Hope Standard, May 01, 2014

Page 1

A summer camp expo is taking place in Memorial Park this Sunday 11

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THURSDAY, MAY 1, 2014

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3 MEASLES FINALLY CONTAINED IN AREA

Fraser Health Authority says outbreak was one of the worst on record

Spring concert Sonny and Cher, also known as Pas and Denise Pascucci, entertain the crowd at the Hope Community Choir spring concert on April 27. The 60s Rewind event also featured guest performances from locals Sophie Enns and Shades O’ Grey. The concert raised $832 for a high school bursary and Tillicum Centre.

13 BC NDP HONOURS

LOCAL RESIDENT

Marjorie Houghton reognized for lifetime of dedication to political party

SHANON FISCHER PHOTO

15 TEAM FIT TAKES

PART IN SUN RUN

A group of 43 members represented Hope at the annual Vancouver event

INSIDE

Opinion . . . . . . . . . . . . 6 Community . . . . . 12 Sports . . . . . . . . . . . . 15 Classifieds . . . . . 17 $

1(PLUS GST)

Rash of thefts in Hope area Kerrie-Ann Schoenit Hope Standard

Thousands of dollars in merchandise has been stolen from Hope businesses in the last week. On Friday, Susan Hall arrived at work to find over $7,000 worth of liquor missing from her store as well as money from the Silver Chalice liquor store float. Overnight thieves had cut the telephone and cable lines on the roof, disabling the security system, and gained entry into the building through a smashed window

off the pub patio. Hall said the security system and horn were also ripped out. She believes the thieves filled garbage cans in the store with the liquor and used a hand cart to transport the merchandise to their vehicle(s). “It is very heartbreaking. This store is struggling anyway,” said Hall. “I have taken so many punches in this community with this business. This is just another thing that makes me have no desire in being a business owner.” Even though she’ll be able to

recoup the majority of the loss through insurance, Hall said she now has to pay the $2,500 deductible in addition to the upfront cost of restocking the shelves over the weekend. Allsys Computers was also vandalized last Thursday at about 4:30 a.m. A display window next to the front door was smashed and several items behind the curtain were taken. Owner Angus McDonald believes a man and woman were “scoping out” the store the day

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before the theft. A suspect was seen running away from the store wearing a black jacket and white sneakers. This is not the first time McDonald’s business has been targeted. He said there’s been three reported incidents in the last couple years. “I would be very surprised if I get the items back,” said McDonald. “At this point in time, I want something to happen with the crime in this town because it’s escalating. Continued on 3

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A2 Hope Standard Thursday, May 1, 2014


Hope Standard Thursday, May 1, 2014 A3

News

Worst measles outbreak in decades Katie Bartel Black Press

Nearly two months after the first case was reported, Fraser Health announced Monday the measles outbreak had finally been contained. The outbreak, which originated in East Chilliwack, was the worst Fraser Health has seen in almost 30 years. In a four week span, from March to April, more than 400 cases were reported; some patients requiring hospitalization. “We haven’t had this large an outbreak since 1986,” said Dr. Michelle Murti, medical health officer for Fraser Health. The rapid spread is concern-

ing. Even though measles has been eliminated in Canada, it’s still common in other countries. In fact, the recent outbreak, which started in a community notorious for low immunization rates, is suspected to have stemmed from a Chilliwack family visiting the Netherlands, a country that’s been battling a yearlong measles outbreak. “When we have lower rates of immunization, that does put us at risk of having this type of an outbreak that can spread quite quickly,” said Murti. “The significance of this outbreak and how large and rapidly spreading it was is a good

reminder for people to keep up to date on their immunizations.” Fraser Health has taken actions to help make it more convenient for families. The health authority recently started offering evening and weekend times for parents to bring their children in for vaccinations. It’s also researching ways to make booking appointments easier. As well, Fraser Health is promoting online tools that remind parents when their child is due for an immunization, including ImmunizeBC.ca and Immunize.ca. ImmunizeBC.ca will send parents free text messages one

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month and one week before their child is due for immunization. Immunize.ca allows parents to keep track of their whole family’s immunization records with one click of the app. It also provides information on vaccinations and outbreaks nationally and internationally. “We do have this constant contact with measles being imported from other places and we do need to maintain that high level of immunization in our population to make sure these types of outbreak don’t happen again,” said Murti. “These are things we can do to make it more convenient for parents.”

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“United We

Contact Kerrie-Ann at 604-869-4992 or email: news@

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ing”

A Community Sing-A-Long Hope United Church (Corner of 3rd Ave. & Queen St.) First Wednesday of each month

May 7, 2014 1:30pm Season Finale SONGS FROM THE

“Good Old Days” Light refreshments served.

Tom Fletcher Black Press

The B.C. government has unveiled its plan to match up skills training with emerging jobs in resource development, by redirecting post-secondary funding and financial aid toward occupations in demand. The plan emphasizes industrial skills such as welding, pipefitting, heavy equipment operation, truck driving and concrete finishing, but ministers and officials stressed that it also includes engineering, health care and other occupations where jobs are

projected to increase. The main shift for colleges and universities is that within four years, a quarter of their operating grants will be targeted to programs with identified demand from the job market. Employment data will determine post-secondary funding, instead of the tradition of block grants to postsecondary schools. Ministers avoided identifying areas that will lose funding, but have previously cited far more teaching graduates than there are jobs in the school system. Premier Christy Clark has lamented a system

where students receive a bachelor’s degree and then must take additional training to qualify for jobs. Education Minister Peter Fassbender outlined a plan for K-12 schooling that aims to double the number of spaces for high school students taking industrial training in high school to 5,000 in two years. Students in these courses get college credits while still in high school, allowing them to go to work more quickly. The ministry is also revamping its kindergarten to grade nine curriculum to give it more emphasis

on “hands-on learning” and exposing students in earlier grades to the range of jobs they can expect when they graduate. Jobs Minister Shirley Bond said the Industry Training Authority will soon get a new board of directors and industry advisory councils to provide up-to-date information on job market needs. NDP leader Adrian Dix said the overhaul of the ITA to restore union representation on its board shows that the model set up 10 years ago has been a failure. He also questioned how the education system can

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B.C. launches skills ‘re-engineering’

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be restructured without adding new resources. “We need investment in skills training,” Dix said. “Instead what we have is a ministry of reallocation, which will cause considerable problems in the system and will not, I think, cumulatively give young people what they need.” Advanced Education Minister Amrik Virk said the student loan program will also be adjusted to market demand, with loans reduced or forgiven for students who graduate with in-demand skills and are willing to move to get work.

Police arrest for people for wire theft in Hope From 1

“Every time something like this occurs, I have to try and figure out a way to recoup my losses. The only way I can do that is to pass it on to the customer. So everybody pays for this one way or another.” Anyone with information regarding these thefts is asked to contact Hope RCMP at 604-869-7750, or Crimestoppers at 1-800-222-8477 to remain anonymous. Last Thursday was a busy day for Hope RCMP. Police also arrested four people from Burnaby last in connection with stolen Telus wire. Police conducted a traffic stop at about 8 p.m. on a pickup truck that had exited the Richmond Hill forest

service road. In plain view was 180 kilograms of Telus wire cut to fit the truck bed. Two women, aged 35 and 49, and two men, aged 39 and 51, were immediately taken into custody. They are scheduled to appear in Chilliwack Provincial Court on July 29. Each will face one count of possession of property obtained by crime over $5,000. “The disruption of communications impacts access to emergency services including 911, is an economic loss to business customers who cannot process transactions, and is an extra cost in terms of money and resources required to repair the damage to the cable,” said Cpl. Len vanNiuwenhui-

zen, adding that the average cost of doing repairs is between $25,000 and $50,000.

“The success of this investigation reflects the good work by the two police officers

and exemplifies the commitment to public safety by the Hope RCMP.”

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SPECIALTY COMPOUNDING SERVICES FOR YOUR INDIVIDUAL NEEDS Generic medications are biologically identical to their brand-name counterparts but they may differ in appearance at times. Even though the colour or size of the generic is different, it is designed to give the same results as the brand name drug. We use many generics in Canada today. We will let you know when there is a change in brand. Let us know if you experience a change in effect. As summer approaches, many people look at diets to lose weight. Some of these diets concentrate on certain foods

in greater abundance than one would eat normally. Let your doctor and pharmacist know you are trying one of these diets, especially if you are taking drugs like the “blood thinner” warfarin. Some foods can interfere with warfarin’s action and may alter regular blood tests. For many people, eating liver isn’t high on their preferred food list. However, prior to 1948, people diagnosed with pernicious anemia were prescribed a diet of raw liver. In that year, vitamin B-12 was ¿rst discovered as a chemical

entity and a supplement was developed to treat the anemia. Much easier to take! The pituitary gland is the size of a pea but it is a powerhouse of activity. Located mid-brain behind the bridge of the nose, it produces hormones that affect many body systems as well as stimulating other glands to produce hormones. Our pharmacists are busy people but answering your questions about medication is one of our main jobs. We are never too busy for that.

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A4 Hope Standard Thursday, May 1, 2014

News

RCMP save three kids in Clearwater

Kerrie-Ann Schoenit

Identification Services, Police Dog Services, and an RCMP Air Services helicopter. The three missing children, reportedly aged six, four and two, were located at the same home where Scott was later arrested. They were safely removed by RCMP Emergency Response Team members. The children were not physically harmed during the incident. Scott is expected to appear back in court on June 2 in Kamloops. Online fundraising campaigns have been started at http://www.gofundme. com/8k1hts and http://www. gofundme.com/8r0x68 to support Wilson’s kids. - with files from the Clearwater Times

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Police discovered the body of Angila Wilson in this small house on Stegg Road in Clearwater last Monday, starting a day-long standoff at a second residence.

ter, attended Hope Secondary School in the late 1990s and still has family living in the community. Significant regional RCMP resources were immediately deployed to support the members

of Clearwater detachment in their response to the homicide scene and their active pursuit of the missing children and suspect. This support included the Emergency Response Team, Major Crime Unit, Forensic

Province keeps weapon against BCTF in reserve Jeff Nagel Black Press

The provincial government is so far holding off on a threat to try to force the B.C. Teachers’ Federation to pay $5 million a month to cover the cost of its members’ benefits in response to their limited job action. That possible financial weapon was broached earlier in the month by negotiators with the B.C. Public School Employers’ Association and Education Minister Peter Fassbender said it remains an option, particularly if the union escalates its tactics. “The BCTF has said they’re taking this action to put pressure on

us,” Fassbender said last Thursday in an interview. “We may need to add some commensurate pressure to the BCTF if we find we’re not getting any solid options from them.” The union has demanded pay hikes estimated at 13.5 per cent over three years, while the government has offered 6.5 per cent over the first six years of an intended 10-year deal. Fassbender said the BCTF has made some movement in negotiations, but not a significant amount. He expressed disappointment that despite continued talks the union opted last Wednesday to begin its

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first-stage strike action – restricting administrative duties and supervision of students outside of class time – a move that has prompted several rural districts to cancel recess. The BCPSEA had notified the union any strike action could trigger a call for it to cover health and welfare benefits for B.C.’s 40,000 teachers, estimated at $5 million a month. “I don’t want to inflict pain on anybody,” Fassbender said. “But there are tools available to government as there are to the union. I don’t think we want to put out any threats but by the same token we need to ensure that we have stability in the classrooms. That’s our goal.” BCTF president Jim Iker said he doubts the Labour Relations Board would approve a request ordering the union to pay benefits, noting a similar effort to make the union pay 15 per

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saying it would impose enormous costs and disrupt programs. Waiting until the fall for an appeal court ruling would be unfortunate, said Dan Laitsch, an associate education professor at SFU. “It really is kind of an all-or-nothing case,” Laitsch said. “They’re playing a fairly high stakes poker game because either side could lose big depending on the outcome of the appeal.” Ideally, he said, the two sides would recognize it’s too risky to wait and instead craft a settlement that doesn’t subject schools to a months-long strike action. Laitsch said budget shortfalls now surfacing at many districts mean the province will be under pressure to find more money for the school system regardless of the outcome of the teachers’ dispute.

