Yukon News, July 16, 2014

Page 1

Peak performance

Mysterious moss The hunt for an elusive northern plant led researchers to some unexpected discoveries.

Yukon’s Special Olympians brought home more hardware than ever before from the national championships last week in Vancouver.

Page 15

Pages 22 & 23

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RCMP hunt for accused murderer PAGE 2

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The audience during Old Cabin’s Saturday evening performance at the Atlin Arts and Music Festival. See stories and photos on pages 17-19.

Mother bear shot, fate of cubs unknown PAGE 5 A special licence plate is in order?

VOLUME 54 • NUMBER 56

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YUKON NEWS

WEDNESDAY, JULY 16, 2014

RCMP issue arrest warrant for Copper Ridge stabbing death

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yukoninfo.com

Ashley Joannou

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News Reporter

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he RCMP has issued an arrest warrant for second degree murder following a stabbing death in Copper Ridge. Police are warning the public that Michael Thomas MacPherson is considered armed and dangerous. “The RCMP urges the public not to approach Mr. MacPherson or his vehicles, but to immediately call 911 or the RCMP complaint line,” the police said in a news release. Investigators say he could be heading for British Columbia or Saskatchewan. The arrest warrant is in connection to the death of Tanner Sinclair, 27, who died early yesterday morning. Police received a 911 call to a home on Lazulite Drive in Copper Ridge around 12:20 a.m. Sinclair was taken to Whitehorse General Hospital where he died. MacPherson is described as a 32-year-old caucasian male, 5’10”, 220 lbs with brown hair and blue eyes. He has one vehicle registered to his name, a 2002 Brown/Gold Cadillac Escalade, Yukon Licence Plate # HHS50. Police say he could also be driving an older red Honda Civic with unknown plates. That car has several dents and missing the driver’s side door

RCMP/Yukon News

An arrest warrant for second degree murder has been issued for Michael MacPherson, pictured above, by the RCMP for the death of Tanner Sinclair, who was stabbed and passed away yesterday morning. MacPherson is considered armed and dangerous.

handle. Anyone with information should contact the Whitehorse

RCMP at 667-5555. Contact Ashley Joannou at ashleyj@yukon-news.com

MLA Darius Elias admits to refusing breathalyzer Ashley Joannou News Reporter

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untut Gwichin MLA Darius Elias pleaded guilty this morning to failing to provide a breath sample to the RCMP. He will be sentenced July 30. The Yukon Party MLA from Old Crow did not appear in court himself this morning. He entered a guilty plea through his lawyer in front of a justice of the peace. The minimum sentence for a first offence is a fine of $1,000. Elias was charged back in May after police pulled him over at a check stop in Whitehorse for using a cell phone while driving. Days later he appeared at a tightly-controlled news conference. Sitting next to Premier Darrell Pasloski, he admitted to a problem with alcohol and promised to seek help. Beyond this, he’s refused to

Alistair Maitland/Yukon News

MLA Darius Elias, centre, along with Premier Darrell Pasloski, right, speaks to reporters about being charged for failing to provide a breathalyzer test. offer any further explanation about the circumstances of him being pulled over, or the type of help he intends to seek. He’s continued to work at his job. At the end of May he attended committee hearings over

the use of hydraulic fracturing, and on July 10, he sat through the last day of the Peel River watershed trial. Elias was pulled over in the early hours of the day following the end of the Yukon legislature’s spring sitting. He had missed part of the final day’s afternoon. Reliable sources told the News at the time that Elias was at the Edgewater Hotel’s bar and restaurant between 2 p.m. and 3 p.m. He went back to the legislature without paying his bill in time to vote on the government’s 2014 budget. After Edgewater staff let him know, he returned around 5:30 p.m. to settle up. The Yukon Party backbencher became interim leader of the Liberals in 2011, but left the party to sit as an Independent in August 2012 and later joined the government in July 2013. Contact Ashley Joannou at ashleyj@yukon-news.com


WEDNESDAY, JULY 16, 2014

3

YUKON NEWS

Reproductive health clinic to open in the fall Ashley Joannou News Reporter

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fter years of being dreamed up over lunchtime meetings and volunteer hours, the Yukon’s first reproductive health clinic is scheduled to open this fall. The clinic is the brainchild of longtime Whitehorse MD Dr. Stephanie Buchanan and an army of doctors, nurses and non-profit groups who have pushed the project into reality. Buchanan, who has been in the territory for the last 11 years, says there was an “obvious black hole in the community” when it comes to this type of health care. If a woman doesn’t have a family doctor, getting basic reproductive care like birth control pills or pap smears can be a real challenge, she said. It can mean waiting in a walk-in clinic or even the emergency room just to get a prescription. The new clinic will offer these services, through nurse practitioner Michelle Wolsky, along with services like options counselling once a woman is pregnant, testing for sexually transmitted infections and information on contraceptives. “It’s more or less a place where people will be treated by experts who have expertise in all manner of sexual health, reproductive health, pregnancy tests, STI checks, counselling around unexpected pregnancy, counselling around an STI diagnoses,” Buchanan said. The clinic will be run two days a week starting in September, out of Whitehorse Medical Services on Lambert Street. It’s open to everyone, though Buchanan said the target audience is specifically younger people. That’s the group that has

Alistair Maitland/Yukon News

From left: Dr. Susan Alton, Nurse Practitioner Michelle Wolsky, Dr. Sherilynne Himmelsbach and Dr. Stephanie Buchanan in one of the patient rooms at Whitehorse Medical Services yesterday.

the hardest time accessing a primary care doctor or may be uncomfortable asking these kinds of questions to a doctor who has known them their entire life, she said. “In our very stifling society, sex is not on the radar for people. So when they do start to have sexual health needs there isn’t a real open venue sometimes, and it depends on your family,” she said. “Young people are who we really want to access (but) we will not turn anyone away.” That’s partly why the clinic will have evening hours as well. “Evening hours are key,” she said. “You’re not going to get your population if you’re not open in the evening, because so many people who are working are not going to have that availability.” Though most women in the Yukon can get different types of birth control covered through

health insurance, Buchanan said the clinic is also working on a fund to help subsidize the cost for those who can’t afford it. For example, birth control pills might cost $10 a month from the clinic, as opposed to the normal $35 a month. Giving women the option of birth control beyond a condom is in everyone’s best interest, she said. Subsidized birth control has been shown to lower the number of unexpected pregnancies and even lower the rate of sexually transmitted infections, thanks to the education that comes with a prescription, she said. “It would be a real tragedy if this clinic was up and barriers still existed for women to access a form of birth control that was going to work for her,” Buchanan said. As a nurse practitioner,

Wolsky is able to write prescriptions, diagnose and perform tests as well as refer patients to other medical professionals. She says having these services available in a clinic setting is the best financial choice for everyone involved. “An emergency room is the most expensive place to access primary health care. So in terms of just cost savings, having your reproductive health care needs met at a clinic setting is much more cost effective than sitting for six hours for a birth control prescription in emerge,” she said. “What that also does is it helps create relationships. You might come one time for your birth control, then you come back because you have a question, then you come back because maybe you’ve decided now’s the time to get pregnant, or whatever happens with your reproductive health.”

It’s only in recent years that Wolsky has even been able to practice what she is trained to do. Yukon was the nation’s last jurisdiction to grant licences to nursing professionals like her. Nurse practitioner legislation was tabled in 2012. The first nurse was registered in 2013. “This sort of model is a brand new model for the Yukon,” Wolsky said, “which is really exciting because it means that the whole idea of how to deliver health care is starting to shift. Which is good.” Buchanan said it has taken five or six years of serious lobbying by volunteers to get the clinic off the ground, though it’s something that has been needed in the territory since the ‘80s. “This is all off the side of our desks at lunch time…completely volunteer to try and make this happen, and that’s hard for anyone.” The need for a sexual health clinic was just “not on the government’s agenda,” she said. The money for the clinic wouldn’t have actually been available, was it not for Wolsky’s position. The cash is coming from a fund jointly administered by the Department of Health and Social Services and the Yukon Medical Association designed to fund collaborative care. For now, the money is only guaranteed for three years. After that the contract will have to be renegotiated. Buchanan and Wolsky want the clinic to become a central hub for sexual health, sexual information, education and outreach across the territory. “People’s sexual health is absolutely a tenet of our well being,” Buchanan said. Contact Ashley Joannou at ashleyj@yukon-news.com

Kluane First Nation illegally awarded contract to itself: judge Jacqueline Ronson

tion had initially intended to use its members as labourers on the project, it agreed to go through he Supreme Court of Yukon a competitive tendering process has ordered the Kluane First at the insistence of the Yukon Nation to pay more than $318,000 government, which was providing for illegally awarding a construc- some of the funding. tion contract to its own developCobalt submitted the lowest ment corporation. bid and Kluane Corp. submitted The money is owed to Cobalt the second lowest bid. Construction Inc., which submitHowever, the First Nation’s ted the lowest bid for the work. ranking process for the bids gave The work was for road upKluane the top-ranked spot. grades in Burwash Landing, inKluane Corp. was awarded the cluding the installation of culverts project. and ditches, according to Justice But the company did not subLeigh Gower’s judgement. mit 10 per cent security with its While the Kluane First NaNews Reporter

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bids, as it was required to do by the tender. It submitted the security two days after the bid deadline, after being asked to do so by the First Nation. As a result of the delay, Kluane’s bid should have been disqualified from the competition, Justice Gower ruled. The First Nation argued through the proceedings that Cobalt’s bid, too, did not meet the tender criteria, according to the written judgement. It argued that Cobalt did not properly list subcontractors and

did not make the best efforts to attract subcontractors from Burwash Landing. However, this line of reasoning only emerged in an amended statement of defence, after the First Nation had deemed Cobalt’s bid compliant. “The obvious problem with this argument is that there is no evidence whatsoever that KFN actually concluded that Cobalt’s bid was non-compliant, at any time or on any basis,” wrote Gower. “Rather, KFN is attempting to justify its actions after the fact.” Jon Rudolph, Cobalt’s opera-

tions manager, said the company missed out on $318,251 in profits because of the lost contract. Kluane Corp. said it ultimately made only $77,465 profit on the contract. But Gower noted that the development corporation had to spend more than $400,000 on equipment rental, while Cobalt owned its own. Gower ruled that Cobalt’s calculation of missed profit was reasonable. He ordered the sum payed in full, plus interest and some costs. Contact Jacqueline Ronson at jronson@yukon-news.com


4

YUKON NEWS

WEDNESDAY, JULY 16, 2014

Yukon government sued for Watson Lake environment woes Sam Riches News Reporter

The Town of Watson Lake and the Liard First Nation have filed a lawsuit against the Yukon government for environmental abuses. It’s the first time that a First Nation and a local government have joined forces as co-plaintiffs in an action against the territorial government, according to a news release issued by the plaintiffs. It’s also the first time that the Environment Act has been used against the government that introduced it. Watson Lake Mayor Richard Durocher said the town and Liard First Nation have been working together for the better part of a year, since concerns were initially raised about hydrocarbons leaking into the fish-bearing waters of Wye Lake, which eventually flows into the Liard River. Those hydrocarbons appear to be emanating from the Alaska Highway, but Durocher said they haven’t been able to locate the direct source.

“We want the Yukon government to do a Level II environmental review of where these hydrocarbons are coming from,� he said. “We’re adamant now we’ll stick with a court-ordered Level II review and from there start the investigation to find the source of these gas and diesel emissions.� Durocher said the town has conducted extensive testing on the water and found that contaminants from gas and diesel have been observed at levels up to 7,450 micrograms per litre. The Yukon defines contamination at 5,000 ug/L. The town has also found hydrocarbons in the lagoon system. Town officials tested Yukon’s sewer lines, which showed levels up to 37,700 ug/L, more than seven times the level of contamination. The hydrocarbons were destroying the town’s microbes and preventing waste from breaking down. The source of the hydrocarbons was linked back to drainage from the Department of Highway and Public Works. “We isolated it to that one drainage line,� said Durocher. Watson Lake Mayor Richard Durocher.

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He said the town alerted the Yukon government of the problem but that they weren’t taken seriously. Watson Lake responded by plugging the Department of Highway and Public works drains, in an attempt to prevent more hydrocarbons from being released. The Yukon government challenged the town’s authority and instructed them to re-open the lines, and threatened the town for all costs due to disruption of the service, according to the news release. “Yukon minimized the volume of the discharge and the premier has defined the contamination as ‘alleged’ despite laboratory data, Wed, July 16 & Thursday, July 17 Whitehorse Yukon Cinema Whi8thorse 304 Wood Street Ph: 668-6644

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disclosed to the Yukon, that clearly indicated otherwise,� it states. The drainage lines remain plugged and have been for six months, said Durocher. “The irony is that Yukon, through the Yukon Water Board, is demanding a remediation plan for our sewage lagoon and it has placed demands that we spend $100,000 on hydro-geological wells to ensure no leakage occurs into the Liard River,� he said. “In light of our discovery, the demands are absurd. Our community will not spend one cent on a problem created by the very government that has ordered we clean it up. “In my view, that’s a little hypocritical. It’s fully their responsibility.� According to the release, the statement of claim asks the court to impose a multitude of remedies, all of which involve the cleanup of the sewage lagoon and the Alaska Highway right of way. Precise figures for the cleanup will not be known unless a Level II environmental review is ordered by the court, but early figures indicate remediation

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in excess of $20 million, according to the release. “The Yukon government wants us to believe they can properly monitor and enforce environmental standards in the Peel watershed and on lands where fracking is to occur, but they can’t even clean up their own backyard. Their conduct is hypocritical. Their behaviour demonstrates why so many Yukoners are concerned with the environmental and First Nations attitudes of this government,� said Cindy Porter, deputy chief of the Liard First Nation, in the release. “It’s tragic we had to go to this step to force the Yukon government to take action on this file,� said Durocher. “It’s nice to see the First Nation here coming on board as a co-plaintiff on this. They realize the importance of doing this and agreed right away to get on board.� Neither plaintiff is seeking any direct monetary compensation. They are represented by Geoff Plant, a former attorney general of British Columbia. “It’s up to the Yukon government where they want to go from here,� said Durocher. “We’re ready and willing to talk but they need to be willing to come to the table as well.� The Yukon government did not respond for comment by press time. Contact Sam Riches at sam@yukon-news.com

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WEDNESDAY, JULY 16, 2014

5

YUKON NEWS

Tainted water source baffles Faro cleanup crew Myles Dolphin News Reporter

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or more than eight months, cleanup crews at the Faro mine have been stupefied by a mysterious source of contaminated water. Concerns were initially raised in late October and early November following a routine water test that revealed unusually high levels of zinc at the surface of the north fork of Rose Creek. Stephen Mead, the Yukon’s director of assessment and abandoned mines, said the findings were strange because high levels of zinc had never been detected in that area before. “When you see a blip on the radar, you go back and make sure the tests are correct. We checked the lab results but we were still seeing elevated levels of zinc.” According to British Columbia’s ambient water quality guidelines for zinc, high levels of the metal are always found in contaminated waters flowing through a bedrock system containing zinc deposits. The 25 square-kilometre Faro site, once the world’s largest leadzinc mine, consists of 320 million tonnes of waste rock and contaminated spill sites. Mead said the metal can be highly toxic to aquatic life, but not to humans. In trying to understand how widespread the issue was, a signifi-

Jeremy Warren/Yukon News

One of the pits at the Faro mine site.

cant amount of monitoring was carried out to determine where the contamination was coming from. Mead said it took them six weeks to “get a handle on what was going on,” as they were looking for a very small volume of water. In late January, more than $1 million was spent on a drilling program in the eastern edge of the Faro waste dump, above the north fork, to estimate where the contamination was coming from. Holes were drilled to sample underneath the waste rock pile in an attempt to find the source, but that was unsuccessful.

Meanwhile, the water quality was continuing to deteriorate and exceeded some safe levels for aquatic life. “We saw it get worse in February and March, but then nature took hand,” Mead said. “With the spring meltwater and the introduction of fresh water we began seeing the water quality improve naturally, but we still hadn’t found where it was coming from.” Unable to find the source, the crews entered into a second phase of response. On site two weeks ago, they came up with a solution they’re

hoping will be effective before the weather gets too cold again. “We’re looking at going into Rose Creek and trying to capture that contaminated water as it comes out of the base of that rock pile, and before it mixes with the freshwater,” Mead added. If they manage to intercept it, they can pipe it into a storage area, a technique they’ve already used at three other areas of the site. They hope to have that designed and constructed within the next 10 weeks, before the impacts of the source become too large. “The level to which we have to

manage all the water leaving the site is half a milligram of zinc for every litre of water,” Mead said. “The water leaving the perimeter of the Faro site exceeded that amount by about 20 per cent for roughly two weeks. Inside the boundary is where this new contamination is coming out. It flows through the site and then leaves it; in that journey is where it is diluted and the end result is 0.6 milligrams of zinc per litre of water.” At the very point where the water comes out of the rocks, however, the level of zinc was measured at up to tens of milligrams per litre of water and at its source, is likely 20 times that amount. In contrast, some more contaminated water contained on site has been measured at up to 1,500 milligrams of zinc per litre of water. The government has been in constant contact with First Nations groups and regulators, said Mead. “Everyone recognizes it’s an unfortunate situation,” he said. In 2009, the estimated cost of the Faro cleanup project was pegged at $450 million. As of March 31 this year, it stood at approximately $925 million. That number will continue to be refined as the closure plan is further developed over the coming years. Cleanup of the site is expected to take many hundreds of years. Contact Myles Dolphin at myles@yukon-news.com

Mother bear killed after returning to Whitehorse Ashley Joannou

subdivision. That afternoon a second call came in, this time from the McInonservation officers were tyre subdivision. forced to kill a mother Around midnight Tuesday black bear when she morning complaints came in returned to eating garbage just from the Copper Ridge area near weeks after she was relocated Winze Place and Drift Drive. outside town. That’s the same area where the The fate of her two four-month bears were initially caught. old cubs hasn’t been decided yet. “She was willing to take her Conservation officer Ryan cubs this distance to come back Hennings was somber when he right to this exact area,” Hennings talked about what happened said. Tuesday morning. It’s clear this “It tells us A) she’s comfortable was the last thing anyone wanted. and B) how important this food The sow and her two cubs source was to her.” were moved about two weeks ago Conservation officers weren’t after they were found rummaging able to find the bears when they through garbage in Copper Ridge. first went out, but at about 6 Hennings said the family was a.m. Tuesday morning more relocated about 30 kilometres complaints from the area started away, past the Yukon River. coming in. That’s a shorter distance than An officer went back out to usual, he said, but biologists were look. hoping that would make it easier “When the officer was lookon the young cubs, and the river ing for her a resident opened his would discourage them from garage. That activity spooked the coming back. bear and it ran out of the backThey were wrong. This week yard and around the side of the the animals were back eating house when the officer was there,” garbage at nearly the same spot as Hennings said. before. On two separate occasions the A tip first came in at 1 a.m. officer hit the bear with a rubber Monday morning. The bears bullet in an effort to scare her off. were seen in the Takhini North But she almost immediately came News Reporter

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back and started going through the garbage again. “Because of the behaviour the bear was displaying at the time he was forced to put the bear down,” Hennings said. By 5:30 p.m. both baby bears had been captured after taking refuge in a tree and were brought to the Yukon Wildlife Preserve for assessment. Their fate is still up in the air. These are wild bears. They no longer have their mom to take care of them. The wildlife preserve isn’t equipped to deal with them in the long term. “The department’s veterinarian staff will assess their condition and we will make some sort of decisions about what condition they are in, if we can find them a care facility to go to or not, and go from there,” Hennings said. There are really only two possibilities, he said. One is, provided they’re healthy, to find a facility that wants them. “If not, they may have to be put down.” The Yukon Wildlife Preserve does not accept carnivores, like black bears, Hennings said. They may be able to hold the cubs for a short time, but eventually the babies will need a home Outside

if they’re going to survive. “They’re wild, they’re not going to want to be handled by people,” Hennings said. “So we’re in a tough spot, and it’s a tough spot we tried desperately to avoid two weeks ago when we relocated her.” The incident serves as another reminder to residents to take

measures to prevent bears from getting into garbage, said Hennings. “This is a prime example of how quickly a bear can go down this road, and the lengths once they do that they will go to to return and continue this behaviour.” Contact Ashley Joannou at ashleyj@yukon-news.com

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6

YUKON NEWS

WEDNESDAY, JULY 16, 2014

Cadet hunt for Yukon flag hits snag Myles Dolphin News Reporter

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hristopher Hickson thought his request was a reasonable one. A training officer for the 867 Vaudreuil-Dorion Air Cadet Squadron near Montreal, he recently embarked on a national unity project in which

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same day. “I just think it struck us as pretty strange that you would not say yes. It’s unfortunate because as members of the legislature, we represent Yukoners and that means we want to leave a good impression with whoever we’re in contact with.” “For us, it’s a small gesture but a worthwhile one – the flag should be on its way.” But Aisha Montgomery, a communications advisor for the executive council office, said the reasons given by Rowe Submitted photo are valid and have been part Chris Hickson holding N.W.T.’s of the government’s policy for flag. Hickson’s request for a years. flag from the Yukon premier’s “Unfortunately, due to the office was rejected. large number of requests that we get and the cost of purOn Monday, he received chasing the flags and shipping a message from Yukon NDP them, it’s just been the practice Leader Liz Hanson, who with Yukon government for at reached out to Hickson inform- least a decade,” she said. ing him she was sending his “This is for groups and squadron a flag. organizations outside the terriHanson said as soon as she tory. This practice is just simply heard about the request, she based on the number of rethought it was a no-brainer. quests we do receive and given “Why wouldn’t you want to the size of our jurisdiction.” have the territorial flag repContact Myles Dolphin at resented?” she asked later the myles@yukon-news.com

Peel a ‘no-go zone:’ miners

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receive several hundred requests for flags each year,” she wrote to Hickson. “Unfortunately, we are no longer able to accommodate these requests. As an alternative, flags can be purchased directly from a number of flag shops within Canada.” Hickson said he was taken aback by the reply, considering how successful he had been with other provinces and territories, and had a hard time coming to terms with Rowe’s letter. “If the point was to buy a $35 flag, then we would have already done that,” he said. “The objective here is to have one gifted from each of the provinces as a gesture of fraternity and good will among all of the provinces.” He said he tried writing to other people within the Yukon government, appealing to them for a flag, and even wrote back to Rowe in an attempt to get her to change her mind. So far, no one has responded. “Now it seems as though I’m being ignored,” he added.

he requested a flag from every Canadian premier. “My goal is to assemble a collection of all of the provincial and territorial flags so that our cadets can form a marching unit and proudly fly them in our parades and ceremonies for all to see,” he wrote to the News in an e-mail on July 10. Hickson’s project is coming along nicely, having received positive responsives from every Canadian province and territory, with just one exception. “I have written your premier and your chief of protocol but sadly, our request was refused,” he said. “Your government is the only one that has said no to this symbolic gesture.” Hickson was informed of the bad news through a letter from Arwen Rowe, administrative assistant for intergovernmental relations with the Executive Council Office, dated June 27. In it, she stated that the government could no longer cope with the high volume of requests each year. “As you can appreciate, we

He called the Yukon government’s plan “complicated” and “fairly restrictive.” That plan is the one currently in effect in the region, according to the Yukon government. “In between the restrictive nature of the plan and the uncertainty around the court case and of course the public’s sensitivities around the uncertainties at this stage, it’s clear that the area is a no-go zone right now, to anybody who is paying attention,” said Hartland. “There’s no question.” On top of that the two First Nations that launched the lawsuit, the First Nation of Nacho Nyak Dun and the Tr’ondek Hwech’in, have made it clear that they do not want to see the industry in the area, he said. “We certainly understand that it’s not the wishes of NND or TH for anybody to go in there until this issue is resolved, and we respect that and we’ve certainly

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he level of uncertainty for mining exploration in the Peel watershed “couldn’t possibly be understated,” according to Samson Hartland, executive director of the Yukon Chamber of Mines. His comments come on the heels of last week’s court case over the region’s land use plans. First Nations and environmental groups have sued the Yukon government for introducing its own plan for the region, which opens 71 per cent of the area to new mineral staking. They argued that the plan recommended by the Peel Watershed Planning Commission, allowing staking in only 20 per cent of the watershed, is the only legal land use plan. But neither plan is friendly to the mining industry, said Hartland.

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The Yukon News has brought back the popular New York Times crossword puzzle.

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5

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23

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30

7

8

9

40

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55 62

65

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Winners are: 81

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110 114

49

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99 109

CUSTOMER

60

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108

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Contact Jacqueline Ronson at jronson@yukon-news.com

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64

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35 38

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14

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82

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28 32

52

61

107

12

37

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96

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25

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run power or water in there, but it’s your land, and if you want to try and build a house go ahead, just use a helicopter to get in.” The solution is for all the parties to come back to the negotiating table, said Hartland. “We’d like to see people talk about what land use planning means, and to take stock of land use planning in the territory, because certainly right now it seems like we’ve hit a bit of a wall and are asking the courts to decide what land use planning means for the territory.” The Yukon government estimates that $50 million has been spent exploring in the Peel in the last decade, he said. “It sort of magnifies and confirms that mining and the environment can co-exist, because this is a region that has had this amount of dollars spent in it, and it’s still viewed as pristine.”

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ENJOY!

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We heard from many of our readers, so we are running the crossword every week in the Wednesday edition.

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communicated that to our membership.” Mike Power, president of the Yukon Prospectors’ Association, said that a ruling in favour of the government wouldn’t do much for the industry. The government’s plan amounts to effective expropriation of the existing claims in the watershed, but “it’s a little like getting smothered with a pillow,” he said. “Under the current land use plan that the government has proposed, the area is basically going to be a no-go area. It’s not going to be easy at all to do anything in there with the restrictions they are proposing. I think anybody who is worried about the mining industry flooding into the Peel if the court case doesn’t go their way is wrong. “It’s cleverly crafted. It’s sort of telling a home owner that, sure, you own the land, but you can’t put a road in front of it, you can’t

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N O I T A I C E R P P A AY WINNERS D

Pat Maltais ........... Set of Michelin Passenger Tires Barb Bohne .......... Set of Toyo Passenger Tires Heather Profeit ... Set of Hankook Passenger Tires Brian Bruckman .. the BBQ donated by Super Save Propane

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See you next year, Management & Staff of Integra Tire Whitehorse


WEDNESDAY, JULY 16, 2014

7

YUKON NEWS

Bike thief pulls off big heist four various sizes of Specialized Stump Jumpers, two Specialized Camber bikes, one Specialized P20 BMX, two Banshee bikes, four Rocky Mountain bikes, one Salsa bike, one Soda bike and one Cadet BMX bike. There were all new, high-end models. At approximately 7:30 a.m. Whitehorse RCMP members were dispatched to the Wood St. shop after receiving a 911 call from a concerned citizen, who spotted the broken glass from the front door. In 2007, 44,013 bikes were reported stolen across Canada, according to StatsCan. If you have any information, Whitehorse RCMP can be contacted at 667-5551.

Sam Riches News Reporter

T

he front door of Cadence Cycle hung open on Monday afternoon, the door tied in placed with a deflated bike tube, the window pane missing. Inside, the shop bustled with customers but the inventory was sparse compared to the usual cramped feeling of the local bike shop owned by Dean Eyre. Sometime between Saturday evening at 6 p.m. and Sunday morning at 7:30 a.m. 16 highend bikes, miscellaneous bicycle items, and cash from the till were stolen. In total, the missing items add up to more than $40,000 in value. Eyre was back behind the counter on Monday afternoon, filling orders and repairing bikes, business continuing on, despite the sudden loss. No surveillance footage of the thieves is available. “You hope you don’t have to worry about that,� he said, “but I guess I should have been a little more diligent with my security system.� The theft was large enough to register on a national scale, he said. “It was pretty comprehensive.� The shop has been targeted in the past, including earlier this

Contact Sam Riches at sam@yukon-news.com

Alistair Maitland/Yukon News

Cadence Cycle lost more then $40,000 in new bicycles to a break-in over the weekend. The front door window had been broken.

summer when a few bikes were stolen from the yard. They were all recovered. On Monday afternoon, a security company was on its way to give Eyre an estimate on installing a security system. As for the bikes that are already gone, Eyre doesn’t expect them to show up on the local

market. Insurance should be able to recoup some of the loss, and most of the bikes had registered serial numbers. It’s likely that the bikes will stripped down and sold as parts through online retailers like eBay, Pinkbike and Craigslist. The RCMP are currently investigating and asking for the

public’s assistance. RCMP Const. Dean Hoogland said while bicycle thefts in Whitehorse are reported often, a theft of this magnitude is “far and few between.� It’s the largest bicycle theft that’s been reported during Hoogland’s seven years on staff. The missing bikes include

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8

YUKON NEWS

OPINION

EDITORIAL

WEDNESDAY, JULY 16, 2014

INSIGHT

LETTERS

Are you asking for it? Natasha Harvey

I

f you are at the Yukon music festivals this summer and you come across some friendly volunteers handing out buttons and condoms, stop and talk to them. Those volunteers are part of a consent crew whose role is to get people reflecting on and talking about consent. The consent campaign aims to reduce the incidence of sexualized assaults by getting people to consistently ask for consent before engaging in any sexual activity. For many people, the idea of asking for consent appears awkward and unusual. The consent crew challenges the belief that if you stop to ask if it is OK to kiss someone that it will somehow ruin the mood. Instead, we propose that asking for consent can be fun and sexy, but most importantly, it shows you respect your partner and that you don’t want to do something that would upset them or leave them feeling violated. In most sexual interactions we rely on body language and non-verbal cues to determine whether or not to make a move. Although there is nothing wrong with this form of communication, body language can often be misinterpreted or misunderstood. For example, flirting might mean that he or she likes the attention, but isn’t interested in having sex. Or it could also be how that person interacts and they aren’t aware that their friendliness is being mistaken for an invitation to sex. The consent crew tries to get people to reflect on some of the more grey areas of consent. Through games and scenarios, they raise questions such as: when two people have been drinking, whose responsibility is it to get consent? And just how drunk does someone have to be before they are no longer able to

give consent? We’ve all seen situations, for example, where a guy buys a woman drinks at the bar then leaves with her at the end of the night. It is such a common scene that most people probably wouldn’t think twice about it. If the people involved were strangers, someone might reason that maybe they were a couple; maybe she knew the guy; or maybe she wanted to leave with him. But what if the woman was your friend, would you react differently? Or what if the man was your friend? Is it still called “cock-blocking” if you intervene to stop someone from potentially committing rape? The scenarios used in the consent campaign try to address assumptions that women “owe” men sex or that men have the “right” to women’s bodies. They equally aim to challenge attitudes that blame victims for the way they dress, how much they flirt, how much they’ve had to drink or their previous sexual history. The slogan of the campaign “Are you asking for it?” makes the dual claim that no one ever asks to be raped and it is the responsibility of the person seeking sexual interaction to ask for consent. Practising consent means communicating clearly with your partner and respecting both your and their boundaries and right to say no. Consent is about more than just “not raping someone” – it involves creating healthy and positive relationships that are built on open communication, honesty and respect. Asking and getting to know what your partner is into and what they like shows you respect and care about that person but can also be fun and exciting. So, next time, make sure you ask for it and get consent. Natasha Harvey the project co-ordinator for Les EssentiElles.

