerly on that. “Well! Wouldn’tcher like more guys to read your….” “Crap?” I suggested and tried hard to shuffle forward towards the till; the sugar was sliding relentlessly towards my knees. But my assailant hadn’t finished with me. “You’re that ex-school-teacher guy, right? How come you don’t play hockey no more? My old man said you used to play with him and some other codgers. You weren’t no good.” “There are so many things I’m not
good at and I’m getting worse,” I explained slowly as the check-out girl was urging us forward. “I’m inclined to write about the weird things people, including me, do in their daily lives.” Like that logger that hauled logs for firewood into the forest when he went hunting, like the lady who feels that it is her duty to spread the joy of autumn leaves about with her leaf-blower, like my neighbours who take everything with them – including the kitchen sink – when they want to get away from things, like me standing there with ten kilograms of sugar in my arms because I’d saved maybe a few cents in the deal and was giving myself a hernia in the process. Getting desperate, I attempted to step round the large guy but got blocked, so I suddenly faked a step to the right then deeked my opponent by stepping left just the way his father and other old guys had shown me, then, just before dropping it, dumped that huge bag of sugar on the counter. The check-out girl grinned and almost clapped sarcastically. I enjoyed that. She said, “Did you manage to find everything, sir?” a mischievous smile on her young face. Paying up dutifully, I replied, “More than I bargained for.” Then: “Would you care to carry this out to my car for me?” Another cheeky smile. “You must be kidding, right?” she replied as I tottered out of the store knowing that I now had some more crap to write about.
Thursday, OCTOBER 24, 2013
Page 7
What’s Up?
KIMBERLEY AND CRANBROOK COMMUNITY CALENDAR
UPCOMING Thursday, October 24: Cranbrook First Toastmasters meets in Room 210 at the College of the Rockies, 7-9 PM Learn to speak with confidence and build your leadership skills. We are accepting new members. pamelaryan@telus.net CBAL Beginner Senior Computer Class: CBAL will be offering a very beginner computer class starting October 25, in Kimberley. If you are a senior, and you would like to begin learning about computers. please contact Pam Bailie at 250-427-6027. Classes will be held on Mondays and Fridays in the afternoon. Craft & Book Sale by EKRH staff, Friday, Oct 25, 10-2 in the Hospital Cafeteria. Free draw for a $20.00 cafeteria gift certificate. Sue Trombly 426-0808, suetrombley53@gmail.com Annual Fall Tea & Bake Sale - Sat Oct. 26, 1:00-3:00 p.m. at Senior Citizens Hall, 125-17 Ave. S., Cranbrook. Info: Judy 250-426-2436. Jubilee Chapter #64 OES meet 7:30 pm sharp, Monday, Oct 28, Masonic Hall, 401-3rd Ave S, Cranbrook. Coffee and Muffins Galore-Saturday, Nov 2nd, 10:00 am to Noon, setup on Friday. Monday October 28th at 7 pm College of the Rockies Lecture Theatre. The Friends of the Cranbrook Library Travelogue; join Gerry Warner for a travelogue on “Helping the Blind to See in Rural Ethopia” Cranbrook Garden Club meeting in the hall of Christ Church Anglican, 46-13th Ave. S., Monday, Oct. 28th, 7:00pm. Come and join us, new members always welcome. Info: April 778-517-1222. Thursday, October 31 – Spooktacular Kid’s Carnival Two hours of games, crafts, treats, food and fun for children ages 2 to 10. Adults please attend with children 6 and younger. @ Cranbrook United Church #2-12th Ave S. (beside Safeway Gas Bar) Admission: By donation or non-perishable food item collected at the door. Big Brothers Big Sisters is proud to announce our first annual Curl for Kids Sake on November 1 & 2 at the Cranbrook Curling Centre. It’s our most important fundraising event of the year-every dollar you raise helps match children & youth with a mentor. 250 4893111 or visit our website www.bigbrothersbigsisters.ca/cranbrook. ONGOING Free Influenza Clinics for people 65 & older and their caregivers/ household contacts, children 6 months to 5 years of age and people who have chronic health conditions and their household contacts. Drop in clinics at Tamarack Mall: Thursday Nov 7, 9-5:30 pm, Friday Nov 8, 9-4:30 pm , Wednesday Nov 13, 9-5:30pm. Dropin clinic at Cranbrook Health Unit: Friday Nov 15, 9-4 pm. Call the Flu Line at 250-420-2285 for more information. Family Flu Clinics at Cranbrook Health Unit by appointment only, call 250-420-2207. 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 COME SKATE WITH US. Ongoing registration available for Pre-can, Canskate, StarSkate, Adult & Powerskate programs. Check us out at www.cranbrookskating.com 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 ICBL-Duplicate Bridge–Senior Center in Cranbrook. Mon & Wed 7pm, Thurs & Fri 1pm at Scout Hall, Marysville. Info: Maggie 250-417-2868. Cranbrook Phoenix Toastmasters meet every Thursday, noon - 1:00 Heritage Inn. Toastmasters teaches communication & leadership skills. Roberta 250-489-0174. 1911.toastmastersclubs.org. Dog Lovers! We have a pet section at Bibles For Missions Thrift Store. We’d love you to join us running our store. Flexible hours, short shifts to suit you. Come meet new friends! Open Tues-Sat, 10am-5pm. 824 Kootenay St. N., Cranbrook. Contact the Kimberley Health Care Auxiliary Thrift Shops at 250-427-2503 (Brenda) or 250-427-1754 Gayle) for volunteer opportunities: cashiers, sorters, after hours cleaners. 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. Help Big Brothers Big Sisters of Cranbrook: One way you can help is by donating to our “Blue Bin” located outside to the left of WalMart. This bin is there for any clothing items or soft items. (250) 489-3111 or email us at bigscran@bigbrothersbigsisters.ca 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, OCTOBER 24, 2013
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Red Sox beat Cardinals 8-1 to open World Series BEN WALKER Associated Press
BOSTON - Given a bit of help by the umpires and a lot more by the Cardinals, the Boston Red Sox turned this World Series opener into a laugher. Mike Napoli hit a three-run double right after the umps reversed a blown call, Jon Lester made an early lead stand up and the Red Sox romped past sloppy St. Louis 8-1 Wednesday night for their ninth straight Series win. David Ortiz was robbed of a grand slam by Carlos Beltran - a catch that sent the star right fielder to a hospital with bruised ribs but Big Papi later hit a two-run homer following third baseman David Freese’s bad throw. The Red Sox also capitalized on two errors by shortstop Pete Kozma to extend a Series winning streak that began when they swept St. Louis in 2004. Boston never trailed at any point in those four games and, thanks to this embarrassing display by the Cardinals, coasted on a rollicking night at Fenway Park. It got so bad for St. Louis that the sellout crowd literally laughed when pitcher Adam Wainwright and catcher Yadier Molina, who’ve combined to win six Gold Gloves, let an easy popup drop untouched between them. Serious-minded St.
Louis manager Mike Matheny didn’t find anything funny, especially when the umpires huddled in the first inning and flipped a call by Dana DeMuth at second base. The six-man crew correctly ruled that Kozma had not caught a soft toss from second baseman Matt Carpenter on a slow grounder by Ortiz. A season before Major League Baseball employs full replay, fans got to see a wrong get righted. “There’s five of us out here, OK? And all five of us agreed 100 per cent that it wasn’t a catch. Our job is to get it right,” crew chief John Hirschbeck told Matheny on audio played on the Fox telecast. The normally slick-fielding Cardinals looked sloppy at every turn. Wainwright bounced a pickoff throw, Molina let a pitch skitter off his mitt, centre fielder Shane Robinson bobbled the carom on Napoli’s double and there was a wild pitch. The Cardinal Way? More like no way. Game 2 is Thursday night, with 22-year-old rookie sensation Michael Wacha starting for St. Louis against John Lackey. Wacha is 3-0 with an 0.43 ERA this post-season. Lester blanked the Cardinals on five hits over 7 2-3 innings for his third win this post-season.
AGM Notice KEYSA Kootenay East Youth Soccer Association will be holding its Annual General Meeting
Tuesday, October 29, 6 pm at the library at Mount Baker Secondary School
This AGM is open to the public, however, voting will be limited to members only. This includes board members, team officials and parents of registered players from the most recent season. There will be an open forum opportunity for comments and input. The board of directors welcomes the feedback from its membership and the community. We hope all of our KEYSA soccer teams had a great season. Now, it’s time to finish up for 2013 and start planning for 2014. Thank you for all your support - we look forward to hearing from you at the AGM.
SPORTS
DAILY TOWNSMAN / DAILY BULLETIN
Sports News? Call Trevor 250-426-5201, ext. 212 trevor@dailytownsman.com
KOOTENAY ICE
TREVOR CRAWLEY PHOTO
WINNER, WINNER, CHICKEN DINNER: Team Guy Fieri was the winner of the 2nd annual Kootenay Ice Iron Chef competition on Wednesday night at Mount Baker Secondary School. From left to right: Jeff Hubic, Ryan Chynoweth, Wyatt Hoflin, Jagger Dirk, Landon Cross, Luke Philp, Rinat Valiev, while Hudson Elynuik sits in front.
From the rink to the kitchen Kootenay Ice put their culinary skills to the test for the second annual Iron Chef competition TRE VOR CR AWLEY Sports Editor
It was a chaotic scene at Mount Baker Secondary School on Wednesday night, as the Kootenay Ice traded their sticks for kitchen utensils for the second annual Iron Chef competition. Split up into three groups named after the famous chefs of Guy Fieri, Bobby Flay and Gordon Ramsay, each team had a $90 budget to buy their ingredients and make a salad, pasta and meat dish and dessert for three judges. After an hour of preparation time, each group presented their best effort, and it was Team Guy Fieri that came out
on top of the other two groups. Judged on taste, texture, preparation and presentation, Team Guy Fieri won a clean sweep in all categories and earned a $200 gift certificate to a local restaurant. While the gift card in itself is a good incentive to win, the bragging rights is the most important element at stake in the competition, said defenceman Jagger Dirk. “We’re all pretty competitive, we all want to be on top,” said Dirk, “and even in little things like this—cooking or community events, if we’re playing against each other— we’re very competitive and we all want to come out on top.
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“Nobody likes being a loser.” Team Guy Fieri, made up of Dirk, Luke Philp, Wyatt Hoflin, Jeff Hubic, Rinat Valiev, Landon Cross, Hudson Elynuik and Ryan Chynoweth, were pretty meticulous in their preparation, having a meeting beforehand to divvy up roles and responsibilities. “Everybody knew what they were doing,” Dirk said. “There were eight guys, so two guys to a station and everybody kind of did their own thing, but at the end of the day when everything came together, it worked perfectly.” Hoflin and Philp prepared a Greek salad, Hubic and Valiev did dessert, Elynuik and
Chynoweth handled the pasta, while Dirk and Cross checked on the chicken. All three groups had to work hard to impress the judging panel of James Farnan with ShawTV, Ice broadcaster Jeff Hollick and yours truly representing the Cranbrook Daily Townsman. The meals prepared from each group ranged from impressive to unfortunate. Team Bobby Flay’s salsa chicken took the tastebuds on a wild roller coaster ride, while Team Gordon Ramsay only prepared one dessert to split between three judges.
See CHEF , Page 9
Doping officials to visit Jamaica next week DAVID MCFADDEN Associated Press
KINGSTON, Jamaica - After attempts by Jamaica’s anti-doping commission to delay an inquiry, a team from the World Anti-Doping Agency is scheduled to visit the island next week to begin a special audit of the sprinting powerhouse’s drug testing regime. Herb Elliott, the chairman of the Jamaica Anti-Doping Commission, said Wednesday that
three WADA officials will be on the Caribbean island Monday and Tuesday to inspect the agency in the wake of revelations of a near-complete breakdown of the commission’s out-of-competition testing from January 2012 to the July opening of the London Olympics. “We have nothing to hide,” Elliott said in Jamaica, where eight athletes have tested positive for banned substances in 2013.
But despite an invitation from Jamaica’s prime minister and WADA’s indication that it was available to visit, JADCO had previously told the Montreal-based organization that an inspection could not be accommodated until early 2014.The Jamaican agency’s response raised many eyebrows, even prompting WADA President John Fahey to call it “farcical” and “unacceptable” in an interview with the Daily Telegraph.
daily townsman / daily bulletin
Thursday, OCTOBER 24, 2013
Sports
Trading hockey sticks for spatulas and whisks Continued from page 8 Team Guy Fieri seemed to knock it out of the park with their pasta and meat dishes, as one judge exclaimed he’d want it for his final meal if on death row. Dirk said his crew was pretty confident as each item went up to the judges. “We slipped them five bucks each under the table, made sure they gave us the right…” said Dirk, trailing off at the end of his sentence. While each group prepared their dishes for the judges, they were under the watchful eye of head coach Ryan McGill and his assistant, Jay Henderson, to see how everyone worked together and to prevent any potential culinary disasters. “I think that’s the best thing I witnessed, is how hard they worked, even though the food is absolutely atrocious,” said McGill, “and it really goes a long way with what they really know about how hard it is to prepare food and get ready for what they need as far as good nutrition. “It’s really neat to see how lighthearted it is. It’s not real serious, they have a good time and the best thing is, it’s away from the rink.”