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cent of wages was denied in the last teachers’ strike. “We would see that as retaliatory and punitive for them to even think about or threaten that the union pay the cost of the benefits when teachers are in the classroom working as hard as they normally do with students,” Iker said. Iker said it is the government that has not moved much off its position, including a refusal to bargain smaller class sizes and more access to specialist teachers. “Our hope is we can get this deal done by the end of June and not be going into September still at the bargaining table.” Overshadowing the labour dispute is last year’s B.C. Supreme Court ruling that the province must restore class size and composition to what existed in 2001. The province has appealed the decision,

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A man in his early 40s has been charged with first-degree murder after a woman with ties to Hope was found dead inside her Clearwater home. Iain Drummond Scott was taken into custody last Monday after a seven-hour standoff with police. He is believed to be the estranged common-law spouse of the victim. On April 21 at 10 a.m., Clearwater RCMP responded to a call for assistance at a residence on Stegg Road in Clearwater. Officers found the body of Angila Wilson inside the home and her three children missing. Wilson, a nurse at Dr. Helmcken Memorial Hospital in Clearwa-

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Hope Standard Thursday, May 1, 2014 A5

News

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Mike Millar of Hope Mountain Centre clears fallen trees from the Hope Lookout Trail last week. A public volunteer work party will take place this Sunday (May 4). For more details, call Hope Mountain Centre at 604-869-3745.

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Opinion

A6 Hope Standard Thursday, May 1, 2014

Published at Hope, Boston Bar, Yale and surrounding area by Black Press

Unplug your electronics It used to be that the old beer fridge, chugging away in the basement at all hours, was your home’s biggest energy hog. And sure, if you have an old beast whirring and humming away, it would be wise to unplug it and save your bucks. But there’s a new consumer of energy in your home — electronics — and you may be surprised to learn how much your cell phones, PVRs, computers and other gizmos are costing you. BC Hydro has been increasing their educational programming, through their website and at trade shows, encouraging customers to use less power. And one way is to properly monitor just how much your electronics are driving up your Smart Meter. While unplugging that old fridge can save you up to $85 a year, properly plugging in your gadgets has the potential to save you more than $100 a year. Just your PVR alone is costing you more than your average refrigerator. BC Hydro suggests hooking up your television, DVD, PVR, VCR and surround system to one power bar, and simply clicking the entire thing off when it’s not in use. “Phantom load” is upping your the cost of your hydro bill, whether you’re home or away, sleeping or awake. Standby power can increase your annual bill by as much as 10 per cent. If hydro companies could convince everyone in Canada to reduce their products that use standby power, they could power up to 400,000 homes, and emissions reductions would be equivalent to taking a large coal-fired power generating unit offline. All you have to do to is unplug the things you aren’t using. If we could learn as a society to turn off the lights when we leave the room, surely we can learn to click off the electronics, too. Finally, BC Hydro’s green team suggests reading a book, and going for a bike ride instead of watching TV at all — the ultimate unplugged experience. - Black Press

Inconvenient truth of pine beetle B.C. VIEWS Tom Fletcher Last week’s column on Earth Day myths attracted a fair amount of criticism. One tireless member of the “Alberta tar sands killing the planet” crowd scolded me for daring to mention that 60 per cent of the oil pollution in the oceans around North America comes from natural seeps. That’s eight times more than all pipeline and tanker spills combined, and it’s been going on 24 hours a day for the last 10,000 years or so. This fact blows another hole in the carefully crafted narrative that only Canadian oil exports to Asia

would destroy our delicate ecosystems. That narrative is why the daily Alaska supertankers along the B.C. coast are ignored, as is the barbaric shale oil rush in North Dakota that can be seen from space. U.S. oil barons are flaring off the vast volume of natural gas that comes up with the more valuable light crude, while the U.S. environment lobby obsesses over the Keystone XL pipeline. Here’s another one that may upset people indoctrinated by our school system, media and our supposedly green B.C. Liberal government. B.C.’s recent pine beetle epidemic was caused by human carbon emissions, right? Everybody knows that. Gordon Campbell hammered the point home in speeches for years. In 2012 I participated in a B.C. forests ministry tour of facilities where hardy seedlings are grown

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for reforestation. Test plantings were also underway to see if the range of southern tree species is shifting northward due to climate change. During the bus ride, I asked the province’s top forest scientists if Campbell was right. The answer? We don’t have enough evidence to conclude that. As for shifting tree habitat, those decades-long experiments are continuing. The scientists confirmed what I already knew, which is that the most recent bark beetle epidemic is the latest of many. It’s the largest “on record,” but the record goes back less than a century. In 2008 I interviewed Lorne Swanell on the occasion of his 100th birthday. A graduate of UBC’s school of forest engineering, Swanell began his career with the forests ministry in 1930. After

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a year as a ranger, he was assigned to the Kamloops region to help deal with a pine beetle epidemic. Conventional wisdom on the latest outbreak holds that it spread so far because of a lack of cold winters, attributed to human carbon emissions. I grew up in northern B.C., and my last two visits to the Peace country were both in January. In 2004 I recall changing planes on the tarmac of Prince George airport, moving briskly in the daytime temperature near -40 C. That night, and subsequent nights, the mercury dropped to -50 C. In January 2013 I returned for some discussions on the Enbridge pipeline route, and experienced a relatively balmy -30 C in the daytime. So when I hear people talk about the end of cold winters in northern B.C. because of global

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warming, it’s difficult to square with personal experience. I can hear the rebuttals already. It takes long periods of extreme cold to kill the pine beetle. How long? Longer than those ones, of course. Similarly flexible theories are being advanced to explain the 17-year “pause” in Earth’s average surface temperature rise, the growing Antarctic ice sheet, and this past winter’s “polar vortex.” If anyone has substantial evidence that CO2 from human activity was the trigger mechanism for the latest beetle outbreak in B.C., I’d like to see it. But please, spare me the affirmations of quasi-religious faith that often pass for climate change arguments today. Tom Fletcher is legislature reporter and columnist for Black Press. Twitter: @tomfletcherbc Email: tfletcher@blackpress.ca

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BC Press Council: The Standard is a member of the British Columbia Press Council, a self-regulatory body governing the province’s newspaper industry. The council considers complaints from the public about the conduct of member newspapers. Directors oversee the mediation of complaints, with input from both the newspaper and the complaint holder. If talking with the editor or publisher does not resolve your complaint about coverage or story treatment, you may contact the B.C. Press Council. Your written concern, with documentation, should be sent within 45 days to : B.C. Press Council, 201 Selby St., Nanaimo, B.C. V9R 2R2. For information, phone 888-687-2213 or go to www.bcpresscouncil.org


Letters

Hope Standard Thursday, May 1, 2014 A7

Refinery will convert bitumen to light fuels our refinery. It will be so clean that in combination with oilsands extraction there will be less CO2 than in the huge conventional oilfields and refineries of Iraq and Nigeria. In other words the Kitimat refinery will neutralize the extra greenhouse gases generated in Canada’s oilsands. This refinery will be built in Asia if not in Kitimat, and if so it will emit double the CO2 of our new design. This is the reason that Andrew Weaver of the B.C. Green Party is in favour of a Canadian refinery. • An Asian refinery will also generate 100 train cars a day of very dirty coke (much fouler than B.C. coal) which will be subsequently burnt in the atmosphere to create power. The Kitimat refinery will not result in the production of any coke. As we all live on one planet, it is far better for the global environment to build this refinery in Canada. • Construction of the refinery will create 6,000 jobs in B.C. for five years. Operations at the refinery will result in more permanent jobs than any project has ever created in B.C. with approximately 3,000 direct jobs. These will be highly paid permanent jobs. These jobs will be available for

Build a refinery in Fort McMurray instead Re: Bitumen should not be put in tankers, Letters (April 24) I found David Black’s opinion editorial on the eventual destruction of the North Pacific most interesting and timely, considering the federal Conservative government’s commitment on making a decision on the Northern Gateway Pipeline in June of this year. The idea of building a refinery in Prince Rupert has already been proposed by B.C. Green Party MLA Andrew Weaver. At the same time the honorable MLA knows this is still a tragic consequence, and does nothing to answer the real problem of global warming and environmental destruction. Opting for the lesser of two evils, Dr. Weaver is hoping the powers that be see that the enormity of the investment involved and the public disdain for pipe-

lining and tankering bitumen will deter them from increasing oil sands production altogether. Personally, and with all due respect, I think the answer lies in Fort McMurray itself. Why not build the refinery right there? Then the bitumen never leaves the tar sands and this would also increase the safety of our rivers and pristine wilderness. Fort McMurray could then become the distribution and recycling return centre. They could then build pipelines for distributing refined product, far safer and many times more lucrative. The money you save not building pipelines for bitumen and the cost of not having to tanker oil back and forth across the ocean, could be used towards refinery construction, which would be around $7 billion dollars. Art Green

Letters The Hope Standard welcomes letters from our readers. Typed or printed letters must be signed and should include an address and daytime phone number for verification purposes. Letters should be no longer than 300 words. The Standard edits letters for accuracy, taste, clarity and length. The Standard reserves the right to not publish letters. EMAIL:

the life of the refinery which should be in excess of 50 years. In addition, there will be thousands of other jobs created in spinoff local petrochemical companies and in indirect employment throughout the province. • The Canadian and provincial governments, local regional districts and municipalities, and many First Nations, will share in billions of new tax dollars each year. Unfortunately, our Canadian oil companies are not interested in building a new major refinery. They are focused on extraction which is more profitable than refining. One of them challenged me to spearhead the refinery myself, so I am doing that. We have a solid business plan and as a consequence Chinese banks and other institutions are prepared to lend us most of the funds required to build the greenest and most efficient refinery in the world. We are currently moving ahead with engineering design and environmental work. We will also build a safe pipeline from Alberta to the refinery, with the active participation of First Nations. Modern pipelines can be built and operated safely. Leak data is available for everyone to see on Canadian

and U.S. government websites and it proves recently constructed pipelines are not leaking. Furthermore some of the best pipelining companies in the world are based in Canada. In addition we will build a fleet of new tankers, powered by LNG rather than Bunker C oil, to transport the refined products to Asia. This way we know the tankers will be state-of-theart and as safe as possible. The fleet will be owned by a company based in B.C. so it cannot shirk its legal liability if there ever is a spill at sea. Let me be up front about my biases. I am for creating thousands of good permanent jobs in B.C. I am for creating billions of new tax dollars for government coffers. I am for reducing the planet’s greenhouse gas emissions. I am for building an oil pipeline that will never leak. I am for building a modern tanker fleet that carries only refined fuels that float and evaporate if spilled. I am against shipping bitumen in tankers. If you agree that we should not put bitumen in tankers please contact your local MP and say so. The Canadian government makes a decision on Northern Gateway next month. David Black

LAST WEEK WE ASKED:

Do you support the B.C. Teachers Federation’s job action?

Do you think B.C. teachers will escalate job action before the end of the school year?

To answer, go to our website: www.hopestandard.com

Here’s how you responded:

Yes 100% No 0%

Copyright Copyright or property rights subsists in all advertisements and in all other material appearing in this edition of THE HOPE STANDARD. 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. Unauthorized publication will be subject to recourse by law.

New option for law students The last-minute controversy about Trinity Western University’s proposed law school is now over. Young people in British Columbia and beyond can look forward to attending law school in Langley. It will be a distinctive, new option. Now that the directors of the Law Society of B.C. have decided, in a 20-tosix vote, to accept TWU graduates, three key

points should be made. First, since The Federation of Law Societies of Canada, after an 18-month study, approved the TWU proposal, the B.C. body had no reason to be opposed. Second, at present many universities in the U.S. and elsewhere have similar faith and conduct requirements; they have produced fine attorneys. Third, the argument that

TWU graduates could not be good lawyers because they have agreed to a university policy upholding traditional marriage is deeply flawed. The TWU policy deals with behaviour while the students are at TWU, not with a life-long commitment. Further, as every lawyer knows, concerning any social policy, whether rooted in the constitution, the Charter, or legis-

lation, numerous lawyers are in opposition. On major policies the country is rife with lawyers on both sides of the issue. The TWU law school won’t cause or affect that reality. Read history, lawyers. Freedom prescribes diversity and social progress has come through dissenting minorities, not by imposition of views by majorities. John H. Redekop

MYTH 3: YOU HAVE TO PAY TO BE RESCUED You do not have to pay to be rescued in British Columbia, nor in any jurisdiction in Canada that we know of.

02/14H_AA6

news@hopestandard.com

QUESTION OF THE WEEK:

Circulation $1 per copy retail; $42 per year by carrier; $61.50 per year by mail in Canada; $185 per year by mail to the USA. All subscriptions are payable in advance of delivery.

2014/2015 Budget Presentation May 5, 2014 at 4:30 pm Agassiz Elementary Secondary School Library 05/14H_FCSD1

This myth has almost certainly caused harm. If someone thinks they will be charged, they might not call for help. Any delay in activating Search and Rescue can result in the missing person being more difficult to find. A delay can turn a simple search in the daylight into a difficult night time rescue. A delay can turn a short rescue into a challenging, expensive (for the taxpayer) and risky (for the searcher) job. If you know you are lost, do not hesitate to call for rescue. It’s free and calling early makes our job faster, easier and safer.