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During the past two months Yukoners Concerned About Oil and Gas Exploration and Development have visited four Whitehorse ridings to invite voters to sign a petition opposing Yukon Energy’s liquefied natural gas plant and fracking in Yukon. To date, we have visited the ridings of Premier Darrell Pasloski and ministers Scott Kent, Currie Dixon and Mike Nixon, collecting nearly 1,500 names, bringing to 4,000 the number of Yukoners who have already signed, making this petition the largest ever undertaken in Yukon. It will be submitted to the Yukon legislature at the start of the fall sitting. Among the comments we have heard at the door are: • Our fresh water needs to be protected from pollution. • Yukon Energy should be looking at renewable energy like wind, solar and bio-mass. • Industry should pay the full cost of energy and not be subsidized by Yukon ratepayers. • Yukon does not need another boom-bust activity. Reporters

Mike Thomas

Jacqueline Ronson

mthomas@yukon-news.com

jronson@yukon-news.com

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Voice your opposition to the natural gas industry

John Thompson johnt@yukon-news.com

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• Who will pay for the infrastructure damage to roads, bridges etc.? • Fracking will lead to the degradation of our land, water and air and impact our quality of life. • The location of the LNG plant alongside one of the two exit routes from downtown/Riverdale and adjacent to the existing hydro facility is risky and dangerous. Although the Yukon Party government has given its approval for the LNG plant, Yukon Energy must still obtain the required building and operating permits before construction can begin. Stopping this project may be a faint hope, but there is still considerable value in letting the government know that thousands of Yukoners continue to oppose its construction, that Yukoners are concerned because

science shows that natural gas, as measured through its life cycle from production to consumption, is much more toxic to the environment than diesel, and that Yukoners care that our LNG would come from fracked sources. We urge you to sign the petition, to contact your MLA and express your views, to write to the select committee on hydraulic fracturing, and if possible to attend one of the remaining select committee hearings in late August or early September. Voice your opposition to both the LNG plant and to the oil and gas industry’s plans to frack in Yukon. Don Roberts and Rick Griffiths Yukoners Concerned About Oil and Gas Exploration and Development

Quote of the Day “This is a prime example of how quickly a bear can go down this road, and the lengths … they will go to to return and continue this behaviour.” Conservation officer Ryan Hennings on why a black bear that developed a taste for garbage had to be shot. Page 5

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WEDNESDAY, JULY 16, 2014

9

YUKON NEWS

Temporary foreign worker program far from ‘slavery’ by Graham Lang

SECOND THOUGHTS

T

he Federal government recently announced the shuttering of the temporary foreign worker program in the Yukon. The program was a pilot initiative intended to help the Yukon deal with seasonal worker shortages, allowing local employers to bring in foreign workers of a fixed-term basis to satisfy local labour requirements. The Yukon Federation of Labour trumpeted the news, decrying the program as a vehicle for “slave labour” and the cancellation as good news for Canadian workers. While there may be some issues with the program in other jurisdictions, methinks the labour federation may be exercising some hyperbolic liberty with their description of the program as “slave labour,” a description which borders on a pretty griev-

ous insult to those employers (or, by the federation’s definition, “slavers”) who participated in the program. The Yukon, given our seasonal work cycle and relative isolation, has needs for such programs to ensure our economy has the necessary labour to meet the shortterm needs of employers. Without available labour those projects that would otherwise be green-lit are moth-balled, and we lose not only the benefit of that specific project, but the ancillary benefits which flow from those local businesses which provide logistical or other support. The Yukon is especially susceptible to summer worker shortages, as our season is especially short and our location is especially remote. During our summer season the rest of Canada is busy putting projects into the building phase, and we compete with jurisdictions that are more central, more accessible and cheaper to live. If no local labour was available at a reasonable wage, Yukon employers were allowed to make use of the temporary foreign worker program to bring in workers to meet their needs. An employer under the program had to meet certain criteria when hiring, with the centerpiece

being that the pay must be at least the median wage particular to that profession or position. The program was not designed to under-cut wages, but rather to provide at least the median wage to foreign workers, and only after the employer had attempted to fill the job by advertising in Canada. The prospective foreign employee then had the option to take the job or not, much like a Canadian citizen. If the wage was commiserate with the position, the foreign worker could accept or not accept, a bargain for services rendered. Those workers are subject to all of the same work place safety legislation and oversight as any other business in Yukon. Far from a “slave labour” type position, the temporary foreign worker provides services in exchange for remuneration under the same umbrella of labour protections as any other employee. Further, as the employment was on a temporary basis, the employees did not find themselves bound to long-term contracts which they could not break. Some jurisdictions, such as Qatar (whose labour practises are currently under the microscope due to its upcoming hosting of the FIFA World Cup in 2022), take in foreign workers, remove

their passports, allow long-term employment contracts and pay far less than standard wages of resident workers. These workers often do not even have an end date on their contracts and are ignored by local labour regulators, truly creating a economic sub-class of workers. The Yukon temporary foreign worker program took great pains to avoid such pitfalls, and rather created a win-win scenario by which the local economy received the seasonal workers it needs, while the foreign worker receives fair wage in a safe and reliable work environment. The temporary foreign worker program is designed to meet short-term needs, and for that reason is required on top of the already existing Yukon Nominee Program, which is designed to fill long-term positions. Under the Yukon Nominee Program an employer is expected to have two years worth of work for a prospective foreign employee, with the worker eventually obtaining permanent residency in Canada through the program. The temporary foreign worker program identifies the need for seasonal workers, and allows employers to hire skilled and unskilled labour flexibly to account

of the cyclical needs of a given project. Both programs work well for the Yukon, as both target different structural issues in the Yukon labour market. The comments from the labour federation comparing the program to slavery are insulting to local employers, as it implies that employers are taking advantage of a program to ride roughshod over the rights of temporary workers. In my opinion it is just the opposite; local employers are providing opportunity to foreign workers to earn good wages in safe work environments, and only after seeking help in the local labour market. The corollary benefit is that the Yukon economy as a whole keeps expanding, eventually creating more permanent jobs, which in turn leads to more Yukon nominee applications and a benefit to all residents of the Yukon. Far from slavery, properly overseen programs such as the temporary foreign worker program keep the Yukon working, and I would encourage the Yukon government to look into renegotiating the program with the Federal government. Graham Lang is a Whitehorse lawyer and long-time Yukoner.

Governed by industry shills

Yukon people who have signed the petition against this LNG project and 300 of those are in your riding. Re: No end in sight to the Peel mess It is time that you start listening to (July 11). like the Fentie/Pasloski governThe LNG economics don’t make Yukoners. ideological aspirations, nor those In the broader context, it’s not ments, use “their” unlimited funds, sense. We’re better off investing about the Yukon government. The of corporations, especially those taxpayers money, to force their they aspire to be engaged by. in renewable energy, and we have JP Pinard and Yukon government is comprised political agendas on the First NaFor six years the Fentie and the ways to build that now. We can Sally Wright of the Yukon, the NDP and the tions and the people of the Yukon. build a smart grid that will allow Pasloski governments held their Whitehorse Liberal parties. The decisions that Their forced legislations will cards close to their chest, never wind, solar, and hydro to meet our are being made to date are not of electric, space heating and transA most unusual the government, as they are strictly revealing their true plan. Would it most likely get shoved into the legal revolving door of the courts, be far-fetched to say that this was portation needs. based on a neoconservative dogma, grant proposal their plan all along, that they never but at what cost? This money You’re simply delaying the ergo the Yukon Party. As we do could have been far better spent considered the possibility of any Yukon’s smart energy future by federally with the Harper governIn your July 4 editorial you charameliorating the lives of all Yukontrade-offs or compromises? investing in this expensive and ment, we should with this agenda. acterized “hardcore alcoholics” as ers, rather than going to those who During the last election Pasloski extreme fossil fuel: LNG. The plan that was introduced “riff-raff on the downtown streets.” will secure their future employstated that he would tell us after Natural gas prices are risky: is not the Yukon government’s, it If you had referred to them as the election what he would do with ment opportunities. Recently Manitoba Hydro’s appliis the Pasloski government’s and chronic inebriates, we might have the Peel. Now I have no doubt that cation for their natural gas electric been able to receive government should always be referred to as Louis Gagnon plant was turned down by their such. They can deny all they want, 99 per cent of Yukoners would funding for an elite inebriates Whitehorse Public Utilities Board (Winnipeg but they are the Conservative Party never buy anything without behockey league. ing told upfront what they were Free Press, July 2). The board ruled of the Yukon, and you’ll find that Imagine the Suave SchadenTake the long view, that the “short-term capital cost many of their policies, agendas and getting, yet some bought into this freudes, the Mighty Muditas, the sham of a party. invest in renewables advantages are offset by signifimissives are copied right out of Happy Angsters and the Wretched It’s a party that has been unable cant ongoing operating cost risk, Harper’s handbook, if not verRiff-Ratts with the editor of the to keep most of their promises. Open letter to Energy Minister Scott primarily fuel costs.” batim. Yukon News as the Riff-Raffs Kent: In such important and conten- That’s not because they can’t do This Yukon Energy LNG project coach. them for whatever reason, not We’re afraid that your shorttious issues, that will without any is very unpopular with the Yukon because they lack the will nor the sightedness has gotten even doubt affect future generations, public and for good reasons. By Christian Torbik skill. It’s simply because they never shorter. never should one party dominate the way, there are close to 4,000 Whitehorse You’re now agreeing with the the agendas, nor make the rules or intended to do them. Yet some Yukoners keep biting the hooks ex- Yukon Environmental and Sociothe laws. pecting some time of reward, only economic Assessment Board, This is not Dennis Fentie’s or to be filleted, cooked and served. which has not looked beyond the Darrell Pasloski’s territory to do Now don’t get me wrong. Some Yukon’s borders to consider that with as they please. These termThe Yukon News welcomes letters from its readers. do get rewards, but most of them the fracked gas that will feed Yukon elected Yukon Party ministers do Letters should be no longer than 500 words and must be signed have offices in Vancouver, Calgary, Energy’s liquefied natural gas projnot own this land. They are not with your full name and place of residence. A daytime phone ect is destroying our neighbours’ the landlords. They are simply the Ottawa or Beijing. number is also required for verification purposes only. We reserve Since the arrival of Harper’s water and our shared climate. temporary term-limited stewards the right to edit letters for clarity, length, accuracy and legality. right-wing American-based repubWe wish you would wake up. that on our behalf, look for what You can send submissions to editor@yukon-news.com. They can lic, democracy has taken a backseat You’re doing a great disservice to is in the best interest of all the be faxed to 867-668-3755 or mailed to 211 Wood St., Whitehorse, to dogma and politics. And those all our children’s future by allowpeople, present and future – not Yukon Y1A 2E4. just their voters, nor their political, who espouse these same beliefs, ing this project to happen.

Letters to the editor


10

YUKON NEWS

WEDNESDAY, JULY 16, 2014

Canada’s back is against the wall after loss to Aussies that they made some great plays in the field, kept the momentum from swinging our way. o get a shot at a medal, “We made three errors and we Canada needs a winning can’t make three errors. Good streak starting today. teams don’t give good teams five The host team has suffered outs an inning.” two straight losses and is in sixth Australia scored a run in the place at the 2014 ISF Junior second and opened the gap on Men’s World Softball Champion- a two-run homer from Callum ship in Whitehorse. Canada (2-3) Beashel in the fifth inning. The has to finish the round robin on team from down under is now in Friday in the top four to contend fifth place with a 3-3 record. for hardware this weekend. “I thought it was closer than “In order to get to the playoffs what the score said,” said Pauli, our whole team has to be hitting, who got one of his team’s three getting runs in and that’s going hits and is second in the tournato win us games,” said Canada ment at the plate with a .563 outfielder Tyler Pauli. average. On Wednesday, “We’re going “We had some hits but they to be ready, we have to win both made some nice plays. I give a lot games. I think we have to win the of credit to their outfielders, they next four games in order to have made some diving catches. A few a chance. So we’re going to come of those hits fall in and it’s a lot guns out.” closer game than it was.” A win Tuesday evening would Tuesday’s game was a rematch have put Canada a spot behind of the 2008 final in which Austhird place’s United States and tralia beat Canada 2-1 for gold Japan tied at 4-2. on the very same field. However, a 5-0 shutout loss to Australia has won the chamAustralia has Canada on course pionship more than any other for the consolation rounds. country with four straight beAustralian pitcher Jerremyah tween 1997 and 2008. Selu threw all seven innings, “It’s been on the back of some allowing just three hits with 10 pretty good pitching,” said Ausstrikeouts. tralia head coach Wayne Saunder. “I have to tip my hat to the “If you have good pitching, you pitcher (Selu), he pitched a fanhave a good platform to work tastic game,” said Canada head around. coach Jim Jones. “When we had “The game has developed in some guys in scoring position Australia and has come a long with one out and needed a clutch way. There’s been a lot of investhit, we didn’t do it. He pitched ment and time.” Canada lost 12-6 to second well and there were some times Tom Patrick News Reporter

T

Tom Patrick/Yukon News

Team Canada outfielder Matthew Pilon catches a deep Australian drive during his team’s 5-0 loss to the Aussies at the ISF Junior Men’s World Softball Championship in Whitehorse on Tuesday.

place’s New Zealand (5-1) on Monday. The Kiwis scored six runs in the fourth inning to go up 9-4.

“Yesterday we were almost embarrassed about the bunts that were made against us – we worked a lot on that today,” said

Jones. “(Against Australia) I thought we played the bunts very well and took that away from them.” Canada opened the championship with a 7-0 win over the Czech Republic on Friday, lost 7-0 to defending champs Argentina Saturday, and beat U.S.A. 9-8 in a nail-biter Sunday. Wednesday is Canada’s turn for a double-header day, facing Mexico (2-3) in the afternoon and Denmark (1-5) in the evening. Canada will play Japan Thursday and winless Singapore Friday to finish the round-robin. Japan – one of the teams Canada could potentially overtake to reach the medal round – plays undefeated Argentina Wednesday. Japan reached Day 5 with a perfect 4-0 record, but lost twice on the team’s double-header day on Tuesday, keeping the door open a little for Canada. Argentina, who won gold in 2012 and are hoping to become the first to win twice within two years now that the championship is biennial, has not allowed a single run against with six consecutive shutouts. Contact Tom Patrick at tomp@yukon-news.com

Champagne and Aishihik First Nation Champagne and Aishihik First Nations is accepting

Notice of Interests

from persons interested in a contract as a

Chief Returning Officer for our upcoming Chief & Council election. If you wish to be considered, please send a cover letter & Chief Returning Officer related resume to Swright@CAFN.ca. Alistair Maitland/Yukon News

Notice of Interests will be accepted until Thursday July 24 at 4 PM.

Canada’s Tyler Pauli makes it to first base during a 12-6 loss against New Zealand on Monday.

Affordable travel. We’ve got it.

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WEDNESDAY, JULY 16, 2014

11

YUKON NEWS

Myles Dolphin/Yukon News

Three-year-old Sarah Dissmann, left, and nine-year-old Ava Dedon presented goldfish to Minister Beverley Brazier at the Whitehorse United Church on Sunday for the annual Blessing of the Animals.

n o C i m o k Yu 14 20

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All ages fun! 3 day passes:

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Want to get involved with the Humane Society? Become a volunteer and join the Board, walk dogs or help with a fundraiser; it all helps!

Call 633-6019 today to find out how you can become involved!

207 MAIN STREET | 867.667.7403 |

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12

YUKON NEWS

WEDNESDAY, JULY 16, 2014

WHITEHORSE WEATHER 5-DAY FORECAST TONIGHT

 21°C TODAY’S NORMALS

THURSDAY high low

 21°C 11 °C

21°C °C Low: 8

High:

FRIDAY high low

04:57 Sunset: 23:15

 21°C 10 °C

Sunrise:

SATURDAY high low

°C  22°C 9

Canned Vegetables Canned Fruit Canned Meat Canned Fish Pasta sauce Peanut Butter Baked Beans Juice Kids Snacks We are completely out of these items and no budget to buy them.

Did you know? If you go shopping for the food bank, bring the food directly to the Food Bank as well as the till receipt. We write your name on the receipt and record the donation. At the end of the year we add them all up and send you a tax receipt for the donated food! Also open Saturdays from 11am-3pm for drop off’s. ⌂ Food Bank Society of Whitehorse ⌂

FoodBankSocietyOfWhitehorse

306 Alexander Street • Whitehorse • YT •Y1A 2L6 867-393-2265 • office@whitehorsefoodbank.ca

@whitehorsefoodb

whitehorsefoodbank.ca

23:50 Moonset: 10:28

Moonrise:

SUNDAY high low

°C 23  °C 8

YUKON Communities

OLD CROW

17/11

A new summer art festival at the Whitehorse Waterfront Wharf (Front Street between Main and Steele)

Art gallery ◆ Artist demonstrations ◆ Interactive art workshops ◆ FREE kids’ craft tent FREE Kids Kreate workshop presented in partnership with the Yukon Arts Centre Public Art Gallery

 18/10

 19/12

DAWSON

Participating Artists: Shiela Alexandrovich Nicole Bauberger Mary Beattie John Boivin

MAYO

  20/10 22/12 21/11    12/10 12/11 21/9 BEAVER CREEK

Marie-Hélène Comeau Josée Carbonneau Larry DuGuay Neil Graham

Leanne Kinvig Lara Melnik Glenda Mosher Stephanie Murray

Thelma Piercey Alena Puskas Jessica Vellenga Amber Walker and many more!

Kids Kreate: Saturday 1-4 pm – Printmaking with Marie-Hélène Comeau Workshops on:

ROSS RIVER

CARMACKS

needle felting ◆ oil painting ◆ block printing ◆ art cards ◆ acrylic painting ◆ paper pod lights ◆ embroidery ◆ beaded jewellery

All workshops $20 (including GST), ages 14+, drop-in Visit artsunderground.ca or call us at 667-4080 for full event details!

WHITEHORSE

HAINES JUNCTION

WATSON LAKE

CANADA/US Vancouver Victoria Edmonton Calgary Toronto Yellowknife

     

23°C 23°C 31°C 30°C 21°C 20°C

Skagway Juneau Grande Prairie Fort Nelson Smithers Dawson Creek

     

16°C 15°C 26°C 26°C 27°C 26°C 07.16.14

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WEDNESDAY, JULY 16, 2014

13

YUKON NEWS

Calls grow louder for deep sea port in Iqaluit as it becomes Arctic boom town Iqaluit’s waterfront, Yasmina Pepa added, is under municipal jurisdiction. IQALUIT, NUNAVUT Paquin suggested the feds qaluit, a territorial capital in a need to take ownership. In 2009, G7 nation, is an Arctic boomafter all, Prime Minister Stephen town perched on the northern Harper announced the construcshores of Frobisher Bay – but the tion of a small craft harbour in Nunavut town’s waterfront has Pangnirtung, further north on scarcely changed since English Baffin Island, which opened last explorer Martin Frobisher sailed year. into the inlet in 1576. “There is federal money for The growing community, infrastructure, but money in clamouring for supplies that the North can be used for a lot include building materials, of things – community centres, construction equipment and allhockey arenas. All of that falls terrain vehicles, boasts some of under infrastructure because the the world’s highest tides. needs of the North are huge,” said In the summer months, mamPaquin. moth barges are forced to work “But marine infrastructure around the 12-metre tides and needs to be the priority, because race to unload their cargo onto it’s critical to get the goods north the town’s craggy public beach, to build all that other infrastrucstill studded with ice in mid-July. ture.” Sometimes they can’t unload at The Building Canada Fund ofall because of high winds and Adrian Wyld/The Canadian Press ficially launched on April 1 of this excessive ice. An overall view of Iqaluit, Nunavut last Tuesday. year, with Edmonton receiving It’s a process that takes weeks the first announcement on May longer than it would if even the ers on the muddy, sometimes icy 26 to fund a light-rail extension. on everything,” said Allan Mullin, North is the expense involved most basic marine infrastructure a New Brunswick-born contracshores as cargo is unloaded from There’s been no word of any in shipping building materials, existed in Iqaluit – such as a dock tor and Inuit art dealer who’s the barges via tugboats, then trac- money coming to Iqaluit. a limited shipping season and a or working causeway. The city of lost money and building supplies lack of accessible roads to comtors with forklifts. “It’s up to local governments Iqaluit has lobbied for a $65-mil- when ships have been unable to “There’s no fencing, no barri- to apply for funding,” Vincent munities. lion deep-sea port in recent years, unload on the beach. Iqaluit’s waterfront in particu- ers; there’s nothing, no superviRabault, spokesman for federal but has gone mute on its current sion. It’s not our land, it’s public lar, Paquin complained, hasn’t Suzanne Paquin, president of Infrastructure Minister Denis efforts, with officials declining to Nunavut Eastern Arctic Shipping, changed since Frobisher’s era. land, so there are kids jumping Lebel, said in an email. respond to requests for interfrom one container to the other, “It really hasn’t at all. But our agrees that a serious investment Joe Hess, who runs a local views. biking through. It’s crazy. It’s an in marine infrastructure in Iqalu- operations have changed, our shop selling Inuit “country foods” In Greenland, the coastal accident waiting to happen.” such as Arctic char, whale meat it – at the very least, rebuilding a vessels have gotten a lot bigger, town of Nuuk boasts a pristine Paquin held out hope that and caribou, said he’s puzzled by Second World War-era causeway our capacity for lifting cargo has deep-sea port and, unlike much the federal government’s major all the buck-passing. that is beyond the low-tide mark increased significantly. There is of Iqaluit, paved roads. Denmark – would help solve a host of other more and more activity in the infrastructure project, the Build“I don’t know if they can’t get invests heavily in Greenland. North, and yet there is absolutely ing Canada Fund, will provide the money or they don’t want to problems confronting the comIn Nunavik, Quebec’s Arctic some assistance – but Nunavut nothing that has changed in get the money,” he said of governmunity. region, there’s also been steady hasn’t applied for marine inment officials. “Economic development in the Nunavut.” investment in marine infrastrucfrastructure funding under the What’s more, she said, the “I don’t know what the probNorth can only happen through ture by the provincial and federal town’s brigade of bike-riding Inu- program, and is instead focusing lem is, but something definitely proper marine infrastructure,” governments, easing the business it children zip to the beach to take on upgrading the town’s airport, has to happen, because there’s of dropping off precious cargo to said Paquin said in an interview a spokeswoman for Premier Peter no way they can continue in the sealift up close, running from Montreal as her company communities in need. without it.” and hopping among the contain- Taptuna said. prepared for an Iqaluit sealift Not so for Iqaluit, considered next week. Canada’s gateway to the high “The lack of infrastructure is Arctic, a region where oil and gas like a hidden tax on all the develexploration is on the brink of opment, because everything costs wide-scale development thanks so much more due to the lack of to climate change. This despite infrastructure; housing, hospital the fact Ottawa seems intent projects, basic building materials.” on showcasing the town, even Along with a lack of social hosting a G7 finance ministers’ housing, Iqaluit is grappling summit here in 2010. with crowded living conditions Residents, local business owners and shipping companies alike thought to be contributing to Brooks Brook rising tuberculosis rates, sky-high are pleading with the municipal, food prices that have prompted territorial and federal governDaily: 9:30am - 5 pm the Inuit to organize protests, and ments to find the millions to do Agenda something about Iqaluit’s water- high suicide rates. A 2011 study by the National front as the town of almost 7,000 Citizen Engagement Strategy buzzes with commerce, construc- Aboriginal Health Organization Tax Buy Out Compensation Dollars said a key factor contributing to tion and a growing population. “It would have a domino effect the high cost of housing in the TTC Aboriginal Rights, Titles and Interests Lee-Anne Goodman Canadian Press

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14

YUKON NEWS

WEDNESDAY, JULY 16, 2014

Pre-electoral advertising storm is about to blow Jennifer Ditchburn

limits to how much can be spent during the campaign, a sizable chunk will be blown beforehand. OTTAWA “It is a fact that money facilitates f you thought you’ve seen that political discourse and that paid snippet of “in over his head� Lib- political advertising is the only way eral Leader Justin Trudeau stripfor parties to communicate with ping off his shirt a zillion times, citizens en masse, without the filter just wait – the political advertising of the mainstream media,� Conseason is about to explode. servative Fund chairman Irving After a relative calm, Canadians Gerstein told a party convention are about to be doused with meslast November of pre-election saging as the parties try to influspending. ence voting intentions before the The NDP pointed to the loomwrit is dropped sometime in 2015. ing advertising boom in a mesA look at the Conservative Party sage to supporters this week. The of Canada’s financial filings with Liberals spent $1.5 million in TV Elections Canada paints a picture advertising alone last year, comof what’s in store: In 2012, the pared to a negligible $3,000 spent party spent just under a million in by the New Democrats on radio TV ads, and then $1.2 million last and television. year. “Campaigning for 2015 has Compare that to their television started earlier than ever before – advertising buy in election year and we have to keep closing the gap 2011 of a whopping $13.7 million if we’re going to compete,� wrote dollars and you’ll get a picture of NDP operations chief Dave Hare in just what’s coming down the pike. a message to supporters Thursday. A federal election must be held in “Chip in $5 or more today to make sure our hard work on the 2015, but because there are legal Canadian Press

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ground gets a fighting chance against the millions being spent on the air.� But how exactly will the parties plot their advertising course as the election draws nearer? The parties have offered some early hints. The Conservatives have focused their efforts so far on Trudeau, with a campaign that tries to paint him as a trifling, inexperienced leader with naive ideas. Prime Minister Stephen Harper played on that theme during a speech last weekend in Calgary. “Tell Canadians there’s something ‘new and exciting.’ What is it? Well, just close your eyes and dream, but don’t ruin it all by asking any hard questions,� he said in his prepared remarks. Conservative strategist and Ottawa consultant Tim Powers said with a majority government, the party has been able to roll out its spending a little more slowly, steadily building a story around what it perceives as its rival’s main vulnerability.