Page 9
Manning misses Denver’s practice with a sore ankle, will return Thursday
ENGLEWOOD, Colo. - Peyton Manning doesn’t like to skip any snaps, so you can imagine how unhappy he was Wednesday when a tender ankle forced him to miss practice for the first time since joining the Denver Broncos last year. “It was Greek’s call,” Manning said of head athletic trainer Steve Antonopulos. “I can assure I didn’t go down without a fight. But hopefully I’ll use the day to get a little better, feel a little better.” Manning said he plans to return to practice Thursday when the banged-up Broncos (6-1) continue preparations for Mike Shanahan’s return to Denver with the Washington Redskins (24). Manning was knocked around by his former team in his homecoming on Sunday night. His mix-and-match offensive line allowed him to get hit 10 times, including four sacks, two by Robert Mathis, in a 39-33 loss to the Indianapolis Colts. Coach John Fox declined to identify which ankle was bothering his star quarterback, and Manning deflected questions about it, too. Associated Press
Trevor Crawley photo
Sam Reinhart and Kyle O’Connor prepare the dessert portion for their group during the Kootenay Ice Iron Chef competition at Mount Baker Secondary School on Wednesday night. McGill had high praise for the winners, noting how organized they were at pairing up to prepare each of the four dishes, while adding that the losing team seemed to be a ‘train wreck’ right from the beginning. McGill and Henderson made up each team with the intent of watching how certain players interacted with each other. “We have some guys that maybe need a little
“It’s really neat to see how lighthearted it is. It’s not real serious, they have a good time and the best thing is, it’s away from the rink.” Ryan McGill help, we have some guys that are true leaders,” said McGill, “and we wanted to put some
guys together to see if there’d be any friction and in some groups, there was, and in some groups. there wasn’t, but they obviously learned to try to work through that.” Dirk added that while the contest was fun for some friendly competition between teammates, there were serious themes at work. “Teamwork and camaraderie,” said Dirk. “Lots of communication in the kitchen can
translate to on the ice, so that’ll help us there. “And just having fun. It’s hard to play well when you’re not having fun.” NOTES: New Ice acquisitions Landon Cross and Tim Bozon have arrived from Kamloops and suited up for their first practice in the afternoon before hitting the grocery store and the Mount Baker school kitchen for the Iron Chef competition.
DETROIT - Bobby Ryan couldn’t quite imagine what Daniel Alfredsson is going through after 17 seasons with the Ottawa Senators. But when Ryan returned to Anaheim to face the Ducks, he got a taste. “Just warming up on the opposite side, talking to the guys at the red-line and whatnot - I never had that experience before,” Ryan said. “Being in the visiting room when you’re only 15 feet away, it’s a much different feeling.” Alfredsson got that Wednesday at Joe Louis Arena in his first game for the Detroit Red Wings against his former team. The Senators dominated 6-1, but no matter the score it was another milestone in the healing process. “As with a lot of things, only time can really fix stuff and that’s what I think this situation needs as well,” Senators defenceman Erik Karlsson said. “It’s just going to take time, and it doesn’t really matter what you do, what you say
or how you feel. You’re just going to have to wait it out for it to feel a little bit normal again.” The new normal is Alfredsson in bright red with the winged wheel on his chest. There’s no letter above it, either. Meanwhile, Jason Spezza has Alfredsson’s old job as Ottawa’s captain and is the first player other than the future Hall of Famer to wear that “C” on his jersey since Alexei Yashin in 1998 and 1999. “It’s a long time in one spot as the captain of the team,” said Spezza, who scored two goals Wednesday. “I imagine it’s weird for him. It’s weird for us to see him in a Wings jersey. I can imagine him seeing me wearing the ‘C’ is different for him, but it’s the reality of the situation and I’m sure he’s moved past it.” On the ice for warm-ups, Alfredsson didn’t stray from routine. Meanwhile, Spezza convened the Senators’ leadership group that includes Karlsson, Chris Neil and Chris Phillips while the rest of the team went about its business.
“It didn’t feel as awkward as I thought it would,” Alfredsson said. “It was OK, actually. It was different seeing them on the other side. I thought it was OK.” Spezza said it was easy to lose touch of where Alfredsson was on the ice during the game. But the surreal experience didn’t escape him. “You’re playing the game and you’re just worried about playing,” Spezza said. “It’s different seeing him, but it’s nice to catch up with him in the morning and see him. Once the game starts, it doesn’t really come into play because we’re so focused on the game.” Alfredsson was in the starting lineup alongside Pavel Datsyuk and Henrik Zetterberg. By the time he took his second shift, he was back in his usual spot on the second line. It didn’t take long for him to settle in. “Once the puck drops in the game, it felt (like) you’re focused, what you’re going to be, what you’re going to do out on the ice,” Alfredsson said.
wishes to provide the following information about our 2012-2013 Poppy Campaign: Balance September 30, 2012..........$9,298.00 Deposits made from Oct. 1, 2012 to Sept. 30, 2013: ...$42,240.00
Royal....................$7,123.00 Canadian Legion Wreaths andThe supplies: Branch 24, Cranbrook to provide the following informatio Poppywishes Campaign expenses: ...........$4,456.00 about our 2010-2011 Poppy Campaign
Balance Septemberexpenses: 30, 2010.............................. $11,005. Poster/Essay ...................$2,725.00
Amount of Donations received: ........................ $40,023.
Special use expenditures: .............$20,928.00
Poppies and Wreaths purchased for campaign ... $7,870.
Campaign expenses: ............................................. $3,429. Bursaries: .......................................$3,000.00
Awards to school participants in Poster and Assessment Literary Contest to ............................................. $4,031.
Alfredsson faces former team with Red Wings Stephen Whyno Canadian Press
The Royal Canadian Legion Branch 24, Cranbrook
Centralgrants Poppy Fund: ...................$41,301.00 Assistance to Veterans, and Dependants in need of assistance .................... $785.
Total expenses Special project grants to: East Kootenay to Sept.for 30,Health 2013:($10,000) .........................$79,533.00 Foundation to assist in purchasing a digital mammography machine. To Post Traumatic Bank balanceStress per Disorder program for returning ($10,000) Sept. 30,Veterans 2013 Bank Statement: .....$9,529.00 1813 Army Cadets and the ($1,143 Veterans and Branch 24 552 On Key behalf City Air of Cadets each) ............. $22,286.
TAKE TIME TO
REMEMBER THE ROYAL CANADIAN LEGION
nce
Remembra Day
Monday, Nov. 11, 2013
Thank You For Your Support Royal Canadian
Legion
Cranbrook Branch No. 24
Legion members, we would like to thank all Donators to our poppy fund. Its prime purpose Assessment by BC/Yukon Central .. $1,805. is to support our Veterans andPoppy their Fund dependants, seniors andVeterans the youth our community. I am On behalf of the and of Branch 24 Legion members, sure aware there now young would likeeveryone to thank allisDonators to ourare poppy fund. Its pri Veterans Canadaand as well as the purpose is to returning support ourtoVeterans their dependan older seniors andVeterans. the youth of our community. I am sure everyo
Bursaries requested: One applicant .......................... $4,0
is aware there are now young Veterans returning to Cana Weaswill provide Bursaries for education as well the older Veterans.
courses as well. Contact Branch 24 for details
We (250 will provide Bursaries for education as w 426-8531). Again, thank youcourses for your Contact Branch 24 for details (250 426-8531). Again, strong support in the past and we hope youtha you for your strong support in the past and we hope you w will help us again during the up and coming help us again during the up and coming campaign start campaign starting in Mid October. in Mid October.
Brown, President, 24 RobClive Martin, President, BranchBranch 24 Radcliffe Clive Brown, Les Les Radcliffe & Ray&LeClair, Poppy Chairmen Poppy Chairmen
Page 10 Thursday, OCTOBER 24, 2013
daily townsman / daily bulletin
Sports
Looking forward to the links next year as the season closes Tre vor Cr awley Sports Editor
T
he days are getting shorter, and the air is getting colder and the snow is beginning it’s slow inevitable advance down from Fisher Peak and the Steeples Range. It’s getting time to winterize and that includes golf courses, which will be shutting down the links for the next six months. Mark Twain once described golf as a good walk spoiled, and I don’t want to be pessimistic about the sport, but that still doesn’t take away from the fact that I’m a terrible golfer. Despite an effort to get out and try more local links this year, I was relatively unsuccessful. However, I did get to one that I’ve never been to before. I got the chance to play a round at Trickle Creek Golf Resort earlier in the summer and didn’t realize just what a treat I was in for until driving through the en-
trance. What immediately struck me as I drove through the ironwrought gate and onto the course roadway was the the work and attention to detail on the landscaping. It was all that much more impressive when I was told that there had been snow on the ground only two weeks prior. The course itself is slope-style, designed by Les Furber, and built right into the side of North Star mountain, which is home to the Kimberley Alpine Resort. It’s a tough course, and Jeff Bazley, the business development and marketing manager for Trickle Creek, wants to maintain it’s reputation as a challenge. The fairways were generally narrow and lined by trees, and I learned real quick that the rough was more like a jungle. Over 18 holes, I lost count of how many balls escaped by golf bag.
I’d publish my score if I’d kept track of it—I gave up after the front nine (it was ugly), but ended up making par on a few holes on the back nine. Bazley said the fifth hole was the toughest on the course. A Par 4, it has a slight dog-leg to the right with a deep valley on the left that can make life difficult if a drive goes wild off the tee box. Hole 11 is considered the signature hole, a short Par 3 with the Steeples mountain range as the backdrop. The tee box is elevated with a 150-foot drop down to a short fairway, before getting to the green, which is surrounded by bunkers. A solid strike with a short iron and and you’re putting for birdie. If you duff your shot off the tee box, well, at least there is a nice view. Being that it’s a mountain-style course, wildlife can, and will, get in the way of a shot. A bedded-down mule deer doe in some shade
It wasn’t a hole in one, but I made it onto the green at least on Hole 11 at the Trickle Creek Golf Resort. at the edge of the fairway on Hole 13 checked out the action as our carts drove by. It was a pretty finish on the final hole, with a lake beside the club-
house that I managed to avoid on my approach shot. I’ve never golfed a mountain slope-style course before, and as my score (which shall
remain secret) indicated, I was woefully unprepared for the challenge. However, it’s not just about the golf, and I had a great time enjoying the course and the
surrounding scenery. There are still a few other local courses that I haven’t played yet, but there’s always next year to enjoy more spoiled good walks.
YOUR CITY WORKING FOR YOU! Thursday, October 24th, 2013 CRANBROOK FIRE & EMERGENCY SERVICES 2ND ANNUAL COMMUNITY CALENDAR ON SALE! The 16 month Cranbrook Community Calendar developed in partnership with Cranbrook Fire & Emergency Services, the Cranbrook Daily Townsman and Rocky Mountain Printers is to raise funds and awareness for the British Columbia Professional Firefighters Burn Fund and help promote the local area.
REMINDERS... Thursday October 24 – Brown Bag Lunch @ 12pm Monday November 4 – City Council Meeting @ 6pm
Purchasers of the calendar will be asked to enter their calendar number, name, address and email on a special link on the City of Cranbrook website – www. cranbrook.ca. The website will generate random monthly winners who will receive some local monthly prizes. Calendars are $10 each and only 1500 copies are available. Calendars are available for sale at the Cranbrook Fire Hall on 2nd Street South, the Cranbrook Daily Townsman, Rocky Mountain Printers, Cranbrook City Hall and the Leisure Services desk at Western Financial Place.
FALL DEER MATING SEASON APPROACHING; RESIDENTS URGED TO BE AWARE Residents and visitors are advised to continue to exercise both caution and common sense this fall, as the late autumn deer mating (rutting) period begins. That is the message from the City of Cranbrook. In the weeks leading up to the rut (into November and December) bucks increase their displays of dominance and indirect threats. A dominant buck typically circles a rival with deliberate steps; back arched, head low and tail flicking. Bucks can also display dominance by violently thrashing the bushes with their antlers. “We are into a transition period, where some does with fawns remain wary and potentially aggressive toward humans with dogs,” says Mayor Wayne Stetski. “Now we will likely also see an increase of particularly aggressive acts from the local urban buck population. Residents are reminded to please give deer plenty of space to move or leave the area. Do not walk closer to the deer; find another route.”
FIVE YEAR FINANCIAL PLAN BYLAW Within Council’s policy direction and key objectives, the Budget process is guided by the Finance and Computer Services Department and spans eight City departments. Each department is responsible for overseeing a multitude of programs that keep City operations running smoothly. Once the City’s Senior Management team completes their review following both the policy direction and priorities of Council, the Budget is presented to Council and the public in a series of open budget meetings. Council debates the issues presented and directs Administration on final Budget decisions. The process begins in early fall of each year and wraps up in March or early April of each year, when Council adopts the Financial Plan Bylaw. Visit our website and click on ‘Bylaws’ for more on all of our City bylaws.