Hope Search & Rescue

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This is the second of two columns addressing what I see as the greatest threat to the B.C. environment in our lifetime. The Alberta oil industry’s Northern Gateway plan is to export bitumen to Asia via tankers from the B.C. coast. Under no circumstances should we allow that to happen. A bitumen spill at sea could destroy our coastline, together with the fish and wildlife that depend on it, for hundreds of years. My first column discussed the light oil spill by the Exxon Valdez and the terrible toll it took on the Alaskan habitat and fishery. It also gave proof that a bitumen spill would be far worse. A bitumen spill would be almost completely unrecoverable because it would sink and stay on the bottom of our seabed. The solution that is best for Canada is to build a refinery in Kitimat. I am promoting and backing this solution. It will convert the bitumen to very light fuels that would float and evaporate if ever spilled. There are other enormous benefits: • There will be a major reduction in greenhouse gases. We will use new cutting-edge Canadian technology in

Editorial Department To discuss any news story idea you may have – or any story we have recently published – please call the editor at 604-869-4992.

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A8 Hope Standard Thursday, May 1, 2014

News

Throness ‘respectfully’ agrees to disagree Jennifer Feinberg Black Press

The idea was that anyone in B.C. wishing to change the gender designation as it appears on their birth certificate would no longer have to prove they had gender reassignment surgery first. Chilliwack-Hope MLA Laurie Throness publicly disagreed with his government on this one, saying he voted against it in committee, while sup-

porting the other aspects of the larger bill. He rose in the legislature Monday morning to make it clear he does not support removing the roadblock to gender designation flexibility his government sought this week by amending the Vital Statistics Act under Bill 16, the Miscellaneous Statutes Amendment Act. Throness backed the Amendment Act in general, according to the draft Hansard transcripts,

but not the clause on gender changes. It could lead to more bullying and selfrejection among teens, he argued. Throness said his stance, his “respectful” disagreement with the BC Liberal government, was not related to morality or religion, but “a biological argument.” “My first question for the minister is this: Why would the government seek to entrench in law a sex designation that does not accord with biological

SUDOKU PUZZLE 441

reality?” the local MLA asked, according to Hansard. Health Minister Terry Lake replied that the proposed amendment was not in fact about biology. “This is about a social construct. In fact, on a notice of birth the sex of the child is recorded, and that will never be amended. That is a permanent record. “We’re talking about a birth certificate in which the gender can be amended to agree with the social construct or the way in which the person who owns that information would like to be identified. Essentially, we’re not talking about the sex

of a person; we’re talking about the gender of a person, the way in which they see themselves and the way in which they present themselves to the world, based on an application with supporting documentation from a physician or a psychologist.” But Throness argued against the idea, and cited three reasons: “First, it will embed in law and in government policy a concept of gender change that is incorrect because it purports to offer what is biologically impossible. “Second, it will entrench in law and thereby extend an existing societal trend of self-rejection

— and this at the very deepest level of human identification. Third, the law fails the test of net benefit, because while it might make a few people feel better, it will make many — particularly, impressionable people and youth — feel worse. Minister Lake acknowledged the MLA’s efforts to protect youth from a negative self-image and bullying. But he said the bill would do that, and reduce the stigma. “In fact, I think this does have a net benefit, because under the provisions that we have had in the past or up until this point that have been in place since 1974, proof of

surgery had to be provided in order to have gender reassignment,” said Lake. “This change allows people to live the life they believe they should without pushing them to have surgery, so in fact, I think that there is definitely a net benefit. So yes, the answer is I have considered the possibility, the unintended consequences, but on the evidence before us and with a lot of discussion on this bill, I believe there is a net benefit and that, in fact, this will bring the legislation to the modern era, reduce stigma and reduce the type of concern in terms of bullying that the member has elucidated.”

‘Living wage’ calculated at $17.02 Vikki Hopes Black Press

HOW TO PLAY:

• Fill in the grid so that every row, every column & every 3 x 3 box contains the numbers 1 through 9 only once. • Each 3 x 3 box is outlined with a darker line. You already have a few numbers to get you started. Remember: you must not repeat the numbers 1 through 9 in the same line, column or 3 x 3 box.

ANSWERS FOR PUZZLE 440 OPEN: Monday-Saturday CLOSED Sundays Eat-In or Take Out 377 Old Hope Princeton Way, Hope, B.C. 604-869-8484

Each parent in a family of four needs to make $17.02 an hour in order to obtain basic needs and “maintain a decent standard of living,” says a local group. Living Wage Fraser Valley (LWFV), hosted by Vibrant Abbotsford, has calculated the “living wage” for the area from Abbotsford to Hope/Boston Bar, including Mission. A living wage is calculated based on a budget for a healthy family of four with two children aged four and seven, and each parent working 35 hours a week for 52 weeks a year. It takes into account basic expenses such as food, housing, childcare, clothing and transportation, once government taxes, credits, deductions and subsidies have been factored in. The living wage does not consider home ownership, debt, holidays, saving for retirement or a child’s education, or caring for a disabled, ill or elderly family member. This year’s calculation is up four per cent

May 1 Crossword Puzzle

ACROSS 1. Alter 7. Defects 13. Language of Andorra 14. One who scrapes 16. Not off 17. People indigenous to Europe 19. Of I 20. Hmongs 22. Brew 23. Sandwich shops 25. Shade trees 26. Scope or extent 28. Self-immolation by fire 29. U of Al. fraternity 3-9-1856 30. Automatic data processing 31. Veterans battleground 33. “___ Squad” 34. Frog genus 36. Pillage 38. Elsewhere defense

40. Graphic symbols 41. An opaque spot on the cornea 43. Capital of Yemen 44. Doctors’ group 45. Electronic countermeasures 47. Make lace 48. Chit 51. Singer Horne 53. Silent agreement 55. Short-billed rail 56. Drinking container 58. Matchstick game 59. Indian dresses 60. Trumpeter Hirt 61. The View’s first segment 64. Atomic #34 65. Plural of 41 across 67. Roof supports 69. Tears apart 70. Goat-like deities

DOWN 1. Folder paper 2. Mormon state 3. Folded, filled tortillas 4. Expression of sorrow 5. Follows sigma 6. Settle in tents 7. Milk paint 8. A batter’s run 9. Little Vienna on the Mures 10. Stems 11. Country singer Lang 12. Half tone interval 13. Arrives 15. Occupies 18. Vestment 21. Relating to US artifacts 24. One who covers with laminate 26. Dental organization 27. Pitch 30. Like a feeble old woman

32. Murdered in his bathtub 35. __ Dhabi, Arabian capital 37. Play on words 38. Alloy of mercury 39. Mushroom gill 42. Perform 43. College entrance exam 46. Praying insects 47. Entices 49. Ascends 50. Sculpture stands 52. God of Assyria 54. Data executive 55. Impudent 57. Not shared 59. Rabbit tail 62. Small amount 63. Irish revolutionary org. 66. Ben-Hur actor’s initials 68. Older citizen (abbr.)

ANSWERS FOR APRIL 24 CROSSWORD PUZZLE CAN BE FOUND IN THE CLASSIFIED SECTION OF THIS PAPER

from the 2013 figure of $16.37. Vibrant Abbotsford coordinator Alison Homer said the hike takes into account inflation, increased child care rates, and higher tuition fees and Medical Service Plan costs. Homer said the calculation is released yearly to demonstrate how the real costs of living are changing in communities. “This year, the trend continues that costs of living are rising faster than inflation, and that wages are not following suit,” she said. “It is progressively harder each year for families to make ends meet, with families having to spend $156 more each month than they did two years ago.” She said the living wage is based on the premise that people who work full-time should never have to live in poverty. Homer said it’s important for communities to support a living wage because it results in citizens having to rely less on social programs and having more disposable income to invest locally. Employers benefit by higher

employee loyalty and productivity, and decreased turnover and training/hiring costs, she said. Homer said 28 per cent of families with two children fall below the living wage threshold, and one out of three poor children live in families where at least one adult has a full-time job. Businesses can become certified “living wage employers.” Currently, Vancity is the only such employer in the Fraser Valley, although Homer says there are many other businesses who also pay a living wage. Catherine Ludgate, Vancity manager of community investment, said the company, which has 56 branches and 2,600 employees in B.C., began in 2010 ensuring that all its employees and people it contracts – for services such as security and janitorial – receive the living wage. She said employee engagement and morale “went up considerably,” there has been less staff turnover, and employees have been happier and more productive. “Paying a living wage is just the right thing to do,” she said.


Hope Standard Thursday, May 1, 2014 A9

y a D s ’ r e Moth Contest

Ideas to look great!

YOU COULD WIN WIN: N

Welcome summer in style!

Manning Park Getaway • One night accommodations for 2 at Manning Park Resort plus a 1/2 day kayak or canoe rental. Prize must be used by June 30.

The perfect gifts for Mom! Summer Scarves by Pinkstix

OR Hope Golf Club Prize Package

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• Homecoming Champagne Brunch for 4 on May 25, 1 group golf lesson and a round of golf for 4. Name:

Phone Number:

Contest closes: May 13, 2014 at 5 pm. Drop your entry off at the Hope Standard, 540 Wallace St. or email it to sales@hopestandard.com. Prizes will be accepted as awarded, no cash value and no further correspondence will be entered into.

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• Fresh fruit & vegetables • Home baking & preserves

y a D ’s r e h t Mo Brunch Buffet

Every Tuesday and Friday at the Curling Rink parking lot on 6th Ave.

Sunday, May 11 at the Hope Golf Club

Mother’s Day

CUPCAKE EVENT

Saturday, May 10 1 - 3 pm

Visit the Bakery Department at

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2 SEATINGS 10:30 AM AND 12:30 PM

What better way to say “I Love You” than to decorate a pack of cupcakes for your Mom. You buy the cupcakes and we supply the decorations.

Full buffet of hot & cold breakfast/lunch items with crepe & dessert stations. Coffee & tea included. $22.95/person. Children aged 4-10 half price. Reservations required.

Homecoming Weekend

Proud supporter of community events! Reg Hours: 8am-9pm 7 Days A Week | 559 Old Hope Princeton Hwy | 604-869-3663

May 23-25 with a semi-formal wine & cheese, tournament/ banquet & Sunday Champagne Brunch!

$ Breakfast: Eggs Florentine Lunch: Shrimp Salad Sandwich Dinner: Chicken Cutlet with Shrimp Hollandaise

Draw for dinner for 2! 604-869-5558

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A10 Hope Standard Thursday, May 1, 2014

News

Hope Garden Club turns 20 Come hike with us! SUNDAY, MAY 4, 2014 MEMORIAL PARK ME

9:15am: Late Registration 10:30am: Start Time 11:30-12:30pm: Food, Entertainment and Prizes

TOP FUNDRAISING PRIZES INCLUDE: One night accommodation with canoe rental at Manning Park Resort $200 value One night accommodation with dinner in The Copper Room and breakfast at Harrison Hot Springs Resort $275 value Registration Fee: $10 per person. Children under 13 free! NATIONAL HOSPICE PALLIATIVE CARE WEEK, MAY 4-10, 2014

All funds raised directly support programs and services to the terminally-ill, caregivers and the bereaved in our community. RegistraƟon Forms available at Hospice Oĸce (1275-7th Avenue), Romano Photo (340B Wallace Street) or online: www.frasercanyonhospice.org / 604-860-7713 / info@frasercanyonhospice.org

4-14H FCH10

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1.855.333.7333 | xplornet.com 1 $32.50 applies to the first two months, $64.99 starts in month 3. Offer ends May 31, 2014 and is available to new customers who agree to a 1 year term commitment on any Xplornet 4G Residential package. Not to be combined with any other offer. $99 activation fee applies on a 1 year term. Taxes apply. 2A router is required for multiple users, see your local dealer. 3Connection is placed in a limited state once monthly bandwidth is exceeded. Please see Internet Traffic Management Policy on xplornet.com. 4Our 30-day money-back guarantee: If you are dissatisfied with your service for any reason, you will receive a refund of all amounts paid to Xplornet if you cancel your subscription within 30 days of activation. Xplornet® is a trade-mark of Xplornet Communications Inc. © 2014 Xplornet Communications Inc.