“You want to put on your base cover as if you were painting a house, and then you want to add the layers when you’re ready to paint that house and move in,� said Powers, vice-chairman of Summa Strategies. “You’ll start to see the second and third coats of paints coming forward later in the year and early in 2015.� The NDP have done little traditional advertising over the last two years, although they have done targeted online campaigns around specific policy issues such as abolishing the Senate and opposing the Northern Gateway pipeline project. The Liberals, meanwhile, recently released an advertisement with the message that Trudeau is focused on Canadians and their issues, all while the Conservatives focus their energy on him. The party has put Trudeau squarely in all of its marketing tools, including a series of highproduction value digital shorts of Trudeau having dinners with aver-

age Canadians – a play perhaps on the adage, “who would you rather have a beer with?� All of the parties, meanwhile, are paying specific attention to reaching voters with social media tools, including online petitions, Twitter campaigns, YouTube and Facebook. Jonathan Rose, a political science professor at Queen’s University and expert on government advertising, said the Conservatives might find it harder to make a narrative stick to Trudeau than his predecessors, since he already has an established public persona. Still, Rose said political parties settle on particular messages by conducting public opinion polling beforehand. “The claim being made – whether it’s about a leader or leadership or policy – has to be plausible. In other words, it has to be seen by the public to be something that might be true,� said Rose. “If it’s not, it looks like the party or the government is grasping.�

Statistics Canada hopes SINs will shore up data Jennifer Ditchburn

The Conservative government eliminated the mandatory longform census in 2011, saying it OTTAWA was too intrusive. It was replaced tatistics Canada is asking with the controversial voluntary people to provide their social National Household Survey. When the data from the survey insurance numbers during test was released last year, information runs for the 2016 census, part of an effort to make the survey data on thousands of smaller communities was withheld because of more reliable. The agency is trying to find out low response rates. And because some people didn’t want to fill if people will reveal a key identifier they’ve been so often warned out the voluntary form or parts of it, collected data on income levels to protect. has been criticized as flawed. The agency is now asking a The Yukon home of broad sample of those who fill out the tests of the mandatory, shortform census to include their SIN. The number will help tap into Canadian Press

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specific information from tax returns held by the Canada Revenue Agency, the type of solid data that could backstop the census. “At the time that people do their income tax, they’re fairly precise, they have all of the papers that they need to provide to the revenue agency,� said Marc Hamel, census manager at Statistics Canada. “The information tends to be of higher quality than it would be on the census or NHS.� Previous questionnaires have asked people for permission to seek information from the revenue agency, but a social insurance number is a much more accurate link to income tax files than a name and date of birth. “It doesn’t take much sometimes to make the linkage fail, if some of the information is incorrect,� said Hamel. “It is also a very work-intensive

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hold Survey in 2016, despite ongoing criticism that it is a poor substitute for the mandatory long form. In 2006, the mandatory long census had a response rate of 93.5 per cent. The 2011 NHS received a response rate of 68.6 per cent, with higher reluctance among some groups, such as aboriginals. Ian Macredie, a former senior bureaucrat at Statistics Canada, said the agency is likely testing out the SIN question now to get a read on just how difficult it will be to get that information in 2016. “We may have a population that, because of the (U.S.) National Security Administration, has a heightened awareness of Big Brother collecting data about us,� said Macredie. “It may well be that the atmosphere in the respondent population has changed and that’s why you do a test.�

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approach. If we have a number we could use instead, it would go much faster and the linkage itself would be of better quality.� That data will also help Statistics Canada fill in the blanks when people choose not to complete their different surveys, providing them with a general picture of certain types of households. If the test works, the agency might be able to one day replace an entire section of questions on income in the long form by just asking for the SIN. The United Kingdom has also been investigating ways of linking their census with more sources of government data. Hamel said they are also looking at changing the look of the online version of the questionnaires to make them more userfriendly. The government has announced it will continue to use the voluntary National House-

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WEDNESDAY, JULY 16, 2014

15

YUKON NEWS

The great Yukon moss hunt ‘Every species has a role in the ecosystem in which it lives and contributes to the biodiversity that makes ecosystems strong.’ Jacqueline Ronson News Reporter

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ooking for Porsild’s bryum, a rare moss, in the Yukon probably feels a bit like looking for a needle in a haystack. That’s what Jennifer Doubt spent two weeks doing last month. She is the curator of the botany section at the Canadian Museum of Nature in Ottawa. Porsild’s bryum is a picky sort of plant. It prefers the cold, wet faces of seeping limestone cliffs. There are only five known locations in Canada, and the moss is listed as “threatened” by the Committee on the Status of Endangered Wildlife in Canada. The moss is named for Morten Porsild, a botanist who worked mostly in Greenland. While Doubt and her team of scientists didn’t find Porsild’s bryum, they did find his granddaughter. Ellen Davignon, who has written extensively about growing up at Johnson’s Crossing Lodge, is Morten Porsild’s granddaughter. Doubt and her team had no idea about this Yukon connection, but they stopped at Johnson’s Crossing looking for cinnamon buns. Davignon no longer runs the lodge, but happened to be there that day, running the dough mixer. She had her about the botanists coming to look for her grandfather’s moss on the CBC. “It’s so random,” said Doubt. “We were just there for cinnamon buns, and we had this chance encounter. “I wish we could have stayed there all afternoon, but we did sit down with her for a short time and listen to her wonderful stories about her father and about her experience at the lodge and in the bakery.” Doubt and her team spent two weeks scouring the Yukon for the rare species. Although it has never been documented here, there are known locations in Alberta and Alaska as well as historical references in parts of the Arctic archipelago. So it would make sense that there could be Porsild’s bryum in the Yukon, said Doubt. They spent their time helicoptering into remote locations around Dawson and in the southeast corner of the territory. There were the inevitable flat tires on the Dempter Highway. “I felt like I graduated or something when the flat tire light went on for the second and third time,” said Doubt. The lovely thing about hunting for Porsild’s bryum is that the most promising sites often happen to also be the prettiest. “The waterfalls are beautiful places to visit, so I felt really lucky to

Submitted photo/Yukon News

Porslid’s bryum is a rare and endangered species of moss that has not been found to date in Yukon.

be involved in a project that focused on such picturesque and adventurous sites,” said Doubt. While the botanists didn’t actually find what they came to look for, that doesn’t mean the case is closed. “It was a lot of kilometres, but when you look at the map there’s huge areas of the Yukon that we didn’t come close to seeing. So there’s definitely lots of work left to be done.” And Doubt left the territory with 750 samples of mosses and liverworts the scientists did find on their travels. It’s too early say what discoveries will be made in those collections. They must be dried thoroughly before they can be identified and classified. There could be newly discovered species among them. “Many of the places we have been haven’t been visited by moss specialists so we know that at the very least we’ll be filling in the distributions of known Yukon species, but I would not be surprised at all if we find some new records for the territory,” said Doubt. Some may wonder why anyone would spend their days examining tiny plants. But mosses are very important parts of ecosystems, especially in the North, said Doubt.

Rene J. Belland photo

Jennifer Doubt, curator of botany for the Canadian Museum of Nature, searches for moss.

“The more extreme the climate gets, larger plants are less able to cope and so you find fewer of them, and the really tough plants, like mosses, are the ones that can. So you get these northern and high-elevation ecosystems that are dominated by mosses, and really control what goes on in terms of the other plant and animal life that can

survive there.” Mosses are also pioneers – the first plant life to colonize disturbed environments and provide the food and shelter other plants and animals need to follow suit. Porsild’s bryum may be very particular about the spots it chooses to make a go of it, but the role the moss plays in that environment

should not be underestimated. “Every species of plant or animal has a role in the ecosystem in which it lives and contributes to the biodiversity that makes ecosystems strong. The loss of any one species diminishes the diversity and weakens the system.” Contact Jacqueline Ronson at jronson@yukon-news.com


16

YUKON NEWS

WEDNESDAY, JULY 16, 2014

Poaching and the illegal wildlife trade threaten Ontario turtle populations Clare Clancy

are considered at risk. Two of Environmental Damages Fund species, the ones that have high a nine-kilogram turtle in the these species – the spotted and after he was found in possesdemand in the pet trade,” he trunk of his car. wood turtles – are classified as sion of three containers of said. “A single poaching event Officers said it was later reTORONTO endangered. reptiles. could theoretically wipe out a leased into the Grand River, and urtle populations in For turtle researchers, the The containers were smugpopulation.” the police didn’t investigate the southern Ontario are under risk of poaching prompts them gled into Canada near CornHe added that this has hapman’s possession of the turtle. wall, Ont., and officers seized pened in Ontario with wood threat by poachers, who sell the to take precautions. Brooks and fellow researchBrooks said in studies and 205 animals including various turtles, where poaching events ers have petitioned the Ministry critters on the black market as reports, researchers remain species of turtles, tortoises and made the population “nonof Natural Resources to change aquarium novelties or for the purposely vague about where lizards. viable” and required intense the fishing regulation to protect dinner plate. the populations of turtles are Joe Crowley, who is an atconservation efforts. snapping turtles. Ron Brooks, who studied risk species specialist at the “The (adult) population was He said while attitudes are turtles in Algonquin Provincial concentrated. “These traffi ckers read the Ministry of Natural Resources reduced by probably about 70 changing, turtles are still not Park for 40 years, said there are reports and read scientific pub- and part of the Canadian per cent,” he said, adding that well-enough protected. no statistics on the number of Herpetological Society, said the people should report suspected “I think the penalties are turtles being poached and sold lications to find out where the turtles are,” he said. ministry’s enforcement officers poaching behaviour to the harsh enough but they’re not in the illegal wildlife trade. At the same time, he applied,” he said, adding But he said it appears that said, wildlife smugglers he first saw turtle poachers will collect turtles and “When you protect habitat for all the functions that will import certain spepoaching in the 1980s sell them to ethnic markets for cies of turtles to sell as around Algonquin Park. that a (turtle) needs, by domino effect you delicacies such as turtle soup. “The judge just laughed “It’s very difficult to find out pets in Ontario. Environment Canwhen we found guys end up preserving that ecosystem for so what’s going on,” Brooks said. ada spokesman Mark poaching turtles in the Eight species of turtles live Johnson said due to the park.” many other things. By protecting them, in Ontario, seven of which “complex, multinational Researcher Jacqueline and covert nature of Litzgus said she has been we protect everything in that wetland.” wildlife crime,” there is observing a population of Your no information on the spotted turtles in decline profitability of wildlife smughave been involved in several ministry. over the last decade, despite a Community gling in Canada but studies “large international investiga“If you see someone muck“pristine site” that wouldn’t Connection suggest wildlife smuggling is tions.” ing around in a wetland with a lend itself to habitat loss or isa global industry earning as “Turtles are definitely in bucket picking up turtles, there sues of road mortality. much as US$30 billion per year. pretty big trouble in Ontario,” is a chance they are biolo“I’ve just noticed my turtles Johnson added that in one Crowley said, adding that there gists, but there is a chance that are gone,” she said, adding that example of wildlife trafficking, are various contributing factors, they’re not,” Crowley said. “incidental take” could be an a man from the eastern Ontario such as loss of habitat and road Brooks pointed out that explanation. community of Cobden was mortality. while turtles are protected This occurs when members importing turtles across the Crowley said turtles have low under legislation, there is a of the public, possibly children, U.S. border. reproductive rates, so the deaths “paradox” when it comes to take one turtle at a time, she The man was sentenced last of adults can be detrimental to snapping turtles. said. year to a 90-day jail term to a population. “They are listed as at risk,” he “Poaching has a couple of be served on weekends and “Poaching is an especially said. “But there’s a regulation different flavours,” she said, adding that even taking one ordered to pay $50,000 to the problematic threat for the rare that you can hunt them if you or two turtles can damage an have a fishing license, which is entire population. anybody.” Litzgus added that it’s imOn Tuesday, a man who portant to look at turtles as an was pulled over by police in “umbrella species.” Brantford, Ont., for a vehicle “When you protect habiviolation admitted to having tat for all the functions that a (turtle) needs, by domino effect you end up preserving that rubber ecosystem for so many other stamps things,” she said. “By protecting them, we protect everything in 207 Main St. 668-3447 that wetland.” Canadian Press

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WEDNESDAY, JULY 16, 2014

17

YUKON NEWS

Little town, big sound Atlin’s arts and music fest turned 11 this past weekend

Photos by Alistair Maitland

Clockwise from the top; Gord Downie, right, lead singer of the Tragically Hip, headlined with The Sadies; Jessica Vellenga helped budding knitters attach their work to a metal upright bass created by artists Paul and Jeanine Baker; Genevieve Doyon, centre, during the Old Cabin performance; Noli Eastmure passed the time hula-hooping on Sunday; Eli Marsh was the centre of attention at the sand pile.


18

YUKON NEWS

WEDNESDAY, JULY 16, 2014

Festival brings international talent together Sam Riches News Reporter

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uring the three days of the Atlin festival the small town becomes, however briefly, a temporary home for many. The artists and performers share meals and beverages and get to know each other in the ephemeral setting before hitting the road once again. Many arrive to Atlin for the first time, unsure of what to expect in the North. Possessed by Paul James, the stage name of one-man show Konrad Wert, and Alex Cuba were two such artists. Wert, whose stage name is in honour of his father and grandfather, spoke to the News on Saturday afternoon, having just wrapped up a performance down by the lake and a few hours from taking the main stage for the first time. Wert, originally from southwest Florida, now calls Texas home, and got his first career break while touring in Europe. No matter which way you look at it, he was a long way from home while in Atlin. “I had no idea what to think because I didn’t know anybody that knew the ‘fest down in the 48,” he said. “When I came into Whitehorse, off the ferry from Skagway, everyone was like, ‘What are you doing here, Texas man?’ and when I told them I’m playing at Atlin everyone said how great it is. It’s like a little Shangri-La.” Wert, who plays the guitar, the violin and the banjo, is adaptable by nature. A school teacher by day and musician by night, he refers to the band as ‘we’ despite his singularity. It’s a way of paying respect to his partner, Jenny, their two children, and his father and

Alistair Maitland/Yukon News Alistair Maitland/Yukon News

Alex Cuba was one of the major acts in Atlin this past weekend.

grandfather, he said. “It’s strange to have conversations with people when every word is ‘I’ in the conversation. It kind of feels strange and a little artistic and we don’t want to be narcissistic,” he laughs. He plays folk festivals and also tours on the punk circuit, melding his style to fit whatever bill he’s on. He said Atlin, and the music festival culture of Canada in general, reminded him of central Europe. “There’s an appreciation here, a humbleness, a selflessness that reminds me of Europe. Something about appreciating the arts in a different light. There’s a romance here.” That appreciation is evident in the attentiveness of the crowd. Wert said it was a little unnerving at first performing at the festival because of how strongly eyes locked onto him. “It’s a different way to celebrate music,” he said. “Here stories are told and I’m comfortable in this environment, I just don’t do it often.”

Konrad Wert, known as Possessed by Paul James, in the artists’ area.

For Alex Cuba, a Cuban transplant who has called Smithers, B.C. home for the last 11 years, the journey to Atlin was preceded with similar unknowing. “I didn’t know what I was getting into,” he said, “but it’s been great. I’m really pumped to be here.” Cuba was the last performer on Friday evening, taking the main stage at midnight. He spoke to the News the next day, while sitting in the artist campground. “Last night we had an amazing, welcoming experience,” he said, before being cut off by a young fan who ran over and said, “Stay right here, my Mom’s friend thinks you’re great.” “Oh man,” Cuba laughed, before returning back to the conversation. “I’m really happy here.” His music, a style which is difficult to define, captures that positivity. He calls it Cuban soul rock and sees himself as a pioneer of “a new Latin vibe.” He comes from a musical family – he refers to his father as

Alistair Maitland/Yukon News

Alex Cuba on the main stage.

the encyclopedia of Cuban music – but his individual style was birthed from arriving to Canada and wanting to introduce people to something new. “It’s really hard for a Cuban to get used to the environment and immigrate to Canada and plant their feet on this ground,” he said, stomping on the grassy earth below him. “So many keep playing for Latin people, for Cuban people, they want to relive memories but it isolates you. You’re not playing for a Canadian audience, and your music won’t take you anywhere because you’re not making the commitment to deliver on this ground and embrace it.” In 2006, Cuba won a Juno for World Music Album of the Year

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and won the same award again in 2008. In 2010, he won a Latin Grammy for Best New Artist. “Once I got here I never looked back,” he said. “I never say I miss Cuba. I’m here for good now.” Pointing across the field into the nearby forest, he said, “that tree, I’m going to put in my song. That vine, I’m going to write about it. I think I managed to put together a mixed fusion of an apple seed with the mango seed.” Cuba is comfortable in Smithers and refers to himself, now, as a “northern sort of dude.” “For me one of my most favourite things to do is getting my boots on and walking when it’s snowing, getting lost in the woods, having a fire, cooking up some wieners. I can write a really catchy, happy, hot sounding song with three feet of snow and minus 38 outside of my window.” Contact Sam Riches at sam@yukon-news.com


WEDNESDAY, JULY 16, 2014

19

YUKON NEWS

Atlin volunteers come out in historic numbers

Alistair Maitland/Yukon News

Above, volunteers sort and stack bottles behind the festival beer garden. Right, Kasey Rae was the 2014 Atlin Arts and Music Festival’s volunteer coordinator.

teers took part this year, each of them donating 12 hours of their time in order to get a he Atlin Arts and Music weekend pass. Festival was propped up Whitehorse resident Kasey this year by its largestRae Anderson was the festival ever volunteer contingent. volunteer coordinator. The main headliner at the Anderson began to get infestival was Canadian rocker volved at the local Whitehorse Gord Downie, known most music scene at 17 – “I just fell widely for being the frontman in love with it and the artists” of the Tragically Hip. Downie, – and eventually headed to who was there performing Vancouver to study music and with The Sadies, has traversed film production. the continent extensively over Her first musical gig was a career now pushing into its volunteering as a driver for fourth decade. Frostbite, taking Danny Michel His visit to Atlin granted around town. him the rare experience of step“I knew then that being on ping foot on a piece of Canathe inside of a festival is where I dian soil that he hadn’t previwanted to be,” she said, speakously touched. The driver who ing midday Saturday as volunbrought him there was a volteers and fans pulsed through unteer, as were the bartenders, the festival grounds. security guards, artist handlers, It was a far different scene recycling crew and more. than the months leading up Each year, with up to 2,500 to the festival, when Anderson guests descending on the town spent much time hunched over of 500 residents, the festival is a computer screen, filling in a made possible by the work of giant spreadsheet with all the volunteers. Close to 300 volun- duties, hours and locations for Sam Riches News Reporter

T

Hey Dawson! The Yukon News is available Fridays and Sundays at the Dawson City General Store and Maximilian’s Gold Rush Emporium.

volunteers and team leaders. Many of the team leaders are local Atlin residents, most of whom have been involved with the festival since its inception. “The Atlin teams are really strong and welcoming,” said Anderson. “Everyone is just down to make the festival happen.” Anderson said that the hours spent pouring over the schedule can eventually be lost in the ether as the festival churns on and volunteers sometimes don’t show, or show at the wrong times, or at the wrong place and sudden substitutes have to

be swapped in, patching up the missing holes. Joslyn Kilborn was one of the festival’s volunteers, working security around the main tent on Saturday afternoon, the first of her six hour shifts. A few hours into it, everything was going smoothly. “Everyone just wants to be good and nice,” she said. She tugged at her Atlinissued orange safety vest and said, “Plus, once you get the orange vest you’re in the orange vest club and that comes with a secret handshake.” Anderson echoed the team-

spirit sentiment of the festival. “Everyone just wants things to go smoothly and works together to make it happen,” she said. On Sunday evening, Anderson and Kilborn worked together, tearing down the remnants of the festival, packing them up alongside 30 other volunteers. As the tents fell, one year of planning fell alongside them, but the rest won’t last long; the Atlin board have already started on next year’s event. Contact Sam Riches at sam@yukon-news.com

CARMACKS COMMUNITY MEETINGS Tuesday, July 22

Wednesday, July 23

11:00AM – 7:30PM Agenda: Access Road Presentation at 11AM

10:00AM – 7:00PM Agenda: Wildlife Presentation at 10AM

Carmacks: Heritage Hall

Carmacks: Health and Social Building

Lunch served at 12pm, and dinner at 5pm. Casino Mining Corporation is hosting two Community Meetings for the proposed Casino Mine, a gold-copper-silver-molybdenum deposit. The project is located in west central Yukon, about 200km northwest of Carmacks via the Freegold Road and Casino Trail. We invite all Little Salmon/Carmacks First Nation citizens to attend. Your input/concerns are very important as the company consults with the First Nation about the proposed mine. The community meetings will include presentations by Casino Mining Corp., road engineers and wildlife biologists. Informational posters and displays will be made available, as well as representatives to speak with you and answer questions. For more information, please contact Jay Chou at 456-4865 or jchou@hemmera.com. For more information on the project, visit www.casinomining.com


20

YUKON NEWS

WEDNESDAY, JULY 16, 2014

WEDNESDAY, JULY 16, 2014

Well-being

Seniors Day 15 off everything

Monday through Saturday, 9 am thru 6 pm and please specify % every Thursday at 15% this if possible. We have Seniors day off of everything except on sale items. I have attached a on sale items. also have picture We of a mobility scooter, don’t know if you except can shrink it down not, if not ,in it doesn’t matter. We also have in stock, LIFTorCHAIRS stock. LIFT CHAIRS, which Seniorscould day isbe mentioned instead of scooters if you like. every Thursday.

DIRECTORY

Northern Hospital & Safety Supply Inc. • 4200 4th Ave. 668-5083 • www.norhosp.com • Monday through Saturday, 9 am thru 6 pm

Natural ways to alleviate anxiety

N

o one is immune to anxiety, which can be triggered by a number of factors. Many people who deal with anxiety can trace their episodes to family, finances or work, but other circumstances, including personal health or even fear of travelling, can lead to anxiety that’s difficult to manage. According to the Anxiety and Depression Association of America, anxiety disorders are the most common mental illness in the United States, affecting roughly 40 million adults age 18 and older. Anxiety also is a significant issue in Canada, where the Anxiety Disorders Association of Canada reports that such disorders are the most prevalent mental illness affecting Canadian adults. While many rely on prescription medication to treat their anxiety, those suffering from anxiety disorders may want to discuss natural alternatives to such medications with their physicians. The following are some natural ways to treat anxiety that may help anxiety sufferers deal with their disorder without the need for medication. • Chamomile: An ancient medicinal herb, chamomile is experiencing a resurgence of sorts. The dried flowers of chamomile contain many terpenoids and flavonoids that increase its medicinal properties. In fact, a study at the University of Pennsylvania Medical Center that examined the efficacy of chamomile at treating generalized anxiety disorder found that patients who took chamomile supplements for eight weeks experienced a significant decrease in their symptoms compared to those given a placebo. Chamomile tea has grown increasingly popular in recent years, but those suffering from anxiety may want to discuss with their doctors chamomile supplements as a means to treating their anxiety.

Trauma and Conict Integration Counselling Release the impact of trauma and Build healthy relationships

867-335-4460 nataschaa@circlestone.ca http://www.traumaconictintegration.com/

Alpine Ayurveda Elaine Hanson www.alpineayurveda.com 867-667-6067

Ayurveda & Wholistic Nutrition ASSESSMENT s CONSULTATION s COACHING

Colon Hydrotherapy -ASSAGE !YURVEDA Therapies Raw Food Classes

Elemental Holistic Therapies

FREE Lunch-Time

Yoga Every Wednesday • 12:10PM-12:50PM Having a tense day at work? Come to Lunch Time Yoga! Learn to breathe stretch and relax! Everyone welcome, no experience required! Donations appreciated.

Shanti Yoga 303 Hawkins Street 456-7123

www.SabuYoga.com

on c a e B h lt a e H r u Yo Kim Beacon Certified Holistic Health Coach

Food sensitivities/weight/fatigue/stress Private coaching, workshops and more

Upcoming Events

28-Day Ignite Your Light

867.333.9001 Free initial health strategy session!

www.yourhealthbeacon

.co

Body/Mind Healing for you and your animal friends! Alison Zeidler, QTP/I, RCRT, CEMT elementalholistictherapies@live.com 867.335.0078 by appointment only #203 – 107 Main Street (Downstairs)

Open Appointments Daily

CircleStone Counselling

• Valerian: Used to treat insomnia, valerian is a sedative herb that is best taken at night. Some people drink valerian tea to reduce their anxiety, but the aroma of valerian tea can be unpleasant. If that aroma is simply too pungent, valerian can be taken as a capsule or tincture. But valerian should really only be taken at night thanks to its sedative compounds. • Exercise: Treating anxiety does not necessarily have to involve putting something into your body. Exercise can be an effective antidote to anxiety, especially for those people whose anxiety can be traced to their concerns about their long-term health. Regular exercise improves mood and supports long-term health, and for some anxiety sufferers that’s enough to alleviate their condition. Even a relatively short 30-minute daily workout can be very effective at treating anxiety. • Omega-3 fatty acids: Omega-3 fatty acids can benefit the body in a variety of ways. Though most widely associated with promoting cardiovascular health, omega-3 fatty acids also have been linked to alleviating anxiety. In a 2011 study published in the journal Brain, Behavior, and Immunity, students who received omega-3 polyunsaturated fatty acids before an exam experienced a 20 per cent reduction in anxiety symptoms over those who received a placebo. Sources of omega-3 fatty acids include salmon and other oily, coldwater fishes. Omega-3 fatty acid supplements also are available, but men and women should discuss such supplements and any potential side effects with their physicians before taking anything. (Metro Creative Connections)

For You:

For Your Animals:

• Hand and Foot Reflexology • Quantum-Touch Energy Healing • Chakra Balancing • Distance Healing • Self Created Health sessions

• Reflexology • Massage / Bodywork • Quantum-Touch Energy Healing • Chakra Balancing • Distance Healing

build my business, As a thank you for helping me nts to me, you will when you refer two new clie This applies only to receive your next visit free. * ouch sessions. T m u t Reflexology and Quan

www. ele me ntalholistic

t h e ra p i e s . ca

Clinic Services include: • SPORTS MASSAGE PRE & POST EVENT • CHRONIC PAIN RELIEF (TREATMENT OF OVER USE AND MISUSE INJURIES) • STRESS RELIEF • DEEP TISSUE/CHRONIC TENSION RELIEF

IF YOU WISH TO ADVERTISE HERE CONTACT REBECCA NELKEN AT REBECCAN@YUKON-NEWS.COM OR 667-6285 EXT. 208. THIS DIRECTORY WILL RUN THE THIRD WEDNESDAY OF EVERY MONTH.

SECOND OPINION SOCIETY Mondays: Practical Skills Group (2-4) Tuesday Self-Care Support Group (2-4) Wednesday Gardening (1-3) Thursday Community Lunch (12-1) Thursday eve. Recreational Self-Care Program (6-8) FOR FURTHER INFORMATION PLEASE CALL 867-667-2037 Open-House & Community BBQ July 31, 12pm-2pm

If I can help you STAND UP more COMFORTABLY Inside yourself and BREATHE EASIER, then I have served y you well.

Massage Therapy & Bodywork

Norman Holler Certified Advanced RolferÂŽ, RMT. 804 Black Street. 867.333.1492

Melissa Väljä, RMT | 867.336.1296 â—† Janet Arntzen, RMT | 867.335.0785

Suite 206 - 212 Main Street, Whitehorse | www.wildernesscityhealing.com Offering: therapeutic, relaxation and deep tissue massage, pregnancy massage (with a pregnancy massage table), hot stones massage, raindrop therapy and flower essence therapy.

abraxas@klondiker.com

D;H=OĂ… ;7:?D=Â…Ă… II;D9;Ă… ;7B?D=Ă… 7D:Ă… ;:?97BĂ… DJK?J?L;Ă… 97DIĂ… BETTER

BODIES

J_Xb\j › Al`Z\j › Jlggc\d\ekj › :cfk_`e^ JhlXj_ >pd 8ZZ\jjfi`\j KXee`e^ GXZbX^\j Gif[lZkj

FFE?DJC;DJIÅ7L7?B78B;ÅIJ7HJ?D=Å<HECÅ 7OÅrIJÅ?DÅCOÅ D;MÅ:EMDJEMDÅBE97J?EDÅ7JÅt{tÅ 7MA?DIÅ JH;;J EÅI9>;:KB;Å7DÅ7FFE?DJC;DJÅ 97BBÅywxÄwwyÄvyuwÅEHÅ ;C7?B‚ÅÅF7C¥=7?7Ä;D;H=OMEHAI 9EC

Ef :fekiXZkj Ef Cfe^ K\id :fdd`kd\ekj ()) @e[ljki`Xc IfX[ -**$,)+,

I[[ ekh <_jd[ii 9bWii IY^[Zkb[i Wj$$$

nnn%9\kk\i9f[`\jN_`k\_fij\%ZX

Massage, as relaxing as a beach vacation. #11-5110 5th Ave. Whitehorse (867) 668-6522 contact@whitehorsemassagetherapy.com

7CÅ ;DD;JJÅ 9ÅÅÅÆÅÅÅMMM =7?7Ä;D;H=OMEHAI 9EC

Check out our NEW website for classes, memberships, scheduling tanning, CrossFit and MMA!!!!

www.peakfitnessyukon.com

ONLINE BOOKINGS AT: http://whitehorsemassagetherapy.com/ 95 LEWES BLVD. WHITEHORSE, YUKON Y1A 3J4 PHONE: 668-4628

Email: info@peakfitnessyukon.com Check us out on Facebook

ENERGY BASED WORK

Of One Heart

Healing for the Mind, Body & Soul Helps balance the Masculine & Feminine ? Incorporates ‘Pink Angel’ communication ? Helps with communication & in gaining control over our lives ? Especially beneďŹ cial to children ? To book your session today please contact Julie Brown 867-334-5887 or Lynn Brown 867-333-9883

Dreamweaver Sessions

Give your body the gift of the ultimate musical vibrational healing sound therapy The Dreamweaver facilitates energetic balancing, deep relaxation, eases stress, & relief of physical & emotional pain.