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Watch the latest
Cranbrook City Council meeting when you want. Visit www.cranbrook.ca
Working Toward A Greener Community
daily townsman / daily bulletin
Thursday, OCTOBER 24, 2013
OPINION
Page 11
Harper’s house of cards comes crashing down Michael den Tandt Postmedia News
S
o, that’s it then: The Senate expense scandal is now a mortal threat to Prime Minister Stephen Harper‘s career, and the future electoral prospects of his Conservative government. And all it took, astonishingly, was two of the “accused,” Sen. Mike Duffy and Sen. Patrick Brazeau, standing up in the Red Chamber and telling, just for a few minutes apiece, their side of the story. Sen. Pamela Wallin is still to come. But the floodgates have opened. In a sense, this is now just the start. From a PMO tactical point of view, it is a calamity. When the history of this tawdry episode is written, this decision — whether it was made by PMO officials, or Conservatives in the Senate, or Harper himself — to seek to cut Duffy, Brazeau and Wallin loose, without pay and without due process, may well go down as the very worst in a cascade of catastrophically bad decisions. Harper must now address allegations of corruption, conspiracy, and strong-arming by his office, tantamount to blackmail. The base, one suspects, will not be pleased. Let’s acknowledge first that no one gets away clean now, come what may. We have heard for months about profligacy in the Senate, and specifically about how Duffy, Wallin, Brazeau and the recently resigned Mac Harb padded their various expense claims. We’ve heard ad nauseam about the $90,000 cheque to Duffy from former PMO chief of staff Nigel Wright. Avarice in the Senate is now a deeply embedded narrative. Tuesday’s motions have been a long time coming, and the senators’ cris de coeur, however dramatic, are unlikely to rehabilitate them, much. But there’s a fair question here: Can it be a coincidence that the simple narrative of culpability by these three happens to suit the prime minister’s needs so well? As Brazeau pointedly
asked his colleagues Tuesday, his voice trembling with emotion: Are the rest really so clean? Monday for the first time, driven by Conservative senators’ move for suspensions without pay, a new narrative began to emerge, from Duffy’s camp. Though not conclusive, it connected the dots in a way that hasn’t happened before. It amounts to this: Duffy had sanction from the party’s highest levels, including then Leader of the Government in the Senate, Marjory LeBreton, and Nigel Wright himself, to submit his expense claims as he did. Brazeau on Tuesday made similar assertions; everything he did, he said, was above board. But when the story blew up in the media, Duffy became a liability, and was ordered to pay up. He refused, pointing out he’d sought and received permission from his bosses at every turn — after which the PMO devised the Wright $90,000 plan, along with “lines” that would see Duffy publicly appear to willingly repay his expenses, thereby soothing anti-fat-cat passions among the Tory base. When Duffy balked, his lawyer, Donald Bayne, said, he was threatened with political summary execution — ouster from the party and the Senate. He caved, blabbed it around too freely and the rest is history. Meantime, Brazeau says, he was deemed expendable, and made a scapegoat. Wallin will doubtless tell a similar story when her turn comes. It’s all so strangely plausible, isn’t it? And there’s now certainly more to come. Bayne claims to have documentary evidence, in the form of emails, backing up Duffy’s account. The pressure to release them, in some public forum or other, will soon become unstoppable. Even before Tuesday evening, this cried out for hard, frank answers from Harper — concrete, specific denials, or admissions. But the prime minister has been mum. Monday in question
period he reverted to old talking points. Tuesday he repeated the same lines a couple of times before handing off to his parliamentary secretary, Paul Calandra, who was then filleted like a trout by NDP Leader Tom Mulcair. Harper cannot continue ducking this, without suffering irreparable harm to his own reputation. Here’s where this leads: If Duffy’s story is true, and he can indeed prove it, then the entire senior Conservative power structure in Ottawa is on trial. And if, as Bayne has hinted, there’s evidence the prime minister knew of the Wright-Duffy deal before May 15 — when he has said repeatedly he did not know — then Harper himself will be irreparably damaged. There’s just one way to get to the bottom of it. The principals — including Wright, Duffy, former PMO director of issues management Chris Woodcock, LeBreton, former PMO lawyer Benjamin Perrin and indeed Harper himself, as well as Brazeau and Wallin — must tell their stories under oath, in a public forum. Emails and documents must be made public. If there’s been lying or other wrongdoing, those responsible must
take their lumps — up to and including the PM himself. Absent that kind of decisive resolution, this will continue to rot away at the Conservative party, and eventually bring it down. Here’s why letting this fester further is not a path the Conservatives should choose, despite the obvious pain of facing up to it now: Their party’s foundation is moral, in the Prairie populist and Baptist-inflected Reform Party. Conservatives won power in 2006 on a wave of popular disillusionment with Liberal arrogance and corruption. Tory loyalists, the rock-solid 30 per cent, will never desert en masse to the Grits or New Democrats. What they may do, though, if they perceive a serious moral and ethical deficit at the top, is take a break. The Liberals learned in 2004, and again in 2006, what effect that can have. Bottom line: If Duffy and Brazeau can make an even semi-plausible case for their victimization by the PMO, then the government has a much bigger problem that any amount of deflection can possibly manage. The truth will out. Put the principals under oath, and get it over with.
CAnadian press
Embattled Tory senator Mike Duffy
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Legion Remembrance Day Wreaths Attention Kimberley Businesses
Show Your Community Pride! Please contact the Poppy Office in Cranbrook @ 250-489-6745 if you wish to sponsor a wreath for Remembrance Day and support our veterans and our community.
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Bring your care card with you! Flu shots are safe, effective, and free for the following: • People 65 years and older and their caregivers/household contacts • People of any age in residential care facilities • Children and adults with chronic health conditions and their household contacts • Children & adolescents (6 months to 18 years) with conditions treated for long periods of time with Acetylsalicylic Acid (Aspirin/ ASA) and their household contacts. • Children & adults who are very obese • Aboriginal people • All children 6-59 months of age • Household contacts and caregivers of infants and children 0-59 months of age • Pregnant women at any stage of pregnancy during the influenza season and their household contacts • People who work with live poultry • Health care and other care providers in facilities and community settings who are capable of transmitting influenza disease to those at high risk of influenza complications • Individuals who provide care or service in potential outbreak settings housing high risk persons (e.g., crew on ships) • People who provide essential community services (First Responders, Corrections Workers) • Inmates of provincial correctional institutions The flu (influenza) is highly contagious. Getting your flue shot protects you and those around you – at home, school and work.
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Page 12 Thursday, OCTOBER 24, 2013
3
kootenay NEWS
daily townsman / daily bulletin
Nelson acupuncturist gets six FACTS months in jail for tax evasion
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Sam Van Schie Nelson Star
A traditional Chinese medicine doctor who didn’t pay his income taxes for three years has been ordered to pay a $40,000 fine and spend six months in jail for the crime. Warren Fischer, 50, is the founder of Nelson’s Academy of Classical Oriental Sciences, where he works as a classroom instructor and an acupuncturist in the outpatient clinic. Between the years of 2007 and 2009, he filed income tax statements reporting either no earnings or a net loss. But according to a Revenue Canada investigation, he earned between $80,000 and $135,000 during each of those years and owed about $62,000 in taxes for the three-year period. The sentence handed down by Judge Lisa
Nelson Star file photo
Warren Fischer, a doctor of Chinese medicine in Nelson, was sentenced to six months in jail for willfully evading income tax payments. Mrozinski at the Nelson courthouse Tuesday morning gave him three and a half years to pay back 75 per cent of the amount he owes in back taxes.
(Kootenay East)
Province of British Columbia Constituency Office: 100c Cranbrook Street N. Cranbrook, B.C. V1C 3P9
Phone: 250-417-6022 Fax: 250-417-6026 bill.bennett.mla@leg.bc.ca
tients, friends and family — filled the public gallery to hear the sentence. Many left in tears. Fischer showed little emotion during the one-hour proceedings and didn’t show any outward response to the news that he was heading back to jail. During sentencing he said that as a slim, intellectual gay man he was bullied by fellow inmates in jail. He was refused access to the Chinese herbs he takes for medical reasons. He had difficulty sleeping and became ill. He also said previously that he has no intention to pay income tax going forward. Instead he will organize his affairs such that he’ll be giving the majority of his earnings to charity and claim only a small income, below the taxable amount.
Castlegar school sold to French school district Jim Sincl air Castlegar News
MacLean School is set to be sold to the French school district. A bylaw making way for the sale of Ma-
cLean Elementary School to the French School District 93 was given first and second reading by the school board at its regular meeting Monday, Oct.
21 at Stanley Humphries Secondary School in Castlegar. Relief in relation to the $1 million sale was expressed by board chair Darrel Ganzert, as
2nd Street South Conceptual Design & Moir Gravel Pit Reclamation Project Open House
well as by several trustees. “The selling of MacLean School is a huge step forward for the board,” said Ganzert the morning following the meeting. “What it allows us to do is to top up our facilities grant because we used most of last year’s and this year’s grant to convert Rossland from a
high school to a K-9 school.” That move left the district without much at all, said Ganzert. The sale could help “top up” the facilities grant fund and allow the district to “look very closely at fixing the water at the Rossland school, at least the drinking water side of things.”
The City of Cranbrook, in conjunction with Urban Systems, will be hosting the public at an open house on both the conceptual design of the 2nd Street South corridor from Highway 3 to 14th Avenue South and the reclamation plan for the Moir Gravel Pit. The session on the 2nd Street South corridor project is intended to gather public input to provide to Council for decision making purposes. The session on the Moir Gravel Pit is around the plan to redevelop the Moir Pit once the gravel resources have been depleted and the development of an off leash dog park on part of the site in early 2014. Urban Systems representatives and City of Cranbrook staff will be on hand to provide information on both projects including: project concepts and intents, progress to date and next steps. There will be information panels and 3D animated video loops of flyovers of both projects. The open house is scheduled for Wednesday November 6, 2013 from 4:30pm to 7:30pm at the Manual Training School at the Cranbrook Public Library. For more information, please contact:
Bill Bennett, M.L.A.
Mrozinski told the court that she did not believe Fischer would comply with a conditional sentence order because of his history of defying court process
and regulations of other governing bodies. During pre-trial hearings he and his supporters were disruptive in court and during the trial he refused to enter the courthouse, opting to stand outside the doors in peaceful protest. Fischer became more respectful of the court process after his conviction and spending 38 days in jail. For the first time, he showed up to court accompanied by a lawyer and gave a statement, during which he explained his motivation for avoiding taxes and apologized for his previous behaviour. Fischer was escorted out of the courthouse in handcuffs and will begin serving his jail time immediately. The days he’s already spent behind bars will be deducted from the sentence. About 40 people — Fischer’s students, pa-
Eric Sharpe, Project Manager City of Cranbrook Engineering Services 250-489-0233 sharpe@cranbrook.ca
Community Grant Applications Kimberley & District Community Foundation is inviting registered non-profit charitable organizations to apply for grants from the Kootenay Savings Community Fund and the KDCF Community Funds. The purpose of these grants is to provide assistance with the funding of educational, cultural, environmental, or economic non profit projects that will be of assistance to the communities of Kimberley and area, including Skookumchuck, St. Mary’s, Ta Ta Creek, Meadowbrook, Wycliffe, and Wasa. While all applications will be considered, preference will be given to those organizations that have not already received grants in 2013, and have an annual working budget of less than $50,000. Please note these grants are NOT for ongoing operating costs (e.g. salaries, utilities). Please contact Des McKay (Grants Committee Chair) at 250427-4008 or desmckay@shaw.ca for more information. Application forms are available at Kimberley City Hall or can be downloaded from our web site at kimberleyfoundation.ca Deadline for applications is Friday, November 1, 2013.
daily townsman / daily bulletin
Thursday, OCTOBER 24, 2013
Page 13
Page 14 Thursday, OCTOBER 24, 2013
arts/entertainment
daily townsman / daily bulletin
Ethiopian eye camp travelogue at the College Monday Submitted
Former Townsman reporter and Sunrise Rotary Club member Gerry Warner presents a Friends of the Library travelogue at the College of the Rockies Lecture Theatre Rm. 250 Monday Oct. 28 at 7 p.m. showing pictures of his Rotary eye camp experience last spring at Dembi Dolo in the Ethiopian Highlands. Warner joined a team of volunteer Rotarians from the Tri-Cities, Washington area including two ophthalmologists who did cataract eye surgery on more than 200 patients at the remote west Ethiopian village more than 500 km west of Addis Ababa near the Sudanese border. The nine-member team was led by Dr. James Guzek of the Pacific Cataract Laser Institute in Richland, Washington, who worked with Dr. Samuel Bora, an Ethiopian ophthalmologist based in Addis Ababa. The team raised its own funds for the trip and
THE
while in Ethiopia was supported by the Sisters of Charity in Dembi Dolo. There is only one ophthalmologist for every one million people in Ethiopia and the majority of these are concentrated in the capital Addis Ababa. In rural areas like Dembi Dolo patients would sometime walk for days just for the chance of receiving eye surgery for which they paid a token amount. “Watching these impoverished people waiting in line for surgery and seeing how it changes their lives is a very compelling experience,” says Warner, who assisted in sterilizing instruments at the eye camp. “You certainly come back with an altered view of what we take for granted here.” Admission is by donation and the funds raised will be used by The Friends of the Library for book purchases and other services at the Cranbrook Public Library.
Theme Night at
Old Bauernhaus
RESTAURANT
Sunday Oct 27
Thai Night
Book your Christmas Parties!
280 Norton Ave, Kimberley
Reservations: 250-427-5133 Find us on Facebook!
An image from the Rotary eye camp last spring at Dembi Dolo in the Ethiopian Highlands.