BC 4GSAT ADMAT 04/2014

Teresa Williams Contributor

The Hope Garden Club is celebrating a milestone anniversary this year. A small group of gardeners gathered in local homes over 20 years ago to start sharing plants, ideas and fellowship. Today the group has some of the original members who meet monthly. Helen Zervini, treasurer for most of these years, remembers the late Ken Wilson and Dave McCart, who were also founding members. The club has given funds to aid a number of community groups, Memorial Park and local schools. Funds are raised by the annual plant sale and raffles. The club hosted Brian Minter in February. A donation jar was set out and instead of using this to pay for costs, the club voted to give it to the First Hope Scouts. Crystal Medlock said the money went to the purchase of a number of snowshoes, which were used at their recent win-

SUBMITTED PHOTO

Hope Garden Club will hold its ninth annual Plant and Book Sale at the Curling Rink on May 10.

ter camping expedition. Another $500 was given this spring to Tillicum to aid in the beautification of their grounds. Naomi Bergstrom was thrilled with the gift and knows their clientele will enjoy working on the grounds. Hope Communities in Bloom also received $1,000. The planters have been cleaned out and have some new pansies. With warmer weather new annuals will be added. In addition, the funds will be used to accent entrances to Hope and

the berm at the junction. Local coordinator Victor Smith was delighted with the contribution, pointing out that the Hope Garden Club giving money for flowers, that the community and visitors can enjoy, is a natural combination. On Saturday, May 10, the Hope Garden Club is hosting its ninth annual Plant and Book Sale at the Curling Rink from 9 a.m. to noon. This is the club’s biggest fundraiser and proceeds go towards a $1,000 bursary for a student at Hope Second-

ary, preferably one who is interested in horticulture, forestry or the environment. The club welcomes donations from the community. Labeled plants and books can be dropped off at the Hope Curling Rink between 3-5 p.m. on May 9. Locals start lining up early to purchase perennials and small shrubs, veggies and annual flowers and fruit bearing plants. Garden related items such as pots, birdhouses are often sold as well. For more information, call April at 604-8604347 and for plant pick up call Bob at 604-8690655. The Hope Garden Club is a growing group and new members are always welcome. The May 7 meeting will be at the Golden Agers Hall at 560 Douglas St. at 7 p.m. Renee Prasad from UFV will be speaking about garden pests. For the $10 yearly membership fee, you receive a monthly newsletter that tells all about club activities.

Smart meter refusal fees trimmed

Tom Fletcher Black Press

BC Hydro customers who refuse to part with their mechanical power meters will continue to pay $32.40 a month for manual meter readings, with a refund on the balance of the $35 they’ve been paying since December. The B.C. Utilities Commission ruled on BC Hydro’s smart meter opt-out fees last Friday, after an order from the B.C. government required the regulator to approve fees covering all of BC Hydro’s costs. A $20 a month charge will continue for BC Hydro customers who accept a digital meter with the radio transmission function turned off. The commission cut the one-

Major renovations on the store will start in the first couple of weeks of June, with the shelving and refrigeration being replaced. The store will remain open during the renovation, with hopefully minimal disruption to their customers. Buy & Save Foods apologizes for any inconvenience this may cause.

time fee for disabling the meter radio to $22.60, far below BC Hydro’s proposed $100. Most of BC Hydro’s nearly two million customers now have fully functioning smart meters, which send daily readings to a collection network and signal when power goes out and comes back on. A few customers cling to theories that the meters present a health hazard, despite evidence that their signals are weaker than the natural background of radio frequency signals even in remote areas. BC Hydro’s meter upgrade was exempted from review, but the commission ruled last year on similar equipment for FortisBC’s electrical grid in the Okanagan and Kootenay regions. Commissioners rejected testimony from smart meter oppo-

nents, noting that their spokesmen were unqualified and in most cases repeating false or exaggerated claims in order to sell solutions to the purported hazards. BC Hydro spent nearly $1 billion to upgrade its grid, forecasting savings from automatic meter reading to faster detection of outages and elimination of power theft from meter bypasses. The commission also reduced fees for customers who move and request a radio-off meter at their new address. To switch from a mechanical meter to a radio-off meter will cost $77.60, reduced from the BC Hydro’s proposed $100. Going from one radio-off meter to another will cost $132.60, down from the proposed $155 that includes activating the meter in the former residence.

Buy & Save Foods would like to congratulate

PAULINE SVENSRUD

on her recent promotion to Store Manager. Pauline is a long time familiar face at the Hope Buy & Save, working in the store for over 28 years now. Over the years, she has worked as a cashier, in the meat department and most recently in the office. For approximately 35 years Pauline has lived in the community of Hope, where she has raised her two children. Pauline has been an active participant with her children's activities including volunteering as an executive member on Hope & Dist. Minor Hockey as well as on Silver Creek and Hope Secondary school's Parent's Advisory Councils. Pauline is excited for the challenges that her new role will bring.

BUY & SAVE FOODS

489 Wallace Street, Hope

40 Y ears in Business 604-869-5318

05/14H_BS1


Hope Standard Thursday, May 1, 2014 A11

Kawkawa Camp and Retreat has undergone several site upgrades over the last couple years, including a new outdoor wood burning pizza oven, a new outdoor arena for Israeli dodgeball, and an upgraded version of 4 Square – 9 Square in the Air. This year, staff are planning to install a new storage shed, make dock improvements, and add a new gazebo in memory of former board chairman Frank Baumen. Kawkawa Camp and Retreat offers a full range of summer camps for children starting from seven years old, right up through adults at family camp. They also have four youth camps this year, each with a different age range. There are a variety of activities, everything from wake boarding, swimming, tubing, and kayaking, to arts and crafts, archery, beach volleyball, hiking, and field games. Kawkawa Camp and Retreat is participating in a summer camp expo this Sunday (May 4) in Memorial Park,

along with Camp Squeah. The event will run from 2-5 p.m. and feature games, food, music, camp giveaways, and information booths for parents to connect with the camps. “We want people to know we’re out here, we’re here to serve them and we have great programming,” said Tim Larson, Camp Squeah summer program director and outdoor education coordinator. “We think that exposure to the natural environment is healthy for children for the love of outdoors, physical fitness and creativity. The social aspect also really helps to reinforce a respect for others and a sense of belonging. (Summer camp) fosters a healthy sense of independence and interdependence at different ages.” Camp Squeah, a ministry of the Mennonite Church British Columbia, first opened its doors off Highway 1 in the Fraser Canyon in 1962 with a few cabins, outdoor swimming pool, and dining hall. Since then, its

FUN R E M M SU 2014 P M A C DAY

expanded to include a lodge, outdoor gym, low and high ropes course, rock climbing area, crafts hall, games room, numerous meeting spaces, and an extensive trail system. Summer camps include children’s programs ranging in duration from three to six days, backpacking trips, and junior and senior leadership training camps, which encourage the development of skills from a servant leader perspective. The camp also offers a variety of on and off site overnight camps during July and August for kids aged six to 17 as well as for families. This year, Camp Squeah has added a new summer day camp program in August. The Daytrippers day camps are open to families in the Hope area and surrounding communities. Families can register their children for any or all of the days available. During the summer, there can be up to 70 staff working every week for 102 campers. Camp Squeah also hosts Camp Skylark every September, a be-

• Swimming • Ice Skating • Field Trips • Outdoors Activities • Arts & Crafts NEW THIS YEAR: • Gardening • Composting

reavement camp for children sponsored by the Fraser Canyon Hospice Society. Another summer camp option is Mountain View Camp, which is operated by the Seventh-day Adventist Church on 110 acres west of Hope. Development on the site started in the early 1970s, and the majority was completed by 1990. Mountain View offers a wide range of activities for young people and families in a residential summer camp setting. The camp has horseback riding, water skiing/ wake boarding, canoeing, rock climbing, swimming, wilderness living, nature study, crafts, videography, sports and archery. Mountain View sum-

mer camp exists for the purpose of leading people to a clearer understanding of God through Jesus. During the spring and fall, the camp is available to other groups for retreats and conferences. Mountain View Conference Centre has 72 guest rooms with private baths, a large dining room, auditorium and a variety of meeting rooms. Cabins, bunkhouses, 900 camping and RV sites and recreational facilities are also available. There is a campfire bowl located at the base of a 75’ rock face that seats 300 people. Other facilities include an indoor/outdoor gymnasium, ski boats, canoes, and a craft building. Recreation, Culture and Airpark Services

Celebrating our 40th Anniversary with an Open House on July 5 SUMMER WE HOPE TO SEE YOU THERE!

is also hosting its Summer Fun Day Camp program again this year. The schedule includes weekly visits to The Art Machine; Story Time in the Park; swimming at Almer Carlson Pool and Dan Sharrers Aquatic Centre; ice skating; and field trips to Bridal Falls Waterpark, Harrison Children’s Festival, Greater Vancouver Zoo, and the Blue Heron Nature Reserve. In addition, kids will have an opportunity to learn how to plant and grow their own fruits and vegetables, manage their own food composting, and play more games at the rec centre such as basketball, badminton, Omnikin and flag football.

Summer camps for children starting from 7 years old through to adults. Youth Camps have different age ranges to meet your family dynamics. Family Camp has a price cap to help those with larger families enjoy a great summer camping experience!

RENTAL AVAILABLE FOR GROUPS UP TO 135 IN AUGUST

www.kawkawa.com info@kawkawa.com 1-866-545-9359

05/14H_KC1

Kawkawa Camp and Retreat is celebrating a milestone this summer. For 40 years, the camp has been a staple in the community providing quality programming focused on moral, spiritual and leadership development. Located on 20 acres on the eastern shore of Kawkawa Lake, the camp is owned and operated by the Kawkawa Camp Society, which is made up of men and women from the Fraser Valley and surrounding area. To mark the anniversary, an open house will be held on July 5. “We want to provide a place for kids and families to come, have fun and learn about God and Jesus. A big part of that too is helping kids grow in leadership responsibility,” said program director Dustin Siemens. “We do all these activities and hopefully there’s an aspect of skill development along the way so the kids are not just doing something to spend time but actually learning new stuff and being able to challenge themselves.”

Come join us for fun-filled days and memorable evenings around the campfire!

An affordable, fun, comprehensive and engaging program for kids! WEEKLY, SEASONAL AND MULTIPLE CHILDREN DISCOUNT RATES AVAILABLE HEALTHY & NATURAL SNACKS PROVIDED. PLUS 20% O

ALL MOVE FOR HEALTH DAY MEMBERSFF H PURCHASEIPS D Friday, May 9 FREE admission to the facility all day!

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(604) 869-2304 1005-6 Avenue, Hope BC Email: leisure@fvrd.bc.ca Website: www.fvrd.bc.ca

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A province-wide initiative designed to help all British Columbian’s invest more time in their personal health and wellness.


A12 Hope Standard Thursday, May 1, 2014

Community

SUBMITTED PHOTO

Hexaphone returns to Hope’s historic Christ Church for a concert this Sunday at 2 p.m. Doors open at 1:30 p.m.

Hexaphone returns to Hope

Hexaphone is stopping in Hope this weekend to present its latest concert series Mermaid in the Parlour. “This group is thought of as Canada’s only professional vocal sextet and they have gained great prominence in B.C. and Canada,” said Darla Dickinson, supervisor of Christ Church Anglican & National Historic Site. “We are excited to have them back, their last concert in 2011 was so powerful people were walking in off the street.”

Hexaphone is a six-member a cappella group from Victoria. They are regularly invited to perform at arts events, including the Victoria Symphony’s New Currents Festival, the Voice Festival, and the New Music In New Places concert series sponsored by the Canadian Music Centre. In 2008, Hexaphone was chosen and commissioned by the Canadian Music Centre to celebrate BC’s 150th anniversary. The concert will be at Christ Church National Historic Site (681 Fraser Ave.) at 2 p.m. on

May 4. Doors open at 1:30 p.m. “This concert will focus on a siren call of alluring songs for six voices by Schumann, Finzi, Brahms and Elgar,” said Dickinson. Hexaphone’s Mermaid in the Parlour is the first of four recognized performers that Christ Church will bring to Hope for their 2014 Concert Series. Tickets for Hexaphone are available at Hope Pharmasave and Romano’s. For more information, call 604-869-5402.

You’re invited to get moving with BC’s doctors, so let’s take steps together as partners in health!

Join the Hope Medical Centre and the “Walk with your Doc “ team as they support the Fraser Canyon Hospice Society 9th Annual Hike for Hospice! Hike for Hospice Palliative Care is a unique national fundraising event held across Canada that brings together organizations working collectively in hospice palliative care to raise funds and awareness in their community! The Hope “Walk with your Doc” team invites patients and community members to join them in raising money to support local hospice palliative care programs! Participants receive a FREE PEDOMETER (while supplies last)

D DATE: Sunday, May 4, 2014 LOCATION: Memorial Park, Hope L S START TIME: 10:30 am FFor more information about joining the Hope Walk with your Doc team, please contact chilliwackdfp@divisionsbc.ca or phone 604-795-0034. p E Every participant is required to register with a fee of $10.00. Late registrations begin at 9:15 am for those who did not register before the hike. b Visit www.frasercanyonhospice.org or call 604.860.7713 for more information.