Colton Jarvis, RMT APPOINTMENTS ARE AVAILABLE FOR SAME DAY BOOKING Email:coltonjarvisrmt@gmail.com Or by phone: 250-661-9781 Or next day through online booking at www.healthspacetherapeutics.com

21

YUKON NEWS

www.shalandra.com Contact Barbara/Shalandra 660 – 4022 for more details

Our programs provide practical and empowering tools to help manage grief in a healthy way, whether the loss is recent or happened many years ago. Hours: M-F 11:30-3pm *Â…\ĂŠĂˆĂˆĂ‡Â‡Ă‡{әÊÊUĂŠĂŠ{ä™Ê >Ă€Ă›ÂˆĂƒĂŠ-ĂŒĂŠ7Â…ÂˆĂŒiÂ…ÂœĂ€ĂƒiĂŠ9/

www.hospiceyukon.net

archbould.com

UĂŠ , ĂŠ ,"1*UĂŠ6 ĂŠ-1**",/ UĂŠ "1 - UĂŠ*," -- " ĂŠ-1**",/ UĂŠ ĂŠ/"1 UĂŠ*1 ĂŠ 1 / " UĂŠ ĂŠ , ,9

Susan Pack RN/Health Coach */530%6$*/( *%&"- 1305&*/ A Diabetic Friendly Program with Gluten Free Products Available “A weight loss solution that works. Private individual coaching and maintenance for life.�

North Star Wellness Centre

Located at #9-5110 5th Avenue Whitehorse Phone: (867) 335-1244


20

YUKON NEWS

WEDNESDAY, JULY 16, 2014

WEDNESDAY, JULY 16, 2014

Well-being

Seniors Day 15 off everything

Monday through Saturday, 9 am thru 6 pm and please specify % every Thursday at 15% this if possible. We have Seniors day off of everything except on sale items. I have attached a on sale items. also have picture We of a mobility scooter, don’t know if you except can shrink it down not, if not ,in it doesn’t matter. We also have in stock, LIFTorCHAIRS stock. LIFT CHAIRS, which Seniorscould day isbe mentioned instead of scooters if you like. every Thursday.

DIRECTORY

Northern Hospital & Safety Supply Inc. • 4200 4th Ave. 668-5083 • www.norhosp.com • Monday through Saturday, 9 am thru 6 pm

Natural ways to alleviate anxiety

N

o one is immune to anxiety, which can be triggered by a number of factors. Many people who deal with anxiety can trace their episodes to family, finances or work, but other circumstances, including personal health or even fear of travelling, can lead to anxiety that’s difficult to manage. According to the Anxiety and Depression Association of America, anxiety disorders are the most common mental illness in the United States, affecting roughly 40 million adults age 18 and older. Anxiety also is a significant issue in Canada, where the Anxiety Disorders Association of Canada reports that such disorders are the most prevalent mental illness affecting Canadian adults. While many rely on prescription medication to treat their anxiety, those suffering from anxiety disorders may want to discuss natural alternatives to such medications with their physicians. The following are some natural ways to treat anxiety that may help anxiety sufferers deal with their disorder without the need for medication. • Chamomile: An ancient medicinal herb, chamomile is experiencing a resurgence of sorts. The dried flowers of chamomile contain many terpenoids and flavonoids that increase its medicinal properties. In fact, a study at the University of Pennsylvania Medical Center that examined the efficacy of chamomile at treating generalized anxiety disorder found that patients who took chamomile supplements for eight weeks experienced a significant decrease in their symptoms compared to those given a placebo. Chamomile tea has grown increasingly popular in recent years, but those suffering from anxiety may want to discuss with their doctors chamomile supplements as a means to treating their anxiety.

Trauma and Conict Integration Counselling Release the impact of trauma and Build healthy relationships

867-335-4460 nataschaa@circlestone.ca http://www.traumaconictintegration.com/

Alpine Ayurveda Elaine Hanson www.alpineayurveda.com 867-667-6067

Ayurveda & Wholistic Nutrition ASSESSMENT s CONSULTATION s COACHING

Colon Hydrotherapy -ASSAGE !YURVEDA Therapies Raw Food Classes

Elemental Holistic Therapies

FREE Lunch-Time

Yoga Every Wednesday • 12:10PM-12:50PM Having a tense day at work? Come to Lunch Time Yoga! Learn to breathe stretch and relax! Everyone welcome, no experience required! Donations appreciated.

Shanti Yoga 303 Hawkins Street 456-7123

www.SabuYoga.com

on c a e B h lt a e H r u Yo Kim Beacon Certified Holistic Health Coach

Food sensitivities/weight/fatigue/stress Private coaching, workshops and more

Upcoming Events

28-Day Ignite Your Light

867.333.9001 Free initial health strategy session!

www.yourhealthbeacon

.co

Body/Mind Healing for you and your animal friends! Alison Zeidler, QTP/I, RCRT, CEMT elementalholistictherapies@live.com 867.335.0078 by appointment only #203 – 107 Main Street (Downstairs)

Open Appointments Daily

CircleStone Counselling

• Valerian: Used to treat insomnia, valerian is a sedative herb that is best taken at night. Some people drink valerian tea to reduce their anxiety, but the aroma of valerian tea can be unpleasant. If that aroma is simply too pungent, valerian can be taken as a capsule or tincture. But valerian should really only be taken at night thanks to its sedative compounds. • Exercise: Treating anxiety does not necessarily have to involve putting something into your body. Exercise can be an effective antidote to anxiety, especially for those people whose anxiety can be traced to their concerns about their long-term health. Regular exercise improves mood and supports long-term health, and for some anxiety sufferers that’s enough to alleviate their condition. Even a relatively short 30-minute daily workout can be very effective at treating anxiety. • Omega-3 fatty acids: Omega-3 fatty acids can benefit the body in a variety of ways. Though most widely associated with promoting cardiovascular health, omega-3 fatty acids also have been linked to alleviating anxiety. In a 2011 study published in the journal Brain, Behavior, and Immunity, students who received omega-3 polyunsaturated fatty acids before an exam experienced a 20 per cent reduction in anxiety symptoms over those who received a placebo. Sources of omega-3 fatty acids include salmon and other oily, coldwater fishes. Omega-3 fatty acid supplements also are available, but men and women should discuss such supplements and any potential side effects with their physicians before taking anything. (Metro Creative Connections)

For You:

For Your Animals:

• Hand and Foot Reflexology • Quantum-Touch Energy Healing • Chakra Balancing • Distance Healing • Self Created Health sessions

• Reflexology • Massage / Bodywork • Quantum-Touch Energy Healing • Chakra Balancing • Distance Healing

build my business, As a thank you for helping me nts to me, you will when you refer two new clie This applies only to receive your next visit free. * ouch sessions. T m u t Reflexology and Quan

www. ele me ntalholistic

t h e ra p i e s . ca

Clinic Services include: • SPORTS MASSAGE PRE & POST EVENT • CHRONIC PAIN RELIEF (TREATMENT OF OVER USE AND MISUSE INJURIES) • STRESS RELIEF • DEEP TISSUE/CHRONIC TENSION RELIEF

IF YOU WISH TO ADVERTISE HERE CONTACT REBECCA NELKEN AT REBECCAN@YUKON-NEWS.COM OR 667-6285 EXT. 208. THIS DIRECTORY WILL RUN THE THIRD WEDNESDAY OF EVERY MONTH.

SECOND OPINION SOCIETY Mondays: Practical Skills Group (2-4) Tuesday Self-Care Support Group (2-4) Wednesday Gardening (1-3) Thursday Community Lunch (12-1) Thursday eve. Recreational Self-Care Program (6-8) FOR FURTHER INFORMATION PLEASE CALL 867-667-2037 Open-House & Community BBQ July 31, 12pm-2pm

If I can help you STAND UP more COMFORTABLY Inside yourself and BREATHE EASIER, then I have served y you well.

Massage Therapy & Bodywork

Norman Holler Certified Advanced RolferÂŽ, RMT. 804 Black Street. 867.333.1492

Melissa Väljä, RMT | 867.336.1296 â—† Janet Arntzen, RMT | 867.335.0785

Suite 206 - 212 Main Street, Whitehorse | www.wildernesscityhealing.com Offering: therapeutic, relaxation and deep tissue massage, pregnancy massage (with a pregnancy massage table), hot stones massage, raindrop therapy and flower essence therapy.

abraxas@klondiker.com

D;H=OĂ… ;7:?D=Â…Ă… II;D9;Ă… ;7B?D=Ă… 7D:Ă… ;:?97BĂ… DJK?J?L;Ă… 97DIĂ… BETTER

BODIES

J_Xb\j › Al`Z\j › Jlggc\d\ekj › :cfk_`e^ JhlXj_ >pd 8ZZ\jjfi`\j KXee`e^ GXZbX^\j Gif[lZkj

FFE?DJC;DJIÅ7L7?B78B;ÅIJ7HJ?D=Å<HECÅ 7OÅrIJÅ?DÅCOÅ D;MÅ:EMDJEMDÅBE97J?EDÅ7JÅt{tÅ 7MA?DIÅ JH;;J EÅI9>;:KB;Å7DÅ7FFE?DJC;DJÅ 97BBÅywxÄwwyÄvyuwÅEHÅ ;C7?B‚ÅÅF7C¥=7?7Ä;D;H=OMEHAI 9EC

Ef :fekiXZkj Ef Cfe^ K\id :fdd`kd\ekj ()) @e[ljki`Xc IfX[ -**$,)+,

I[[ ekh <_jd[ii 9bWii IY^[Zkb[i Wj$$$

nnn%9\kk\i9f[`\jN_`k\_fij\%ZX

Massage, as relaxing as a beach vacation. #11-5110 5th Ave. Whitehorse (867) 668-6522 contact@whitehorsemassagetherapy.com

7CÅ ;DD;JJÅ 9ÅÅÅÆÅÅÅMMM =7?7Ä;D;H=OMEHAI 9EC

Check out our NEW website for classes, memberships, scheduling tanning, CrossFit and MMA!!!!

www.peakfitnessyukon.com

ONLINE BOOKINGS AT: http://whitehorsemassagetherapy.com/ 95 LEWES BLVD. WHITEHORSE, YUKON Y1A 3J4 PHONE: 668-4628

Email: info@peakfitnessyukon.com Check us out on Facebook

ENERGY BASED WORK

Of One Heart

Healing for the Mind, Body & Soul Helps balance the Masculine & Feminine ? Incorporates ‘Pink Angel’ communication ? Helps with communication & in gaining control over our lives ? Especially beneďŹ cial to children ? To book your session today please contact Julie Brown 867-334-5887 or Lynn Brown 867-333-9883

Dreamweaver Sessions

Give your body the gift of the ultimate musical vibrational healing sound therapy The Dreamweaver facilitates energetic balancing, deep relaxation, eases stress, & relief of physical & emotional pain.

Colton Jarvis, RMT APPOINTMENTS ARE AVAILABLE FOR SAME DAY BOOKING Email:coltonjarvisrmt@gmail.com Or by phone: 250-661-9781 Or next day through online booking at www.healthspacetherapeutics.com

21

YUKON NEWS

www.shalandra.com Contact Barbara/Shalandra 660 – 4022 for more details

Our programs provide practical and empowering tools to help manage grief in a healthy way, whether the loss is recent or happened many years ago. Hours: M-F 11:30-3pm *Â…\ĂŠĂˆĂˆĂ‡Â‡Ă‡{әÊÊUĂŠĂŠ{ä™Ê >Ă€Ă›ÂˆĂƒĂŠ-ĂŒĂŠ7Â…ÂˆĂŒiÂ…ÂœĂ€ĂƒiĂŠ9/

www.hospiceyukon.net

archbould.com

UĂŠ , ĂŠ ,"1*UĂŠ6 ĂŠ-1**",/ UĂŠ "1 - UĂŠ*," -- " ĂŠ-1**",/ UĂŠ ĂŠ/"1 UĂŠ*1 ĂŠ 1 / " UĂŠ ĂŠ , ,9

Susan Pack RN/Health Coach */530%6$*/( *%&"- 1305&*/ A Diabetic Friendly Program with Gluten Free Products Available “A weight loss solution that works. Private individual coaching and maintenance for life.�

North Star Wellness Centre

Located at #9-5110 5th Avenue Whitehorse Phone: (867) 335-1244


22

YUKON NEWS

WEDNESDAY, JULY 16, 2014

Yukon collects a record 14 medals at Special Olympic Games Tom Patrick News Reporter

Y

ukon’s Special Olympians performed at their best in the 2014 Special Olympics Canada Summer Games last week in Vancouver, B.C. Not only did athletes post many personal bests as individuals, the team as a whole delivered its best showing to date. Team Yukon won 14 medals, the most ever collected by Yukon at the quadrennial national championship, up from 12 medals in 2010. “I think it went really well,” said Yukon Chef de Mission Janine Peters. “The athletes have been training hard all year since the beginning of our season, which would have been the beginning of October. They’ve been working on a lot of different things like teamwork, nutrition, healthy eating. “We’ve made sure the athletes know winning isn’t all about the medals, it’s learning how to be a team player.” It was a big team that got big results. The Yukon squad was the largest ever set to the Games from Canada’s three territories with 24 athletes and 15 coaches and staff. The largest part of the team was the soccer squad with 10 players and three coaches, and they made history. Yukon captured its very first soccer gold in a thrilling shootout win over New Brunswick in the division C final on Saturday. Yukon won bronze at the 2006 Games and silver at the 2010 Games. “There was a lot of emotion. The team was in tears after they won the gold medal,” said Yukon soccer coach Ken Binns. “It was a very close, very exciting game throughout the final. It was pretty evenly matched.” Yukon twice fought back from a goal down to finish regulation tied 2-2 and extra time tied 3-3. The territory’s Kenny Atlin, Owen Munroe and Mike Sumner scored in the shootout to secure the win. For Sumner, it was a “golden goal” and his first ever at a Games. “It was amazing – the whole game was,” said Sumner. “I had my first ever soccer goal in the final goal. “It was one of the best competitions I’ve ever had in my whole career.” Yukon arrived in the final with a 6-0 win over P.E.I. and 2-0 over New Brunswick before a rematch in the gold medal match. “Gaetan (Michaud) our goalie and Kenny Atlin, for sure, stood out,” said Sumner. “Owen Munroe

Trevor Twardochleb/Special Olympics Yukon

Yukon soccer player Owen Munroe brings the ball upfield at the 2014 Special Olympics Canada Summer Games last week in Vancouver. Team Yukon won 14 medals at the Games.

played a really good tournament as well.” Also playing for Yukon were Rachel Dawson, Teddy Jackson, Christopher Lee, Duncan McRae, Steven McGundy and Marvin Hall, Yukon’s flag-bearer in the opening ceremonies. “It was very inspirational to watch all the athletes and exciting as it always is,” said Binn of the Games. “It was quite an experience for myself.” Yukon’s Jessica Pruden and Darby McIntyre burned up the track in Vancouver. The two athletics competitors each won two medals and set personal bests. “I think they did really great,” said Yukon athletics coach

McIntyre, the youngest on the team at 14 years old, captured silver in the shot put and in the 5,000-metre, achieving his goal of breaking the 19-minute mark with a time of 18:57.77. “He was strong throughout and at the finish he sprinted and it was fantastic,” said Gustafson. McIntyre also claimed fifth in the 1,500-metre and sixth in the standing long jump. “Darby has been working hard Trevor Twardochleb/Special Olympics Yukon on running with Special Olympics and he also runs with (Athletics Yukon five-pin bowler Garry Chaplin high-fives his coach Yukon coach) Don White, and he Krista McKinnon. has really advanced as a competiCarmen Gustafson. “They had “Jessica’s races in the 100- and tor,” said Gustafson. “Not just in his athletic ability, but his strategy, personal bests throughout and 200-metre were very close. So running smart races. they were in very competitive close I had to wait for the results “The coaches from across the divisions. to know if she got third or fourth.”


WEDNESDAY, JULY 16, 2014

23

YUKON NEWS

Trevor Twardochleb/Special Olympics Yukon

Yukon’s Trevor Beemish delivers a shot in the bocce competition.

Trevor Twardochleb/Special Olympics Yukon

Yukon swimmer Ernest Chua competes in the backstroke.

Trevor Twardochleb/Special Olympics Yukon

Yukon golfer Jean-Sebastien Gallant sends a drive down the fareway.

country were commenting on his abilities and his races. As a 14-year-old, he was surpassing older competitors with much more experience.” Pruden threw to a bronze in shot put and then teamed up with runners from Saskatchewan to win gold in the 4x100-metre relay. She also took fourth in the 100- and 200-metre races and fifth in the standing long jump. “We worked a lot of the jumping and throwing,” said Gustafson. “We didn’t have access to the proper facilities for that, so we were actually using the beach volleyball courts at Rotary Park. We worked a lot on their technique in the shot put and standing long jump.” Last week was the first time bocce was included in the national Games and Yukon won hardware in it. The territory came home with a bronze after a 16-4 win over Quebec. “We had such good camaraderie between Quebec and Yukon,” said Yukon bocce coach Deb Sumner. “We were singing together

and cheering for both teams. “We played Quebec the day before and Quebec actually beat us.” It was a tight competition. Yukon’s team of Aimee Lien, Taylor Amundson, Trevor Beemish and Teresa Roberts had the eventual gold winning Saskatchewan on the ropes and almost made the final. “When we played Saskatchewan, I think seven or eight times we had game-point,” said Deb. “And then they went away with it. It was a tough one.” Yukoners Ernest Chua and Kevin Spoffard were at their fastest in the pool. The two swimmers each posted personal bests and won medals at their first nationals. “I’m very impressed with the results,” said Yukon swim coach Kaitlin McDougall. “I’m most impressed with the personal bests that they achieved during the week. They have put in a lot of hard work this past year and the work paid off. I’m just incredibly proud of both Ernest and Kevin for all the hard work they’ve done

to get to where they are.” Chua took in a silver in the 200-metre freestyle and a bronze in the 50-metre freestyle with a personal best. He also grabbed fourth in the 100-metre backstroke and fifth in the 100 freestyle with a personal best. Spoffard swam to bronze medals in the 25-metre backstroke and the 50-metre backstroke, with new personal bests in both events. He also came fifth and sixth in the 50- and 25-metre freestyle races. “Kevin, in the 50 freestyle and 50 backstroke, had personal bests by eight seconds in each event, which is incredible,” said McDougall. “Both Phil (Whiles) and I have coached this year and we are both proud of the effort they put in this year. Medals are great, but to see a good swim and a solid effort is what we’re there for.” Yukon’s five-pin bowlers knocked pins en route to hardware. They won Yukon’s first-ever team medal at the national Games and came away with three individual medals as well.

Trevor Twardochleb/Special Olympics Yukon

Yukon’s Jessica Pruden nears the finish line in a track race.

Carrie Rudolph, Garry Chaplin, Hayley Halushka, Lisa Bachli and Tyler Repka won silver in the team event. Chaplin and Halushka then took silvers, and Repka a bronze, in the individual competitions. Golfer Jean-Sebastien Gallant faced a tough course but improved his score every day in Vancouver. The 22-year-old carded 73, 62 and a 57 in three nine-hole rounds on his way to fifth in his division.

“He was tied for second the second day and then the other golfers pulled up their socks,” said Yukon golf coach Charlene Donald. “It was a tough course, very narrow, lots of sand,” she added. “He saw the bunkers a few times. The sand traps are so deep and have huge lips on them and we’re just not used to that. “He did very well to get out of them so easily.” Contact Tom Patrick at tomp@yukon-news.com


24

YUKON NEWS

WEDNESDAY, JULY 16, 2014

Team Koltun to host golf tourney this weekend Tom Patrick News Reporter

T

eam Koltun is going from rinks to links this weekend. The Whitehorse women’s curling team has another big season planned for the winter and is hosting a fundraiser golf tournament on Saturday to help cover travel and bonspiel entry costs. “We’re going to a lot of high-end bonspiels that cost a lot of money,� said Koltun third Chelsea Duncan. “Traveling to meet up and coming back here to work with (coach/fifth) Lindsay (Moldowan) costs a lot of money. So we’re just trying to raise as much money as possible and possibly get this going as an annual thing.� The team, which includes skip Sarah Koltun, second Patty Wallingham and lead Jenna Duncan, competed at numerous Women’s World Curling Tour events last season and the Scotties Tournament of Hearts. Team Koltun won their eighth consecutive Yukon junior title in their last year of eligibility in December. “The other three girls are going to school somewhat around

Tom Patrick/Yukon News

Skip Sarah Koltun calls out to her sweepers at the Yukon Junior Curling Championships last December. Team Koltun is hosting a golf tournament to raise money for this coming season.

PELLY BARGE

the Vancouver area at different colleges and universities,� said Chelsea. “I will still be in Edmonton at school. “We are currently putting applications for different spiels. We don’t have each one sorted out, but we will be doing several competitive World Curling Tour spiels throughout the season.� If they can win the Yukon

Summer 2014 Operation Information Highways and Public Works is committed to providing a transportation s›st‡Â? tŠat is saˆ‡ and ‡ƥ‡…tiv‡Ǥ The Pelly barge, also known as the Ross River ferry, is an important part of —konÇŻs transportation infrastr—…t—re and its importanÂ…e to the Â…omm—nity of Ross River, to Â…ommerÂ…ial operators that are working along the orth anol Road and to visitors interested in ešperienÂ…ing this —ni“—e region of —kon is reÂ…ogniÂœedǤ Restricted Schedule: t will operate, s—bÂŒeÂ…t to loÂ…al Â…onditions, from 8 am to 10 am and from 2:30 pm to 4:30 pm, seven days a weekǤ Please Note: Čˆ oÂ…al Â…onditions, inÂ…l—ding the weather, water levels and the Ross River suspension bridge’s stability will be assessed daily and may result in the Â…anÂ…ellation of a sÂ…heduled sailing if Â…onditions are too riskyǤ Čˆ ll users will be re“uired to sign a aiver, Release and ndemniƤÂ…ation greement that makes them aware of the risks prior to using the ferryǤ Čˆ All users are to be aware that the ferry may have to cease operations without warningǤ Čˆ nterested users are enÂ…ouraged to phone ahead to see if the ferry is in operationǤ ommerÂ…ial operators with speÂ…ialiÂœed needs, suÂ…h as transporting oversiÂœe e“uipment or livestoÂ…k, are urged to make additional arrangements and book a time to get aÂ…ross the riverǤ Please phone 867-667-5644 or toll-free at 1-800-661-0408 ext. 5644. For more information please visit the Department of Highways and Public Works website at: www.hpw.gov.yk.ca

Your Co

Women’s Curling Championships, they will also try for a second straight appearance at the Scotties, Canada’s women’s curling championship. Team Koltun was the first Yukon rink to reach the Scotties since 2000 this past February. Hindered by illness, the team still grabbed two wins and had a couple close losses at the cham-

pionship. The Scotties will feature a new format beginning this year. Canada’s bottom-four ranked jurisdictions will now compete in a qualifying playdown for entry into the national championship. This year Yukon, N.W.T., Nunavut and Northern Ontario will compete for a spot. So if Team Koltun wins the Yukon Women’s Curling Championships, there’s no guarantee they will make it into the championship, but will have to travel to the hosting city of Moose Jaw, Sask., to find out. “Because we’re all the four bottom teams we’ll have to go a bit before the event to playdown for one spot to play at the Scotties,� said Chelsea. “So we go into the week not knowing if we’re going to go home at the end. “Even if we do make it for Yukon, we don’t have a guarantee of playing in the Scotties, which is added pressure.� The fundraising tourey will be a nine-hole, best-ball tournament and will take place Saturday afternoon at Meadow Lakes Golf Club. It will include dinner, as well as longest drive, closest to the pin and putting contests for prizes. For more information, or to register a team, contact Meadow Lakes at 668-4653. “Gordon (Moffatt), Lindsay’s dad, was golfing at Meadow Lakes and talked to (club manager) Johnny (Enns) and he’s being super supportive and wants to support our team,� said Chelsea. “It was his idea to have this.� Contact Tom Patrick at tomp@yukon-news.com

ay. w A k c li C e n O spaper. w e N y it n u m m

m o c . s w e n n o k u y . w w w


WEDNESDAY, JULY 16, 2014

25

YUKON NEWS

Brazil pulls off World Cup and now awaits a more demanding game with the 2016 Rio Olympics Stephen Wade Associated Press

RIO DE JANEIRO, BRAZIL razil just pulled off the World Cup. Next up is Rio de Janeiro’s 2016 Olympics, which poses an even bigger challenge. Cement trucks are busy, creating billowing dust clouds, and girders are rising along Avenida Embaixador Abelardo Bueno, the main road running in front of the main Olympic Park in the suburb of Barra da Tijuca. “It’s going, it’s going,” said a worker at the construction site, wearing an orange helmet, blue overalls and introducing himself as Mauricio Lima. Rust-orange beams sprouted behind him as he talked, a superstructure that in two years will become the Olympic media and broadcast centres. “There is a lot to do, but things are moving,” he added. The World Cup overcame fears about protests, halffinished stadiums and chaotic transport to deliver an exciting tournament that culminated with Germany’s 1-0 victory over Argentina in extra time in the final. Brazil’s humiliating 7-1 loss against Germany in the semifinals was a blow to the home country, and the collapse a week ago of an overpass – part of a World Cup project in the southeast city of Belo Horizonte – killed two people. Eight workers died in World Cup stadium construction accidents. Rio’s Olympics have had their own problems. A few months ago, International Olympic Committee Vice-President John Coates called the city’s preparations the “worst” in memory. Other IOC members openly lambasted Rio. In response, the IOC sent in executive director Gilbert Felli to work as a troubleshooter. His presence has helped, and Felli expects most projects back on schedule by September. “I’d like to be clear,” Felli said in an interview with The Associated Press. “Until the games are delivered I’m always concerned. But it’s not the case to say we’re not going to make it. It’s not possible that we won’t make it.” Felli believes the World Cup gave the Olympics a boost. “The perception of the Brazilians is much more positive,” Felli said. “It’s good for the games. They have better trust in themselves to deliver the games. My view is to say … the Brazilians will deliver excellent games. But we have to work every day for it. Nothing is a done deal.” Deadlines are still tight, and Felli described some as “tense, very tense.” The problem areas

B

Silvia Izquierdo/AP Photo

Soccer fans of Brazil’s national soccer team react in disbelief as their team trails the Netherlands during a live broadcast of the World Cup soccer match, inside the FIFA Fan Fest area on Copacabana beach, in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, last Saturday.

include: • a shortage of hotel rooms • severe water pollution at the sailing venue in Guanabara Bay • a late start at the second large cluster of venues called Deodoro in northern Rio • completion of a subway line extension from central Rio to Barra da Tijuca, site of the Olympic Park • construction of a public golf course several kilometres (miles) from the Olympic Park. The Rio Games, with events scattered around four venue clusters, could present transportation nightmares in a city cut up by mountains, tunnels and poor roads. About 60 per cent of the events will be at Olympic Park, about 25 kilometres (15 miles) west of central Rio. The Olympic Park and nearby golf course is being built in a wetlands/swamp area. Small alligators have been spotted wandering around the golf course, and visitors constantly complain about swarming mosquitoes in the Olympic Park area and the neighbouring athletes village. Other events will be staged at three other clusters: Deodoro; the famous Maracana Stadium area in central Rio; the Copacabana Beach and Guanabara Bay areas. Track and field will be run at the Joao Havelange Olympic Stadium, which was built in 2007 for the Pan American Games. The stadium, located in the Maracana cluster area, has been closed for a year for renovation and is to open next year. In the wake of the World Cup, former IOC marketing director Michael Payne warned against complacency.