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Carla Nelson, Branch Manager www.maritimetravel.ca Maritime Travel, 1001 Baker St., Cranbrook, BC • cnelson@maritimetravel.ca • www.maritimetravel.ca
Gerry Warner photo
Kootenay-wide writing competition opens
For adults, there are three writing categories, For youth, there are two age divisions with cash prizes for the first, second and third place winners. Nelson Star
The gauntlet is down for this year’s Kootenay Literary Competition. Since its beginning as a small competition for Nelson writers, it has expanded to cover the entire Kootenay region, and offers the winners substantial cash prizes. For adults, there are three writing categories: fiction, creative non-fiction and poetry, with cash prizes for the first and second place entries in each category. For youth, there are two age divisions (12 to 14, and 15 to 18 years old) with cash prizes for the first, second and third
place winners. Submissions will be judged by a panel of writing professionals, who will provide feedback and suggestions on the winning work. All the winning entries will be published in the 2013 KLC Anthology. This year’s theme for older youth (15 to 18 years old) and adults is “refuge.” Writers have the freedom to interpret the theme in any way they like, and approach it through any of the genre categories. Younger writers (ages 12 to 14) have a different challenge, and must incorporate a small selec-
Not sure about the whole
digital NOW thing? is the time to get with it! On-Line Advertising – call your advertising representative today. Townsman: 250-426-5201 Bulletin: 250-427-5333
tion of keywords into their work to qualify. Detailed rules are available on the competition website. The deadline for submission is Friday, January 17 and the gala celebration to announce the winners will be March 14. The KLC committee hosts other writing related events in the region over the course of the year. In the spring of 2014, the second annual Spring Scribble weekend workshop for young writers will be held in Cranbrook. Details about upcoming events will be available at www. kootenaylitcomp.com. The literary competition committee has made the 2012 Anthology available for free as an ebook through the KLC website. Printed copies are also available to order. Questions about the competition can be emailed to kootenaylitcomp@gmail. com or call Morty Mint at 250-352-7844.
daily townsman / daily bulletin
arts/entertainment
Thursday, OCTOBER 24, 2013
Page 15
Bergmann Piano Duo plays Key City Theatre Nov. 3 Submit ted
The Key City Theatre is proud to present Internationally recognized pianists Elizabeth and Marcel Bergmann in a unique duo piano concert on Nov. 3 at 3 p.m. What makes this concert remarkable is that the Bergmann Piano Duo will be travelling with two matching Grand Pianos “in tow”; shipped from town to town for an extensive concert tour in October and November reaching 13 communities across B.C. from the Gulf Islands, to the lower mainland, the Interior as well as across the Kootenays. In the spirit of Vronsky and Babin, Stecher and Horowitz, and a host of others, the Bergmanns are embarking on such a remarkable tour, including two magnificent Grand Pianos, generously provided by Showcase Pianos of Vancouver, with the logistical help of moving company Salmon’s
Transfer of Richmond. The Bergmann Piano Duo have touched and inspired audiences with their uniquely eclectic programmes for more than two decades. As International prize winners, including the Dranoff International Two Piano Competition and Provincia di Caltanissetta International Chamber Music Competition, they have performed in recital and with orchestras across North America and Europe including recent appearances at the Concertgebouw in Amsterdam, the Salkind Duo Piano Festival, San Fransico and Munich in 2013. They have several recordings to their credit as well as being frequent featured artists on CBC broadcasts. Their recitals draw from an extensive repertoire ranging from the baroque to the contemporary and incorporate numerous arrange-
Elizabeth and Marcel Bergmann ments and original compositions byDrive Marcel 115 Thorncliffe Park Toronto Ontario Bergmann. M4H 1M1 Their Key City TheTel 416•696•2853 atre concert will include works by Mozart, Brahms, and Bernstein, along with Dave Brubeck, Chick Corea and
duo-piano teams on Astor Piazzolla. “We Docket: have 21641 taken a tour with their own pia247 - Saatchi nos in tow. Now the page outClient: of 20th century Tundrasaid Newspaper Job Name: Bergmanns have re-esmusical history” Lara Vanderheide Production Contact: Impresario George tablished an old tradiZukerman of White tion that will be as sucRock, B.C. “In the 50’s cessful today as it was in and 60’s the concert the past century.” The mastermind landmark was full of
chefs who created this recipe for delectable concert enjoyment are veteran community George Zukerman and his Kelowna-based partner Sylvie Lange, who have pulled together the ingredients re-
quired for one of Western Canada’s most unusual concert tours of the 21st century. Zukerman and Lange, along with the Bergmanns, credit piano dealer Manuel Bernaschek of Showcase Pianos for his willingness to share the vision of two matching Grand Pianos touring along with the performers. The magic of this unique concert tour may become a permanent reality for some lucky concert goer – or perhaps a community that is in search of a quality grand piano. The touring instruments will be made available for sale at the conclusion of the tour, autographed by the Bergmann Duo artists. Bergmann Piano Duo plays the Key City Theatre on Sunday, Nov. 3 at 3 p.m. Tickets are $25 plus GST and are available at the Key City Theatre box office or charge by phone at 250426-7006.
Somewhere in Cranbrook there’s a Tundra hauling the wood that will become a new fence.
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daily townsman / daily bulletin
Page 16 Thursday, OCTOBER 24, 2013
www.cranbrookchamber.com
BUSINESS TO BUSINESS Our Mission Statement:
Fostering a healthy business climate in Cranbrook & District
The Value of Small business By: The Cranbrook & District Chamber of Commerce Chamber of Commerce
October 21-25.2013 TWENTY-THIRD ANNUAL
“Christmas in The Country”
Market & Sale On Saturday, November 2nd
At The Jaffray Community Hall
And in sheer dollars, you’re right: these projects are economic game changers, with the ability to inject huge sums of money into B.C.’s economy. But when it comes to actual employment numbers, there’s another sector writing more paycheques: the small business sector.
JAFFRAY, BC
BY THE VENDORS OF THE Jaffray-Baynes Lake Farmers’ Market TIME:
I
f you watch the headlines, you might think that pipelines, LNG and mines are the bread and butter of B.C.’s business community.
9:00 AM TO 4:00 PM
“OVER 36 TABLES OF CHRISTMAS SHOPPING AT ITS BEST!”
THANK
YOU The Canadian Cancer Society wishes to thank all those that made our Hot Flashes movie premiere fundraiser a success. You helped us raise over $3,800 for the fight against cancer. A special thank you to our supporters that made this night possible: • House of Rose Winery • TVA Films • Landmark Cinemas’ Columbia Theatre • Rick’s Meats • Home Sweet Home Treats • Save On Foods
Small businesses, defined as businesses with less than 50 employees, make up 98 per cent of businesses in B.C. and account for a full 56 per cent of private-sector employment in the province. And if 50 employees doesn’t sound “small” to you, dig a little deeper into the numbers and you’ll discover that a full 82 per cent of the small business count is made up of “micro” businesses, with fewer
than five employees.
in our communities.
These small and micro businesses are a critical complement to the bigger players in B.C.’s resource-based, exportoriented economy. It’s this diversity of players that makes our economy strong.
It’s a well-known fact that small businesses create critical jobs in communities. But if you attend local civic events, you might also know this: Small business owners are often some of a community’s most engaged citizens, bringing leadership, common sense and outof-the-box thinking to community projects and goals.
And, like their larger counterparts, small businesses bring unique strengths to B.C. Small business owners add energy, drive, and entrepreneurial spirit to their communities. These entrepreneurs work tirelessly, determined to beat the sobering statistics about how many businesses fail. And if they do fail, more often than not, these entrepreneurs regroup, come up with a better idea, and try again. That’s a great spirit to have in British Columbia – a spirit of innovation, resourcefulness, and determination. It’s a spirit that helps our province dream big, bite off more than we can chew, and achieve more than we ever thought possible. And it’s a spirit that drives positive, tangible action
Not only do these entrepreneurs find time to build and beautify a community, but they’re often a voice of both reason and vision, challenging local politicians to spend sustainably, plan for the long term, and take bold, forwardthinking action to build a brighter future.
groups, clubs, teams and organizations that all receive sponsorship from small business owners.
So as B.C. celebrates Small Business Week (October 20 - 26), consider all the small businesses you count on for your everyday goods and services and take the time to celebrate that entrepreneurial spirit.
Because without our small businesses, B.C. would be far the poorer.
In Cranbrook, there are many achievements our local small businesses have driven forward : A new home and location for Denham Ford; a newly renovated building for Taylor Adams Chartered Accountants; the new theme and renovations to Heidi’s Restaurant are all projects that have enhanced the business core. The new sign by-law, last year’s
Gelato and Espresso Bar featuring
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Black Friday Campaign, the success of the Farmers’ market all achievements of Small Business. The recent announcement that Canadian Tire Corporation Ltd. along with its subsidiaries Sport Chek, Sports Experts and others has committed to providing support for the Canadian Olympic team for the next eight years is a win for all involved and that leads into the sponsorship of so many local events,
open 7am - 9pm Monday - saturday, 9am - 4pm sunday Prestige rocky Mountain resort, 209 Van Horne st. s., cranbrook
IN CONCERT
DIRECTOR, CHUCK BISSETT Pianist, Sue Gould
Friday, Nov 7 7pm
Kimberley Conference Centre with Kimberley Community Choir Director, Marta Zeegars
Tickets $12 adults $10 seniors $8 youth In Cranbrook: Lotus Books and from Choir Members or at the door.
A delightful evening of choral jazz, folk & classics!
B2B
daily townsman / daily bulletin
Thursday, OCTOBER 24, 2013
Page 17
BUSINESS TO BUSINESS
MAKE YOUR BUSINESS
STAND OUT
Diversity Advantage for Business
sities and their own unconscious bias. Embracing employees with different skills and cultural viewpoints also helps in understanding the needs and requirements of your customers, on a global scale. Example* Improved customer service skills that promote loyalty in clientele.
3
H
ow do diversities in a working environment add a unique richness to the workplace? Diverse backgrounds bring individual talents and experiences which contribute greatly to an organization’s overall growth. Diversity in the workplace leads to a wide variety of viewpoints and business ideas. This helps an organization formulate the best business strategy, with its large pool of different ideas and solutions. Example* Frontline & supporting staff are often the first to experience/discover a problem or potential problem. A solution can be made even better by consulting all unique perspectives as this can lead to an inventive/creative idea that sets your business apart from your competition.
1
• How do you encourage employees to share their ideas? • ANSWER – Create an environment in which they feel included & respected. When every individual within the organization feels a sense of duty to contribute a little effort to overcome unique differences, this united opinion, in fact, works for the betterment of the company or the institution. Example* Improved sense of pride & loyalty when they feel respected and included resulting in less employee turnover ( “I feel valued” )
2
• How do you nourish a sense of responsibility in your employees? • ANSWER – Give them an opportunity to have the conversation that will make them aware of each other’s hidden diver-
• How will you improve your respect and understanding of the perspectives of employees and customers? • ANSWER – Learn about your OWN diversities through a Diversity Training Workshop that will open your thoughts, give opportunities to
listen and share, consider and acquire some tools on “INCLUSIVITY” as well as develop a simple plan to help implement what you choose to bring back to your staff. Employees who are aware and accept t h e i r c o - wo r ke r ’s unique skills and cultural viewpoints are more likely to also understand the needs and requirements of your customers, on a global scale.
4
• How will your employees acquire the skills to embrace the perspectives of coworkers and customers with respect and understanding? • ANSWER – Arrange
for a Diversity Training Workshop that will open their thoughts, allow them to listen and share, then practice and deliver the unique plan that you developed earlier with the help of a trained facilitator. BUSINESS WITHOUT BORDERS, presented in partnership with the Cranbrook & District Chamber of Commerce, is now offering FREE DIVERSITY TRAINING WORKSHOPS for business owners/managers. • BECOME AN EMPLOYER OF CHOICE • IMPROVE STAFF LOYALTY & INVOLVEMENT
business partner wanted Are you interested in building a special kind of community newspaper? SNAP is now snapd with many new services to keep you in touch with your community! We are growing and looking for an Equity Partner. Call or email more details!
250-426-8585
“ We need an accountant that knows the industry as well as we do.” People who know, know BDO.SM
Coming next month: Mobile App Free Event Ticketing System Publish your photos & video Connect to your Interests
eastkootenay.snapd.com
• MAKE YOUR BUSINESS MORE WELCOMING IMPROVE CUSTOMER SERVICE
Preregistration is required (250) 426-5914 or email businesswithoutborders@cranbrookchamber.com
• INCREASE INTEREST OF PROSPECTIVE BUYERS OF YOUR BUSINESS
Workshops are offered for a limited time only. Program ends March of 2014.
Facilitator Maureen Frank, will be your guide in developing diversity in your workplace.
This project is made possible through funding from the Government of Canada and the Province of British Columbia.
Carla Lowden Owner/Manager
Carla Lowden has been the owner of Cranbrook Curves since October 2006. She and her staff have a desire to help women reach their goals in health and fitness. Their“Mission”is“To Strengthen Women”. Curves have a unique program that consists of resistance training and cardio exercise which protects muscle, increases metabolism and burns fat. Their machines are designed for safety, simplicity and effectiveness. The hydraulic resistance encourages smooth, continuous motion that reduces soreness and potential for injury. A total body workout which may take up to 90 minutes at a traditional gym can be completed in 30 minutes at Curves. Cranbrook Curves purchased new computerized technology in 2008 called Curves Smart which is a system that gives individualized feedback to members on each machine and calculates the calories burned at the end of each workout. Zumba classes were also added to the circuit early in 2011. Curves has recently introduced a new membership called Curves Complete, an integrated program that combines exercise, meal plans, and one-on-one coaching for more effective weight loss. This unique program puts an emphasis on increasing ones metabolism and making sensible, healthy eating choices with the help of an extensive website and weekly counseling. The cost is even lower than some diet programs alone. The members of Cranbrook Curves like to give back to the community as much they can so they have chosen to support the following charities; The Food Bank, Multiple Sclerosis, The Heart and Stroke Foundation, SPCA , The Canadian Cancer Society and The Canadian Breast Cancer Foundation. Call Cranbrook Curves at 250-417-2626 for a FREE no obligation appointment.
BDO provides assurance, tax, financial advisory and consulting services to growing businesses across the country. Assurance | Accounting | Tax | Advisory 35 10th Ave South Cranbrook BC V1C 2M9 250 426 4285
Page 18 Thursday, OCTOBER 24, 2013
daily townsman / daily bulletin
Home & Garden
YOU WANT IT, WE’VE GOT IT!
Trena Neid provides the highest quality service and advice. Available to meet in the privacy and comfort of your home. Trena is happy to help you build a customized and flexible home financing solution that meets your needs of today and goals of tomorrow. Servicing Cranbrook, Elkford, Fernie, Sparwood and the East Kootenay.