Chilliwack | Agassiz | Hope

British B iti h Columbia C l bi Medical M di l Association A i ti

05/14hope_DFP1

@doctorsofbc


Hope Standard Thursday, May 1, 2014 A13

Community

Hope resident honoured by BC NDP members across the province.” The luncheon, hosted by the Chilliwack-Hope NDP riding association, was in appreciation of Houghton’s lifetime of political and community work. About three dozen close friends, family and party dignitaries were in attendance. Chilliwack-Hope federal president Al Ens discussed how instrumental Houghton was when she became the first president of the newly formed provincial Chilliwack-Hope riding association. The new boundaries, which were established in 2008, presented geographical challenges. Ens pointed out how important it was to have leadership in the Hope area and Houghton grabbed the reins, including turning her home into a meeting place for the party. Ens presented Houghton with a T-Shirt with a vintage CCF campaign image. The two former MLAs, who have both represented the Hope area, also gave impassioned speeches of Houghton’s support to them and to the party over many decades. Lali

drew applause from the audience when he spoke about the importance of honouring lifelong members, like Houghton, who built the party. “Not very many people remember a Canada without universal health care, Canada pension, worker’s compensation, employment insurance or child tax benefits,” added O’Mahony. “These were the ‘radical’ ideas put forward by the CCF when Marjorie first joined the party.” Houghton’s son Doug and daughters Rita, Suzanne and Joanne shared stories about their mother’s commitment to give back to one’s community and care for others. Joanne spoke about how her mom inspired her to found an orphanage. At times, tears flowed, at times there was laughter. Rita recounted seeing a majestic orange sunset as a young child and describing it as an “NDP” sunset. Suzanne talked about her mother’s political aspirations when she ran for council in Maple Ridge and founded the Outpost, a community-run newspaper.

SUBMITTED PHOTO

Former NDP MLAs Harry Lali and Gwen O’Mahony presented Marjorie Houghton with a Certificate of Recognition for her lifetime dedication to the NDP on Saturday during a special luncheon honouring the local resident at Hope Station House.

Agassiz cheese maker earns industry awards Jessica Peters Black Press

Debra Amrein-Boyes has earned plenty of awards over the years for the artisan cheeses she’s created at Farm House Natural Cheeses. And most local cheese lovers would drool at the mere thought of a herb and garlic encrusted fromage frais, a smooth goat brie, or a perfectly crumbly feta. Now the Agassiz cheese maker has done it again, winning two awards at the 2014 Canadian Cheese Awards. But it was not an overly exotic type of cheese that won the hearts of the judges at the 2014 Canadian Cheese Awards. Instead, it was something that many people use every day — cheddar cheese. Amrein-B oyes’ clothbound cheddar won for Best Aged Cheddar category (national), and Best British Columbia Cheese. The awards were conducted by industry professionals, and were the first of what’s expected to be a biennial event. It’s a huge honour, she said, and “confirmation that the way we make cheese and the way we raise milk is good.” Almost every cheese

producer makes a cheddar, meaning Farm House’s offering was competing against a large pool of contenders. But the cheddar they produce is far from what you’ll find in a big box supermarket. Farm House prides itself on creating entirely handmade cheeses, going so far as to raise the goats and cows directly on their own farm. “Over handling degrades the milk quality,” she said, breaking down the cheese and

losing quality (and taste) every step of the way. Instead of leaving the delicate job to machines, Amrein-Boyes and her staff use gentle handling techniques to preserve the quality of the cheese. And while processed cheeses are aged in vacuum-sealed bags, their cheddar is bandaged with cheesecloth, sealed with lard, and aged for a minimum of 20 months. It’s that combination of tenderness, skill and

knowledge that have earned Amrein-Boyes accolades throughout her 11 years at the helm of Farm House Natural Cheese. But there is something else to the magic of good cheese — the environment. “People like quality, and the quality of the grass, the earth and the air all come into play,” to create that distinctive Agassiz taste. Amrein-Boyes attended the 2014 Canadian Cheese Awards in Toronto on April 7, and

the accompanying gala that featured cheeses from every corner of the country. After sampling everything from sheep and goat cheese to water buffalo cheese, she still believes Agassiz produces the best cheese in the country. To learn more about the Canadian Cheese Awards, visit www. cheeseawards.ca. To learn more about Farm House Natural Cheese, visit their shop at 5634 McCallum Road in Agassiz.

Join us in Worship Community of Hope Church Directory

CHRIST CHURCH ANGLICAN CHURCH OF

ANGLICAN CHURCH OF CANADA & National Historic Site CONSECRATED 1861

Invites you to worship

SUNDAYS 10AM

Welcomes you to

Sunday Worship: 10am

888 Third Ave. THE REV. GAIL NEWELL Rev. Don Gardner www.anglican-hope.ca 604-823-7165 Corner of Park & Fraser St. Anglican Network in Canada Local info: 604-869-1918 604-869-5402

HOPE PENTECOSTAL ASSEMBLY Pentecostal Assemblies of Canada

Corner of 5th & Fort

Lace up for someone you love

THE RESURRECTION

10:30am Morning Worship & Children’s Sunday School

Pastor Jim Cornock

Grace Baptist Church

“People connecting to God, each other and the World”

www.gbchope.com

949-3rd Ave. • 604.869.5524

Sunday June 8, 2014

604-869-9717

“Helping people take one step closer to Jesus...”

MT. HOPE SEVENTH-DAY ADVENTIST CHURCH 1300 Ryder St.

HOPE UNITED CHURCH

Memorial Park, 325 Wallace St

SATURDAY MORNING Study Hour 9:15 a.m. Worship Hour 11:00am Prayer Meeting - Tuesday, 7pm

SUNDAY SERVICE: 10am ‘UNITED WE SING’ FIRST WEDNESDAY OF EVERY MONTH!

590 Third Ave.

Check In: 10:00am Start: 11:00am

Pastor Michael Hope 604-792-8471

Rev. Ryan Knight

REGISTER NOW TO END MS mswalks.ca | 604.746.9331 1.877.746.9331

Rummage

A PASSION FOR CHRIST AND HIS KINGDOM

Sale

Hope United Church Hall

Corner of Queen & 3rd Ave.

May 3 • 9am to Noon Coffee & MufÀns Available No early birds please!

604-869-9381

SUNDAY WORSHIP: 10:30 AM FREE STORE TUES/THURS 3:00-4:30 PM

Northwest Harvest Church

888 - THIRD AVE. 604-869-9969 (MESSAGE ONLY)

05/14H_C1

A long-time Hope resident was honoured on Saturday for her dedication and service to the provincial NDP. Former NDP MLAs Gwen O’Mahony and Harry Lali presented 92-year-old Marjorie Houghton with a framed certificate from BC NDP president Craig Keating in recognition of her “lifetime of dedication to the New Democratic Party and the principles of social democracy on which it is founded.” The certificate also included one of Houghton’s favourite quotes from JS Woodsworth, “What we desire for ourselves, we wish for all.” The quote was engraved on a pendant as well, which was gifted to Houghton by the local riding association. “We are a movement that has always depended upon the efforts of volunteers like you,” said Keating, in a statement read at the Hope Station House luncheon. “Volunteer work like yours is the thing that has always sustained us - and always will. Your example is one that I will carry with me when I speak to


A14 Hope Standard Thursday, May 1, 2014

Community

Lotto 6/49 winner bought ticket in Hope A Kelowna accountant checked his Lotto 6/49 ticket as an afterthought last Tuesday, noticing that he hadn’t bothered to check the numbers on the ticket since the March 22 draw. To his surprise, Steve Woloshyn discovered he had a winning ticket, which he had purchased at the Chevron gas station on Old Hope-Princeton Way in Hope on his way home to Kelowna from Vancouver a month ago. “I was taking out money to buy milk at a corner store and noticed the ticket was in my wallet. I had forgotten about it. So I check to validate it and discovered it was a winning ticket,” Woloshyn said. “At that moment, I was more in shock than anything. I couldn’t believe it.” Woloshyn said he is not a regular lottery ticket player, normally buying three of four tickets a year on a whim. “I guess I was lucky that I didn’t lose the ticket all that time it was in my wallet.” Woloshyn, 44, who is married with two children ages two and six, said he really hasn’t had a chance yet to let the fact he’s become an instant millionaire sink in, or what he will do with his winnings. “I guess discharging the mortgage to have that no longer hanging over your head would be one thing to do, but at the moment we’ll deposit the cheque and sit back and evaluate what to do next,” he said, noting that being an accountant will certainly offer him some insight in how to proceed. “A million dollars… it certainly enhances your life.”

SUBMITTED PHOTO

Lotto 6/49 one million dollar winner Steve Woloshyn of Kelowna bought his ticket at a Chevron gas station in Hope.

You are invited to participate in…

EARLY LEARNING FAIR For 3 year old children

Silver Creek Elementary School ~ Room 104 Tuesday, May 6, 2014 10:30 a.m.-12:00 p.m. There will be craft and writing activities, school tours, parent handouts, education related gifts for each child and snacks.

Hope to see you there!

04/14H_FC24

COMMUNITY CALENDAR MONDAY

TUESDAY

Krackle Goes to Family Place: Famous Hope Library poet-in-residence, Krackle Crow, visits Hope Family Place every Monday morning. Library staff tag along. tell stories, and sing songs.For kids age six and under and their caregivers. Monday, May 5 9:30 a.m. Family Place 604 Hudson’s Bay St. 604-869-2313 deb.ireland@fvrl.bc.ca

Senior keep fit: This fitness class is designed for seniors, and uses weights and bands for strength training. Chairs are also used to support the participant. This class has been ongoing for 15 years. Tuesdays and Thursdays at 9 a.m. Golden Ager’s Hall 560 Douglas St. 604-869-8435 jilllast1@gmail.com

Hope Al-Anon Group: Al-Anon supports friends and families of problem drinkers. Monday, May 5 8 p.m. Fraser Canyon Hospital meeting room 1275 7th Ave. 604-869-7078

Join us for a two-day bike tour of wineries in the Fraser Valley! Novice, intermediate & expert cyclists are welcome.

June 7 & 8

Fraser Valley Grape Escape

REGISTER NOW msbike.ca

TITLE SPONSOR

Tops Meeting: Powerful support group for weight loss and lifelong health. Weigh-in 5:30-6:50 p.m. Meeting 7-8 p.m. Tuesday, May 6. Anglican Church Hall 681 Fraser St. 604-869-2204 eyesee55@telus.net

WEDNESDAY Westie Army Cadet Training: The cadet program prepares youth age 12 to 19 to become leaders of tomorrow through fun yet challenging activities. Wednesday, May 7 6:30 p.m. The Royal Canadian Legion Branch No. 228 344 Fort St. 604-869-2919 1789trg@gmail.com United We Sing: Season finale and community sing-a-long. All are welcome refreshments will be served. Wednesday, May 7 1:30 p.m. Hope United Church 310 Queen St. 604-869-8435 jilllast1@gmail.com

N AT I O N A L S P O N S O R S

THURSDAY MEDIA SPONSORS

Senior’s Coffee and Conversation: Drop in and join us for a cup of coffee, tea and homemade

treats. You’ll enjoy some interesting and lively conversation. Sponsored by the Friends of the Hope Library - no membership required, just stop on by! Thursday, May 8 10:30 a.m. Hope Library 1005A 6th Ave. 604-869-2313 deb.ireland@fvrl.bc.ca The Grateful Executor: Join Kevin Holte for a program all about estate settlement and an executor’s duties. Kevin will discuss the role of the executor, as well as the pros and cons of joint ownership. You’ll also learn about probate, capital gains issues and how to do pre-planning. There will be useful handouts and time for questions. Thursday, May 8 10:30 a.m. Hope Library 1005A 6th Ave. 604-869-2313 deb.ireland@fvrl.bc.ca

FRIDAY Tops Meeting: Powerful support group for weight loss and lifelong health. Weigh-in 8:15-9:20 a.m. Meeting 9:30-10:30 a.m. Friday, May 2. Anglican Church Hall 681 Fraser St. 604-869-2140 glennbarb@telus.net

SATURDAY Rummage Sale: Rummage sale at Hope United Church Hall on the corner of Queen Street and Third Avenue. Coffee and muffins available. No early birds please. Saturday, May 3 9 a.m. Hope United Church Hall 310 Queen St. 604-869-2195 hellyje@telus.net