“The danger would be anybody having a false sense of security,” Payne said. “The Olympics are a far more complicated undertaking to deliver than the World Cup.” For example: • The World Cup involved 736 athletes; the Olympics 10,500. • The World Cup is one championship; the Olympics are dozens. • The World Cup drags on for a month; the Olympics are densely packed into just over two weeks. • Host-generated broadcasting for the World Cup amounted to a few hundred hours; the Rio Olympics will generate about 5,000 hours. Payne suggested Rio’s Olympic preparations might have “bottomed out” a few months ago, which means the only way is up. “No disrespect to FIFA and the complexity and what they’ve done,” Payne said. “But the sheer number of events becomes intimidating in the Olympics. It’s a danger if Brazilians think it’s just a bit more complex.” Brazil is estimated to have spent $11 billion to 14 billion on the World Cup, mostly public money. About $4 billion went to building or refurbishing 12 stadiums. Olympic spending is about $17 billion • a mix of public and private money. Rio Mayor Eduardo Paes said he expects overall spending to increase by as much as 20 per cent. That would put spending at over $20 billion. In their winning bid in 2009, Rio officials pitched that the Olympics would be a catalyst for building infrastructure in

Rio, a city neglected for 50 years. But as costs have risen, and in an election year for President Dilma Rousseff, national, state and local officials have flipflopped. Now they say infra-

structure spending should be viewed separately from direct Olympic spending. They argue that a subway extension, high-speed bus lanes and a rejuvenated port would have been built anyway and are not Olympic-related expenses. However, Paes has acknowledged the projects lingered for years and would not have happened without the Olympics. Dennis Coates, a sports economist at the University of Maryland-Baltimore County, warns against countries bidding for mega events like the Olympics or World Cup on the premise they will drive economic growth or spur building of roads and bridges. “If you need highways and airports, you should be able to build them without throwing a big, expensive party for the rest of the world,” he said. “All that does is add to the cost. But if that’s the only way to convince the public that this is a good idea, than I guess that’s what you do. It’s sad but true.” The Yukon home of

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YUKON NEWS

r u o j n Bo

Musique au musée MacBride

L’auteur et interprète Jim Vautour (chant et guitare) et le muƐŝĐŝĞŶ ŵƵůƟͲŝŶƐƚƌƵŵĞŶƟƐƚĞ KůŝǀŝĞƌ ĚĞ ŽůŽŵďĞů ;ƐĂdžŽƉŚŽŶĞ Ğƚ ŇƸƚĞͿ ƐĞ ƌĠƵŶŝƌŽŶƚ ƉŽƵƌ ŝŶƚĞƌƉƌĠƚĞƌ ĚĞƐ ĐŽŵƉŽƐŝƟŽŶƐ ŝŶƐƉŝƌĠĞƐ Ğƚ ŝŶƐƉŝƌĂŶƚĞƐ͘ Ŷ ƉƌĞŵŝğƌĞ ƉĂƌƟĞ͕ ůĂ ĐŚĂŶƚĞƵƐĞ <ĂƟĞ dĂŝƚ ;&ƌĂŶƟĐ &ŽůůŝĞƐͿ Ğƚ KůŝǀŝĞƌ ĚĞ ŽůŽŵďĞů ;ŐƵŝƚĂƌĞͿ ĚĠǀŽŝůĞƌŽŶƚ ƋƵĞůƋƵĞƐ ĐŚĂŶƐŽŶƐ ŝŶĠĚŝƚĞƐ ĚĞ ůĞƵƌ ŶŽƵǀĞĂƵ ĚƵŽ͘ >Ğ ϭϳ ũƵŝůůĞƚ͕ ă ϭϳ Ś͕ ĂƵ ŵƵƐĠĞ DĂĐ ƌŝĚĞ͘ ǁǁǁ͘ŵĂĐďƌŝĚĞŵƵƐĞƵŵ͘ĐŽŵͬŵƵƐŝĐ͘Śƚŵů

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WHERE

HILLCREST

hůƟŵĞ ĐŽŶĐĞƌƚ ĚƵ ŐƌŽƵƉĞ dŚĞ ƌĂƐƐ <ŶƵĐŬůĞ ^ŽĐŝĞƚLJ EĞ ŵĂŶƋƵĞnj ƉĂƐ ů͛ŽĐĐĂƐŝŽŶ ĚĞ ǀŽŝƌ dŚĞ ƌĂƐƐ <ŶƵĐŬůĞ ^ŽĐŝĞƚLJ ƵŶĞ ĚĞƌŶŝğƌĞ ĨŽŝƐ ĂǀĂŶƚ ůĞƵƌ ƐĠƉĂƌĂƟŽŶ͘ WĂƌĠƐ ĚĞ ůĞƵƌƐ ƉůƵƐ ďĞĂƵdž ĂƚŽƵƌƐ͕ ůĞƐ ŵĞŵďƌĞƐ ĚƵ ŐƌŽƵƉĞ ǀŽƵƐ ĨĞƌŽŶƚ ĚĂŶƐĞƌ ƐƵƌ ĚƵ ĨŽůŬůŽƌĞ ĞƵƌŽƉĠĞŶ Ğƚ ĚƵ ďůƵĞƐ ŽůĚ ƐĐŚŽŽů. Le spectacle sera ĞŶƌĞŐŝƐƚƌĠ ĂĮŶ ƋƵĞ ƐƵďƐŝƐƚĞ ů͛ĞƐƉƌŝƚ ĨĞƐƟĨ ĚĞ ĐĞ ŐƌŽƵƉĞ ƵŶŝƋƵĞ͘ ŝůůĞƚƐ ĞŶ ǀĞŶƚĞ ĂƵ ĞĂŶ͛Ɛ ^ƚƌŝŶŐƐ Θ DƵƐŝĐ ^ƵƉƉůŝĞƐ ŽƵ ă ůĂ ƉŽƌƚĞ͘ >Ğ ϭϲ ũƵŝůůĞƚ͕ ă ϭϵ Ś͕ ĂƵ KůĚ &ŝƌĞ ,Ăůů͘ ǁǁǁ͘ĨĂĐĞŬ͘ĐŽŵͬƉĂŐĞƐͬdŚĞͲ ƌĂƐƐͲ<ŶƵĐŬůĞͲ ^ŽĐŝĞƚLJͬϱϭϵϱϴϵϱϵϴϬϴϮϲϬϰ

WEDNESDAY, JULY 16, 2014

Coyote Video Goody’s Gas Green Garden Restaurant Heather’s Haven Super A Porter Creek Trails North

RIVERDALE: 38 Famous Video Super A Riverdale Tempo Gas Bar

DOWNTOWN:

Canadian Tire Cashplan The Deli Edgewater Hotel Extra Foods Fourth Avenue Petro Gold Rush Inn Home Hardware Klondike Inn Mac’s Fireweed Books Ricky’s Restaurant Riverside Grocery Riverview Hotel Shoppers on Main Shoppers Qwanlin Mall Superstore Superstore Gas Bar Tags Well-Read Books Westmark Whitehorse Yukon Inn Yukon News Yukon Tire

AND …

Want to get involved with the Humane Society? Become a volunteer and join the Board, walk dogs or help with a fundraiser; it all helps!

Call 633-6019 today to find out how you can become involved!

Kopper King Hi-Country RV Park McCrae Petro Takhini Gas Yukon College Bookstore

THE YUKON NEWS IS ALSO AVAILABLE AT NO CHARGE IN ALL YUKON COMMUNITIES AND ATLIN, B.C.

“YOUR COMMUNITY CONNECTION” WEDNESDAY FRIDAY


WEDNESDAY, JULY 16, 2014

27

YUKON NEWS

New York Times Crossword ACROSS 1 6 9 12 18 20 21 22 23 26 27 28 29 30 32 33 34 35 38 41 42 43 48 49 50 51 53 54 57 60 63 65 68 70 72 76 77 78 79 80 82 84 86 87 89 92 94 97 102 103 104 105 109 110 114 115 116 117 118 119 121 125 126 127 128 129 130 131 132

Fighting group Understood Scientific truth Lives Opposite of wind up Bobby on the ice Memphis-to-Nashville dir. Like yesterday Classic excuse for some misdemeanors Intimidating words Prefix with -graphic Mercury, but not Earth Workman’s aid Heavy work Carrier to Tokyo World’s largest particle physics lab, in Switzerland Many a drive-thru installation Declaration from Popeye ___ Anne’s (popular pretzel purveyor) Smugglers’ worries ___ mortal Doubt-dispelling words from Lady Macbeth Follower of lop Follower of lop Formerly, once Spectrum “Alea iacta ___” (“The die is cast”) Mutt’s mutter? “When You’re Good to ___” (“Chicago” song) Aside, e.g. Encyclopedic Frequent features of John Constable landscapes Atypical Bearing in mind Famous Yogiism Traditional Gaelic singer Falafel holder Food often with pentagonal cross sections “All ___” Holy ___ Makes loop-the-loops? Chicken ___ diable Spanish “that” One summing things up They may come with covenants Property areas Match game? Words dismissive of detractors Send, in a way Urge to attack Top choice Expression of resignation Baseball stat. “Did gyre and gimble in the ___”: “Jabberwocky” Take it easy Cast Sushi topper, maybe Hardly highbrow reading Material blocked by parental controls Fantasy title character whose name is one letter different from the creature he rides “We will tolerate this no more!” Least plausible Certain wardrobe malfunction Filler of la mer Mess up Covers with goo Austin Powers, e.g. Record stat Guide

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3125-3rd Ave Whitehorse Across from LePage Park 867.668.2196

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Colorful, pebble-like candies Bit of trip planning: Abbr. Roth ___ Take up again, as a case Yearbook sect. Small power sources Ones that warn before they attack Former employer for Vladimir Putin, for short Sunny room Reams Takes a turn Strict Work for a folder What you might be in France?

99 100 101 103 106 107 108 111 112 113 120 122 123 124

Degree of disorder in a system Pop stars? Bit of wisdom Pushes aside “___ Baby Are You?” (1920 show tune) Debt note Rocker Bob Beguile Corn chip since 1966 Clear sky Pip Barely beat Chance, poetically Refusals

N\Ëi\ Xcc XYflk Yffbj%%% Xe[ jf dlZ_ dfi\ Books are what we’re all about, but we also carry much more than just books! Check out the Power Purse Universal Battery, a fashionable clutch that charges everything! Smart Design, Superior Organization and Universal Charging. PM t www.macsbooks.ca K UNTIL 9 E E ON MAIN STRE W A S ET t OPEN 7 DAY


28

YUKON NEWS

WEDNESDAY, JULY 16, 2014

ENTER YOUR COLOURING FOR A CHANCE TO WIN! ENTER YOUR DRAWING FOR A CHANCE TO WIN!

WINNERS... Up to five years

Leah Lariviere Six to eight years

WINNERS... Up to five years

Shale Davis Six to eight years

Zuri Howard Nine to twelve years

Ethan Thompson Congratulations to our winners and runners-up and good luck to those of you entering next week’s competition.

Name: _____________________________ Address: ____________________________ __________________________________ Phone: _____________________________ Age Up to five Six to eight Nine to twelve years years years Group:

No Entries Nine to twelve years

Entries for both contests should be dropped off or mailed to:

211 Wood Street, Whitehorse, Yukon Y1A 2E4.

Open to kids up to age 12. Entries for this week’s contests must be received by 12 pm next Monday in order to appear in next week’s paper. If your entry arrives late (which may happen with out-of-town entries), it will be judged along with the contestants from the following week. Please limit entries to ONE PER CHILD PER WEEK. The contests are divided into three age groups: Up to five years, Six to eight years, Nine to twelve years. Drawings for the drawing contest must be on a separate piece of paper and reproducible on a photocopier to win. (Black and white drawings on white paper are easier to reproduce.) Winners will receive their prizes by mail so be sure to include your complete address! Please note that only winning entries will be returned. WINNERS RECEIVE GIFT CERTIFICATES FOR “SECOND SHOW”.

Chris Currie-Blanchard

JULY CLEARANCE SALE CONTINUES…

Kids Consignment Clothing:

The brands you like at the prices you’ll love! 867-393-2178

Tues-Fri 12 to 6 PM • Sat & Sun 12pm - 5pm

Located in Yukon Inn Plaza

Second-Show-Kids-Consignment www.facebook.com/Second-Show-Kids-Consignment


WEDNESDAY, JULY 16, 2014

29

YUKON NEWS

WEDNESDAY UÊFRIDAY

CLASSIFIED FREE WORD ADS: wordads@yukon-news.com

DEADLINES 3 PM " 9 for Wednesday 3 PM 7 - 9 for Friday

FREE CLASSIFIED

HOUSE HUNTERS

30 Words FREE Ê{Ê ÃÃÕiÃ

$ Ê³Ê -/ « VÌÕÀiÊEÊÌiÝÌÊ Ê£ÝÎÊ>` > ÞÊÎÊ ÃÃÕiÃÊÜ Ì Ê>ÊÎÊÜii Ê«iÀ `°

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ÜÜÜ°ÞÕ iÜðV ÊUÊÓ££Ê7 `Ê-ÌÀiiÌ]Ê7 Ìi ÀÃi]Ê9/ÊÊ9£ ÊÓ {ÊUÊ* i\Ê­nÈÇ®ÊÈÈÇ ÈÓnxÊUÊ >Ý\Ê­nÈÇ®ÊÈÈn ÎÇxx For Rent ATLIN GUEST HOUSE Deluxe Lakeview Suites Sauna, Hot Tub, BBQ, Internet, Satellite TV Kayak Rentals In House Art Gallery 1-800-651-8882 Email: atlinart@yahoo.ca www.atlinguesthouse.com HOBAH APARTMENTS: Clean, spacious, walking distance downtown, security entrance, laundry room, plug-ins, rent includes heat & hot water, no pets. References required. 668-2005 SKYLINE APTS: 2-bdrm apartments, Riverdale. Parking & laundry facilities. 667-6958 WEEKEND GET AWAY Rustic Cabin-45 minutes from town Hiking Trails in the summer Skiing in the winter Includes sauna. Reasonable rates. Rent out by the week or for a weekend. 867-821-4443

Beautifully finished office space is available in the Taku Building at 309 Main Street. This historic building is the first L.E.E.D. certified green building in Yukon. It features state of the art heat and ventilation, LAN rooms, elevator, bike storage, shower, accessibility and more.

Call 867-333-0144 Available Now Newly renovated OFFICE SPACE & RETAIL SPACE Close to Library & City Hall A short walk to Main Street Phone 633-6396 2-BDRM CONDO-STYLE apt, Hillcrest, renoʼd 3-yrs ago, view, elec heat (not included), carport, 5 appliances, N/S, no dogs, responsible tenants, $1,424/mon + dd. 333-0085 OFFICE/RETAIL SPACE, downtown Ogilvie St, wheelchair access, 1,350 sqft, reasonable rent, 667-7144 OFFICE SPACE FOR RENT 2nd storey of building in Marwell. 340-sqft & 190-sqft spaces. Quiet, reasonable rent. 334-7000 or 667-2917 1-BDRM NEW apt, Riverdale, avail Aug 1, utils included, laundry facilities, N/P, no parties, responsible tenant, $1,200/mon. 668-5558

Offices in CAPITAL Hotel at 103 Main. Heat, Power, Security System included. Reasonable Rates 170-245 sq ft. Archie 668-2648 1-BDRM SUITE, Crestview, quiet location, wood heat, use of garden & sunroom, N/S, responsible tenants, $800/mon inclusive. 633-2455 1-BDRM APT, Porter Creek, newer, N/S, N/P, close to Super A, washer/dryer, no stairs, N/S, N/P, responsible tenants, avail Aug 1, $950/mon. 393-3767 aft 5 pm 3-BDRM 1-BATH top floor of log house, Annie Lake Rd, private entrance, W/D, wood heat, pet friendly, $1050/month. 334-8271 2 CABINS, solar & wood, carports, 1-bdrm greenbelt, Whitehorse, $550/mon, July 15, long term. 332-8899 or 689-2017

ROOM, RIVERDALE, $650/mon utilities incl, N/P. Rick at 332-6030 for info NEW CABIN, 600 sq ft, propane stove and fridge, wood stove for heat, currently no running water, $550/mon. 334-4473 1-BDRM BSMT suite, Porter Creek, avail July 15 or Aug 1, full bath, washer/dryer, close to bus route, N/S, N/P, $1,000/mon + plus deposit, heat & light incl. 456-7729 1-BDRM LEGAL suite, Takhini, sep ent & parking, w/d, avail July 15, N/P, N/S, $1,000/mon. 335-5898

Executive Downtown Condo FOR LEASE

3-BDRM 2-BATH upper floor of house & garage, Riverdale, very neat & clean, close to park, N/S, long term only, avail Aug. 1, $1,800/mon. 456-7397

Centrally located large downtown penthouse condo; Southfacing; 2 Bedroom, 2 Bath, Den, Office, Pantry; open Kitchen Living Dining; Fireplace; Indoor Parking. Furnished or unfurnished.

2-BDRM APT, Riverdale, resonsible tenant, N/P, no parties, big balcony, heat, lights & water incl, avail Aug. 1, $1,400/mon. 668-5558

$2300 per month unfurnished plus electric and propane. For more info contact whitehorsecondo@gmail.com

2-BDRM SPLIT level basement apt, Riverdale, lots of windows, N/S, N/P, w/d, sep ent, $1,250/mon, heat & hot water incl. Natalie or Chris 633-6331 3-BDRM 1-BATH top floor of log house, Annie Lake Rd, private entrance, W/D, wood heat, pet friendly, $1050/month. 334-8271

BACHELOR SUITE, Riverdale, newly renoʼd, walk-out basement, cooking range, w/d, microwave, fridge, N/P, N/S, no parties, $1,200 incl heat & elec. 587-438-7776 3-BDRM 1-BATH, Riverdale, N/P, N/S, dd reqʼd, avail Aug 1, $1,600/mon. Richard 336-0125 or 668-2998 2-BDRM 1-BATH bungalow house, downtown, laundry facilities, N/S, N/P, $1,500/mon + utils + $1,500 dd. 336-0125 3-BDRM + bsmt, Hillcrest, furnished, storage/gym, N/S, dog considered, refs & dd reqʼd, 9-mon lease (Sept 1), then monthly, winter wood supplied, $1,900/mon + utils. Contact Hillcrestrental_33@hotmail.com BOTTOM FLOOR of house, Mile 2 Mayo Rd by Takhini River, lg living room, 2-bdrms, kitchen & bath, N/S, $900/mon + 1/2 utils. Peter 633-5461 ROOM ON ranch close to Whitehorse, rent negotiable in exchange for helping on ranch, country living, room for your horse, own transportation reqʼd. email: raftera@northwestel.net 667-7844 3-BDRM 2-BATH house, large deck, 700 sqft per floor, oil/elec/wood heat, refs reqʼd, N/S, N/P, $1,600/mon + utils. 335-8815 2-BDRM SUITE, Riverdale, W/D, laminate floors, close to bus/grocery, N/P, N/S, $1,300/mon incl utils. 333-9948 2.5 BDRM main floor legal suite, Riverdale, stove, fridge, laundry facility hook-up, close to schools/hospital, avail Oct 1, $1,400/mon + utils (approx $290/mon) + dd of $1,450. 667-2452

2-BDRM 2-BATH energy efficient single level townhouse, 1,000 sqft, Ingram, $1,500/mon. 333-0383

SHOP DOWNTOWN, 118 Copper Road, 40X45 with top office, waste oil furnace, fenced in yard. $2,000/mon plus utils. Days 633-2043 ask for Al, after 6pm 633-6379

3-BDRM + bsmt, Hillcrest, furnished, storage/gym, N/S, dog considered, refs & dd reqʼd, 9-mon lease (Sept 1), then monthly, winter wood supplied, $1,900/mon + utils. Contact Hillcrestrental_33@hotmail.com

FULLY FURNISHED room, clean Copper Ridge home, avail Sept 17, single bed, dresser, desk, bookcases, utils, cable & wifi incl, close to grocery/bus, $600/mon. 456-7855

SHARED STUDIO type space, Porter Creek, best for office, art studio, etc, $500/mon. Call for info 335-1317 3-BDRM 1-BATH, Northland, avail Aug 1, w/d, oil/wood heat (oil dep. reqʼd) N/S, 1 pet considered, partially furnished, $1,400/mon + utils, refs reqʼd. 334-4389 SHOP/OFFICE/STUDIO Multi-Use Building with space available to rent Shop/Office/Studio Various sizes, will modify to suit Washroom on site, friendly environment whserentals@hotmail.com Phone 667-6805 3-BDRM 3-BATH condo, Copper Ridge, avail Aug 1, parking for 2 vehicles, N/S, pets negotiable, dd&refs reqʼd, great for family/shared accomd, $1,900/mon + utils. 456-4976 3-BDRM 1-BATH log home, Mt. Lorne, 35 min s. of Whitehorse, avail Sept 1/14 ʻtil June 1/16, wood/propane heat, electric, internet, water delivery, garage, N/S, N/P, $1,350/mon + utils 3-BDRM 1.5-BATH condo, Riverdale, newly renoʼd, avail Aug 1, N/P, N/S, dd & refs reqʼd, $1,450/mon + utils. 332-8686 2-BDRM CONDO-STYLE apt, Hillcrest, view, clean, 5 appliances, elec heat (not incl), carport, N/S, no dogs, responsible tenants, $1,200/mon + dd. 333-0085 3-BDRM DUPLEX, Granger, avail Aug or Sept, bright & clean, storage, large kitchen, parking, long term only, N/P, $1500/mon incl heat, 2ppl max, 334-8001 ROOM IN Ingram, N/P, no parties, utils incl, 668-2848 after 4:30 or lv msg 2-BDRM DUPLEX on greenbelt lot, Copper Ridge, 1-yr lease, refs & dd reqʼd, N/S, N/P, no parties, responsible tenants, $1,400/mon + utils. 333-9993

LARGE 12ʼX24ʼ room, Porter Creek, sep ent, shared accom, $750/mon & dd, includes heat, utils, satellite TV. 334-4568 3-BDRM 2-BATH condo, Stone Ridge Place, beautiful mountain view, avail Aug 15, all appliances, two parking stalls w/plug-ins, N/S, refs reqʼd, $1700/mon + utils. 668-7115 2-BDRM 1-BATH house, 804 Wheeler St, $1,500/mon + heat + $1,000 dd, avail Aug 15, N/S, no partying. 336-0125 or 668-2998 3-BDRM 2-BATH trailer, Crestview, new, pets ok, N/S, no parties, $1,650/mon + dd & utils. 336-2205 2-BDRM TRAILER, Kopper King, has wood stove, dd & refs reqʼd, $1,200/mon + utils. 334-7872 or 456-4885, lv msg 2 ROOMS in spacious P.C. home, shared kitchen, living room and bath, must be clean and responsible, no parties/pets. 335-3136 lv msg SMALL 3 bedroom house, Porter Creek, 1 bath, large fenced yard, pets ok, separate heated studio, storage incl, $1500/mon + heat & utils. 633-3125

HALF-ACRE PROPERTY, fenced 3 sides w/gate, no service to property but goes by property, next to Matco, currently in use collecting $500/mon, located in McCrae, $139,000. 333-0717 3-BDRM HOUSE w/2-bdrm suite, Granger, separate paved driveway & entrance, great revenue or quality family home, $385,000. 633-4778 REDUCED TO $279,000, 3-bdrm 2-bath condo, 1,742 sq ft, Porter Ridge, Porter Creek, many upgrades, built-in vac, French door fridge, double sink vanity, etc, built in 2012, one owner. 334-3978 Brand New Single Family Homes starting at $349,900. Certified Green. Show Home Open Daily 1-85 Aksala Dr. Visit www.homesbyevergreen.ca for more details or call Maggie 335-7029 OFF-GRID CABIN on 20 acres of titled land near Braeburn 1 hr from town, shops and equipment included, too much to list, beautiful views, $195,000. For more info 633-3392

Wanted to Rent

WANTED: LONG time yukoner wants to buy log house outside city limits, needs 1 acre for dogs, 2-3 bedrooms, no basement, well insulated. 334-6265

HOUSESITTER AVAILABLE Mature, responsible person Call Suat at 668-6871

WANTED: REVENUE property downtown, duplex, 4-plex, 6-plex or house. 456-3003 lv msg

ALPINE BAKERYʼS guest cook Michael Mishka is looking for a house to house-sit in a central location July 19-Aug 5 & Aug 16 to end of October, refs available. 668-6871

1974 12ʼX68ʼ Premier trailer w/8ʼx10ʼ addition, $35,000, no dogs allowed in the park, for sale only, not rental, realtor is Marj Eshack, Coldwell Banker. 335-0870

HOUSESITTER AVAILABLE year-round, professional, non-smoking, non-partying, mature female, offering unequalled care for pets, plants, yards, and house. References. Call Tracy 334-2882

ATLIN LAKE VIEW PROPERTIES FOR SALE www.lemke-realty.com Phone 250-651-2112

WANTED: LOOKING to rent an office space in downtown or industrial area Whitehorse, not bigger than 800sq. ft. 335-9934

House Hunters

2-3 BEDROOM place for retired pensioner, can afford $1,000/mon, donʼt smoke or party, am very clean. 393-2545

MODERN INGRAM DUPLEX

Real Estate 5 ATLIN lake view town lots. Prime location, Discovery Ave & 3rd St. 1 double lot incls old log house. Reduced to sell, $150,000 takes all. Email: mjbhome14@live.co.uk or John 250-676-9597 OPEN HOUSE July 26 & 27, 12-4pm, 3-bdrm 2-bath bi-level house on bigger lot in Riverdale. 335-5976 CABIN, FOX Lake water front, main bdrm main floor, large sleeping loft, solar/wind power, propane fridge, stove, Lights, partially furnished, $249,900, call 867-633-5540 2-BDRM CONDO, downtown, elevator, heat water floor heating, no shared walls, 2 units per floor, deck, wheelchair access, humidifier, intercom, fan, bsmt storage, $312,000. 250-716-6190, email hanasaly.czca@gmail.com 2-BDRM CABIN, Tagish, Sidney Str, Lot 12, blue siding, electric ready to hook up, gd location, 5 minutes to bridge for fishing, serious inquiries only. Delphine 780-926-1966 BAKERY AND lodge on 5 acres, close to Alaska border, moving out of Canada. 867-862-7047 3-BDRM 1.5-BATH condo, Riverdale, oil heating, energy-efficient, front-yard patio, large backyard patio, large detached, yard house, Theresa (807)-629-1705 TRAILER, #35 Takhini Trailer Court, on sale as is for $39,000. 334-5794

HOUSE OPEN th – 6:30 to 8:00PM 17 ay, July

Thursd

Property Guys.com

ID# 143646

$345,000 5 Goldeneye Place Whitehorse 867-667-2282 Help Wanted ROSIEʼS DAYHOME has opened for children 18 months and older 15 years experience, downtown location Low rates 633-4318 Gold Village Chinese Restaurant Looking for experienced full-time kitchen helper and server Apply with resume to 401 Craig Street, Dawson City, YT Y0B 1G0 Fax resume to: 867-993-2336


30

YUKON NEWS

dänä Näye Ventures

Part Time Administrative Assistant/Receptionist

DOWNTOWN DAYS CHILDCARE CENTRE Looking for staff with early childhood training ECD Levels II, III Wages $17 - $23 per hour depending on experience Phone 667-6776 for further details

Are you looking for a part time job exible enough to suit your day to day activities? Are you looking for an opportunity to be part of a dynamic and creative team working together to help create successful entrepreneurs in the Yukon? däna Näye Ventures is a Yukon based, Aboriginal controlled institution that encourages business development by providing developmental ďŹ nancing and business training to entrepreneurs is looking for you. General Position Description: Under the direction of the Finance Manager, the successful candidate will be responsible for providing administrative services and reception functions for the corporation. Necessary Skills and Knowledge: General knowledge of ďŹ ling practices, ofďŹ ce procedures, Microsoft OfďŹ ce and knowledge of Yukon First Nations. Compensation Type: UĂŠ Salary to be commensurate with experience UĂŠ We provide a generous beneďŹ ts package If you feel this might be the job for you please come by our ofďŹ ce and pick up a Job Description and Statement of QualiďŹ cations today. Thank you for your interest, however, only applicants selected for an interview will be contacted. Applications will be accepted up to and including July 23, 2014 Drop off, mail or fax your resume in conďŹ dence to: däna Näye Ventures 409 Black Street, Whitehorse, Yukon Y1A 2N2 Attention: Raul D. Dioquino Fax: (867) 668-3127 E-mail: rdioquino@dananaye.com

WEDNESDAY, JULY 16, 2014 FRISKY FRESH FISH is looking for young, energic, self-motivated individuals with experience in retail and food service. Positions in Whitehorse and Carcross. Please send resumes to friskyfreshfish@gmail.com

The award winning

has an exciting opportunity for a part-time data entry clerk.

Data Entry Clerk

The successful candidate will be responsible for accurate and timely data entry as well as a wide range of administrative duties. This person must be a team player with exceptional customer service skills, solid English grammar, have attention to detail and the ability to work in a fast paced deadline driven environment. Black Press is an internationally recognized newspaper/publishing group with more than 170 publications across Canada and the United States. If you possess strong time management skills, have a sharp wit, and a responsible work ethic, please submit your resume with a cover letter to: Stephanie Newsome, Operations Manager, Yukon News 211 Wood Street, Whitehorse, Yukon Y1A 2E4 Or email to stephanien@yukon-news.com NO PHONE CALLS PLEASE.

Employment Opportunity www.yukoncollege.yk.ca

Champagne and Aishihik First Nations

Short Term Workers Required

2014 General Assembly Workers CAFN Government is calling out to CAFN Citizens who are interested in submitting their names for a variety of on-going short-term work. CAFN Citizens are encouraged to submit their name into any of the various positions listed here. You will be required to submit an updated resume with copies of any and all certification where applicable. 2014 General Assembly workers will be chosen from these lists.

Cooks; Assistant Cooks

Activity Coordinators

Mandatory Certification: t 'PPE 4BGF -FWFMT * BOE ** t 7BMJE 'JSTU "JE BOE $13 t 8)*.*4

(Children & Adults) Mandatory Certification: t 7BMJE 'JSTU "JE BOE $13 $FSUJĂśDBUF

Cook’s Helpers, Bull Cooks

Some Previous Experience Required

Mandatory Certification: t 'PPE 4BGF -FWFMT * BOE ** t 8)*.*4 t 7BMJE 'JSTU "JE BOE $13 XPVME CF an asset

Cleaners; Grounds Workers;

Mandatory Certification: t 8)*.*4 t "CJMJUZ UP MJGU MCT

Minute Takers

Sound Technicians

Some Previous Experience Required

Bus Drivers

Mandatory Certification: t 7BMJE $MBTT %SJWFS T -JDFOTF t 7BMJE 'JSTU "JE $13

General Laborers

Some Previous Experience Required t "CJMJUZ UP MJGU MCT

HR Dept. will not be responsible to submit anyone’s name via a phone call or email instruction. Each applicant will be responsible to submit an updated resume and copies of all updated certificates. HR Department must ensure that all paperwork is updated and current certificates on file are current for each applicant. CAFN Citizens who do not have all the required certificates will be given the opportunity to get the required certification within six months to be eligible to have their name stand on the list. CAFN’s Human Resources Policy will apply. Application deadline: CAFN Citizens names can be added to any of the above lists at any time as long as they can verify their certification for the particular job area. SEND APPLICATIONS AND/OR RESUMES TO: Human Resource Officer, Champagne & Aishihik First Nations Fax: (867) 634-2108 | Phone: (867) 634-4244 Email: jgraham@cafn.ca

Providing leadership through our strengths in programming, services and research, Yukon College’s main campus in Whitehorse and 12 community campuses cover the territory. A small college, YC provides a stimulating and collegial environment. We work with Yukon communities, Yukon First Nations, local governments, business and industry, to promote a community of learners within a vibrant organization. Come join us as we continue to enhance the Yukon’s capacity through education and training.