CALL TRENA NEID TODAY
250.919.3188 CRANBROOK 250.425.4788 SPARWOOD 1.855.222.5789 TOLL FREE
Mortgages…coming to you.
Anytime. Anywhere.
EKCCU.COM CR ANBROOK • ELKFORD • FERNIE • SPARWOOD
October 24
How to invite more natural light into your home A dark home can be dreary and drain residents’ energy levels rather quickly. Natural light has the power to make a person feel more energized, and it also can buoy spirits. As a result, many homeowners want to increase the amount of natural light in their homes. Increasing natural sunlight in a home reduces reliance on interior lighting. This reduces energy
bills and lowers the home’s carbon footprint. Natural light also can help people in a home feel happier and more content. According to the National Institutes of Health, some people experience serious mood changes during the winter months. Dubbed seasonal affective disorder, or SAD, this condition may be effectively treated with light
therapy. Exposure to more light can alleviate fatigue, loss of interest and sad or anxious feelings. Homeowners looking to increase the natural light in their homes, be it for medical or aesthetic reasons, can do so in a variety of ways. * Keep the drapes open. Opening blinds and curtains as far as they will go allows as much light to shine in without having to do major
Is old man winter giving you the draft? Seal him out with
Kimberley Building Supplies 250.427.2400
It is with extreme pride that Management and staff welcome our newest member – Rob Stang.
home renovations or spend any money at all. Homeowners concerned about privacy can install a window film that allows viewing from the inside only. * Clean the windows. Dirty windows obstruct sunlight from entering the home. They also can make a home appear unkempt. Spend a free day cleaning the windows so that they’ll let ample light in. * Install seamless or low-profile windows and doors. Seamless sliding doors enable a large amount of light to enter the home. Such doors can replace an entire wall to brighten up a dark area of a home. The more windows and doors a home has, the brighter it will be. * Take inventory of dark spots. A room may be dark
because it simply does not have a layout conducive to brightness. Is a wall blocking light from reaching a portion of the room? Think about changing the room’s layout or even making structural changes to improve light distribution. The addition of a small window on a southor west-facing wall can greatly improve natural light. Using mirrors can also reflect light where it is needed. * Invest in skylights or solar tubes. Both skylights or solar tubes enable light to enter a home from above. Skylights are larger and require considerably more work to install, while solar tubes are more low-profile and can be put into rooms that do not abut the roofline, such as those obstructed by attic space. The tubular cylinders are installed between the roof
Increasing natural light in a home can improve feelings of well-being and also reduce energy consumption during daylight hours.
and the ceiling and carry light through a reflective tube to the room below. Diffusers on tubular daylighting devices scatter the rays so the light doesn’t cast harsh shadows, and UV filters can help protect furniture from discoloring.
lose their leaves come autumn can be planted on sunny areas of the property. This way in the summer months they will shade the house and keep it cooler, while in winter more sun will stream in when the leaves are shed.
* Trim shrubs and trees. If trees and bushes are blocking light from entering your home, trim them to enable dappled light to come through. Deciduous trees that will naturally
* Create a threeseason room. Make a spot in the home where sun will be at a premium. A solarium or greenhouse attached to the home can be a warm and sunny spot.
Rob is a hard working REALTOR® and since he started his 3 year career in Real Estate has dominated the commercial market.
• Chimney Sweeping & Cleaning
Rob is excited about this new home and will welcome past, present and future clients to come in and see him at 911 Baker Street – right across the street from the Royal Bank and the Spirit Tree Sculpture.
• Gutter Cleaning • Vinyl Siding Repair
Rob Stang
250.919.9915 • robstang@cranbrookagencies.com
Realty Executives Cranbrook
911 Baker Street, Cranbrook, BC 426-3355 • Toll Free: 1-888-629-4002
• Inspections & Technical Services
As Always Free Estimates Tip Top Chimney Service “Sweeping the Kootenays Clean” T - 250-919-3643 E - tiptopchimneys@gmail.com
daily townsman / daily bulletin
home & Garden
Thursday, OCTOBER 24, 2013
Page 19
Call Now
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daily townsman / daily bulletin
Page 20 Thursday, OCTOBER 24, 2013
ANNUAL
HALLOWEEN
SPOOKTAKULAR! THURSDAY, OCTOBER 31ST 3:00PM – 5:00PM JOIN US FOR FUN FESTIVITIES FOR THE LITTLE ONES. • Spooky Story Time at Coles 3pm-4pm • Face Painting across from Bentley 3pm-5pm • Trick-or-Treating starts at 3:30pm while supplies last. Look for stores displaying balloons. • Costume Contest for Kids ages 2 to 8 years old, by Winners at 4:30pm (chance to win movies passes) • Visit the decorated pumpkins on display and vote for your favourite.
facebook.com/tamarackcentre
FIND IT HERE.
Costume pattern and materials from Fabricland Make-up courtesy of Shopper’s Drug Mart Socks from Ardene Flip Flops from Target
Columbia Theatre
Winners
Staples
daily townsman
Thursday, OCTOBER 24, 2013
3
DALYE SA
SATURDAY
FRIDAY
26
25
OCTOBER
OCTOBER
SUNDAY
27
OCTOBER
UN.
.-S FRI.-SAT
®
New York Strip Loin Steak
Pepsi Soft Drinks Assorted varieties. 20 Pack. Plus deposit
Boneless. Cut from 100% Canadian beef. Sold in a twin package of 4 for only $20.00.
$
and/or enviro levy where applicable. HOUSEHOLD LIMIT TWO - Combined varieties.
3
99
0 Pack! 2 e g r a L
Product of China. 5 lb. Box. HOUSEHOLD LIMIT TWO.
ea.
3
99
2
99 ea.
! YS ONLY 3 DAPR ICE
! YS ONLY 3 DAPR ICE CLUB
Brownies with Cream Cheese Party Tray Or assorted varieties. 400 to 540 g.
4
99
! YS ONLY 3 DAPR ICE CLUB
CLUB
Deli Turkey Breast Sliced or shaved fresh. Service counter only.
1
ea.
E EXTREM PRICE
CLUB
500 g. LIMIT FOUR.
each steak
Seedless Mandarins
ONLY! 3 DAPYRSICE e Deli! From th
5
NLY! 3 DAYS O
E EXTREM PRICE
Pantry Essentials Sliced Side Bacon
Page 21
Signature CAFE BBQ Chickens
e Deli! From th
6
99
99
/100 g
! YS ONLY 3 DAPR ICE
ea.
! YS ONLY 3 DAPR ICE
CLUB
CLUB
Phalaenopsis Orchids
Aveeno Hair Care
153 to 310 mL. Or Body Wash 473 mL. Or Lubriderm Lotion 473 to 480 mL. Select varieties. LIMIT SIX FREE Combined varieties.
Or Novelty Orchids. In ceramic pots. 3 Inch. While supplies last.
9
99
T BUY 1 GE
1FREE EQUAL OR
! YS ONLY 3 DAPR ICE
LESSER VA
LUE
! YS ONLY 3 DAPR ICE
CLUB
CLUB
SAVINGS! Items valid until October 31st
Halloween Pumpkins
Product of Canada, U.S.A. While supplies last.
19
¢
lb 42¢/kg
CLUB PRICE
Flu Shots!
Bakery Counter Halloween Mini Cupcakes Vanilla or Chocolate. Package of 12.
Hawkins Cheezies Snak-Pak 24 x 28 g. While supplies last.
2
7
99
99
CLUB PRICE
CLUB PRICE
Ask at the pharmacy to learn how you can receive your flu shot! Talk to your healthcare professional, including your Safeway Pharmacist, about having your own immunization record reviewed to determine your individual needs. Vaccines may not be suitable for everyone and do not protect all individuals against development of disease. Some vaccines may require a prescription. Vaccines may not be available in all locations. Age restrictions may apply. Check with our pharmacist for further information.
Prices effective at your Cranbrook Safeway store Friday, Oct. 25 through Sunday, Oct. 27, 2013 only. We reserve the right to limit sales to retail quantities. Some items may not be available at all stores. All items while stocks last. Actual items may vary slightly from illustrations. Some illustrations are serving suggestions only. Advertised prices do not include GST. ®™ Trademarks of AIR MILES International Trading B.V. Used under license by LoyaltyOne, Inc. and Canada Safeway Limited. Extreme Specials are prices that are so low they are limited to a one time purchase to Safeway Club Card Members within a household. Each household can purchase the limited items one time during the effective dates. A household is defined by all Safeway Club Cards that are linked by the same address and phone number. Each household can purchase the EXTREME SPECIALS during the specified advertisement dates. For purchases over the household limits, regular pricing applies to overlimit purchases. On BUY ONE GET ONE FREE items, both items must be purchased. Lowest priced item is then free. Online and in-store prices, discounts, and offers may differ.
OCTOBER 25 26 27 FRI
SAT SUN
Prices in this ad good until OCT 27th.
Page 22 Thursday, OCTOBER 24, 2013
daily townsman / daily bulletin
1500 Cranbrook St. Cranbrook - in the Tamarack Mall 1-877-426-0079 www.dynamichearingsolutions.ca
TURN UP LIFE, not the volume.
L
ike sight, smell and touch, the ability to hear is an essential part of daily life. Hearing loss can affect communication and quality of life, but technology is making significant headway to alleviate impaired hearing. That’s where Dynamic Hearing Solutions comes into the picture.
“Hearing aid technology is constantly improving and the success rate is much better than five years ago. Even the lower levels of technology are performing much better, so it’s important to stay on top of new developments,”he said.
Founded in Cranbrook five and a half years ago, Dynamic Hearing Solutions has also set up clinics in Fernie and Nelson. Having identified a demand for hearing related services in the area, audiologist and owner Brad Meulenbeld set up shop in the Tamarack Shopping Centre and now offers hearing services for patients aged from 4 to 104. Hearing evaluations and hearing aid assessments form the core of the practice, but patients can also drop in for programming adjustments, on-site repairs and education seminars.
While the majority of patients who walk through the doors are over 65 years old, Meulenbeld also sees a number of younger people including school aged children with hearing impairments or middle ear infections. He is also the only full-time credited audiologist in Cranbrook who is certified to deal with veterans and Worksafe claims relating to noise exposure from the military or work. As the only full-time Audiologistbased clinic in Cranbrook, Dynamic Hearing Solutions has access to the latest equipment from over 20 manufacturers across the globe.
While the process of hearing loss can be quite confronting for patients at first, Meulenbeld says there are a number of steps in place to make the transition to hearing aids as smooth as possible. Beginning with a hearing evaluation, patients undergo audiometric testing to determine their precise hearing levels. The results are then analysed to see if listening devices are required, and those who are opt to go ahead receive round the clock care to ensure hearing aids are tailored to suit their needs.
“As the only full-time audiologist-based clinic in Cranbrook, we offer more services than other hearing clinics. We can use a wider range of hearing aid products, treat a broader base of clients, and ultimately provide the best care for our patients,” Meulenbeld said.
With over 15 years under his belt as an audiologist, Meulenbeld is passionate about the science of hearing loss and how it affects people in their daily lives. He is also committed to providing long term care including coaching Meulenbeld admits that treatment can be a significant investment from the and educational services so patients can rest assured they are receiving the outset, but with no ongoing costs for adjustments or follow up treatments, best care. And ultimately, he’s dedicated to improving his clients’ quality he says the value speaks for itself. “Getting hearing aids is a process, but of life. there’s no charge for ongoing services whether you come in once a year or Dynamic Hearing Solutions has offices in Fernie, Cranbrook and Nelson. 5 times a year,” he said. “It’s not until people make their first purchase that Learn more about what they do by visiting they see the value of that.” www.dynamichearingsolutions.ca. The good news for patients is that hearing aids are now much smaller and more responsive as technology moves forward with rapid pace. In fact, Meulenbeld attends regular courses to keep up with the access to the latest technology and ensure his skills are up to scratch. He also belongs to three today to start hearing like you want to. audiology associations and remains in close contact with manufacturers to tap into the latest software and diagnostic services.