Fine Arts Exhibit: The Friday “Artists At Work” painters are a group member of the Hope & District Arts Council. This will be the fifth time they have had an exhibit of their works. Saturday, May 3 1-8 p.m. and Sunday, May 4 1-5 p.m. Refreshments will be served. Hope Station House 111 Old HopePrinceton Way. 604-869-5925 slblythe@telus.net Plant Sale: Hope Garden Club is hosting its ninth annual plant sale. Lots of plants starting at just $1 plus we sell books by donation. Come early to get the best selection. This is our major fundraiser for the year. The proceeds go towards a bursary for a graduating student at our local high school (HSS). Saturday, May 10 9 a.m. Hope Curling Club 1055 6th Ave. 604-869-2032 bam99@telus.net

SUNDAY Mermaid in the Parlour: Hexaphone returns to Christ Church as part of their 2014 concert lineup. Mermaid in the Parlour concert is a siren call of alluring songs for six voices by Schumann, Finzi, Brahms and Elgar. Doors open at 1:30 p.m. Tickets are available at Romano’s and at the door. Sunday, May 4 2 p.m. Christ Church Anglican & National Historic Site 681 Fraser Ave. 604-869-5402 Christchurch1861@yahoo. com


Hope Standard Thursday, May 1, 2014 A15

Sports Over 40 runners represent Hope in Sun Run Barry Stewart

The Hope Standard

The things our kids get us involved in…. One local dad was living in his own little comfort zone three years ago, when his daughter came home and announced that she had entered the whole family in a running club at C.E. Barry School. “It was Hannah that signed us all up and I said, ‘I can’t do this!’” recalled Dan Hambly, laughing. “I’m a mechanic for Emil Anderson and during snow season, if I get the call, I’ve got to go. Also, our son Ashtyn had braces from an Achilles operation he had, so I didn’t think he could do it.” Fast forward three years and Hambly has completed the 10km Sun Run three times and is now preparing to run the half marathon at Abbotsford’s Run For Water event on May 25. “It’ll be the longest distance I’ve ever run,” said Hambly. Going back to 2011, Hambly said he was shamed into going along when Ashtyn decided that he would take part in the 13-week Team F.I.T. program — despite having had tendon-lengthening surgery and being saddled with walking braces. With other son Dryden, daughter Hannah and wife Yvonne already on-board, dad didn’t have much of a choice. “As it turned out, I never got called in to work during our training that first year,” said Hambly. “I think I only missed one of the runs. “Ashtyn and I ran the Sun Run together the first two years, then I moved up to the Run Faster group this year, so I was on my own. Ashtyn ended up getting sick the night before the race, so he couldn’t run this year. He and I will be in Run Faster next year, so we can run together again.” Sunday in Vancouver, the Team F.I.T. (Families In Training) group had 43

GILBERT DESCHENES PHOTO

Forty-three members of Hope’s Team F.I.T. club took part in the annual 10-kilometre Sun Run in Vancouver last Sunday.

participants on the 10km course. “I stayed up with Dryden till the 4.5 kilometer mark this year — then he just took off !” said Dan. Dryden posted Hope’s third-fastest time, at 47:07… two minutes behind Hope’s quickest duo, Dawson Hollmann and Levi Cowan, who posted 45:18 and 45:19 respectively. Those two are intent on beating Hope Secondary teacher Jeremy Smith’s time from his high school days, rumoured to be 36 min-

utes, said Kim Hollmann, another team leader. Dan melted over nine minutes off the mark he had set with Ashtyn last year. His 5:06 per kilometer pace gave him a very respectable 51:00. After the first Sun Run, Hambly said he just shut down the running until the second year’s start up. Now, he’s hooked and he looks forward to running three times a week. “It’s good for your heart and soul,” said Hambly, “I find it relaxing — and it doesn’t cost much… just a

pair of running shoes. “If they didn’t have Team F.I.T., I don’t think we would have done it,” he added. “I think we would have just gone quadding.” One of Team F.I.T.’s leaders, Miranda Cowan said, “Dan doesn’t realize what an inspiration he is for the rest of the team.” There were other inspirational stories, such as Chris Miller and his 10-yearold son Jacob, finishing together in 53:33 — and Hope’s fastest female, Kayla Penner, crossing the line at 51:32.

Spring Programs Chair Yoga

Tuesdays, May 6-27 3:00pm-3:45pm

Tai Chi

Tuesdays & Thursdays, May 6-29 9:00am-10:15am

School Daze Off Camp

Friday, May 16 8:30am-5:00pm

RECREATION, CULTURE & AIRPARK SERVICES

“Gerry Dyble had never run before — and she never missed a session,” said Cowan. “She came in at 1:24:10.” Two entire Hope-based families were on the course this year, one for their firstever 10k. C.E. Barry student Faith Johnny got her family involved in the program and she completed the course in 1:01:48, her stepdad Teri Gonzales finishing a step ahead. At roughly 1:31:12, stepbrother Austin Gonzales, sister Kaylayla Johnny and mom Susie crossed the

line together. Once again, all six Hollmanns took part in the race: parents Peter and Kim and sons Dawson, Kai, Bendix and Fraser. Fraser crossed the line with his grandpa, Don McKay, at 1:17:31. McKay’s story is similar to Hambly’s and is inspirational in its own right. His daughter Kim’s family was on the team, then his other daughter Marlo and his wife Carole-Ann joined — so what could he do? The things our kids get us involved in….

Emergency First Aid with CPR-C Sunday, May 25 9:00am-5:00pm For more information, please view our online schedule

1005-6th Ave. • 604-869-2304 “Best Ice in BC” website: www.fvrd.bc.ca • email: leisure@fvrd.bc.ca

05/14H HR1


A16 Hope Standard Thursday, May 1, 2014

BUSINESS

AUTOMOTIVE

BUSINESS

FRASER CANYON Hope Auto Body Ltd. GLASS LTD. Windshield replacements Rock chip repairs All private insurance co. Certified Automotive Glass Technician 35 yrs exp. Full Service Glass Shop

DOMESTIC & IMPORTS

604-869-9514 • 531 Corbett St. FREE PICK UP & DELIVERY - ASK FOR DETAILS.

COMPUTERS

Computer Sales & Service

604-869-3456 1-877-7ALLSYS

285B Wallace Street info@allsyscomputers.com

GUN We'll buy unused unwanted õrearms.

Yarrow

GUN WORKS .com Gord Frost

Precision Exteriors • Roofing • Siding • Windows • Doors & more

PLUMBING & HEATING

• Gas, Oil & Propane Furnaces • Water Heaters • Class A Gas Fitter

REGISTERED WITH B.C. SAFETY AUTHORITY

LLOYD’S UTILITIES

604-869-1111 604-869-6544

• Complete collision & glass services • Courtesy Vehicles • Express repair facility - all insurance company estimates written here

966 6th Avenue, 604 •869 •5244 www.hopeautobody.ca

ELECTRICAL • Residential • Rural • Commercial • New Construction • Renovations

WCB Insured. Contact Jeremy for a FREE ESTIMATE

Scott Gilbert 604-750-8025 604-860-8605

“Protecting your inside from the outside”

Bonded/Insured Hope, B.C. 94574

LANDSCAPING

MOVERS

GLEN TRAUN

LANDSCAPING • Commercial & Residential Yard Maintenance • Hydro Seeding • Brush Chipping

Integrity Movers Moving and Delivery Services “We’re not satisfied until you are” NEW TO HOPE

604-869-2767

604-860-5277 (LOCAL) 778-896-6414 (CELL)

SPACE FOR RENT

REAL ESTATE

Servicing Hope & Area since 1979

Please call for appointment.

CONSTRUCTION

Nyda Realty (Hope)

ROBPELLEGRINO.COM

Hey! If this got your attention, then it worked... call today to advertise your business: 604.869.2421

(Personal Real Estate Corporation)

“Lifetime Hope Area Resident” robp@remax.net 604-869-1290 (Cell Direct) 604-869-2945 (Office)

287 WALLACE STREET SELLING HOPE SINCE 1990

BARCLAY FLETCHER

FLOORING

CANYON CARPETS • Cloverdale Paint Dealer • Blinds • Carpet & Vinyl • Ceramic Tile • Hardwood • Laminates • Free Estimates • Expert Installation

CARPETS FLOORING

CONTRACTING L TD. Renovations & New Construction bÅetchercontracting.com

TILE

Cell: 604.869.1686 Fax: 604.869.7605

BLINDS PAINT

549 Wallace St• 604.869.2727

PLUMBING

PLUMBING

DAVE’S

Got the plumbing blues?

PLUMBING

• gas fitter • reno’s, service work, hot water tanks, etc. Hope & Area LICENSED, BONDED, TICKETED & INSURED

TREE SERVICE

PHILLIPS TREE SERVICES • Removals • Toppings • Chipping • Limbing

Free Estimates, Fully Insured, Locally Owned & Operated.

604-702-8247

BLUE’S PLUMBING

604.750.0159

Licensed Plumber

UPHOLSTERY

R O GE R S

22 Years Experience

Phone: 604.823.6308 Cell: 604.798.1609 gord@yarrowgunworks.com C.F.S.C./C.O.R.E. Examiner Estate / Appraisals

CONSTRUCTION

of the week

2-14H BP26

AUTOMOTIVE

Services

• Licenced Gas Fitter & Contractor • Hot Water Tanks • Furnace & Fireplace Service & Repair • Bonded/Insured

FREE ESTIMATES!

604-869-4566 Serving Hope & Area

SPACE FOR RENT

Upholstery Furniture, Windows, Fabric rogersupholstery@telus.net

Hey! If this got your attention, then it worked...

In-home & on-line estimates

call today to advertise your business: 604.869.2421

604.860.0939

Your source for quality local professionals. ADVERTISING DEADLINE: Tuesdays at 4:30pm

Call Janice at 604.869.2421 to advertise on the Business Services page. 05/14H_BS1


Thursday, May 1, 2014, Hope Standard A17

FAMILY ANNOUNCEMENTS

INDEX IN BRIEF FAMILY ANNOUNCEMENTS ...............1-8

5

IN MEMORIAM

COMMUNITY ANNOUNCEMENTS 21

COMING EVENTS

COMMUNITY ANNOUNCEMENTS ...9-57

041

PERSONALS

CHILDREN ........................................80-98 EMPLOYMENT .............................102-198 BUSINESS SERVICES...................203-387

TRAVEL

PETS & LIVESTOCK ......................453-483

CLOVERDALE ANTIQUES & VINTAGE FAIR May 3rd & 4th

MERCHANDISE FOR SALE...........503-587 REAL ESTATE ...............................603-696 RENTALS ......................................703-757 AUTOMOTIVE ..............................804-862

The Former ANTIQUE EXPO AT TRADEX HAS MOVED... CLOVERDALE RODEO & EXHIBITION GROUNDS 17763 62ND AVE. SURREY, B.C. V3S 4L5

MARINE .......................................903-920

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 for 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.

WILLIAM (Bill) CHARLIE Sunrise: Sept. 3, 1926 Sunset: April 24, 2004 Your presence, your smile Can feel & see for a mile. Your humble and quiet Until it’s time for a riot. Then we would hear you roar Times get hard but we are strong Without your teachings we couldn’t move on. We miss you and love you With all of our hearts I believe we are ready for a brand new start. Until we meet again. Grandpa & Dad

SATURDAY 9AM - 5PM SUNDAY 10AM - 4PM ANTIQUE APPRAISALS FOR SHOW INFO 1-604-316-1933

SAVE THE DATE

HOPE GARDEN CLUB PLANT AND BOOK SALE Sat. May 10th 9 am to 12 noon At the Hope Curling Club

33

INFORMATION

IN-FLIGHT Magazine...SOAR Magazine. This attractive business & tourism publication is published bi-monthly six times a year. Great impact for your BC Business more than 280,000 passengers fly Pacific Coastal Airlines. Please call Annemarie 1.800.661.6335 email: fish@blackpress.ca

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.

Find just what you are looking for? www.bcclassified.com

COPYRIGHT

bcclassified.com

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EMPLOYMENT/EDUCATION

GET FREE VENDING MACHINES. Can Earn $100,000.00 + Per Year. All Cash-Retire in Just 3 Years. Protected Territories. Full Details CALL NOW 1-866-668-6629. Website WWW.TCVEND.COM.