Enrolment Management Advisor 2IĂ€FH RI WKH 5HJLVWUDU $\DPGLJXW :KLWHKRUVH &DPSXV Permanent Position 6DODU\ WR SHU KRXU 3DUW WLPH SRVLWLRQ KRXUV EL ZHHNO\

&RPSHWLWLRQ 1R ,QLWLDO 5HYLHZ 'DWH -XO\

If you have the talent and drive to make our students’ goals become reality, we’d like to talk with you about joining the 2IĂ€FH RI WKH 5HJLVWUDU WHDP As the Enrolment Management Advisor, you will work with enrolment initiatives, support a variety of programs and HYHQWV VXFK DV FRQYRFDWLRQ EXUVDULHV Ă€QDQFLDO DLG DQG awards programs and advise current and/or potential VWXGHQWV :RUNLQJ FORVHO\ ZLWK WKH (QUROPHQW 6HUYLFHV 2IĂ€FHU you will be providing career education and program support to students and advancing the goals of the Yukon College Strategic Enrolment Management Committee. The successful candidate will have a relevant Bachelor’s GHJUHH LQ D UHODWHG Ă€HOG 0DVWHU¡V GHJUHH SUHIHUUHG ZLWK practical work experience coordinating and organizing events and/or programs, chairing committees, and working with student enrolment management initiatives. You will be a skilled public speaker, have strong organizational and leadership skills, and an understanding of Canadian postsecondary education systems. Please forward your resume to: +XPDQ 5HVRXUFH 6HUYLFHV Yukon College Box 2799 Whitehorse, Yukon Y1A 5K4 )D[ e-mail: hr@yukoncollege.yk.ca Go to: http://yukoncollege.yk.ca/about/employment for more information on all job competitions. Quoting the competition number, please submit your resume and cover letter to: Yukon College, Human Resources Services, Box 2799, 500 College Drive, Whitehorse, Yukon, Y1A 5K4 Fax: 867-668-8896 Email: hr@yukoncollege.yk.ca

DON'T JUST Visit! Live It! Australia & New Zealand dairy, crop, sheep & beef farm work available for young adults 18-30. Apply now for fall AgriVenture programs. 1-888-598-4415. www.agriventure.com. SEEKING MEDICAL TRANSCRIPTIONISTS TO WORK FROM HOME! We are currently recruiting experienced MTs to work from home. CanScribe graduates preferred. Positions available immediately. Email: mt.recruiter@yahoo.ca. EMPLOYERS SEEKING CANSCRIBE MEDICAL TRANSCRIPTION GRADUATES. We can't meet the demand! Medical Transcription is a great work-from-home career! Contact us today at www.canscribe.com. 1.800.466.1535 info@canscribe.com. MEDICAL TRANSCRIPTION is an in-demand career in Canada! Employers have work-at-home positions available. Get the online training you need from an employer-trusted program. Visit: CareerStep.ca/MT to start training for your work-at-home career today! EXPERIENCED PARTS PERSON required for a progressive auto/industrial supplier. Hired applicant will receive top wages, full benefits and RRSP bonuses working 5 day work week, plus moving allowances. Our 26,000ft2 store is located 2.5 hours N.E. of Edmonton, Alberta. See our community at LacLaBicheRegion.com. Send resume to: Sapphire Auto, Box 306, Lac La Biche, AB, T0A 2C0. Email: hr@sapphireinc.net. SALMON ARM Home Building Centre in beautiful Salmon Arm BC has an immediate opening for experienced Cabinet and Flooring Sales Professional. Looking for a highly motivated, customer service driven, possessing a high degree of knowledge in all aspects of flooring and cabinet sales. Competitive Wage and Benefit package offered. Send resume: david.kroeker@hbcsalmonarm.ca OFFICE ADMINISTRATOR NEEDED Experience in AP/AR an asset Full time Email resume to: lechefmichel@yahoo.com WANTED Welders, labourers and those familiar with steel work for tank projects in NWT and Nunavut 3-4 weeks in, one week out Must not be afraid of heights Criminal Record check required, however a criminal record does not eliminate you as a Candidate. Must be in good shape, pass a medical. Above costs paid for. Fax Resume to: (780) 449-0001

DOOR PERSONNEL Drop rĂŠsumĂŠ off at

The Town & Mountain Hotel 401 MAIN STREET Whitehorse, Yukon info@townmountain.com

Miscellaneous for Sale GENERATOR, 334-6043

2000 watts, $800 obo.

ANTIQUE/VINTAGE STEREO cabinet/record player, Zenith floor model, flips over for compact storage, 333-9020 MANFROTTO VIDEO Head and Tripod: Manfrotto Video Head (504HD) with 3-section Carbon Fiber Tripod (MPRO 535) and nylon carry case (MBAG100PN). Like-new condition. $900. 667-6472 BETTER BID NORTH AUCTIONS Foreclosure, bankruptcy De-junking, down-sizing Estate sales. Specializing in estate clean-up & buy-outs. The best way to deal with your concerns. Free, no obligation consultation. 333-0717 We will pay CASH for anything of value Tools, electronics, gold & jewelry, cameras, furniture, antiques, artwork, chainsaws, camping & outdoor gear, hunting & fishing supplies, vehicles & ATVs. G&R Pawnbrokers 1612-D Centennial St. 393-2274 BUY • SELL • LOANS


WEDNESDAY, JULY 16, 2014

31

YUKON NEWS

STERLING SILVER collector spoons in display cabinets, 333-9020 BASIC OLDER cash register, $150. 667-7144 WINDOOR RECYCLER We buy & sell new & used triple/double/single windows. We have wooden, vinyl and metal windows available. Check out our selection of brand new exterior doors/frames as well as vinyl windows. Cheapest in town. 333-0717 TORIN FLOOR jack, 2 1/2 ton, new cond, $40. 334-8318 MENĘźS VASQUE hiking boots, size 10.5 or 11, 667-7144 LARGE 667-7144

O U T D O O R air conditioner,

ISI CLASSIC Glass Mesh Soda Siphon, new, incl 11 Co2 cartridges, $65, call 867-863-5404 CAN THE FELLOW who has my 6 John Lyons VHS videos come forward and call me. I have lost your number. Call Deb at 333-0744 JACK LALAINE power juicer elite mod #MT-1066, good cond, $50. 633-2106 after 5pm 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

Job Opportunity Job Posting: WH-2014-06-27 Job Title: Business Development Manager

Calling all

Position Type: Full Time Description: Named one of Canada’s Best Managed Companies for 8 years in a row, DRIVING FORCE Vehicle Rentals, Sales and Leasing requires a customer oriented individual to join our Business Development Team to focus on the Yukon/ NWT region. Reporting to the Executive Manager, the successful candidate will work with integrity and respect to exceed our customer’s expectations. Duties will include but are not limited to: ‡ 3URVSHFWLQJ QHWZRUNLQJ DQG JHQHUDWLQJ QHZ EXVLQHVV IRU '5,9,1* )25&( Vehicle Rentals, Sales and Leasing and Klondike Motors Inc., a General Motors dealership. ‡ 1HWZRUN ZLWK FXUUHQW FXVWRPHU EDVH WR PDLQWDLQ DQG LQFUHDVH EXVLQHVV and referrals ‡ &UHDWH VKRUW WHUP DQG ORQJ WHUP IRUHFDVWV JRDOV DQG REMHFWLYHV ‡ $VVLVW EXVLQHVV GHYHORSPHQW WHDP LQ RYHUDOO HIIRUW RI LQFUHDVHG VDOHV 4XDOL¿FDWLRQV ‡ 0LQLPXP RI \HDUV EXVLQHVV PDQDJHPHQW H[SHULHQFH DXWRPRWLYH H[SHULHQFH DQ DVVHW ‡ $ UHSXWDWLRQ IRU GHOLYHULQJ YDOXH E\ FRQVLVWHQWO\ H[FHHGLQJ FXVWRPHUVœ H[SHFWDWLRQV Please forward a letter of interest and resume to:

GYPSY WAGON on 16Ęź flat trailer, unfinished, with Dutch door and screen door. 456-4755

Human Resources 6XLWH $ $YHQXH (GPRQWRQ $% 7 6 0 )D[ ( PDLO KU#GULYLQJIRUFH FD )D[ ( PDLO KU#GULYLQJIRUFH FD

SZ 20P pants, 17 pairs of pants, dress, capri, shorts & yoga pants, exc cond, $100 firm. 668-5154

Enthusiasts!

Be part of building British Columbia & Alberta’s landmark projects!

Come grow with us!

Our Residential & City infrastructure could not be built without YOU!

Check us out: www.lmsgroup.ca and Facebook Contact us with your interest/resume:

careers@lmsgroup.ca OR Fax: 604.572.6139 Quote: “LMS-July2014� in the subject line.

We thank all applicants for their interest, however only those who clearly outline the application requirements above will be contacted toward future screening.

EARLIER MODEL car kits, $10 ea, 5 for $40. 667-7144 ITALERI 667-7144

REINFORCING STEEL OR POST TENSIONING INSTALLER

3-AXLE canvas trailer, $25.

GARRET ELECTRONICS, 4-coil metal locator w/case, exc shape, $600. 332-6565 MCPHAR MOD. TV-A1 spectrometer w/case, exc shape, cost over $6,000, offers. 332-6565 SPILSBURY TINDALL SBX-11 2-way radio w/antenna, $500. 332-6565 ANTIQUE TREADLE sewing machine, $425 obo. 668-4240

ACTIVE IN YOUR COMMUNITY

Are you looking for volunteer opportunities? Please check www.volunteeryukon.ca to find more volunteer opportunities.

THE 2014 MOOSEHIDE GATHERING JULY 24-27 NEEDS YOU!

FREE BBQ to give away. works, has side burner, lots of cooking surface, 334-2693 PLAY STATION 2 with 10 games, $50. 633-4827 TROYBUILT RIDE-ON lawn mower, c/w triple bagger, 54" cut, 26hp, exc cond, $1,000. 633-6920 MODEL TRAIN track, accessories, etc. 667-7144 AIR NORTH shares, 668-2972 BUTTON MAKING Kit (PIN Back), $20. 335-7711 80 WATT Sharp solar panels, 7 years old, very good shape, amperage rating 4.63 amps (max). $200 ea or $350 for 2. Randy @ 867-399-4478 (Tagish) RIDGID 918 Hydraulic Roll Groover c/w 2"-12" rollers, like new, $1,800 obo. 667-7844 or raftera@northwestel.net for info/pics MEAT GRINDER, 1/2hp, c/w various dies and sausage stuffer, like new, $800 obo, 667-7844 or email raftera@northwestel.net 2-PC RAIN suit by Columbia, youth size L, exc shape, dark blue, $30. 456-7880 CANNING JARS, assorted sizes, baker's rack & assorted kitchen/household items. 456-7880 after 6:30 HANDI-CAP SCOOTER, Dawson City, Invicare Meteor, 440lb capacity, 4-wheel, in exc shape, $1400 obo, call George @ 334-3555 in Whse CHIMNEY PIECE, two 3ʟ sections & rain cap, 6� inside diameter, $50 ea obo. 456-4926 MENʟS BLACK leather jacket, size L, $60. 633-5324 HOUSEHOLD W I R E , 3-conductor, 14-gauge, min 75ʟ (probably more), call after 5pm. 633-2106 FLOOR DRILL press, $75; steel scrap pieces & tubing. 668-6931 10' AND 12' new heavy duty butterfly valves for pipe or hose, suction hose to fit also available. 333-0192 THULE QUEST, soft-sided cargo carrier, $40. 456-7758 20ʟ SEA-CAN, $3,500 obo. 335-2648

Please visit www.trondek.ca for the Moosehide Gathering Service Roles that are available. t Set up/take down t Info Booth t Merchandise t Dock Hand t Concession t Kids Tent t And Many More! This volunteer opportunity is open to anyone who is interested. Moosehide Gathering couldn’t happen without the help of volunteers! DO YOU NEED COMMUNITY VOLUNTEER HOURS FOR YOUR SCHOOL OR OTHER REASONS? Sign up today! Email: hrjobs@trondek.ca www.trondek.ca Or drop by TH HR Department *** The Moosehide Gathering Cultural Society and the Tr’ondÍk HwÍch’in are pleased to invite you to the 12th biennale Moosehide Gathering, taking place July 24th-27th. We hope you’ll be able to join us. The Moosehide Gathering is a unique experience. It is a celebration of our culture, with storytelling, dancing, drumming, singing, traditional art and crafts, and feasting. Performances range from larger concerts to intimate workshops. You will also have the opportunity to personally engage with locals, friends and visitors. Camping will be available at Moosehide Village, offering the opportunity to stay and hospitable atmosphere. You work for a non-profit organization and you would like to add your volunteer opportunities? Please click on http://www.volunteeryukon.ca/.

EMPLOYMENT OPPORTUNITY

Accounts Payable Clerk Finance & Administration Department Permanent Full-Time Salary range: $49,339-59,204 QualiďŹ cations: Grade 12 supplemented with courses in accounting and accounting software. Courses or several years experience with software programs; ACCPAC (accounts payable & general ledger), Word, Excel, Easy Pay. Knowledge of generally accepted accounting principles. Good knowledge of accounting practices, principles and standards. Ability to deal effectively with people, be able to assume responsibility and meet deadlines. Duties: s 0ROCESS INVOICES FOR PAYMENT BY MATCHING PURCHASE ORDERS with invoices, ensures approvals and extensions are correct and that policies of the Council are being adhered to. s 2ESPONSIBLE FOR ENSURING CHEQUE RUNS ARE DONE ON A TIMELY AND consistent basis while ensuring the accuracy of batch totals and the accuracy of output. s 2ESPONSIBLE FOR ACCOUNTS RECEIVABLE BY ENSURING TIMELY INVOICES are issued and updating accounts receivable system when payment is received. s 2ESPONSIBLE FOR MEMBERS RECEIVABLE BY KEEPING SYSTEM updated when payments are issued and received. Ensure payments are received regularly and notifying the Director of &INANCE WHEN AN ACCOUNT REQUIRES ACTION s 4O MAINTAIN THE ACCOUNTS PAYABLE AND RECEIVABLE !##0!# systems. s !SSIST 2EVENUE #ANADA WITH INVOICES REGARDING '34 REBATE s -AINTAINS VENDOR lLES ENSURING APPROVALS AND CODING ARE correct. s /THER RELATED DUTIES INCLUDE ASSISTANCE IN RECONCILING ELDERS BANK STATEMENT WHEN REQUESTED lLLING IN FOR lNANCE STAFF WHEN REQUESTED ANSWERING INQUIRIES FROM THE GENERAL PUBLIC AND ASSISTING IN ANNUAL AUDIT PREPARATION AND OTHER lNANCIAL functions as needed. s %NSURING SAVINGS TO THE EXTENT POSSIBLE THROUGH PROMPT payments, thereby preventing having to pay interest on late payments. LSCFN preferential hire will apply. If you are interested, please submit your expression of interest ALONG WITH YOUR RESUME BY 0 - *ULY TO $ORIS #AOUETTE (UMAN 2ESOURCE /FlCER 0/ "OX #ARMACKS 9 4 9 " # Phone: (867)863-5576 ext 280 Fax: (867)863-5710 Email: resume@lscfn.ca While LSCFN thank all applicants, only those candidates selected for an interview will be contacted. )F YOU REQUIRE A JOB DESCRIPTION PLEASE FEEL FREE TO CONTACT US

Community Services


32

YUKON NEWS

TREADMILL, GREAT condition, selling due to lack of space, $200 obo. 335-6343

FULL SIZE pick-up truck boat rack, good cond, $400. 336-0667

SKID SHACKS, 10' x 20', new, finished but no wiring and finishing plumbing, Arctic insulation. 333-0192

ROLLAWAY COT, $40, 5-shelf bookcase 12�deepX23�wideX72�high, $40, Kenmore white microwave, $15. 668-6079 or 336-1763

MOVING OUT sale, apt-size freezer, large red oak dining table, complete computer setup, 6' glass display case, many other items. 393-2545

YUKON MAGNUM bear spray, purchased mid-May, not needed, expires May 2017, cost $42, asking $30. 332-1680 lv msg

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3FRVJSFNFOUT Â… .VTU CF B DFSUJGJFE $(" NFNCFS OP TUVEFOUT QMFBTF XJUI QSPGJDJFODZ JO GVOE BDDPVOUJOH 4JNQMZ "DDPVOUJOH "%1 PS 1BZ BU XPSL Â… .VTU IBWF FYDFMMFOU JOUFSQFSTPOBM TLJMMT BOE QBSUJDJQBUF JO B UFBN FOWJSPONFOU PO FNFSHJOH JTTVFT 2VBMJGJDBUJPOT Â… 6OJWFSTJUZ EFHSFF JO JO "DDPVOUJOH PS 'JOBODF XJUI B $." PS $(" EFTJHOBUJPO Â… ZFBSTÂľ FYQFSJFODF JO B TFOJPS MFWFM GJOBODF PS BDDPVOUJOH QPTJUJPO Â… 4USBUFHJD QMBOOJOH FYQFSJFODF LOPXMFEHF PG DPOUSBDUJOH BOE OFHPUJBUJOH Â… "CJMJUZ UP XPSL FGGFDUJWFMZ XJUI BVUPNBUFE GJOBODJBM BOE BDDPVOUJOH TZTUFNT BOE QSPHSBNT 4JNQMZ &YDFM Â… &YQFSJFODF JO CVEHFUJOH JOUFSOBM DPOUSPMT BOE BTTFU DIBOHF NBOBHFNFOU Â… ,OPXMFEHF BOE NBOBHFNFOU PG 'FEFSBM BOE 5FSSJUPSJBM GJOBODJBM SFHVMBUJPOT BOE FYQFSJFODF JO NBOBHJOH DPOUSJCVUJPO BHSFFNFOU SFRVJSFNFOUT $POEJUJPOT PG &NQMPZNFOU $SJNJOBM 3FDPSET $IFDL 7BMJE :VLPO %SJWFSÂľT -JDFOTF BCTUSBDU SFRVJSFE

1MFBTF TVCNJU BMM SFTVNFT GPS UIJT QPTJUJPO UP GJOBODFPGGJDFS!LMVBOFDPSQ DB " GVMM KPC EFTDSJQUJPO XJMM CF TFOU UP UIPTF XIP BQQMZ

WEDNESDAY, JULY 16, 2014

JACKETS, GORETEX, special government army material, green camouflage new, original cost $750, only two med size left, $395 ea. For info 250-651-7650 NEOPRENE FARMER John wetsuits, menĘźs M/L $40 ea, Klondike: A Photographic Essay, Pierre Berton hardcover, $30, Bissell steam cleaner, $20, cast iron dutch oven, $30. 336-0534 2 X waterproof Pelican 1600 cases, $150 ea, 1 x waterproof Pelican case $125, both w/foam dividers, as new, no shipping. 867-863-5404 METAL DESK c/w office chair, $50. 633-2837 WALKER WITH storage seat, new cond, $50 firm. 334-4299

ALUMINUM FLOATS, will make barge or dock, complete with frame, new. 333-0192 NEW BLAZE King stove, twin beds, view at garage sale 59 Army Beach July 19, 9am to 3pm. 660-5152 FENCE POSTS, 4 bundles, 60 posts per bundle, 8ʟ x 5-6� treated blunt fence posts, $1,750 for all. 335-2648 MOVING OUT: large wooden trunk with lock, good for storage, $60 obo; solid wood shelf, very nice, $60 obo. 393-3113 INDUSTRIAL REBAR, 30 pieces 1/2�, 40ʟ length, 20 pieces 1/2�, 12ʟ length, 5 pieces 3/4'�, 60ʟ length, numerous 1/2� angle pieces, $1,000 takes all obo. 335-2648

55 JEWELRY boxes for pendants/other pieces, 1 ionizer jewelry cleaner w/ cleaning solution professional model, 10 necklace display stand, clearance price. 334-4299

20'X45' DOUBLE wide mobile home, 1975-1980 model, needs renovation, appliances, forced air oil furnace/wood stove back up, is already disassembled & ready for transport, $12,000 obo. 335-1088

UNFINISHED MAPLE door, new, 1 3/4� door 32" x 80" with window 24"x30" and fire rated door frame, new, $200 obo. 335-2648

CEDAR DECKING, 1000 sq ft of 1x6 radius edge decking, random lengths from 16'-5' pieces, 270 boards in lift, $1,200. 335-1088

THE CANDIDATE The ideal candidate will hold a degree in either Finance or Business Administration or a professional accounting designation with at least seven years relevant work experience at a senior management level. Substantial knowledge (both in depth and broad) of accounting practices in both the public and private sectors is required as well as several years experience in a supervisory role. Strong interpersonal, mediation, analytical and written communications skills are a must. Knowledge of Yukon First Nations and their government systems is an asset. A DETAILED JOB DESCRIPTION IS AVAILABLE @

http://www.vgfn.ca/employment.php PAY RANGE $88,133 - $114,573 plus an excellent beneďŹ ts package. CLOSING DATE July 31, 2014 PLEASE FORWARD YOUR RESUMES TO: Brenda Frost, Manager, Human Resources P.O Box 94, Old Crow, Y.T. Y0B 1N0 Ph: (867) 966-3261 ext. 256 Fax: (867) 966-3800 Email: hrd@vgfn.net

MOBILE CART for disabled person, repaired from top to bottom, new tires, $2,500 obo. 334-6043

Electrical Appliances CROSLEY ELECTRIC clothes dryer, works great, $100. 335-7711 SAMSUNG HIGH efficiency top load 5.2 cu.ft washer, 7.4 cu.ft dryer, both have 5-yr extended warranty, bought in May for $1,598, selling for $1,298. 633-2448 KITCHEN STOVE, working cond, 4 burners & oven, $50 obo. 633-2106 after 5pm FREEZER, MEDIUM size, $100. 335-6042 lv msg

Full-time

TVs & Stereos

Please apply in person with resume to

Paying cash for good quality modern electronics. G&R Pawnbrokers 1612-D Centennial St. 393-2274 BUY • SELL • LOANS

Receiver 207 Main Street

MRX 500 JBL speakers, 800 watts, total rms, $600. 667-7055 2 BELL satellite receivers w/remotes, good cond, $60. 334-8318 42� FLAT screen TV, $400, tall corner unit entertainment centre, $100. 633-4707

is looking for a

RECEIVER

FOR A 3-MONTH TERM POSITION. Bring resume or letter of interest w/references to Manager at Mac’s Fireweed Books 203 Main Street. Offering competitive wage based on retail experience.

20� TV with DVD, like new, 334-9593 WOODEN TV stand with shelves, $20. 633-4827 32� TUBE TV, exc cond, $25. 633-4827 FREE TV stand, measuring 48" H, 49" W, 17" deep, pick-up only. 335-2223

Computers & Accessories LEXAR PRO Compact Flash Reader ExpressCard PCLe Interface, $35. 667-6472 SONNET TEMPO SATA PRO, 2 port expresscard/34 expansion card, $35. 667-6472

Musical Instruments

An Experience in Canada’s True North

THE JOB Reporting to the Chief/Deputy Chief, this position is responsible for the administration of the consolidated revenue fund, the integrity of the ďŹ nancial reporting system of Vuntut Gwitchin Government and ensuring that the Vuntut Gwitchin First Nation operates within the approved annual budget. This position oversees development and implementation of ďŹ nancial internal control policies and procedures to ensure Vuntut Gwitchin First Nation assets are safeguarded and provides support to departments in managing budgets. This position also serves as a member of the Management Committee and the senior management team.

ALL-IN-ONE PRESSURE washer, hot/cold, trailer, Hotsy Trail Blazer, 200 gal. water tank, 2 high pressure reels/wands, 50 hrs on machine, priced to sell. 336-0995

DRYER, HARDLY used, exc working cond, $200. 335-6042 lv msg

Champagne and Aishihik First Nations

DIRECTOR OF FINANCE

KITCHEN CABINETS and counters, great for cabin or shop, pick up this week, $500. 334-3668

Murdoch’s is seeking a

VUNTUT GWITCHIN FIRST NATION Old Crow, Yukon

EMPLOYMENT OPPORTUNITY

IF YOU purchased a Yamaha Keyboard on July 5 garage sale on Tatchun Rd you forgot the foot pedal. Will leave in mailbox.

Accounts Payable Clerk Regular Full Time Employment | Salary: $48,617.15 - $56,875.19 Location: Haines Junction The Accounts Payable (A/P) Clerk is directly responsible for performing data entry and related duties in disbursing non-payroll accounts payable to individuals, suppliers, corporations, and other entities. This includes maintaining ledgers, credit balances, and account irregularities. The A/P Clerk will also ensure the timely and accurate processing of payment documents such as purchase orders, travel reimbursements, stipends, and any other accounting transactions related to A/P management. This position involves diplomatic interaction to provide billing information and support in order to facilitate daily bank reconciliations. Performs other duties as required. Education and Experience: Successful completion of High School – Grade 12; with successful completion of post-secondary course work in accounting, word processing and computerized accounting programs such as ACCPAC Accounts Payable, Receivables, Payroll, General Ledger and Excel or an equivalent combination of training and work experience. CAFN’s Human Resources Policy will apply. For complete job description please check the CAFN website at http://www.cafn.ca/jobs.html or contact below. We thank all those who apply but only those selected for further consideration will be contacted. Application deadline: 4:30 p.m. on July 21, 2014 SEND APPLICATIONS AND/OR RESUMES TO: Human Resource Officer, Champagne & Aishihik First Nations Fax: (867) 634-2108 | Phone: (867) 634-4244 Email: jgraham@cafn.ca

We will buy your musical instrument or lend you money against it. G&R Pawnbrokers 1612-D Centennial St. 393-2274 BUY • SELL • LOANS PIANO TUNING & REPAIR by certified piano technician Call Barry Kitchen @ 633-5191 email:bfkitchen@hotmail.com KAWAI PIANO, black, made in Japan in the 1970s, bargain price, height 52"/131cm, width 59"/150cm, depth 26"/66cmm, $1,600. 336-2502 RED FENDER Squire Strat, solid body, pristine condition, don't use it enough, beautiful sound, great guitar, $150. 867-634-2350 BEAUTIFUL 5-STRING right-handed banjo, strummed a handful of times, great cond, $400, obo, 334-4092 for details WANTED: 335-8091

BEGINNER acoustic guitar.

HALF-SIZE GUITAR in case, like new, $120. 335-8091 3 GUITARS, banjo, fiddle, electric bass, Dobro, 668-1224 anytime for info GEIMENHARDT FLUTE, exc cond, used 4-5 times, $500. 332-1086

Firewood EVF FUELWOOD ENT Year Round Delivery • Dry accurate cords • Clean shavings available • VISA/M.C. accepted Member of Yukon Wood Producers Association Costs will rise. ORDER NOW 456-7432 FIREWOOD FOR SALE Beetle killed Approximately 20-cord logging truck loads $150 per cord Delivered to Whitehorse Call Clayton @ 867-335-0894 LOOKING FOR 3-yr seasoned firewood, willing to purchase, call David 332-8327


WEDNESDAY, JULY 16, 2014

HURLBURT ENTERPRISES INC.

Cars

Store (867) 633-3276 Dev (867) 335-5192 Carl (867) 334-3782

✔ Beetle-killed spruce from Haines Junction, quality guaranteed ✔ Everything over 8" split ✔ $250 per cord (2 cords or more) ✔ Single and emergency half cord deliveries ✔ You-cut and you-haul available ✔ Scheduled or next day delivery

Cheque, Cash S.A. vouchers accepted.