Call 1-877-426-0079
HEAR MORE OF WHAT YOU WANT, less of what you don’t
daily townsman / daily bulletin
Thursday, OCTOBER 24, 2013
B.C. NEWS
Page 23
Online voting no quick fix for turnout Tom Fletcher Black Press
VICTORIA – B.C. isn’t ready to consider a wholesale shift to Internet-base voting in either local or provincial elections, according to a new report from Elections B.C. Chief Electoral Officer Keith Archer released the report Wednesday, warning
that even if a host of technical and security issues can be resolved, there is no consistent evidence that voter turnout would be increased. Archer asked the B.C. government in 2011 for authority to conduct pilot projects for electronic voting. The government appointed him to chair an
expert panel last year, and its preliminary findings are not encouraging. While there are likely benefits for voters with disabilities or in remote locations, the report concludes that governments should not expect either lower costs or greater participation from voter access via computers and
mobile devices. Despite the widespread use of new technology by young people, a survey of other results showed middle-aged and older people more likely to use online voting. The committee recommends that online voting be considered first as an option for people with access re-
Air Canada loses dog destined for man battling cancer Kristen Dougl as Campbell River Mirror
Duncan and Lynda White were in Courtenay filling up their gas tank when their cell phone rang with the bad news. Lynda listened as former dog breeder Jutta Kulic told the couple their new pet was missing. Larry, a two-year-old Italian greyhound who was being flown from San Francisco to Victoria where the Whites would be waiting, had escaped from Air Canada handlers at the San Francisco Airport. The Whites, both of Campbell River, were set to adopt Larry who had belonged to a friend of Kulic’s who died of cancer. About a year ago, Duncan was also diagnosed with cancer and the couple set out to find a new pet to brighten their lives. They got in touch with Kulic who was looking for a home for Larry. The young Italian greyhound seemed the perfect match. “Duncan is also suf-
Photo submitted
Larry was on his way to Campbell River to be a companion for Duncan White. fering from liver cancer, we’re not sure what kind of time we have,” Lynda said. “We had hopes for this dog to be a companion to him. Time is not on our side.” But their plans were turned upside down after Larry escaped from his secure crate at the San Francisco airport on Oct. 7. The plan was for Larry to catch a connecting flight to Van-
couver before flying to Victoria where the Whites would pick him up and bring him home to Campbell River. Unfortunately, Larry’s flight to Vancouver was delayed so arrangements were made to have Larry stay overnight on the Mainland. But in a frantic phone call, Kulic told Lynda that an Air Canada worker had let Larry out of his crate – which had
It is with extreme pride that Management and staff welcome our newest member – Rob Stang. Rob is a hard working REALTOR® and since he started his 3 year career in Real Estate has dominated the commercial market.
four zip ties around it so he wouldn’t escape – despite Kulic’s detailed instructions to the airline’s cargo holders to not open the crate. Angela Mah, spokesperson for Air Canada, said staff let Larry out of his crate because of the flight delay. Larry slipped out of his collar. Witnesses told Kulic that Larry ran out onto nearby Highway 101 and was hit on the freeway entrance ramp. Kulic said three different cars pulled over and one couple rushed to Larry’s side. “Shortly after 5 p.m., a couple called a local veterinary hospital, saying they had picked up a dog hit on the freeway, that it was still breathing, and asked to bring it for treatment,” Kulic said. “They were referred to the closest emergency vet, but never arrived there or at any other local vet contacted to date..” Lynda said Kulic has been “very vigilant” in trying to track down Larry and a $2,500 reward is being offered for his return.
strictions, such as those who vote by mail. It says universal voting should only be be attempted on a province-wide basis for consistency, security and ability to audit results. No provincial or federal voting has been conducted online in Canada, but municipalities including Halifax and Markham, Ontario have tried it, as well as some U.S. and European jurisdictions. Archer said online voting has unique challenges, such as the need to verify a person’s identity and then keep that separate from their voting choice. Another issue is how to verify security of a range of computers, tablets and mobile phones that could be subject to software
Chief Electoral Officer Keith Archer tampering. “It’s not like banking online, it’s not like dating online, it’s not like making a purchase online,” he said. The panel has posted its preliminary re-
Black Press
port at www.internetvotingpanel.ca and is seeking public comments until Dec. 4. It plans to make recommendations to the government on the next steps in February.
Your Community Foundation is celebrating its tenth year! What was once just an idea is now an energetic and valuable tool to build and strengthen Cranbrook and District. The Cranbrook and District Community Foundation’s (CDCF) three main roles are: 1) Building endowments 2) Granting to qualified charities 3) Convening community The CDCF has helped local charities establish their own designated endowments that annually return interest income to their specific causes. We have a growing general endowment fund that any local charity can apply to; as well as specific field of interest grants for seniors, sports, arts and culture and environmental organizations. Great things have already happened; from 2003 to 2013 the Foundation gave more than $290,000 back to Cranbrook and area charities! We are a member of Community Foundations of Canada (CFC). Membership requires a foundation to adhere to strict ethical codes and Community Foundation standards. We pledge to provide visionary leadership that welcomes innovative approaches to community issues. The Foundation builds on strengths and model inclusiveness. The Cranbrook and District Community Foundation conducts itself using open and accountable practices. We strive to achieve the highest possible standards of performance, leading the way in promoting philanthropy for our area. Ready to contribute their many talents to the growth of the Foundation are Executive Director Theresa Bartraw and Fund Development Coordinator Riley Wilcox. Theresa has experience in a variety of community development models, working for over 15 years on local, regional and international levels. She has worked with Public Health and Population Health, taught courses at the College of the Rockies, coordinated the Early Childhood Development Committee and Cranbrook Social Planning Society. Theresa describes her role with the CDCF as the perfect merging of two passions, healthy community development and philanthropy. Riley lived in Prince George for 16 years where she advocated for families, worked with youth at risk and oversaw the Friends of Children Society as Executive Director. She is excited to return to the Kootenays where she was raised. She believes inclusive communities that support a vibrant arts culture, healthy families, active seniors and engaged youth are the keys to opening doors of opportunities for all area residents.
Rob is excited about this new home and will welcome past, present and future clients to come in and see him at 911 Baker Street – right across the street from the Royal Bank and the Spirit Tree Sculpture.
Theresa and Riley invite people to contact them at the Community Foundation office to discuss the fund options they have available for donors and the grant opportunities for charities.
Rob Stang
Drop by the new office location at: Suite 250 – 100 Cranbrook Street North
250.919.9915 • robstang@cranbrookagencies.com
Realty Executives Cranbrook
911 Baker Street, Cranbrook, BC 426-3355 • Toll Free: 1-888-629-4002
or
Reach us at: 250-426-1119
Page 24 Thursday, OCTOBER 24, 2013
communitysnapshot
Itâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Howl-oween! The Paw Shop in Cranbrook celebrated Halloween on Saturday, October 19. Pets and children came into the store in their finest costumes to have their photo taken by photographer Niki Becker, with all proceeds going to the East Kootenay SPCA. Letâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s give them a round of a-paws! Photos courtesy Niki J. Bee Photography
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October 25
4:00 4:30 5:00 5:30 6:00 6:30 7:00 7:30 8:00 8:30 9:00 9:30 10:0010:3011:0011:3012:0012:30
Peg Wild Biz Kid News Busi KSPS-PBS Sid News News CTV News CFCN Ellen Show The Doctors News ABC KXLY-ABC Rachael Ray Dr. Oz Show News CBS KREM-CBS Dr. Phil Judge Judge News News KHQ-NBC Ellen Show Figure Skating TSN SportsCentre Can Hocke NHL Hockey NET Poker Tour The Young News News GLOBAL BC Queen Latifah KNOW Clifford Ceorge Maya Arthur Martha Wild Ste Dragons’ Den News News CBUT Reci News News News News CICT The Young News News News Hour CIVT The Young YTV Alien T.U.F. Spong Kung Pump Spong Bethenny Simp Two KAYU-FOX Steve Harvey Cooper 360 CNN Situa Cross E. B. OutFront SPIKE Cops Cops Cops Cops Cops Cops Poten Poten Hunt Hunt HGTV Holmes/Home Stor Stor Stor Stor Stor A&E Stor Taco Funny Videos CMT Gags Gags Piz. Good Witch Undercover Property Bro W Day of the Triffids SHOW Day of Triffids Canada’s DISC How/ How/ Daily Planet SLICE Four Weddings Friend Friend 48 Hours Myst. Say Say Say Say Say TLC Say Flashpoint Missing BRAVO Missing (:05) Ghost Dad EA2 Mystery Men Johnny TOON Trnsfr Loone Monster High Dog LivGood FAM Jessie Austin Phi Theory Theory Brown Payne WPCH Middle Mod Sein Gas Theory Parks Theory COM Sein The Walking Dead Bucket-Blood TCM Mil Stor Stor Stor Stor OUT Mantracker Amer. Pickers MASH MASH HIST Ancient Aliens Stargate SG-1 SPACE Inner Scare Castle (:15) The Exorcist AMC (3:15) Cujo Being Being: Mariano FS1 FOX Football Monsters DTOUR Eat St. Eat St. Weird (:25) Deadly Hope MC1 (3:40) Now Is Good Maury Family Family KTLA Cunningham Funny Videos Mother Mother WGN-A Funny Videos (5:50) Batman EA1 (:05) The Real McCoy Murder, She... Eas Yes... VISN Road-Avonlea MuchMusic Countdown 102 102 MM Top 10 Entrée prin Mange Union 105 105 SRC Brunetti
Thursday, OCTOBER 24, 2013
Arsenio Hall Rock Sunny Monty Python Super Popoff Countdown TJ C.-B.
Wash Charlie Pretty Much Raisin in Sun Craft-America Charlie Rose Blue Bloods MasterChef Grimm News News Theory J. Fal Ent Insider Last Neigh Shark Tank (:01) 20/20 KXLY Kim Inside Ac Undercover Hawaii Five-0 Blue Bloods News Late J’pard Wheel Dateline NBC Grimm Dracula News Jay CFL Football SportsCentre SportsCentre Sports ATP Tennis Sportsnet Con. Hocke Game News Hour Ent ET Elementary Hawaii Five-0 Dracula News Park Volc Wild Coasts Murder Myster. The Inspector Lynley Mysteries Architects News Mercer Georg Cor Market Mercer the fifth estate The National News Georg ET Ent Dracula Elementary Hawaii Five-0 News Hour Fi ET The ET Ent Dracula Elementary Hawaii Five-0 News Hour ET The Toy Daddy I’m a Zombie Coraline Spong Boys Spla Theory Mod Two Theory MasterChef Simp Simp News Mod Arsenio Hall Piers Morgan A Un Anthony Cooper 360 A Un Anthony Bellator MMA Live Cops Cops Bellator MMA Live Ways Ways You Live-What Ext. Homes Hunt Hunt You Live-What Ext. Homes House House Stor Stor Stor Stor Stor Stor Stor Stor Stor Stor Stor Stor Dumb and Dumber Piz. Dumb and Dumber Dumb Love Dine Dine Dine Dine Dine Vampires Suck Love It Copper Game, Thrones (:15) Legion (:15) Game of Thrones Legion Highway Thru Mayday Mayday Highway Thru Canada’s Mayday 48 Hours Myst. Surviving Evil Brainwashed Friend Friend 48 Hours Myst. Surviving Evil Say Say Secret Princes Say Say Say Secret Princes Say Criminal Minds Person-Interest Cold Justice Criminal Minds Criminal Minds Criminal Minds Dead Silence Poltergeist Thirteen Ghosts Long Lego Teen Bat Bat Bat Bat Batman: The Dark Fugget Crash Shake Austin Next Jessie Halloweentown ANT The Scream Team Prin Brown Payne Mod Sein Family Family Amer. Head of State Torino Match Match Just/Laughs Gags Gas Theory Com Theory JFL JFL (:15) Dementia 13 What Ever Happened to Baby Jane? (:15) Sisters Ghost Hunters Stor Stor Stor Stor Ghost Hunters Stor Stor Ghost Hunters Treasures Amer. Pickers Ancient Aliens Pawn Pawn Pawn Pawn Ice Pilots NWT Shark Night 3D Inner Castle Star Trek: Voy. Shark Night 3D Walking Dead Family Plot (:45) Topaz Big East Tip-Off Party FOX Sports FOX Football FOX Sports FOX Sports The Dead Files The Dead Files Weird Monsters The Dead Files The Dead Files Twilight Saga: Breaking Dawn Beautiful Creatures Hobbit-Unexpected News News Two Two Carrie Diaries iHeartradio News Sports Arsenio Hall Mother Mother News at Nine Mother Rules Rules Parks Parks Rock Rock Sunny The Shining The Exorcist: The Version From Gaither Gospel Gospel Time- theZoomer The In-Laws Super Popoff Simp Cleve Idle Hands South South South South South South TJ C.-B. Paquet voleur Le choc des C’est vendredi TJ Nou TJ C.-B.
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KK OOOO T AY E N AY TEN W IINN E CERC A FR T EA R SF T E R S W
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Cranbrook, BC Behind Integra Tire on Van Horne
Exciting New Fashions!
CALL 426-3272 OR VISIT
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for this week’s movie listings TRENDS N’TREASURES N’ TREASURES 1109a Baker St. Cranbrook
1109a Baker Street, Cranbrook 250-489-2611 trendsntreasures@shaw.ca
Something’s been puzzling me. Q. How can I get advertising for my business so it’s covered in both newspaper and online media for one great price? A. If you live in Cranbrook area, call 250-426-5201, then press ext. 214 and speak with Erica.
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daily townsman / daily bulletin
Page 26 Thursday, OCTOBER 24, 2013
COMICS Horoscopes by Jacqueline Bigar
“The Magic of Christmas”
Artisan Market
Friday, November 15 3pm - 8pm
Saturday, November 16 10am - 4pm
at Bootleg Gap Golf Course Clubhouse, Kimberley. • A selection of •
Handcrafted Treasures & Tasty Treats In support of the Kimberley Food Bank. Wheelchair accessible. Soup & Sandwich Saturday Nov 16, 11am-2pm, by donation to Kimberley Helping Hands Food Bank.
Info: Elke 1-250-427-3209
OVER THE LAST 8 YEARS WE HAVE DONATED $8,200.00 TO THE KIMBERLEY FOOD BANK!
Newly Renovated!
Under new ownership, in Kimberley!
— Authentic Chinese Cuisine — Dine-In, Take-Out and Delivery
Open Tuesday - Saturday 11am-10pm • Sunday - Monday 4-8pm. Visa, MC, Interac. 10% off cash pick up.
250.427.3311 250.427.5513 FREE DELIVERY!!
(Minimum $35 order, within 3km of city limits. $4 charge for Marysville)
Come see and taste for yourself some delicious Chinese food!
A business without advertising gets you no customers.