Landscaping Business for Sale This well established business servicing Strata and Commercial properties in Kamloops, B.C, comes with all the tools and equipment work trucks & trailors needed to run this business. Signed contracts are in place, with business grossing 400,000.00 annually. For more information I can be contacted at kamloopsliving@gmail.com SAWMILLS from only $4,397 MAKE MONEY & SAVE MONEY with your own bandmill - Cut lumber any dimension. In stock ready to ship. FREE Info & DVD: www.NorwoodSawmills.com/400OT 1-800566-6899 Ext:400OT.

109 CAREER OPPORTUNITIES EMPLOYERS CAN’T FIND the work-at-home Medical Transcriptionists they need in Canada! Get the training you need to fill these positions. Visit CareerStep.ca/MT to start training for your work-athome career today! LEARN FROM HOME. EARN FROM HOME. Huge demand for CanScribe Medical Transcription graduates. Start your online learning today with CanScribe Career College. w w w. c a n s c r i b e . c o m . 1.800.466.1535 info@canscribe.com.

114

Deputy Operations Manager District of Kitimat, exempt staff position, with competitive compensation and full benefit package. Reporting to the Operations Manager, assists in planning, implementing and tracking the operations, repair and maintenance of the municipality’s infrastructure, including water and sewer, buildings, roads, parking lots, traffic control, drainage, signage, sidewalks, parks, grass cutting,, cemetery, and equipment fleet. Candidates will have several years of experience in a municipal or similar work environment and post-secondary education in Civil, Building or Water Quality Technology, EOCP Sewage Treatment and Water Distribution certification, or related Trade Qualification. Submit resumes by May 15, 2014, 4:30 p.m., to Personnel, District of Kitimat, 270 City Centre, Kitimat, B.C. V8C 2H7, Fax 250-632-4995, email dok@kitimat.ca

DRIVERS/COURIER/ TRUCKING

Van Kam’s group of companies req. Highway linehaul owner operators based in our Surrey terminal for runs throughout BC and Alberta. Applicants must have winter and mountain driving experience/training. We offer above average rates and an excellent employee benefits package.

Only those of interest will be contacted. Van Kam is committed to Employment Equity and Environmental Responsibility.

115

EDUCATION

APARTMENT/CONDO MANAGER TRAINING • Certified Home Study Course • Jobs Registered Across Canada • Gov. Certified www.RMTI.ca / 604.681.5456 or 1.800.665.8339

WE’RE ON THE WEB 604-869-2421 Toll-Free 1-866-575-5777

DRIVERS/COURIER/ TRUCKING

Help us build a new BC Children’s Hospital. Please Give. 1.888.663.3033 beasuperhero.ca

604-858-8082

Affordable, Professional Haircare, Guaranteed

130

HELP WANTED

An Alberta Oilfield Company is hiring experienced dozer and excavator operators, meals and lodging provided. Drug testing required. 1-(780)7235051.

Campground Security This position requires an individual who posses a friendly demeanor, excellent communication skills, ability to problem solve, tactful and diplomatic in dealing with campers and members of the public. Customer service oriented with a professional attitude and ability to handle stress well. Position is seasonal, requires candidate to work evenings, all weekends and statutory holidays, part time to begin and may lead into full time. Must enjoy working outdoors in all weather conditions. Please submit resume in person to: Coquihalla Campground, 800 Kawkawa Lake Road. Hope BC or email: info@coquihallacampground.ca

Chambermaid Excavator & Backhoe Operator Training. Be employable in 4-6wks. Call 604-546-7600. www.rayway.ca

TransX requires owner operator to do mostly Okanagan runs with some Caribou runs as well. We offer competitive rates and steady runs guaranteed. 2 years EXP required!!!!!!!!!! Please call 1-877-914-0001

for items $200 and under One big need.

HAIRCARE PROFESSIONALS

Full & Part time positions. Guaranteed hourly rate of $12 to start plus 25% profit sharing. No clientele required. Paid birthday. Dental and drug benefits. Equipment supplied and maintained. Advanced annual upgrading training. Management opportunities. Call

To join our team of professional drivers, email a detailed resume, current driver’s abstract and details of your truck to: careers@vankam.com or Call 604-968-5488 or Fax: 604-587-9889

www.bcclassified.com

DEAL ADS

Two open heart surgeries.

127

Chilliwack Location

HIGHWAY OWNER OPERATORS $3500 SIGNING BONUS

QUATSINO First Nation is seeking the services of a Band Administrator to oversee all band programs and band related business. PostSecondary education in Business Management, Human Resources or related fields is a preference. A minimum (3) years experience in administration, human resources or related field or setting is required. Please direct any questions and/or your cover letter, resume complete with 3 references, and a criminal record check to: Attn: Rob Cahill 305 Quattishe Rd. Coal Harbour, BC V0N 1K0 Tel: 250-949-6245 Fax: 250-949-6249 Email: kakotlatsi@rocketmail.com

114

EMPLOYMENT/EDUCATION

HAIRSTYLIST WANTED

INTERIOR HEAVY EQUIPMENT OPERATOR SCHOOL. NO Simulators. In-the-seat training. Real world tasks. Weekly start dates. Job board! Funding options. SignUp online! iheschool.com 1-866-399-3853

130

HELP WANTED

Loonie Toonie

_____________

ON THE WEB:

75

EMPLOYMENT/EDUCATION

Turn your extra items into CA$H with our

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bcclassified.com reserves the right to revise, 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.

TIMESHARE

108 BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES

Love always Bill, Margo, Tony, JoJo and Annie

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EMPLOYMENT/EDUCATION 109 CAREER OPPORTUNITIES

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COMMUNITY ANNOUNCEMENTS

Call Janice at 604-869-2421 to book your ad today.

Apply in person with resume at

Royal Lodge Motel 580 Old Hope Princeton Way Hope BC 604-869-5358

TEAM MEMBERS needed for Triple-O/Chevron Hope, drop off resume at front counter, 587 Old Hope Princeton Way. 604-869-5442

CARRIERS NEEDED 04/14H_CN17

FOR THE

SILVER CREEK AREA

Call Janice at 604-869-2421 or drop by 540 Wallace St.


A18 Hope Standard, Thursday, May 1, 2014

EMPLOYMENT/EDUCATION 130

HELP WANTED

Christ Church Hope, Anglican Church of Canada and National Historic site wishes to hire a student for summer employment during the months of July & August 2014. All applicants must be returning to full time study at a recognized university or college in September 2014. Please email your resume to: christchurch1861@yahoo.com atten: Bev Kreller Suitable candidates will be contacted for an interview.

EMPLOYMENT/EDUCATION 160

Plumber (7251) Wanted

needed immediately, permanent, part time bring resume to:

ACCOUNTING / TAX /BOOKKEEPING

Contact Joe at: joeschachtel@live.ca ref job app Plumber.

KENLIN ELECTRIC, residential, rural, commercial, new construction, reno’s. Call (604)860-8605

PERSONAL SERVICES

YOUR ELECTRICIAN $29 Service Call Lic #89402 Same day guarn’td We love small jobs! 604-568-1899

173

MIND BODY SPIRIT

239

245

260

275

FLOOR REFINISHING/ INSTALLATIONS

Gutter & Roof Cleaning since 1982. WCB/Liability insurance. Call Simon for prompt service. 604-230-0627

HOTEL, RESTAURANT, FOOD SERVICES COOKS

La Dolce Vita Restaurant Ltd located at 575 Old Hope Princeton Highway, Hope, BC V0X 1L4 is hiring 2 permanent cooks specializing in Italian cuisine such as pizza, pasta, sandwiches, soups, salads, fries, fish etc. Duties: Prepare and cook individual dishes and foods, ensure quality of food and determine size of food portions, maintain inventory, and record of food supplies and equipment, etc. High school education and 2-3 years of experience required. Candidate must be willing to work evenings & weekends. Wages: $13.00/hr. Apply by e-mail to: ladolcevita433@gmail.com

INCOME TAX PROBLEMS? Have you been audited, reassessed or disallowed certain claims by Canada Revenue Agency? Call Bob Allen @ 250-542-0295 35yrs. Income Tax experience, 8.5yrs. with Revenue Canada. Email: r.gallen@shaw.ca C- 250-938-1944

UPHOLSTERY

387

MILANO PAINTING Int./Ext. Prof. Painters. Free Est. Bonded & Insured. 604-551-6510

332

PETS 477

PETS

ITALIAN MASTIFF (Cane Corso)

WINDOWS

PETS P/B blue males & females. Ready to go. 1st shots & tails/dew claws done. ULTIMATE FAMILY GUARDIAN Pet homes. $1000. 604-308-5665

MISC. FOR SALE

STEEL BUILDINGS/METAL BUILDINGS 60% OFF! 20x28, 30x40, 40x62, 45x90, 50x120, 60x150, 80x100 sell for balance owed! Call 1-800-457-2206 www.crownsteelbuildings.ca.

NEED A GOOD HOME for a good dog or a good dog for a good home? We adopt dogs! Call 604856-3647 or www.856-dogs.com

REAL ESTATE 603

ACREAGE

Don’t Miss Out! 62 acres, Endless Possibilities. 5500 sq. ft. house. 1500 ft. of lake-shore. www.lakeoftheprairieshome.ca www.lakeoftheprairiesproperty.ca Jackie 1-306744-2399 1-306-744-7432 Watch online for open house.

MUST LOVE DOGS!!! Fostering and adoption needed for medium - large dogs. Bring a loved one home today! Call 604.583.4237 http://homeatlastdogrescuebc.ca

PAVING/SEAL COATING Specializing in reasonably priced SMALL BREED puppies. 604300-1450. trugoalpuppies.com

ASPHALT PAVING • Brick Driveways • Retaining Walls • Foundation Repairs • Sealcoating 604-618-2304

560

HOT TUB (SPA) COVERS. Best price. Best quality. All shapes & colours available. 1-866-652-6837 www.thecoverguy.com/newspaper?

KILL ROACHES! Buy Harris Roach Tablets. Eliminate Bugs - Guaranteed. No Mess, Odorless, Long Lasting. Available online only @ Ace Hardware & The Home Depot

PETS 477

MERCHANDISE FOR SALE

KILL BED BUGS & THEIR EGGS! Buy Harris Bed Bug Killer Complete Treatment Program or Kit. Available: Hardware Stores, Buy Online: homedepot.com

FRASER CANYON GLASS, for all your glass repairs, windshields domestic & imports. (604)869-9514

Chihuahua pups, playful, cuddly, family raised, vet check, 1st shots, avail now. $350. 604-794-5844

338

Yorkshire Terrier, P/B, not reg., 1 male/4 female, vet certificate. $900 & up. (604)846-7074/846-7139

PLUMBING

612 BUSINESSES FOR SALE

Dairy Distribution Business for products of a national leading dairy supplier in Kamloops and surrounding area. Excellent revenue opportunity. Requires investment and good physical condition. 250-828-7855

BRO MARV PLUMBING 24/7 Plumbing, heating, plugged drains BBB. (604)582-1598, bromarv.com

DROWNING IN DEBT? Cut debts more than 60% & DEBT FREE in half the time! AVOID BANKRUPTCY! Free Consultation. www.mydebtsolution.com or Toll Free 1877-556-3500 BBB Rated A+

If you own a home or real estate, ALPINE CREDITS can lend you money: It’s That Simple. Your Credit / Age / Income is NOT an issue. 1.800.587.2161.

377

ROGER’S UPHOLSTERY, furniture, windows, fabric, in-home & online estimates. Call 604-860-0939

CATS OF ALL DESCRIPTION in need of caring homes! All cats are spayed, neutered, vaccinated and dewormed. Visit us at fraservalleyhumanesociety.com or call 1 (604)820-2977

283 GUTTERS & DOWNSPOUTS

FINANCIAL SERVICES

HOME/BUSINESS SERVICES

CATS GALORE, TLC has for adoption spayed & neutered adult cats. 604-309-5388 / 604-856-4866

ELECTRICAL

604-746-6777

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

3 rooms for $299, 2 coats any colour (Ceiling & Trim extra) Price incls Cloverdale Premium quality paint. NO PAYMENT until Job is completed. Ask us about our Laminate Flooring & Maid Services.

CONTRACTORS

QUALITY CONTROL

Vernon Service Company requires Journeyman Service Plumbers/Gasfitters, $36.00/hr Call (250)549-4444 or fax 250-549-4416

Running this ad for 10yrs

PAINT SPECIAL

BARCLAY FLETCHER CONTRACTING, complete home reno’s, additions & more. (604)869-1686

655 Third Ave. (604)869-5220

182

604.339.1989 Lower Mainland 604.996.8128 Fraser Valley

ALLSYS COMPUTERS, new computer sales & service. 604-8693456 or info@allsyscomputers.com

CANYON CARPETS, 549 Wallace St., Hope. For all your floor covering needs! Call 604-869-2727

2459 McCallum Rd. Abby.

329 PAINTING & DECORATING

COMPUTER SERVICES

CHANEL SPA Top Quality Services...