DRY STANDING PINE For sale 668-3534

Guns & Bows Case cutlery, high quality hand-crafted pocket and hunting knives available at G&R Pawnbrokers 1612-D Centennial St. 393-2274 BUY • SELL • LOANS BRAZILIAN MAUSER in 8mm Mauser, nice hand made hardwood stock, bedded and floated, recent refinish of whole rifle, sights & rings, $300 firm, PAL req'd, 667-2276 LEE ENFIELD No. 1 Mk III, 303 British, sporterized, very nice bluing, good bore, scope rail instead of rear sight, 10 rd mag, $300 firm. PAL reqʟd. 667-2276 Bowtech Compound Bows for sale. New with warranty, free set up and tuning. Carbon Arrows from $75 a doz. Montec BHʟs $35. Will ship. martin@swampdonkeyoutdoors.ca Martin Tinney Ph: 780-720-8357 http://www.swampdonkeyoutdoors.ca RUGER MINI 14 223 target matte stainless 22� heavy barrel, 3 mags, scope, exc cond, 2 boxes ammo, $750. 333-0087 WANTED: IMR 4831 & IMR 3031. 633-3738 LEE ENFIELD shtle III, 303 British, sporterized wood, very good bore/metal finish, 10 rd mag, sights & scope rings installed, $300 firm, PAL reqʟd. 667-2276 BERETTA 90TWO .40 S&W, excellent condition, c/w case & 2 magazines, c/w 700 rds. 536-2856 BELGIUM BROWNING 30.06 in Safari grade, premium rifle in exc cond, email for pics jim.bowie57@gmail.com, $900. 334-4067

Wanted WANTED: IF you have any wild meat or fish in your freezer I will take it off your hands, even dog food type, Josef 335-2300 WANTED: CARING individuals who would like to join our team of volunteers, training will be provided. Contact Cst. Philip Whiles at Philip.Whiles@rcmp-grc.gc.ca for more info WANTED: SOMEONE to teach me Quick Books, call Pret 335-6959 LOOKING FOR one or two tickets for the Atlin Music Festival. Please call 334-2994 and make us happy WANTED: USED lawn tractor for a very rough yard so needs to be cheap but working. 867-634-2082 or 867-333-0636 WANTED: USED wall panelling, 4ĘźX8Ęź, even damaged. 633-2837 SUMMER CLEAN up? Wanted cars, trucks, dirtbikes, quads, sleds, boats etc in need of repair or rebuild for free or cheap. 334-6776

2012 NISSAN Versa, black, 6-spd manual, 13,000kms, DC sports intake and exhaust, HID headlights, summer/winter tires on rims, $14,900. 335-7878 2010 HYUNDAI Genesis Coupe 2.0T premium package, 55,000km auto w/sport shift, extended warranty to October 2016, all the options, winter/summer tires, $16,500. 633-5635 2009 PONTIAC G5, FWD, manual, Pioneer 7 speaker sound system with sub, fully transferable extended warranty, 69,000 km, $8,900. 334-1842 or 334-1488 2008 CHRYSLER 300 touring model, silver, c/w sunroof & 2 sets of tires, very well maintained, 53,000kms. Price reduced to $9,500. 333-9966 2008 TOYOTA Corolla, red, exc cond, 93,500 km, c/w 4 winter tires on rims, clean/well cared for, $10,000. 336-2694 2007 HONDA Civic, 2 sets tires/rims, remote start, manual 5-spd, clear windshield, new battery, maintenance records, detailed. 78,000 kms. 335-2648 2007 PONTIAC G5, red w/black&grey interior, 67,000kms, mint, $6,500. 667-6185

2007 PONTIAC Torrent, awd, leather heated power seats, sunroof, command start, new windshield, 149,000kms, $11,000 obo. 334-3153 2007 SUBARU Impreza Special Edition, 5-spd, 145,000 km, heated seats, 6-CD changer, summer/winter tires on alloys, sun roof, leather steering wheel/shifter, temp display, fog lights, hitch, $12,000. 335-1426 2006 CHRYSLER Sebring, auto, P/L, P/W, keyless entry, cruise control, A/C, blue, exc cond, $5,700 obo. 667-7733 or jenskel@hotmail.com 2006 FORD Mustang 3.8L, V6, burgundy, exc cond, 74,000kms, $6,500 obo. Ken 668-7366 2006 HYUNDAI Elantra, exc cond, 4-dr sedan, keyless entry, power windows, cruise control, $4,500 obo. 667-7733 2005 CHRYSLER Sebring convertible, 4-cyl, 75,000 mi, P/S, PDL, P/W, $7,250. 668-6961 or 332-8918 2004 TOYOTA Matrix XR 5-spd manual w/ sunroof, good cond, must sell. $5,700 obo. 333-0069 2003 BMW X5 4.4I, good running cond, 667-4905 2003 GRAND Am, 150,000kms, rear spoiler, stick shift, fog lights, air, cruise control, great looking, exc cond, $4,900, 332-7054 or 667-7733 2003 HONDA Civic Coupe SI, 181,000kms, Runs perfectly, sunroof, power locks/windows, A/C, cruise control, lowered a bit, magna flow exhaust, cold air intake, $3,800 firm. 334-2356

WANTED: FRONT pull-out cupholder for Grand Caravan. 668-6481

2 1992 Buick Roadmasters, great shape, $6,000 for both. 633-4799

WANTED: WOMENĘźS cruiser/comfort bike & womenĘźs mountain bike. 660-4321

2002 CAMARO 35th Anniversary Edition, exc shape, like new, only 4,500 km, $19,000. 335-4769

WANTED: MOUNTAIN bike, if it needs work thatĘźs okay, 633-2837 WANTED: ROUND antique dining room table. 334-1840

1997 LINCOLN Mark VIII, silver grey, 183,000kms, good cond, c/w extra set of tires, $5,200 obo. 668-4679

2006 F350 XLT 6.0L diesel 4x4, auto, tow pkg 5th wheel hitch, hidden hitch, 147,000 kms, $17,000. 689-4590

1996 DODGE Caravan 155,893kms, blue, $1,300 obo. 336-1493 after 3:00

2006 NISSAN Titan SE 4x4, 192,000kms, new exhaust/air intake, recently serviced, needs new tailgate handle, $9,000 obo. 334-7013

1986 BUICK Park Avenue, V6, 3.8L, exc cond, 170,000 km, burgundy colour, power windows, seats, mirrors, loaded, $3,000. 335-7711 1986 TOYOTA Tercel, manual, needs new battery, $200 obo. 333-9132 1978 GRAND Marquis, all original, body in prime shape, interior in good shape, drive train in good shape, great classic and driver. 668-3229 1978 NOVA factory 4-spd, project car, $1,500. 633-4799 1972 DODGE Challenger Rallye Coupe, numbers matching car, 340 4-barrel, 4-spd posi, numerous new parts installed plus additional spare parts, $15,800. 334-5578 1971 VW Beetle, new tires, sunroof, good condition, recent tune up, $4,500 obo. 335-5166 1965 OLDSMOBILE Starfire convertible, 867-821-3004 1961 CADILLAC Coupe De Ville 2-dr hardtop 48,000 mi, $2,000 obo. Days 633-2043, ask for Al, after 6pm 633-6379 WANTED: 2002-2005 Pontiac Sunfire or Cavalier, low kms, auto. 393-1992 WANTED: ORIGINAL mustang hubcaps, good condition, text or call 250-240-1692

2007 PONTIAC Grand Prix, silver, loaded, second set of tires, 90,000kms, $6,500 obo. 668-6961 or 332-8918

2003 TOYOTA Solara, heated leather seats, remote start, original owner, exc cond, 205,000kms, $7,995 obo. 393-2926 or 336-1754

COMPANION, MALE or female, to share suitable accomodations with senior gentleman. Call Al @ 668-4380 or email eglguy@hotmail.com

2008 HONDA Pilot SUV, V6, auto, P/W, P/S, cruise control, A/C, alloy rims, cloth seats, CD/radio, seats 8, 3rd row seating, winterized, no accidents, Honda serviced regularly, $16,500. 334-3352

1990 CHEVY Sprint, running, motor needs work, auto, 4-dr, good tires, low mileage, some new parts & other parts, 456-7868

WANTED: HOUSESITTER from September 6 to December 1, N/P, N/S, must provide references. 633-6771

COMPANION, MALE or female, to share suitable accomodations with senior gentleman. Call Al @ 668-4380 or email eglguy@hotmail.com

1998 INFINITI QX-4 SUV 4X4, loaded, heated leather seats, 6 speaker Bose stereo, towing package, sun roof, roof rack, running boards, 250,000 km, was $7,995 now $3,595, no GST. 633-6720

1995 D O D G E Neon, automatic, 168,000kms, $1,700 obo. 667-7057

2012 HONDA Civic EX, auto, blue w/grey interior, sunroof, low km, city & highway driven, interior in great shape, c/w winter & summer tires, $19,000. 334-5713

MasterCard

33

YUKON NEWS

2001 TOYOTA Sienna XLE, great cond, only 153,604 kms, $6,500 obo. 633-3757 2000 VW Golf TDI, 238,000kms, c/w spare set of tires, $4,000 obo. 334-8249 1999 MERCEDES Benz ML 320 SUV, grey, 4-dr, exc cond, 226,000 km, $10,900. 250-651-7650 1999 SUBARU Outback, 276,000 km, great shape, includes winter tires on rims, roof rack, cargo divider, $4,400 obo. 689-7888

✔ ! ! ✔ " " $ ✔ $ # ! ✔ ! % ✔ $ ✔ & ✔ ✔ "

2005 DODGE 3500 diesel, too much info to list. 334-1965 2005 F-350 4x4 crew cab diesel, short box, good cond, lots of upgrades, $12,000. 334-7373 2005 F150 Super Crew, loaded, leather int, FX4, sun roof, 135,000kms, black, $13,800. 334-3160 or 633-3116 2005 T O Y O T A Sienna awd van, 139,000kms, can be viewed behind T&M, $11,000. 668-7644 2003 JEEP Liberty Sport, 4-cyl, 5-spd 4x4, 110,000kms, new windshield, block heater, oil pan heater, battery warmer, nice vehicle, $6,500. 668-7976 2002 DODGE Caravan, V6, 178,000km, white, dual automatic sliding doors, great shape, no damage, winter tires, $2.950 obo. 668-6491 2002 FORD Crew Cab, 7.3 diesel, auto, all power, good shape, $6,500. 334-1935 2001 CHEVROLET Silverado 2500 4x4, super cab short box, 290,000kms, very good cond, recent work done, c/w 5th wheel hook-up, $5,200 obo. 334-8871 2001 MAZDA B 3000, plus cab, 2wd, 220,000+ km, exc cond, 5-spd manual, silver grey, $2,800 obo, also dump storage box, $150. Kevin 633-6953 2000 CHEVY S10 extended cab 2x4 /4 cyclinder w/new auto transmission and lots more, runs great, $2,500 obo. 334-7723 2000 F350 super duty 4 door super cab long box 2-wheel drive, 7.3 diesel, island blue exterior, 157,000kms super clean condition, non-smoking owners, $12,500 obo. 335-3868 1999 DODGE Ram 1500 Quad Cab, 4x4. 360, 5.9L, white w/white canopy, longbox w/liner, Sirius radio, driving & fog lights, running boards, cloth interior, 193,500km, $6,200, 867-993-6920 to view 1999 DODGE Ram 3500 15-passenger van, 325,000kms, 50,000kms on new trans, heavy duty roof rack, good tires, no dents, no rust, new spark plugs, $3,900 obo. 660-4723 or 332-5450

1991 CHEVY Astro Van, 307,000 km, needs some repairs, $500. 335-7711 1990 DODGE Caravan Grande, blue, automatic, cruise, a/c, 220,000kms, 3.3L V6 cyl, body & interior in good cond, great family vehicle around town, $1,150. 667-2174 1990 FORD F250 4-spd manual, comes with canopy, $2,000. 456-4567 1990 TOYOTA Hilux diesel, 4X4, right-hand drive, 5-spd, standard, 131,000kms, strong SUV, $3,500 obo. 393-4796 lv msg for August 1990 TOYOTA, great little bush truck, V6, 419,000 kms, light blue, sport seats, moonroof, P/L, P/W, (optional) canopy incl, $4,500 obo. 335-4691 1988 FORD Super Cab, 300-6cyl, 667-2046 1983 FORD F150, standard, 2wd, $500. 335-0293 CHEV 1 ton pickup, crew cab, lg box, p/s, registered and in use for highway, 144,000 kms, $2,000 obo. 633-3432. WANTED: SJ410/SAMURAI drive train parts, transmission, transfer case etc. 332-1999

REACH MORE BUYERS with the ClassiďŹ eds.

With our extensive, organized listings, readers will ďŹ nd your ad easily, so you won’t be climbing the walls looking for buyers.

Photo Ads 2 weeks! 4 issues! $ 40 Photo + 30 words

1997 DODGE Caravan, recent mechanical repairs, newer tires, new rad, brakes redone, good running cond, $2,500 obo. 334-6043 1997 DODGE D150 1/2 ton, 2wd. SWB, EC, 5.3L auto, immaculate, new tires, shocks, brakes & battery, 190,000kms, no room to park, must go, $3,500 obo. 456-9608

1995 CHEVY Blazer, 4-dr 4x4, $1,500. 335-0293

Trucks

1994 CHEV diesel 3/4 ton, well maintained, $5,500 obo, 668-2972

We Sell Trucks!

1992 DODGE 250 5.9 Cummins diesel dually, gone through from one end to the other, in great shape mechanically & body. 668-3229

What do you want to sell?

Sport GT 2006 Mazda 3disk CD changer,

e, 6 Excellent shap spd manual, ther seats, 5 A/C, Heated lea ntrols, sunroof, PW/L, l co Steering whee . Asking $7,500 Keyless entry

0-000-0000 Call or text 00

867.667.6285 211 Wood Street, Whitehorse

www.yukon-news.com

1-866-269-2783 • 9039 Quartz Rd. • Fraserway.com

2012 GMC Sierra 2500HD, 6L, crew cab, 4X4, 24,000kms, $25,500 obo. 668-6961 or 332-8918 2010 F150 Supercrew 4X4, $21,000 + GST 2011 F550 Crew Diesel 4X4 flat deck, $41,000 + GST 53ʟ triple axle (inclined) car hauler trailer, $9,500 + GST Range Rider canopies off long box 2010 GMC, $1,000 + GST ea 456-2121 2010 JEEP Rubicon Unlimited, black, 139,000 highway kms, 6-spd manual, 2� heavy duty Olm Man Emu suspension kit, Toyo MT 295/70/17 on Black Rock wheels, bedtred interior, $23,000 obo. 335-7540 2010 NISSAN X-Terra 4x4, ewsm very good shape, low mileage, good glass, good rubber, 332-3928 lv msg 2009 CHEVROLET Silverado extʟd cab, 4 door 1500 LT truck, silver exterior, black interior, new tires, still under warranty, $13,800. 333-9020

The Yukon News is looking for help at its print plant effective July 29. It is a permanent position up to 25 hours a week, spread over the day and evening. The candidate will be willing and able to learn on the job. Heavy lifting will be required. Experience is an asset but not required. Send your resume to Mike Thomas at 211 Wood St., Whitehorse, Yukon, Y1A 2E4 or email mthomas@yukonnews.com. No phone calls please.

2008 DODGE Ram 4x4, 1/2 ton short box, extended cab, 71,000 km, c/w canopy, $15,000 obo. 456-4241 2008 F250 Super Duty 4X4, $20,000 obo. 335-3243

+ gst

1998 TOYOTA Tacoma, V4, 4x4, 4" lift w/canopy, roof rack, great cond. 335-4431

1996 DODGE 3500 Dually 12 valve, 5-spd 4x4 ext cab, good cond, $9,600 obo. 332-2452

1991 31Ęź school bus, seats removed. Good running order, gas. Suitable for moving, storage, camping or work shop. 633-5155

www.blackpress.ca

www.yukonnews.com


34

YUKON NEWS

Pet Report HOURS OF OPERATION FOR THE SHELTER: 5VFT 'SJ QN QN t 4BU BN QN $-04&% 4VOEBZT .POEBZT

633-6019 WEDNESDAY, JULY 16

Help control the pet overpopulation problem

2014

have your pets SPAYED OR NEUTERED. FOR INFORMATION CALL

633-6019

Fundraiser 3rd Saturday of each month. Next Date:

TH

t Riverdale, DMH, black male not neutered, no collar, answers Koshka, Contact Lorraine @ 334-3265 (11/07/14) t Riverdale Laird, Rotti X, female spayed, black and tan, wearing a red collar with tags, answers to Juno, Contact Erin @ 332-0408 (15/07/14)

FOUND t Found between Dawson and Stewart husky X, white and black with a curly fluffy tail, female, 7-8 months old no collar, Contact @ Ashley @ 336-4557 (02/07/14) t Falcon, DSH, female, black and white with white on all its paws, no collar, Contact Kethry @ 613857-5989 ( 08/07/14) t Found in Riverdale, small little female dog, tan and white paws, wearing a black collar, Contact Julia @ 336-0494 ( 12/07/14) t Found on Wheeler street, young female, white and brown spots, wearing a cd tag on collar, Contact Frank @ 336-3523 (15/07/14)

YARD SALE July 26 & 27 t 9:00AM-3:00PM

Come by and shop for an assortment of household goods and animal equipment. All proceeds go towards the care of our homeless Yukon animals.

Any items you wish to donate can be dropped off at the animal shelter during regular hours. Want to set up your own table? You can do that! $25.00 for a 10x10 space, just be sure to take an items that do not sell with you when you leave. Contact the shelter for further details. ( We will not be able to take the following donations: t #PPLT .BHB[JOFT t *ODPNQMFUF #SPLFO &MFDUSPOJDT t $PTNFUJDT t 'PPE 1SPEVDUT t $MPUIFT 4IPFT t 0MEFS 57T

IN FOSTER HOMES t 3yr old, neutered male, Akita, grey and white (A.J.)

t 3 yr old, neutered male, GSD/ Rottie, black and brown (Tristan)

CATS t None at this time.

AT THE SHELTER DOGS t 7 yr old, female spayed, rottie X, brindle (Daphne) t 1 yr old, female spayed, staffie/labX, black (Peanut) t 2 yr old, spayed female, cream, husky (Darby) t 6 mo old, neutered male, lab/ husky X, blonde (Sven) t 1 yr old, neutered male, huskyX, white and brown (Mi loo)

3 DODGE vans, Dawson City, 1980's, part of estate, in reasonable shape, 1 running, currently in storage, $100 ea. Call George in Whse 334-3555 WESTIN SPORTSMAN Winch Mount Grill Guard and Westin T-Max 8500lb winch, new, grill guard fits 2005-2014 Toyota Tacoma, bolts to factory frame, no drilling required, $500. 335-7504 WANTED: ROOF rack for 2009 Toyota Corolla, doesnĘźt have to be pretty, 336-2205 CANOPY FOR 90s Toyota pick-up, windows, good shape, with light, 332-3928 WANTED: 2005 Chev Malibu for parts, has to have a good front bumper, n n ran mounts. 390-2313 THULE ROOF rack parts, set of 4 feet to fit factory roof racks $120, set of 4 feet and false gutters to fit truck canopy $150. 633-2348 after 7pm POLAR RZR tires & custom rims, 27-9-12 fronts, 27-11-12 rears, $300 for all. 333-9020

FIBREGLASS CANOPY, 61�WX89�LX26�H, $95. 660-4321

white,

t 1 yr old, neutered male, boxerX, brindle and white (Nikolaos) t 1 yr old, neutered male, husky X, black snd white ( Mario)

t 3 yr old, male neutered, DSH, black and white ( Cheeks) t 3 yr old, male neutered, DSH, black and white ( Ross) t 3 yr old, male neutered, DSH, black and white ( Rock)

CATS t 3yr old, Female spayed, Calico, Tortie and white (Maia) t 3 yr old, female spayed, DSH, black and white ( Phoebe)

SPECIAL t Homes needed for retired sled dogs. They would make excellent pets. Please contact 668-3647 or kennelmanager@muktuk.com If your lost animal has been inadvertently left off the pet report or for more info on any of these animals, call 633-6019 or stop by 126 Tlingit Street.

2000 CHEV Tracker for parts, rollover, good drive train, recent replacement, very good tires $1,500 obo. 334-2555

Pets 2 DOG houses for medium size dogs, one non-insulated for free, one insulated for $50. 335-2223 ADORABLE PURE bred Pomeranian female, not spayed, must go to loving home. 667-2293 or 335-0659

AVAILABLE FOR ADOPTION DOGS

SET OF 4 Motormaster tires, all season, lots of tread, P195/70R 14, $25 ea. 335-7711

1964 CHEVY Biscayne, good cond, needs some body work, original 3-speed standard, no motor, great project car, $1,000 firm. 335-8844

th

@ the Mae Bachur Animal Shelter parking lot

TOYOTA ALLOY wheels, fits Tacoma or Tundra, 16X7, retail $490 ea, asking $250 ea or 4 for $900, near new condit, 633-3053

TRUCK BOX, black, 70�X20�, for full size truck, $45. 660-4321

If you have lost a pet, remember to check with City Bylaw: 668-8382

BARBEQUE & FREE Pet Cuddles!

2004 GMC Sierra 4.8L, 2wd parts, engine, tranny, diff etc. no body parts, 112,000kms on all parts, info @ 334-6776

1991 ESCORT for parts, lots of new parts, $300. 335-8091

RUNNING AT LARGE...

th

Hi-Rise & Cab Hi - several in stock View at centennialmotors.com 393-8100

SET OF 4-Michelin summer tires, 275/65R18, like new, mounted on Custom Strada M01 Chrome wheels from 2007 Ford F150 6-lug, will sell mounted or separate, $1,200 for set. 667-7573

LOST/FOUND

Pets will be posted on the Pet Report for two weeks. Please let us know after that time if you need them re-posted.

You can also check out our award winning website at:

WWW.HUMANESOCIETYYUKON.CA

PUPPIES, 2 female, 1 male, Min Schnauzer/Havanese cross, black, ready July 22, 1st shots, $400. 668-7157 TORTOISE SHELL cat, female, 6-yrs-old, would do best with couple, used to children/other pets, free to good home. 335-0659

TRUCK CANOPIES - in stock * new Dodge long/short box * new GM long/short box * new Ford long/short box

MISC TIRES w/rims, 2-16�, 1-14�, 4 -13�, 668-6931 or 332-9355

at The Feed Store Pet Junction 10:00AM - 2:00PM LOST

Auto Parts & Accessories

2003 DODGE 3/4 long box 4x4 Cummins 5.9 diesel, rollover, parting out, still have all parts, Ben @ 334-2992 or Ross @ 332-3293

Saturday, July 19

t Burma rd, Siamese, male, black, Contact 3356260 (02/07/14) t Pelly rd, 2-3 years old, DLH, black and brown no collar, answers to Nim, Contact Ducan @ 332-4322. (03/07/14) t Tlingit st, 1-2 yrs old, DSH, Brown tabby, no collar. Contact the Mae Bachur Animal Shelter @ 633-6019 t Downtown, DSH, female spayed, grey and black on top and brown and black spots on the belly has yellow green eyes, no collar answers to Macha Contact Meghan @ 335-2774. (05/07/14) t Crestview, Blue point Himalayan, neutered male, grey and white, blues eyes, 2 years old, wearing a blue collar, answers to Milo, Contact Tasha @ 667-6019 (08/07/14) t Jeckell street, Tabby, female spayed, very light orange and white, answers to Tigger, Contact Shawna @ 334-2503 ( 25/07/14) t Downtown behind the deli, Australian shepherd, female spayed, white and grey long hair, no collar, answers to Savy, Contact Jake @ 332-5212 (09/07/14)

WEDNESDAY, JULY 16, 2014

FOUND ON Klondike Hwy half way from Dawson to Stewart, 7-8/mon old pup, black and white face, looks like she was out there for long time, 336-4557 for info or to claim

2-YR-OLD BEARDOG/PUG X, female, very friendly, loves kids, gets along w/other pets, needs exercise, free to good home, 335-0659

Motorcycles & Snowmobiles TAITĘźS CUSTOM TRAILER SALES 2-3-4- place snowmobile & ATV trailers Drive on Drive off 3500 lb axles by Trailtech - SWS & Featherlight CALL ANYTIME: 334-2194 www/taittrailers.com RONĘźS SMALL ENGINE SERVICES Repairs to Snowmobiles, Chainsaws, Lawnmowers, ATVĘźs, Small industrial equipment. Light welding repairs available 867-332-2333 lv msg Recreational Powersports and Marine (RPM) Repairs Service, repair and installations for snowmobiles, ATVs, motorcycles, chainsaws, marine and more Qualified and experienced mechanic Great rates! Call Patrick at 335-4181 2012 ARCTIC Cat 550 ATV, 900km, power steering, winch, windshield, h/t warmers, $8,500 obo. 668-6961 or 332-8918 2007 GSX-R Suzuki 1000, Fender Eliminator, after-market exhaust, new tires, fully serviced at ListerĘźs, $6,500 obo. 867-536-2779 4X4 QUAD, winch on front & back, c/w trailer & snowplow, loading ramp, good rubber, $3,500, will consider trade for small car or pickup, must have 4-cylinder motor. 867-335-0076 (cell) TRAILER WITH side rails, $1,700 obo. 668-2972 2002 CRF 450 rebuilt engine, new air filter, good cond, $2,500 obo, trades welcome, also wanted bikes, outboards, atvs, dead or alive. 334-9118 2011 YAMAHA 250R 4-stroke, upgrades fuel tank to 15L and customized to fit saddle bags. barely driven & only on paved roads, exc cond, $7,000 obo. 336-0769 2007 CAN-AM 800cc quad, 600kms, gently used, $8,500. 668-6931 SNOWMOBILE ARTIC Bearcat, 2-up seat 570, reverse drive, exc cond, $3,750, 2013 Skidoo Tundra 600, 250kms, offers, also nice skimmer, offers. Kevin 633-6953 2008 KAWASAKI KLR 650, immaculate cond, new rear tire, like new front tire, new battery, all fluids changed/topped up, 6,865 km, c/w seat, saddle bags, $4,500 obo. 334-4658 1997 HONDA Goldwing GL 1500 Aspencade, all bells and whistles, new rubber serviced, ready to go, a great ride. 668-3229 2011 YAMAHA 250WR 4-stroke engine, c/w upgrades & accessories, barely driven & only on paved roads, exc cond, 336-0769 for info

2000 BEAR Cat 440, 120kms on new engine, new skis/track, work done professionally at Listers, incl cover & new adult helmet, $2,499. 335-2648 2002 HONDA CRF 200, $1,650. 334-4296 SCHLAGE COMMERCIAL door lock sets, brushed chrome, 4 complete sets, $100 ea obo. 335-2648

Marine PROFESSIONAL BOAT REPAIR Fiberglass Supplies Marine Accessories FAR NORTH FIBERGLASS 49D MacDonald Rd Whitehorse, Yukon 393-2467 24.5ʟ CRESTLINER, welded aluminum, 225hp, c/w tandem trailer, all rigging, $16,500 obo. 668-6961 or 332-8918 2' FIBREGLASS boat, 10hp Honda 4 stroke, new water impeller, thermostat, engine and leg oil, speakers, deck, battery, charging cord, seats 3, $1,500 or $1,300 without stereo, no leaks. 334-6776 14' HARBERCRAFT aluminum boat (leaks a little) w/20 hp 2 stroke Merc w/spare prop, runs well, reliable, $1,000 firm. 334-6776 BOAT TRAILER, suitable for 14ʟ boat, w/large tires, $200. 633-2837 17ʟ REINELL tri-hull boat, motor & trailer, $3,200 obo. 668-4240 18ʟ INFLATABLE V hull, ultra safe boat, twin 35hp, fuel tanks, controls, tubes, tow ropes, $7,500 obo, ex-coast guard boat. 456-4926 2-PERSON INFLATABLE boat along with 2 sets of propellers 15*17 and 15*16. Kevin 633-6953 2003 HONDA 50hp outboard, good shape, all oils changed, c/w control box, $2,500. 668-2262 1974 STARCRAFT 21ʟ runabout w/Suzuki DF 140, $16,500, or w/90hp 1989 Johnson, $8,500. FMQB@GMX.com, 250-651-7716 SHAKESPEARE 55LB thrust battery-powered trolling motor, used for 1/2 hr, $150. 667-2607 or 334-1102 1971 CAMPION 23ʟ cabin cruiser, rebuilt 350 Chev IB, 15hp Yamaha kicker, fish finder, marine radio, stereo, anti-sway hitch, $5,000. 336-1279 more info JOHNSON OUTBOARD motor, short shaft, exc cond, $700. 250-651-7650 for info 14ʟ FIBREGLASS boat w/65hp Merc motor, $1,750. 335-0293 SEA-EAGLE, 8ʟ10� inflatable w/all accessories, weighs 55lb, uses up to 4hp motor, used twice, new $1,350, asking $800. 667-2607 or 334-1102 2009 20ʟ Legend Xtreme 115, Mercury outboard (60hrs), dealer serviced, winter stored in heated garage, full canopy/canvas covers, fishfinder & 2 Scotty downriggers, $23,000. 332-2655 1994 BAYLINER Classic 2252 4.3l, V-6, 22ʟ, Cuddy cabin can sleep 4, $9,500 obo. 334-7131

2010 SKI-DOO 600 XP RS race sled, good cond, lots of fun, $4,000 obo. 334-2347 1985 HONDA Shadow 1100, 90,000kms, 2nd owner, lots of spare parts, exc cond, $3,500. 633-4246 lv msg

( URGENT! ( The Mae Bachur Animal Shelter urgently requires the following items:

12x54' houseboat w trailer, 14' extended deck, fully equipped, c/w depth sounder, fish finder, radio completely refurbished, engine tune-up, 1-yr moorage incl at Atlin Lake, $53,000. 250-651-7880. 24Ęź STARCRAFT aluminum boat, many extras incl 2 electric downriggers, runs well, upgrading to bigger boat, has been on ocean/lakes, green/white, $10,500. 668-4593 or 335-1283 NISSAN 10Ęź inflatable boat w/aluminum flooring, 950lbs, 5-person, w/Nissan 8hp outboard motor, 1 tank & extras, exc cond, $2,000. 668-7026

( RUBBER GLOVES ( BLEACH ( TOWELS DONATIONS to the Bella Fund would also be greatly appreciated.