ARIES (March 21-April 19) You feel unusually tuned in to a family member. You have a lot going on and easily could get angry out of the blue. Pressure builds in a one-on-one discussion with this person. You might decide to let go of this situation for now. Tonight: Mosey on home, if you’re not there already. TAURUS (April 20-May 20) You become quite the conversationalist, though you might get upset at someone’s anger that appears to be directed at you. Your imagination could go wild as you try to figure out what is wrong with this person. Tonight: Return calls, and catch up on a close friend’s news. GEMINI (May 21-June 20) You could be quite intense as you seek immediate results. Your creativity flourishes when dealing with a hassle or someone’s frustration. A partner could be changing in front of your eyes. The unexpected comes out one more time in a meeting. Tonight: Go with the flow.
CANCER (June 21-July 22) You beam in what you want, but you might be so much in your head that you could be accident-prone. A close associate really demonstrates how much he or she has changed. You could get into a heated conversation if you are not careful. Tonight: Visit and chat with a friend. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Know what is happening behind the scenes. Understand what is going on with a loved one. Listen to your inner voice, and follow through on your decision. Pace yourself and stay levelheaded. If one approach is not working, try a different one. Tonight: Only what you want. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) Zero in on what you want. A partner could be unusually vague, and he or she might confuse you. You also might not want to hear what this person has to say. Be careful if you are in an irritable mood. A fight might take some time to heal. Tonight: Where your friends are. LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) A sense of irritation could be un-
Tundra
dermining your best intentions and come out when you would prefer it wouldn’t. Pressure builds to an unprecedented level. A domestic matter could be difficult to sort out. Know that a control issue might be the cause. Tonight: A must appearance. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21) Your likeminded friends know what they want from a situation. Trying to change their minds would be like entering a war zone. The smart move is to back out and say little. A disagreement begun right now will be difficult to put to rest. Tonight: Gain a new perspective. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21) You could be seeing a situation differently than in the past. A friend presents a new side of his or her personality. This person has been going through changes, but perhaps you didn’t realize that the transformation had evolved to this point. Tonight: Go along with a suggestion. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) Defer to others, and know full well that you might not agree with them. It is important for
a close associate to see the end results of pursuing the present course. Your anger breaks out when dealing with someone at a distance. Tonight: Listen to an outside perspective. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18) Pace yourself. Your money sense plays out, but you must handle your own finances, as others could be accident-prone. A loved one or an associate could be on the warpath in an attempt to upset you. For now, try not to react. Tonight: Make plans for the weekend. PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20) Your creativity might not be able to soothe someone’s nerves. In fact, it might just make a situation worse. Be sensitive to what someone says, but know that you don’t have to take on his or her comments. Refuse to respond to anger. Tonight: You choose the time and place. BORN TODAY Playwright Moss Hart (1904), actor Kevin Kline (1947), soccer player Wayne Rooney (1985) ***
By Chad Carpenter
Get advertising for your business so it’s covered in both newspaper and online media for one great price. Call 250-426-5201, then press ext. 207 and speak with Dan.
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Garfield
By Jim Davis
Having a meeting or a conference? We at the Days Inn have Meeting Rooms from 10 – 300 people, so if it’s a Small Focus Group or a Conference we have you covered.
Catering is available for all occasions, Weddings, Family Reunions, AGM’s Business Meetings and Conferences. We also offer outside catering.
Hagar the Horrible
By Dick Browne
Book now for your Christmas Business Parties Please call the Cranbrook Days Inn 250-426-6630 To discuss your requirements
L, THINK LOCA BUY LOCAL
BE LOCAL.
Baby Blues
By Kirkman and Scott
become cal businesses Don’t let our lo ! st pa a thing of the
Why You Should Care: • Increased support for local events and causes • Local competition means better prices • Job opportunities for local residents including your people • Friendly service and support before, during and after your purchase
Rhymes with Orange
Love your community.
Shop at home.
By Hillary B. Price
Annie’s Mailbox by Kathy Mitchell and Marcy Sugar Dear Annie: What is your opinion on co-sleeping? My husband, his daughter and I all sleep in the same bed at night, and neither my husband nor I minds a bit. My husband loves it, saying he knows where both of his beautiful ladies are at night and he doesn’t have to worry. When we want to make love, we wait until his daughter is not in the bed, or we go into the spare bedroom. What do you think? -Pennsylvania Dear Pennsylvania: We think a lot of this is up to the parents and depends on the age of the child. Often, pediatricians do not recommend co-sleeping with an infant because of the slight risk that a parent will roll over onto the child. Some older children who co-sleep have difficulty transitioning to their own bed and will demand to sleep with the parents well past puberty. And some children who are developing sexually can transfer inappropriate feelings to a parent when co-sleeping continues past a certain point. (We will assume that neither parent has inappropriate sexual feelings toward the child, although this is also a concern.) What counts is that both of the parents and the child are comfortable with this arrangement, both parents are responsible about the child’s development, and the setup does not interfere with marital intimacy. If you are the stepparent and the biological mother is in the picture, be sure she is in agreement. This is a joint parental decision. Dear Annie: I’m the proud grandma of two: a young lady of 17 and a 14-year-old Eagle Scout grandson. The problem is my Lauren Bacall voice. (A nun in the fifth grade nicknamed me “Foghorn.”) My granddaughter deliberately goes out of her way to ignore her grandfather and me because she is embarrassed by how I sound. It doesn’t bother my grandson at all, but my granddaughter has avoided me since the age of 5. No kisses, no hugs, no affection at all. She just graduated from high school. My heart aches, and I cry every day knowing she will continue to hate me. I always have been good to her. I never say no when she asks for something, right up to paying for her 18th birthday gift to parachute for the first time. -- A Loving and Lonely Grandma Dear Grandma: Grandchildren generally are very accepting of their grandparents’ voices, features, habits, etc. We know that some children are acutely embarrassed by any variation of the norm. But even if your voice is grating to her, by the age of 18, your granddaughter should have developed the maturity and tolerance to consider it unimportant compared to her relationship with you. We hope she will learn to value the love you offer, but in the meantime, please accept her limitations and focus your affection on your grandson. Also, if you haven’t had a doctor check your throat, we hope you will. Sometimes, these vocal issues have medical causes that go undiagnosed for years. Dear Annie: I had to respond to “Venting in Oregon,” who complained about the neighbors’ noisy children. My husband and I, while sitting on our front porch, recently complained that our street is too quiet. When we moved here 25 years ago, the street was filled with children, ours included. We enjoyed watching boys racing gocarts down the street and children dashing back and forth to one another’s homes. Last year, a garage band around the block blasted their music for an hour in the afternoon each weekday. It was great. Now it feels like a ghost town. All of our children grew up and moved away, and we are still here. We miss the lively commotion that makes for a family neighborhood. We don’t like all this peace and quiet. -- Connecticut 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
DAILY TOWNSMAN/DAILY BULLETIN daily townsman / daily bulletin
Thursday, OCTOBER 24, 2013 PAGE Page 23 27 Thursday, October 24, 2013
Share Your Smiles!
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Van was smiling at Grandma Dianna!
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INDEX IN BRIEF FAMILY ANNOUNCEMENTS COMMUNITY ANNOUNCEMENTS TRAVEL CHILDREN EMPLOYMENT BUSINESS SERVICES PETS & LIVESTOCK MERCHANDISE FOR SALE REAL ESTATE RENTALS AUTOMOTIVE ADULT ENTERTAINMENT LEGAL NOTICES
AGREEMENT It is agreed by any display or Classified Advertiser requesting space that the liability of the paper in the event of failure to publish an advertisement shall be limited to the amount paid by the advertiser for that portion of the advertising space occupied by the incorrect item only, and that there shall be no liability in any event beyond the amount paid for such advertisement. The publisher shall not be liable for slight changes or typographical errors that do not lessen the value of an advertisement. bcclassified.com cannot be responsible for errors after the first day of publication of any advertisement. Notice of errors on the first day should immediately be called to the attention of the Classified Department to be corrected for the following edition. bcclassified.com reserves the right to revised, edit, classify or reject any advertisement and to retain any answers directed to the bcclassified.com Box Reply Service and to repay the customer the sum paid for the advertisement and box rental. DISCRIMINATORY LEGISLATION Advertisers are reminded that Provincial legislation forbids the publication of any advertisement which discriminates against any person because of race, religion, sex, color, nationality, ancestry or place of origin, or age, unless the condition is justified by a bona fide requirement for the work involved. COPYRIGHT Copyright and/or properties subsist in all advertisements and in all other material appearing in this edition of bcclassified. com. Permission to reproduce wholly or in part and in any form whatsoever, particularly by a photographic or offset process in a publication must be obtained in writing from the publisher. Any unauthorized reproduction will be subject to recourse in law. ON THE WEB:
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Travel
*~Enchanted Companion~* Beautiful host to entertain you. Private, personal, real sweet. Amy, 38
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250-421-6084 KOOTENAY’S BEST ESCORTS
Employment Drivers/Courier/ Trucking
*For your safety and comfort call the best. *Quality and V.I.P Service Guarantee *Licensed studio ~New Location~ Calendar Girls
Scarlett - 21, Strawberry blonde, sweet treat Lily - 25, Sandy-blonde, blue-eyed bombshell Cougar Stacy - pretty, petite blonde 42 Dakota - 20, busty, curvy, raven-haired beauty. New - Danielle - 25, French seductress, slim, athletic
Lost & Found FOUND, in the Walmart parking lot, a house key. Please call 250-489-2882 to claim. LOST: BLACK Kershaw folding lock blade hunting knife in Gold Creek on 29th or 30th Street, or on trails to Hidden Valley Lake. Sentimental value - REWARD offered. Please call 250-426-0029.
Obituaries
Obituaries
George Lynwood Webber passed away at 91 at his home, October 15th 2013, with his family at his side. George was born in Chester Basin, Nova Scotia, on December 14, 1921. He was the fourth child of nine siblings, born to Lottie and Neil Webber. George leaves behind his daughter Shelley McInroy, his granddaughter Kate McInroy, son-in-law Mike Kemle, sister Elaine Smith, and many other dear friends and family members. George was the 58th paratrooper in Canada. He trained paratroopers for overseas, and later trained men for Japanese occupation. On October 2, 1945 he married Mary Jean Lang of Brandon, Manitoba, an army x-ray technician. In 1949, they came to Kimberley and made their lives together there. George worked as Exploration Geologist for Cominco until 1981 when he retired. George then put his pursuits into initiating and running a gold placer operation in the Moyie area which he had planned to do for many years. Then he settled into retirement.
AZ, DZ, 5, 3 or 1 w/ Airbrake • Guaranteed 40hr. Work Week & Overtime • Paid Travel & Lodging • Meal Allowance • 4 Weeks Vacation • Excellent Benefits Package
George was a man of will, strength and determination. He was an outdoors man who liked to fish and hunt. In years past, he was a keen bridge player. He loved his family and friends fiercely, enjoyed entertaining, cooking, gardening, and a good debate. He had a strong interest in understanding the scientific and physical world, and continued to seek knowledge through to the end of his life.
Help Wanted
At George’s request, there will be no funeral or service. A gathering for family and friends will be held at his home on Sunday November 10th from 2:00 pm till 5:00 pm. The family asks that memorial donations be made to the Canadian Cancer Society, 19 - 9th Ave. S., Cranbrook, BC V1C 2L9. The family would like to thank all those who visited and supported George in his last days. Condolences may be left for the family at www. markmemorial.com.
DRIVERS WANTED
Must be able to have extended stays away from home. Up to 6 months. Must have valid AZ, DZ, 5, 3 or 1 with airbrake license and have previous commercial driving experience. Apply at:www.sperryrail.com/ careers and then choose the FastTRACK Application.
“Spice up your life” (250)417-2800 in/out calls daily Hiring
Obituaries
Help Wanted
Help Wanted
WEBBER, George Lynwood 1921 - 2013
CENTURY PLAZA HOTEL Best Rates. 1.800.663.1818 century-plaza.com
Attn: Placer Miners, are you or have you been bullied by The Ministry? Please call, (250)431-8632
in/out (specials)
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.
An Alberta Oilfield Company is hiring dozer and excavator operators. Lodging and meals provided. Drug testing required. Call (780)723-5051 Edson, Alta.
ANSWERING SERVICE
looking for a person to work 3 graveyard shifts per week. 12am - 8am, Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday. Knowledge of East Kootenay highways is an asset. Please call between 8am and 4pm. 250-426-2201.
Obituaries
Hank was born on October 3, 1924 in Den Helder, Holland. He lived for a short time in the far east and moved to Canada in 1952. Hank worked for Air Canada for 35 years. He had a great love of animals, especially dogs. Hank passed away on October 12, 2013 and is survived by his partner Kathleen Bjorkes and friends. At Hank’s request, there will be no funeral service. His burial will take place in Westlawn Cemetery in Cranbrook. Arrangements entrusted to McPherson Funeral Service. Condolences for the family can be offered at: www.mcphersonfh.com
The Financial Controller oversees the day to day financial activities, ensures the company’s finance function is organized and efficient, and produces accurate financial and managerial accounts. Other duties include the management of all finance functions, company benefits and SRED Programs, including preparation of reports, budgets, forecasts and cash flows. Previous experience as a Financial Controller, Accountant or CFO with management reporting experience in the mining industry is an asset. The candidate should be a confident self-starter, with the ability to operate in a dynamic environment. You must demonstrate good attention to detail, good judgement showing logical decision making, and be a team player with a hands-on approach. You must be computer literate with good Excel skills and Simply Accounting software principles. Financial modeling and analysis as well as contributing to decisions regarding financial strategy will be expected. Excellent income with bonuses to the right candidate. Email all resumes with cover letter to mike@calipermachine.com Emails only please
CAREER OPPORTUNITY
Journeyman Auto Technician Top Wages in the Kootenays Our growing dealership requires a Journeyman Auto Technician to join our team of qualified professionals. The position has a potential wage of $40/hr. plus benefits. Please apply in person with resume.