The Lemare Group is seeking a Quality Control person for Northern Vancouver Island. Coastal/Dryland sort experience an asset. Traveling required. Excellent wages plus benefits. Email or fax resumes to office@lemare.ca or 250-956-4888, Attention: Jennifer.

HOME/BUSINESS SERVICES

www.paintspecial.com Unfiled Tax Returns? Unreported Income? Avoid Prosecution and Penalties. Call a Tax Attorney First! 855-668-8089 (Mon-Fri 9-6 ET)

Skagit Motel,

134

203

Lloyd’s Utilities Box 893, Hope BC V0X 1L0 Apprentice served plumber required for position on our team at Lloyd’s Utilities providing plumbing repair services in the Upper Fraser Valley and Fraser Canyon. Must have excellent customer service skills and be able to self motivate. Candidates must have a minimum 5 yrs experience and have own tools, workwear and driving licence. Experience with hydronic heating systems and an ability to problem solve and repair. Comfortable with heights and physically able to lift 100 lbs. Willing to work on call and overtime. Min 2 yr contract, $22-26/hr dep on experience.

FLAGGERS NEEDED. No Certification? Get Certified, 604-575-3944

HOUSEKEEPER

TRADES, TECHNICAL

HOME/BUSINESS SERVICES

BLUE’S PLUMBING, got the plumbing blues? reno’s, service work, hot water tanks. Call (604)750-0159 DAVE’S PLUMBING, licensed, insured, gas fitter, for all your plumbing needs. Call (604)869-4566

341 284 HEAT, AIR, REFRIGERATION LLOYD’S UTILITIES, gas, oil & propane furnaces, class A gas fitter. (604)869-1111 or (604)869-6544

287

PRESSURE WASHING

The Hope Standard

POWER WASHING since 1982. WCB/Liability insurance. Call Simon for prompt service. 604-230-0627

353 ROOFING & SKYLIGHTS

HOME IMPROVEMENTS

Office Hours:

MURPHBROS Contracting specialists in windows, doors, siding, decks and much more! WINDOW DOOR SPECIALS NOW!! Call Shaun 778-823-6939 Murphbroscontracting@gmail.com PRECISION EXTERIORS, roofing, siding, windows, doors and more. WCB insured. Call (604)750-8025

300

Tuesday-Friday 9:00am-5:00pm

.A East West Roofing & Siding Co. Repairs, new roofs, torching, gutter services. 10% off. 604-783-6437

356

RUBBISH REMOVAL

LANDSCAPING

GLEN TRAUN LANDSCAPING, Commercial & Residential yard maintenance. Call 604-869-2767

320

Published Thursday

MOVING & STORAGE

GET the BEST for your MOVING From $40/hr Licensed & Insured senior discount 778-773-3737

MOUNTAIN-MOVERS.ca

Need CA$H Today? Own a vehicle? Borrow up to $25,000. Snapcarcash.com 604-777-5046

188

130

HELP WANTED

LEGAL SERVICES

(778)378-6683

CRIMINAL RECORD? Don’t let it block employment, travel, education, professional, certification, adoption property rental opportunities. For peace of mind & a free consultation call 1-800-347-2540.

INTEGRITY MOVERS, moving & delivery services, New to Hope. Call(604)860-5277or(778)896-6414

374

1PRO MOVING & SHIPPING. Across the street - across the world Real Professionals, Reas. Rates. Best in every way! 604-721-4555.

PHILLIPS TREE SERVICES, Removals, Toppings. Free estimates & Fully Insured. Call 604-702-8247

130

130

130

HELP WANTED

HELP WANTED

TREE SERVICES

HELP WANTED

130

CAREER OPPORTUNITIES CA

HELP WANTED

130

HELP WANTED

130

HELP WANTED

Professionals Connecting Professionals

Your New Career Your Future is a Click Away www.localwork.ca


Thursday, May 1, 2014, Hope Standard A19 REAL ESTATE 627

REAL ESTATE

HOMES WANTED

REAL ESTATE

633 MOBILE HOMES & PARKS

640

RENTALS

RECREATIONAL

We Buy Homes BC • All Prices • All Situations • • All Conditions • www.webuyhomesbc.com 604-657-9422

706

APARTMENT/CONDO

736

HOPE

2 bedroom home plus den, and a 2 bedroom 2 bath with addition in seniors community.

Adult complex, fridge, stove, N/P, drapes, laundry facilities. Ref’s req’d.

604-869-1212 or 604-869-2139

Call Gordon 604-240-3464

HOPE, 1 bdrm apt., newer, $650/ mon., includes hot water, N/S. Call 604-819-6422 or 604-819-6122

HOPE, main floor of house for rent at Kawkawa Lake, 2 bdrm, $850/mon utilities included. Avail. May 1. Call (604)869-1588

HOPE 2 bedroom mobile homes for sale in seniors community. Call Gordon 604-240-3464 New SRI *1296 sq/ft Double wide $93,888. *New SRI 14’ wide $67,888. Repossessed mobile homes, manufactured homes & modulars. Chuck 604-830-1960.

Recreation Paradise Year Round! Fishing, hiking, hunting, quadding, snowmobiling or just relaxation. Great access within 3 hours of the lower mainland, 40 km from Princeton and steps to Osprey Lake. 2 years new this 3 bedroom, 2 bath open concept chalet has it all & more. Includes a guest cabin with a bedroom, living/sitting area, kitchen & bathroom. New detached garage for storing the toys. Call Adrienne (Royal Lepage Parkside Realty) at 250-809-6322 for a private viewing.

696

OTHER AREAS

20 Acres. $0 Down, Only $119/mo. Owner Financing, NO CREDIT CHECKS! Near El Paso, Texas. Beautiful Mountain Views! Money Back Guarantee. Call 866-8825263 Ext. 81 www.sunsetranches.net

RENTALS 700

HOMES FOR RENT

HOPE

1 & 2 BEDROOM APT

633 MOBILE HOMES & PARKS

HOPE, Needs work, 1 bedroom mobile home, $500, 2 bedroom mobile home, $5000. In senior’s community. Call Gordon (604)240-3464

RENTALS

HOPE, 1 bdrm apt., new paint & carpet, adult oriented building, sunny side of town, clean & bright, pets accepted with deposit, $625/mo. Call 604-793-5010 HOPE, 2 bdrm apt., adult oriented complex, 4 appliances, newly reno’d, electric heat, N/S, N/P. (604)869-9402 or 604-869-1432

551 HOPE

752

TOWNHOUSES

1070 Fifth Ave

HOPE, 2 bdrm, newly reno’d townhome, $750 + utilities, N/S, N/P, ref’s req. Call 1 (604)818-9488 or 250-706-8766

Storage Max unit #17

Sat., May 3 9:00 - 1:00 pm household items, tools, gardening, all sorts of stuff

TRANSPORTATION

HOPE

Coquihalla Courts 1030 3rd Ave.

810

AUTO FINANCING

HOPE

Rummage Sale

1 Bdrm apt. $600 2 Bdrm apt. $650 F/S, coin laund, cable incl., secure prkg.

Hope United Church Hall corner of Queen & 3rd

Sat., May 3 9:00 am - 12:00 noon

Ross Fullbrook Royal LePage 604-792-0077

Coffee & Muffins available

No Early Birds Please! HOPE:

Small 1 bedroom studio apartment for rent on Wallace St. $600. per month. Newly renovated. Includes heat. On site coinop laundry. N/P, N/S.

TRANSPORTATION

Call (604)869-1301

RENT TO OWN

STOP RENTING! RENT TO OWN! No Qualifications! Flexible Terms! CLOVERDALE - 60th and 176th Spacious 1 Bedroom Condo. Only $880/mo. Option Fee Req’d 604-657-9422

GARAGE SALES

845

709 COMMERCIAL/INDUSTRIAL

MARINE

SCRAP CAR REMOVAL

912

BOATS

AAA SCRAP CAR REMOVAL Minimum $150 cash for full size vehicles, any cond. 604-518-3673

Need A Vehicle! Guaranteed Auto Loan. Apply Now, 1.877.680.1231 www.UapplyUdrive.ca

HOPE, Office space in centre of town, suitable for studio, business, health care, pet care, storage etc. Rear access and parking. Includes lunch room. Call 1-604-267-7473 or cell 1-604-250-6339

SCRAP CARS & METALS - CA$H for CARS Up to $300. No Wheels - No Problem! Friendly &

Professional Service. Servicing the Fraser Valley 1-855-771-2855

733 MOBILE HOMES & PADS HOPE, 2 vacant pads for rent in senior’s community. First 3 months free pad rent. Call Gordon 604-240-3464 HOPE, Silver Hope Mobile Park. Cabin, Mobile homes, and R/V pads for monthly rentals, cable included. Call (604)869-1203 or (604)860-0652 The Scrapper

736

HOMES FOR RENT Auto Financing - Dream Catcher, Apply Today! Drive Today!

HOPE 2 bdrm house, 1900 sq. ft., 2 baths, backing onto Coquihalla River. $1000/mo plus 1/2 DD. Avail June 1st. Call 604-869-9293 HOPE, 2 bdrm house in Silver Creek, $750/month incl. electricity. Call 1-604-525-1883.

Do you have Snoring/ Sleep Apnea problems?

Do you have TMJ problems?

1.800.910.6402

812

AUTO SERVICES

HOPE AUTO BODY, complete collision repair & restoration. www.hopeautobody.ca Call (604)869-5244

838

RECREATIONAL/SALE

Hope, 670 Maple St. 4 bdrm, 2 bath, 5 appl, carport, freshly painted, great area, pet negot. avail. April 22, $1200/m Ross Fullbrook, Royal Lepage, 604-792-0077

1998 Layton 22.5 ft RV with awning, stove, oven, fridge, microwave, inside/outside shower with tub. $5500 obo. Call 604-860-9353

809

809

AUTO ACCESSORIES/ PARTS

.wwwone4yacht.com 604-669-2248

AUTO ACCESSORIES/ PARTS TOP CA$H PAID TODAY For SCRAP VEHICLES! 2 hr. Service www.a1casper.com (604)209-2026

THE WAREHOUSEMAN’S LIEN ACT In the matter of the Warehouseman’s Lien Act and J.M.H. Storage Ltd Bev Fisher James West Wynonna Strazza Take notice that the furnishings and personal effects located at 63370 Flood Hope Rd, Hope BC will, if not claimed by May 15, 2014 be disposed of accordingly. Any questions regarding this matter should be directed to The Manager, J.M.H. Storage 604-8604005

SELF-SERVE DISCOUNT AUTO PARTS

OVER A THOUSAND VEHICLES TO CHOOSE FROM

WEEKLY SPECIALS MAY 03 - 09, 2014

We can help! JOIN US ON

Wednesday, May 7 @ 7:00pm Coast Chilliwack Hotel 45920 First Ave. Chilliwack Please RSVP to: tmj@vedderdental.ca

FREE tod atten

ENGINES - GAS ......................................... $139.95 TRANSMISSIONS ....................................... $49.95 STARTERS .................................................... $17.95 ALTERNATORS............................................. $17.95 FRT BUMPER COVERS - 190-1 .................. $59.95 ALL BUCKET SEATS - MANUAL ............... $19.95 ALL BENCH SEATS...................................... $24.95 ANY PLAIN STEEL WHEEL .......................... $7.95 HOODS .......................................................... $40.95 FENDERS ...................................................... $20.95 CAR DOORS.................................................. $34.95 TRK. VAN SUV DOORS ............................... $44.95 Now That’s a Deal!

The first 30 people to RSVP will receive a free gift!!

TMJ & Sleep Therapy Clinic

www.pickapart.ca

5640 Vedder Road • 604-858-6830

www.apnea-dentist.ca

Hours: 8:30 am–5:00 pm 7 days a week 792-1221

4-14F TMJ25

04/14W_PP30

43645 Industrial Way, Chilliwack

ANSWERS FOR APRIL 24 CROSSWORD PUZZLE


A20 Hope Standard Thursday, May 1, 2014

women’s

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45930 WELLINGTON AVENUE, DOWNTOWN CHILLIWACK T: 604.792.2375 102 - 32883 SOUTH FRASER WAY, ABBOTSFORD NEXT TO KFC T: 604-859-2330 380 - 19800 LOUGHEED HWY, MEADOWNTOWN CENTRE, PITT MEADOWS T: 604.457-3375 WWW.PAYTONANDBUCKLE.COM

FIND US ON FACEBOOK 04/14W_PB30


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