HUDAK, Angela Lynn Angela Lynn Hudak was born on May 29, 1976 to Victor and Linda Hudak in Tisdale, Saskatchewan. She grew up in the Crooked River area and developed a huge love for all animals that stayed with her all her life. She was a tomboy in the truest sense of the word, spending countless hours in the garage with Dad. Ang developed a love for classic cars and the ability to work on all kinds of vehicles. Angie’s interests were numerous. She loved boating and water skiing in the summer and snowboarding in the winter. She enjoyed collecting antiques and loved finding gems in a garage sale. She spent hours riding her Harley and when she couldn’t ride she was polishing and customizing. She loved drawing and always had a craft project on the go. She would go gold panning and exploring in the mountains every chance she got. There was a fishing rod and tackle box in every vehicle she ever had, just in case she found the perfect spot!
Hendrikus Theodorus Broekhuysen “Hank” 1924 - 2013
Caliper Machine & Hydraulics is looking to hire a full time Financial Controller
Family was the most important thing in Ang’s life, and once you met her you were a part of her family. Her core was her daughters and son, her mom and dad, her uncles and aunts, but she made sure that everyone else felt just as loved. Left to cherish her memory are her father Victor Hudak, mother Linda Olmstead (Dave), daughters: Leah Guy (Reeve Leopold), Alexandra Guy and Jessica Wilson, son Micheal Wilson, husband Jason Wilson, grandson Hayden Leopold; as well as uncles, aunts, cousins and friends. A funeral service was held 2:00 p.m. Tuesday, October 22, 2013in the Crooked River Community Hall, Crooked River, Saskatchewan. Donations may be made to the Salvation Army as a token of remembrance. Barron’s Funeral Chapel and Crematorium were honored to serve the family. www.barronsfuneralchapel.com
DL#5248
250-427-4224 • Toll Free 888-703-2211 Sales: M-F 8-5:30 / SAT 9-5 • Parts & Service: M-F 7:30-5
Job # JCV-101301
Registered Care Aide CAREER OPPORTUNITY
• • • • •
Cranbrook’s Newest Seniors’ Housing and Care Community Attractive Compensation Package Flexible Hours Innovative Support Team to Ensure Your Success Opportunity for Growth within an Expanding Company Vibrant Professional Atmosphere Joseph Creek Village Cranbrook, BC Please apply by email (include job #) or call us at: (250) 489-0060 Email: careers@glm.ca
We’re on the net at www.bcclassified.com
DAILY BULLETIN dailyTOWNSMAN/DAILY townsman / daily bulletin
PAGE 24 Thursday, October 24, 2013 Page 28 Thursday, OCTOBER 24, 2013
Obituaries
Obituaries
Obituaries
Sympathy & Understanding Kootenay Monument Installations Granite & Bronze Memorials, Dedication Plaques, Benches, Memorial Walls, Gravesite Restorations, Sales & Installations
2200 - 2nd Street South Cranbrook, BC V1C 1E1 250-426-3132
IN-HOME CONSULTATION OR VISIT OUR SHOWROOM
1885 Warren Avenue Kimberley, BC V1A 1R9 250-427-7221 www.mcphersonfh.com
6379 HIGHWAY 95A TA TA CREEK, B.C. 1-800-477-9996
Employment
Employment
Employment
Services
Help Wanted
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Contractors
GENERAL LABOURERS
ST. MARTIN DENTAL CLINIC Dr. Ernst H. Schandl Inc.
TIM HORTONS,
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WANTED PROCESSING contractor for interior operation to start immediately. Call 1-604819-3393.
Pets
Dental hygienist position available.
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CRANBROOK, BC
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Food Counter Attendant Full-time, shift work, nights, overnightâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s, early mornings & weekends. $10.25/hr. + beneďŹ ts. Apply at store.
Retail Store Manager: Dollar Tree, Cranbrook This position is responsible for overall store operation, sales, merchandise ordering, and presentation initiatives. Major Responsibilities Customer service and management of all store personnel. Hiring the most qualifies candidates to meet the storeâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s needs. Creative problem solving in a way that improves store service efficiency and productivity. Performing all opening and closing procedures as well as weekly scheduling. Maintaining a high standard of merchandising, placement, and store signage. If interested, please email gmeikle@dollartree.com with your resume.
Services
Garage Sales
Financial Services GET BACK ON TRACK! Bad credit? Bills? Unemployed? Need Money? We Lend! If you own your own home - you qualify. Pioneer Acceptance Corp. Member BBB. 1-877-987-1420 www.pioneerwest.com
Ph: 250.426.6006 Fx: 250.426.6005 2104D 2nd Street S. Cranbrook, BC theďŹ&#x201A;owerpot@shaw.ca
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GARAGE SALE: Friday Oct. 25, 3pm on.... Saturday Oct. 26, 9am â&#x20AC;&#x2DC;til whenever. 3016 MT. FISHER PLACE. Downsizing.....lots of good stuff.
Financial Services
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Heavy Duty Machinery A-STEEL SHIPPING DRY STORAGE CONTAINERS Used 20â&#x20AC;&#x2122;40â&#x20AC;&#x2122;45â&#x20AC;&#x2122;53â&#x20AC;&#x2122;and insulated containers all sizes in stock. SPECIAL Trades are welcome. 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 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
Rentals Apt/Condo for Rent
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E M Y T EMPLOYMENT O FIND N L T MP T E ENT N N M E E IN CLASSIFIEDS Y THE E M M M O Y Y Y L O O O T T P PL L L N N P P E E M M M E E YM YM T E ENT O O T L L N N M P P E E M T EM YM PLOY EM Y N O MNT O E L L M P P E Y M YME M O T E E L N P O ,re looking E T T L N N M EM Everything you for is P T T E E Y N YM NEM YM O E E L in the classifieds! M P O TOY PLO YM L N O P EM M MEPL M PL
DAILY TOWNSMAN/DAILY BULLETIN daily townsman / daily bulletin
Rentals
Thursday, OCTOBER 24, 2013 PAGE Page 25 29 Thursday, October 24, 2013
Open Houses
Open Houses
Homes for Rent 1BDRM, 1 BATH, charming house on an acre of land in Marysville. $650./mo. + utilities. Available Nov. 1/13 250-675-2140
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Transportation
High Tech Home! Sophisticated heating system, iPod docking stations and more! Utility bills available. $419,900 Hosted by: Rob Stang
0DU t QN QN QN 31 - 7th Avenue South, Cranbrook Almost 6500 sq ft of renovated office / commercial building. Owners will look at a lease with option or agreement to buy. $499,000 Hosted by: Rob Stang
Auto Accessories/Parts 4 BLIZZAK snow tires rims. 15â&#x20AC;?. $200/obo. 250-417-0806
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Open Houses
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Human trafficking in Canada: arrests made C ANADIAN PRESS
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ST. THOMAS, Ont. â&#x20AC;&#x201D; The military was called in after an elderly woman showed up at an Ontario police station to turn in grenades, a tank round and even aircraft bombs dating back to the Second
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World War. Police in St. Thomas, south of London, say the 94-year-old woman walked into their front lobby Tuesday carrying her late husbandâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s collection of military munitions. An expert from the
BETHUNE â&#x20AC;&#x201D; A pipeline project near Bethune, Sask., has
turned into an archeological dig. A week ago, a contractor with SaskEnergy
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subsidiary TransGas was digging a trench for a new gas pipeline when he uncovered some bone fragments. SaskEnergy spokesman Casey MacLeod says thatâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s not unusual in their line of work. But usually it ends up being animal bones. This time, however, archeologists from Golder Associates determined that the remains are human, and pre-date European contact. RCMP estimate the bones are over one thousand years old. â&#x20AC;&#x153;This is definitely a first for us,â&#x20AC;&#x2122;â&#x20AC;&#x2122; says Ma-
cLeod. Any pipeline work in the area has been shut down while local First Nations, the First Nations University of Canada, and an archeologist with the province have all been brought in to investigate. Theyâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;re now going to spend the next four or five days looking for other artifacts in the area. â&#x20AC;&#x153;We are able to continue to do some work down the line, outside of the dig area, but other than that, it takes as long as it takes,â&#x20AC;&#x2122;â&#x20AC;&#x2122; says MacLeod.
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as a precaution. They say anyone looking to get rid of military munitions should call police to come to their home â&#x20AC;&#x201D; and not carry the potentially explosive items to their local police station.
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Department of National Defence was brought in and determined that none of the ammunition was live. Police say some of the items were donated to the Elgin Military Museum, while one was destroyed by the military
Saskatchewan pipeline dig on hold after century-old human bones found C ANADIAN PRESS
HANDYMAN
lours in Montreal. At least one of the women had been there for several years and, Letang says, the women were threatened so that they remained under the networkâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s control. Police say other arrests are possible and they are actively searching for at least one other Montreal man who has avoided arrest. Miclescu, 38, is to appear in court this afternoon in Montreal.
Military called after Ontario senior brings grenades, aircraft bombs to police
Sport Utility Vehicle
Call:
Cornwall, Ont., police arrested a man in Montreal today on serious charges. Marius Trifu Miclescu is expected to make an appearance in court today on charges of human trafficking, procurement and living off the avails of prostitution. RCMP Cpl. Caroline Letang says four victims have been identified in this case â&#x20AC;&#x201D; all of Romanian origin. They were allegedly being put to work in illegal par-
MONTREAL â&#x20AC;&#x201D; Human-trafficking charges have been laid after Romanian women were allegedly lured to Canada with the promise of a better future and forced to work for years in erotic massage parlours. A wide-ranging federal investigation into the smuggling of Romanian families started about a year ago and, following a handful of arrests over the past few months in Toronto and
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Call and speak to one of our ad representatives... â&#x153;&#x201C; Cranbrook Daily Townsman (250) 426-5201 â&#x153;&#x201C; Kimberley Daily Bulletin (250) 427-5333
Page 30 Thursday, OCTOBER 24, 2013
WORLD NEWS
daily townsman / daily bulletin
Mexican clowns deny costumed killer of drug trafficking boss belonged to their profession Mark Ste venson Associated Press
MEXICO CITY — Leaders of clowns gathered for a convention in Mexico City said Wednesday they are saddened that a killer disguised himself as a clown to kill a drug lord last week, and insisted no true member of their profession would have committed the crime. Convicted drug trafficker Francisco Rafael Arellano Felix was shot to death Friday in the Baja beach resort of Los Cabos by a gunman wearing a clown costume, including a wig and a rubber nose. Clown leader Tomas Morales, a 21-year veteran of the trade who goes by the stage name “Payaso Llantom,’’ said he was certain the killer was not a professional clown. He said clowns in Mexico know each other and their cos-
Francisco Rafael Arellano Felix was shot by a man in a clown costume. tumes and makeup are individualized and recognizable. “The people who do that, they’re not clowns. I can swear on my mother’s grave it wasn’t a clown,’’ said Morales, whose costume includes frizzy blue hair and a tiny top hat. “We are not like that ... we are nonviolent.’’ “Bufon Marley,’’ the stage name of 49-yearold Alberto Villanueva,
who dresses a bit like a medieval jester, said of the killer, “It’s sad that it has fallen to that level.’’ An estimated 500 clowns from around Mexico and the rest of Latin America gathered Wednesday at the International Clown Meeting and held a 15-minute laugh-a-thon “to demonstrate their opposition to the generalized violence that prevails in our country.’’
3 children treated after police officer’s gun accidentally goes off at US school ASSOCIATED PRESS
CHINO, Calif. — Authorities say a police officer’s gun accidentally fired during a school safety demonstration in California and three children were treated for minor injuries. Tamrin Olden, the Chino Police Depart-
ment’s crime prevention supervisor, says the gun went off at around 11:15 a.m. Wednesday during a safety presentation at Newman Elementary School. Fire Department spokeswoman Massiel Ladron De Guevara says three students were
treated for cuts and scrapes but they weren’t hit by gunfire. Two were taken to hospitals and one was released to parents. Other details of the incident remain sketchy. Olden says authorities are still trying to sort out what happened.
Konnie Kaldor October 22 at 7:30
Key City Theatre
Bergmann Piano Duo -Nov 3 at 3:00 “electrifyingly rendered recitals”
facebook.com/keycitytheatre
Call for tickets 250 426 7006 or visit the KCT Box office
daily townsman / daily bulletin
Thursday, OCTOBER 24, 2013
Elk Valley Water Quality Plan Consultation Open Houses Teck is working with communities, First Nations and governments to create an Elk Valley Water Quality Plan that will maintain the health of the watershed and support continued, sustainable mining in the Elk Valley. We Want to Hear From You The objective of the Elk Valley Water Quality Plan is to stabilize and reverse the increasing trend of selenium and other substances related to mining activity in the watershed. The process to develop the plan will include three formal public consultation periods, with the first period taking place from October 28 to November 29. Further public consultation periods will take place in 2014. We are asking for your feedback on the framework we are using to develop the Elk Valley Water Quality Plan. Your input during this public consultation period is an important part of the development of the Plan. More information and an online feedback form are available at www.teck.com/ElkValley
Consultation Open Houses: You are invited to learn more, provide your input and ask questions at a public open house in your community: Elkford Community Conference Centre 750 Fording Drive November 12, 2013 4:30-8:30 p.m. Sparwood Senior Citizenâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Drop-In Centre 101 4th Avenue November 13, 2013 4:30-8:30 p.m. Fernie Senior Citizenâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Drop-In Centre 562 3rd Avenue November 14, 2013 4:30-8:30 p.m. A presentation will begin at 7 p.m. for each open house, followed by a question and answer session.
Page 31
daily townsman / daily bulletin
Page 32 Thursday, OCTOBER 24, 2013
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