MARATHON TRUCK boss deck, hold 2 sleds or 2 atvs, like new, can be used on short or long box trucks, $3,500 obo. kodey_small@hotmail.com or 335-8100

2002 16.25Ęź Harbercraft boat & trailer, 50hp Johnson & 9.9 Yamaha, downrig, new winch, life jackets, exc cond, $14,000. 334-8912 lv msg 14Ęź SEA Kayak, Necky Manitou w/paddle & skirt, $1,000. 335-5113

633-6019 126 Tlingit Street

www.humanesocietyyukon.ca

OLDER 27Ęź Bayliner 5.7 Mercruiser, Bravo III leg trailer, trollng motor, radar, 2 helms, 2 downriggers, great boat, 334-1935 12ĘźX54Ęź HOUSEBOAT, Atlin Lake, in the water read to go, 1-yr storage/moorage incl, very clean, your cabin on the lake, $53,000. 250-651-7880


WEDNESDAY, JULY 16, 2014 1980 BAYFIELD 25ʼ sailboat, sleeps 4, new head, holding tank, fuel tank, Yanmar 8hp diesel engine, triple prop, alcohol stove, galley/head sinks, fresh water tank, jib, Jenny, $9,900. 336-1412

Heavy Equipment HIGHLANDS IRRIGATION Supplying miners since 1974 Aluminum Pipe - New and Used Diesel Pumps Hoses - Fittings info@thewaterpeople.com 1-800-665-5909 www.thewaterpeople.com AIR ROTARY drill rig, everything needed for water wells & exploration, $45,000, atlinmech@outlook.com Caterpillar D9N, D10N, & D11N dozers (all with u-dozers and rippers), Cat 345C excavator & Cat D400D Rock trucks for sale, rent, or rental purchase. All sitting in Dawson City, YK. Phone A1 Cats for questions or details at 780-538-1599 or view www.a1-cats.com for photos. 2002 POWER Prime V300" Dry Prime Water Pump . Hours on meter: 3050.0 hours. 12" intake, 10" discharge, Diesel, John Deer 6068TF158 Engine, Skid Mounted, Integrated Fuel Tank. Maximum output 5000 GMP. Maximum Head 115 feet Purchase Price: $28,000.00 Phone A1 Cats for questions or details at 780-538-1599 or view www.a1-cats.com for photos. 100 KW John Deere generator, 10,000 hrs. Can be used for mining camp or placer operation. Will trade for smaller welder & portable air compressor + cash. $7,500 obo. 334-9357 8KW KUBOTA engine light tower, $8,000 and 6kW Perkins engine light tower, $6,000. 333-0192 2008 B26 Kubota, 487 hrs, has excavator attachment, 8ʼ dig depth, loader bucket for snow removal, fork lift attachment, $24,500. 335-6869 TRACTOR, 50 hp MFWD, self levelling front end loader, quick attach bucket/bale fork, 3-pt hitch, tire chains, 3-cyl Yanmar diesel, runs great, low hours, $5,800 obo. 335-2034

2004 COACHMEN Class A motorhome, 34ʼ, under 50,000 kms, Ford V10 new tires pull-out 5500w Onan gen set, clean cond, 334-4299 GENERATOR GEN, 1,000 watt, like new, 334-9593 2009 ENCLOSED auto/cargo trailer, inside measurements: 26' long, 8' wide, 80" high, $10,000. 335-2223 PROWLER LIGHTWEIGHT 25ʼ 5th wheel, good cond, Northwest Edition, slide, bunks, AC, awning, full bath, microwave, TV antenna, rear hitch, flipped axles, outside shower, sleeps 6-8. $9,500. 633-5948 2008 14" cargo trailer by Interstate, near new, 3,500lb axles, low miles, LED lights, plywood floor, checker-plated front, spare, greasable hubs, all in exc cond. 335-1509 2010 CARGO trailer, 6ʼ X 10ʼ, easy lube bearings, good tires, rear ramp door & side door, good cond, $3,600. 334-5047

1988 F250 w/87 Falcon camper, exc cond, for the age, 460 engine, new battery, ext cab, CD stereo, camper is super clean, $6,000. 668-5154

YUKON INVASIVE Species Council is hosting an outdoor Spotter's Network Workshop. Learn to identify priority invasive species, July 16 at 6pm at the Frank Slim Building, Shipyards Park. Info@yukoninvasives.com

1989 3/4 ton Ford 4x4, runs great, low mileage, c/w 10ʼ camper, immaculate cond, queen size bed, fridge, stove, furnace, $3,300. 393-2869 2010 JAYCO travel trailer, 2 slides, bunk-bed slide, table/couch slide, master bedroom, TV, outside stereo/satellite, outside BBQ, 2 years left on extended warranty, exc cond, $24,000. 333-0317 1989 TRAVELAIRE Rustler 5th wheel, 24ʼ, amazing shape inside and out, 1/2 ton towable includes hitch, $6,000 obo. kodey_small@hotmail.com or 335-8100 WANTED: USED ATCO office trailer, at least 50' long. 335-9934

2008 ADVENTURER 76R truck camper, fits short base truck beds (7ft6"), exc cond, fast gun tie downs, sleeps 4, must sell, $11,500. 867-536-4756

180 Taildragger for sale.

Campers & Trailers TAITʼS TRAILERS www.taittrailers.com taits@northwestel.net Quality new and used Horse * Cargo * Equipment trailers For sale or rent Call Anytime 334-2194 Southern prices delivered to the Yukon 2009 VERY low mileage, easy towing, 15' Hi-LO travel trailer, 3-way fridge, propane furnace & stove, Everything works perfectly, $12,000 obo, must be seen. 335-2223 2009 30' Citation trailer, polarpak pkg, enclosed valves tanks, thermopane windows dualpane skylights, 50amp power baseboard heaters, slide awnings, 16" wheels, shocks, equalizer hitch/antisway, $32,900 obo. 633-3339 or 334-9634 2011 24' Cougar travel trailer, exc cond, 1/2 ton towable, polar plus package, rear kitchen, dinette, large windows, lots of storage, awning, one slide, queen size bed, $22,000. 334-2693 1991 FORD 1-ton crew cab with camper, exc cond, fridge, stove, furnace works great, 667-2046 2008 CORSAIR Excella 29.5 RKDS Polar Pac 5th wheel, loaded, many extras, screen room, 867-536-7626 or 867-689 -4590 UTILITY TRAILER, sturdy, 2 wheel, Ford p-up hub wheel bearings, 2" ball, $1,100, call 867-993-6920 to view or 604-538-4175 for more info 2014 CAR tow dolly with electric brakes swivel platform spare wheel with tire on. 334-4299

2000 SUNDOWNER horse trailer, removable stalls, can be used for quads, snowmobiles, 3-horse slant trailer, living quarters, exc cond, $37,000. 651-7880 2007 TRAILTECK 20ʼ tandem axle flatdeck trailer, slide in loading ramps, tool box, spare tire, good tires, good cond, $5,000. 651-7880 X-TENT TRAILER, 5ʼ10”WX7ʼL, new 12” tires, steel frame, aluminum sides, crank front legs, spare tire, great shape, $400. 633-4246 lv msg

RIVERDALE BAPTIST celebrates its 50th Anniversary Sunday, August 3, 10:30 am, 15 Duke St

Place: Heritage Hall, Carmacks

VOLUNTEERS WANTED for Frog Food & Music Festival Aug 1, 2 & 3, good time, awesome food & music, website www.frogfoodfestival.com, Linda 668-3984 or Lara 633-5402

MT. LORNE Mis-Adventure Run, Sunday July 20, registration 9am at Mt. Lorne Firehall, Robinson Rd. Race starts at 10am, proceeds Fire Department, fee $25/runner FROG FOOD Festival.ca, served with great music, Aug. 1, 2, 3, Alaska Hwy km 1459, 25 min. west of Whitehorse, free camping, Friday hog roast, beer garden SUMMER PROGRAMS at Old Log Church Museum, daily tours about Herschel Island, Spirited Characters, First Nations Arts, Anglican Church History, 11:30am & 2:30pm. Info: 668-2555 CHILI AND Bean Canoe and Kayak Race 18.5 km Rotary Park to Takhini River Bridge Tuesday, July 29, register 5:30 pm, start 6 pm. Pat 668-5298

RAMSHACKLE THEATRE first AGM as a non-profit organization, all welcome to attend, Wednesday, July 23 at 6:30pm, 34 Harvey Rd, Ramshackle Theatre Studio. For details: taralynn5@gmail.com

ATLIN GUEST HOUSE Deluxe Lakeview Suites Sauna, Hot Tub, BBQ, Internet, Satellite TV Kayak Rentals In House Art Gallery 1-800-651-8882 Email: atlinart@yahoo.ca www.atlinguesthouse.com ATLIN - GLACIER VIEW CABINS “your quiet get away” Cozy self contained log cabins canoes, kayaks for rent Fax/Phone 250-651-7691 e-mail sidkatours@ atlin.net www.glacierviewcabins.ca THE ALZHEIMER/DEMENTIA Family Caregiver Support Group meets monthly. A group for family/friends caring for someone with Dementia. Info and register call Cathy 633-7337 or Joanne 668-7713

Out of respect for the famiy, please no alcohol or drugs.

Smokers throw away all their cigarettes. Stop smoking with Hypnotist Romane. Written guarantee included! Stop Smoking with Hypnotist Romane at the Coast High Country Inn on July 31 at 7 PM. Save up to $32 on advance tickets at the Coast High Country Inn (cash only), or online at TicketWeb.ca/Romane, or charge by phone 1-888-222-6608

2001 10'8" Citation Supreme truck camper w/ electric jacks, winter pkg, n/s bed, booth dinette, 6 cu. ft. fridge, dual batteries, clean, no pets, non-smokers, $11,000. 335-9490

Coming Events

Jerry Charlie Date: July 26, 2014 Time: 3:00 PM

CELEBRATION OF Life for Sharone Maldaver, July 22 6:30pm, Mt. Mac Lounge. Bring a song, story, special dish or whatever the spirit moves you to remember her

2013 5TH wheel load max, gooseneck tridem gooseneck trailer, 25ʼ deck, spring-loaded, fold down beavertails, total deck space 30ʼ, like new, used once, 3 locking tool boxes, $11,500. 651-7880

H e a d s tforo nthee lateP o t l a t c h

YUKON COUNCIL on Disability Annual General Meeting is on Thursday, July 31, 2014 @ 5pm, Yukon Council on Disability's Office, #2, 211 Wood Street

1989 VANAMERA 27ʼ motorhome, F350 w/460 V8 auto, a/c, cold weather pkg, front & rear hitches, fridge, freezer, oven, microwave, full bath, sleeps 6, 17ʼ awning, 147,000kms, $12,000 obo. 633-5234

OLDER CHEV box trailer, crank leg, $400. 633-4246

HOUSECLEANING, SPRING Cleaning, Detailing! Safe, reliable, bondable RCMP check available on request For into call 334-7405

MC RENOVATION Construction & Renovations Laminated floor, siding, decks, tiles Kitchen, Bathroom, Doors, Windows Framing, Board, Drywall, Painting Drop Ceiling, Fences No job too small Free estimates Michael 336-0468 yt.mcr@hotmail.com

YUKON ORIENTEERING Association meet July 16 on Paddyʼs Pond/Hillcrest map. Start 6:30pm at Elijah Smith School. For info call Forest at 668-2306

WHITEHORSE ABORIGINAL Women's Circle AGM July 28, 5pm, #6-4230-4th Ave. (where Chon FM was), light refreshments served, hear what we've done over the past year and what weʼll be doing next

ATCO “WELL-SITE” triple skid mounted, propane furnace, kitchen, bathroom & dining area. Excellent condition $8,000 336-2029

Services

YACL CELEBRATE Summer invites children, teens & adults with disabilities & their families/caregivers to join in 8 inclusive summer events June 24th-Aug 21. Call 667-4606 http://www.ycommunityliving.com/programs. html

2002 SALEM Lite 26ʼ bumper pull, sleeps 8, queen/bunks, fold-out couch/table, insulated, new floor, 2x30lb propane tanks, appliances work, outside shower/BBQ, awning ripped but works, $8,200 obo. 335-1509

2002 F350 1-ton truck, 18' cedar lined box, gasoline, runs great, sun roof, heater installed. 334-0085

CESSNA 393-1992

CANADIAN CELIAC Association Yukon Support Group, monthly meeting in Whitehorse Library Meeting room, drop in July 24 between 6:00 and 7:45 p.m. for information, informal discussion and support

1987 FORD 27ʼ motorhome, 110,661 kms, $11,500 obo. 668-6931

UTILITY TRAILER, heavy duty trailer made from 3/4-ton pick-up box. 667-2046

EASYRIDER, UNSINKABLE canoe w/rigging to fit on Super Cup float spreader bars, spin tested and STC'd, $900 obo. email: raftera@northwestel.net or 667-7844 for info/pics

YUKON ECONOMIC Developers Conference, for people involved in community economic development, Dawson City, September 10-12. For more info and early registration http://ecdevnorth.org/

“ROCK WALKS”, hosted by Yukon Geological Survey geologists. Thursday, July 17th, 7:00 p.m. Discover how Miles Canyon was formed. Meet at Miles Canyon Bridge Parking Lot. Info: 393-7187

SKID STEER, over tire tracks to fit 12x16.5 tires (Bobcat S250 etc) $800 obo. 667-7844 or raftera@northwestel.net for pics

Aircraft

35

YUKON NEWS

YUKON ORIENTEERING Association July 16 event, Just 4 Fun Relay, register 6:00pm at Elijah Smith School grounds. For info call Forest 393-3301 LES CAFÉS 5 à 7 en musique July 24th, 5pm, Baked Café. This summer, come and relax to the music, discover our talented Francophone artists with pianist, Wiliam Auclair-Bellemare. Information: vhamel@afy.yk.ca COMMUNITY SAFETY Awards: Nominate a group or individual who works for community safety. Deadline for nominations Sept 5, 2014. More info 867-667-3656; www.justice.gov.yk.ca/prog/cjps/CommunitySafetyAwards.html

Donald Keith (Don) Knutson DECEMBER 5, 1936 – JULY 7, 2014 In his 77th year of living life to its fullest, Don Knutson passed away suddenly at the Whitehorse General Hospital, with his beloved wife and soul mate Margaret at his side. Don and Marg had just celebrated their 55th wedding anniversary on July 4th. Don was predeceased by his parents, Wes and Iris Knutson, and by his sister Karen Passmore, who always looked up to her big brother. Don will be deeply missed by Marg, who gave him the support he needed to carry out so much of his work; his sons Doug (Jean Jobagy), Russ (Claudiane Samson), Ken (Trix Tanner), and Thom (Kent Macaulay), who had the best dad, role model and friend anyone could hope for; his grandchildren (Kaitlin, Aven, Tori, Malcolm, Tammy, Sarah, Lou, Clare), for whom Papa will always be a special person in their hearts; brother Ken (Sandy); brother-in-law Terry Passmore; cousin Dennis (Edith) Mackay; extended family, countless friends, colleagues, and former coworkers. Don was born in Jasper, Alberta, and grew up around a loving extended family. He and Marg began their own family in Edmonton where Don worked for CN Telecommunications. In 1979, Don was transferred to Whitehorse with Northwestel, finishing his 40 year career in 1993. In retirement, Don thrived on his countless volunteer roles, and his many well-deserved awards reflect the passion that Don had for helping others. Don fought long and hard for the things he cared about, but always with the same smile and witty quips that made people laugh and want to be around him.

ANNUAL YARD Sale, July 26th and 27th from 9am-3pm each day in the Mae Bachur Animal Shelter parking lot. Barbecue and free pet cuddles. All proceeds go toward care of the animals

A celebration of Don’s life and achievements will be held on Thursday, August 14, at 2 p.m., at the Mount McIntyre Rec Centre. Please join us afterwards at Don’s favourite watering hole, the Legion Branch #254, 503 Steele Street.

YUKON QUEER Film Alliance AGM, Monday July 28, 2014, 6:00pm, Whitehorse Public Library, main floor

The family wishes to express its deep appreciation to Dr. Avery and the caring nursing staff at Whitehorse General Hospital, the ambulance crew, and all those who worked to bring the family together in Don’s final moments.

DOG WASH Saturday July 19th from 10am-2pm, The Feed Store/Pet Junction. Come on down and let our wonderful volunteers wash your pet while you stay clean and dry. All proceeds to Mae Bachur Animal Shelter

In lieu of flowers, donations can be made to Autism Yukon, the Learning Disabilities Association of Yukon, or a charity of your choice. Book of condolences at www.heritagenorth.ca/obituaries, and at the Celebration of Life.


36

YUKON NEWS

ALCOHOLICS ANONYMOUS MEETINGS Yukon Communities & Atlin, B.C.

Beaver Creek Y.T. Friday - 1:30 p.m. Health Centre

Carcross Y.T. Friday - 1:30 p.m. Health Centre

Carmacks Y.T. Friday - 1:30 p.m. Health Centre

Dawson City Y.T. Thursday - 6pm (summer only) New Beginners Group Rm 2160 @ Hospital Friday - 1:30pm Unity Group Rm 2160 @ Hospital Saturday - 7pm North Star Group Community Support Centre 1233-2nd Ave.

Destruction Bay Y.T. Friday - 1:30 p.m. Health Centre

Faro Y.T. Friday - 1:30 p.m. Health Centre

Haines Junction Y.T. Friday - 1:30 p.m. Health Centre

Mayo Y.T. Friday - 1:30 p.m. Health Centre Old Crow Y.T. Friday - 1:30 p.m. Health Centre

Pelly Crossing Y.T. Friday - 1:30 p.m. Health Centre

Ross River Y.T. Friday - 1:30 p.m. Health Centre

Telegraph Creek B.C. Tuesday - 8:00 p.m. Soaring Eagles Sewing Centre

Teslin Y.T. Wednesday - 7:00pm Wellness Centre #4 McLeary Friday - 1:30p.m. Health Centre

GET RESULTS! Post an ad in 126 newspapers. Reach more than 2 million people for only $395/week for a 25-word text ad or $995/week for a formatted display ad! Book by province or whole country. Save over 85% compared to booking individually.

Friday - 1:30 p.m. Health Centre

FROGGY SERVICES PEST CONTROL For all kinds of work around the house Windows & Wall Cleaning & Painting Clean Eavestroughs Carpentry Yard Work etc. References available 867-335-9272

668-2963

bcyukonaa.org AA 867-668-5878 24 HRS A DAY

The Yukon News is available at these wonderful stores in Whitehorse

THE YUKON NEWS IS ALSO AVAILABLE AT NO CHARGE IN ALL YUKON COMMUNITIES AND ATLIN, B.C.

HILLCREST

Airport Chalet Airport Snacks & Gifts

GRANGER

Bernie’s Race-Trac Gas Bigway Foods

DOWNTOWN:

Canadian Tire Cashplan The Deli Edgewater Hotel Extra Foods Fourth Avenue Petro Gold Rush Inn

LOG CABINS: Professional Scribe Fit log buildings at affordable rates. Contact: PF Watson, Box 40187, Whitehorse, YT, Y1A 6M9 668-3632 BUSY BEAVERS Painting, Pruning Hauling, Chainsaw Work, Yard Cleaning and General Labour Call Francois & Katherine 456-4755

THOMAS FINE CARPENTRY • Construction • Renovation • Finishing • Cabinets • Tiling • Flooring • Repairs • Specialty woodwork • Custom kitchens 867-633-3878 or cell 867-332-5531 thomasfinecarpentry@northwestel.net

CELEBRATE!

www.aa.org

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.

BACKHAULS, WHITEHORSE to Alberta. Vehicles, Furniture, Personal effects etc. Daily departures, safe secure dependable transportation at affordable rates. Please call Pacific Northwest Freight Systems @ 667-2050

Call Dirtball

NS - No Smoking OM - open mixed, includes anyone CM - closed mixed, includes anyone with a desire to stop drinking

SHARPENING SERVICES. For all your sharpening needs - quality sharpening, fair price & good service. At corner of 6th & Strickland. 667-2988

MAN WITH 3/4 TON High-side truck for hire $40 per hour Phone 668-3534

TOPSOIL

in Whitehorse

WHERE DO I GET THE NEWS?

NORTHRIDGE BOBCAT SERVICES • Snow Plowing • Site Prep & Backfills • Driveways • Post Hole Augering • Light Land Clearing • General Bobcat Work Fast, Friendly Service 867-335-1106

OW! N e labl Avai

ALCOHOLICS ANONYMOUS MEETINGS

Watson Lake Y.T.

PASCAL PAINTING CONTRACTOR PASCAL AND REGINE Residential - Commercial Ceilings, Walls Textures, Floors Spray work Small drywall repair Excellent quality workmanship Free estimates pascalreginepainting@northwestel.net 633-6368

GET RESULTS! Post a classified in 125 newspapers in just a few clicks. Reach more than 2 million people for only $395 a week for 25-word text ad or $995 for small display ad. Choose your province or all across Canada. Best value. Save over 85% compared to booking individually. www.communityclassifieds.ca or 1-866-669-9222.

communityclaVViÂżedV.ca or 1.866.669.9222

MONDAY: 12 noon Joy of Living (OM, NS) Maryhouse, 504 Cook St. 8:00 pm New Beginnings Group (OM,NS) Maryhouse, 504 Cook St. TUESDAY: 12 noon Joy of Living (OM, NS) Maryhouse, 504 Cook St. 7:00 pm Juste Pour Aujourd’hui 4141B - 4th Avenue. 8:00 pm Ugly Duckling Group (CM, NS) Maryhouse, 504 Cook St. WEDNESDAY: 12 noon Joy of Living (OM, NS) Maryhouse, 504 Cook St.. 8:00 pm Porter Crk Step Meeting (CM) Our Lady of Victory, 1607 Birch St. 8:00 pm No PufďŹ n (CM,NS) Big Book Study Maryhouse, 504 Cook St. THURSDAY: 12 noon Joy of Living (OM, NS) Grapevine Discussion Maryhouse, 504 Cook St. 6:00 pm Young People’s Meeting BYTE OfďŹ ce, 2-407 Ogilvie Street 7:30 pm Polar Group (OM) Seventh Day Adventist Church 1609 Birch Street (Porter Creek) FRIDAY: 12 noon Joy of Living (OM, NS) Big Book Discussion Maryhouse, 504 Cook St. 1:30 pm #4 Hospital Rd. (Resource Room) 8:00 pm Whitehorse Group (OM, NS) Maryhouse, 504 Cook St. SATURDAY: 1:00 pm Sunshine Group (OM, NS) DETOX Building, 6118-6th Ave. 2:30 pm Women’s Meeting Whitehorse General Hospital (room across from Emergency) 7:00 pm Hospital Boardroom (OM, NS) SUNDAY: 1:00 pm Sunshine Group (OM, NS) DETOX Building, 6118-6th Ave. 7:00 pm Marble Group Hospital Boardroom (OM, NS)

WEDNESDAY, JULY 16, 2014

Births! Birthdays! Weddings! Graduations! Anniversaries! 1 column x 3 inches ....................Wed - $ s &RI $35.10 2 columns x 2 inches ..................Wed - $ s &RI $46.80 2 columns x 3 inches ..................Wed - $ s &RI $70.20 2 columns x 4 inches ..................Wed - $ s &RI $93.60

Home Support/Respite Care Available Certified nursing-home attendant/ home-care worker Available days, evenings & weekends Recent RCMP check Valid drivers licence Tender, loving care 334-7405

Phone: 867-667-6285 211 Wood Street, Whitehorse

www.yukon-news.com

TITAN DRYWALL Taping & Textured Ceilings 27 years experience Residential or Commercial No job too small Call Dave 336-3865 ELECTRICIAN FOR all your jobs Large or small Licensed Electrician Call MACK N MACK ELECTRIC for a free estimate! 867-332-7879

AL-ANON

CHECK OUT THE JOB SECTION IN THE

MEETINGS contact 667-7142

Has your

WEDNESDAY

life been

12:00 noon Hellaby Hall, 4th & Elliott

affected by someone’s drinking ???

DO YOU HAVE A PROBLEM WITH FOOD?

CLOSED DEC. 25TH FOR CHRISTMAS

FRIDAY

Meetings

7:00 pm Lutheran Church Basement Beginners Mtg ( 4th & Strickland )

Mondays

8:00 pm Lutheran Church Basment Regular Mtg ( 4th & Strickland )

4071 4th Avenue

7:30 p.m. PBZVLPO!HNBJM DPN t XXX PB PSH

PORTER CREEK

Coyote Video Goody’s Gas Green Garden Restaurant Heather’s Haven Super A Porter Creek Trails North Home Hardware Klondike Inn Mac’s Fireweed Books Ricky’s Restaurant Riverside Grocery Riverview Hotel Shoppers on Main Shoppers Qwanlin Mall

RIVERDALE: 38 Famous Video Super A Riverdale Tempo Gas Bar

Superstore Superstore Gas Bar Tags Well-Read Books Westmark Whitehorse Yukon Inn Yukon News Yukon Tire

“YOUR COMMUNITY CONNECTIONâ€? 7 - 9ĂŠUĂŠ , 9

AND ‌

Kopper King Hi-Country RV Park McCrae Petro Takhini Gas Yukon College Bookstore


WEDNESDAY, JULY 16, 2014

Licensed and Professional Automotive Repairs 20-year Journeyman Mechanic Monday - Friday 8:00am to 5:00pm Call Brian Berg 867-633-6597 ANGYʼS MASSAGE Mobile Service. Therapeutic Massage & Reflexology. Angelica Ramirez Licensed Massage Therapist. 867-335-3592 angysmassage@hotmail.com 8 Versluce Place Whitehorse YT, Y1A 5M1 FINISHING CARPENTRY & RENOVATIONS For Clean, Meticulous & Tasteful Quality Work INTERIOR Design & organization of walk-in closets, laundry & storage room, garage Kitchen & Bathrooms, Flooring, Wood & Laminate, Stairs. EXTERIOR Decks, Fences, Insulation, Siding, Storage Shed DIDIER MOGGIA 633-2156 or cell 334-2156

MILLENNIUM GENERAL SERVICES -Spring Yard Cleaning -Power Raking -Aerating -Cut and Vacuum -Fertilizer -Install New Lawns -General Bobcat Work Make a Reservation First-Come, First-Served 633-3404 / 334-4474

DRUG PROBLEM?

DROWNING IN DEBT? Cut debts more than 60% & DEBT FREE in half the time! AVOID BANKRUPTCY! Free Consultation. www.mydebtsolution.com or Toll Free 1-877-556-3500 BBB Rated A+

Narcotics

Anonymous

Project Description: Lab analysis for water samples collected from drinking water and wastewater facilities operated by the department of Community Services. Submissions must be clearly marked with the above project title. The closing date for submissions is July 31, 2014. Please refer to the procurement documents for the closing time and location. Documents may be obtained from the Procurement Support Centre, Department of Highways and Public Works, Suite 101 - 104 Elliott Street, Whitehorse, Yukon (867) 667-5385. Technical questions may be directed to Rob Anderson at (867) 456-6542. The highest ranked or lowest priced submission may not necessarily be accepted. View or download documents at: www.gov.yk.ca/tenders/tms.html

Community Services

TAIGA TILE & STONE Ceramic, porcelain, glass, slate, stone & cultured stone kitchens, bathrooms, backsplashes, fireplaces and exteriors 6 years in the trade Excellent references Contact Adam, 867-335-6526

YELLOW TRUCK EXCAVATING 393-3667 or 333-0972 Residential and Commercial Gravel - Sand - Concrete - Topsoil Dump Truck and Excavator Rentals Bobcat Services Excavating - Landscaping Road Construction

Energy North Construction Inc. (1994) for all your insulation & coating needs Cellulose & polyurethane spray foam Free estimate: 667-7414

S.V.P. CARPENTRY Journey Woman Carpenter Interior/Exterior Finishing/Framing Small & Medium Jobs “Make it work and look good.” Call Susana (867) 335-5957 susanavalerap@live.com www.svpcarpentry.com

PUBLIC TENDER

PUBLIC TENDER

TO PROVIDE HP SERVER AS BUILT WITH SPECIFIED COMPONENTS

PURCHASE OF DE-ICING AGENT FOR GOVERNMENT OF YUKON

Submissions must be clearly marked with the above project title. The closing date for submissions is August 6, 2014. Please refer to the procurement documents for the closing time and location. Documents may be obtained from the Procurement Support Centre, Department of Highways and Public Works, Suite 101 - 104 Elliott Street, Whitehorse, Yukon (867) 667-5385. Technical questions may be directed to David Knight at (867) 667-3114. The highest ranked or lowest priced submission may not necessarily be accepted. This tender is subject to Chapter Five of the Agreement on Internal Trade. View or download documents at: www.gov.yk.ca/tenders/tms.html

Submissions must be clearly marked with the above project title. The closing date for submissions is August 6, 2014. Please refer to the procurement documents for the closing time and location. Documents may be obtained from the Procurement Support Centre, Department of Highways and Public Works, Suite 101 - 104 Elliott Street, Whitehorse, Yukon (867) 667-5385. Technical questions may be directed to Jenny Richards at (867) 3936387. The highest ranked or lowest priced submission may not necessarily be accepted. This tender is subject to Chapter Five of the Agreement on Internal Trade. View or download documents at: www.gov.yk.ca/tenders/tms.html

- INSULATION Upgrade your insulation & reduce your heating bills

MEETINGS: Wednesdays 7:00 pm - 8:00 pm #2 - 407 Ogilvie St. <BYTE> Fridays 7:00 pm - 8:30 pm 4071 - 4th Ave. <Many Rivers>

PUBLIC TENDER

PUBLIC TENDER LAB SERVICES FOR WATER SAMPLES

37

YUKON NEWS

STANDING OFFER AGREEMENT FOR THE SUPPLY OF AUTOMOTIVE BRAKE PARTS FOR THE GOVERNMENT OF YUKON Submissions must be clearly marked with the above project title. The closing date for submissions is August 6, 2014. Please refer to the procurement documents for the closing time and location. Documents may be obtained from the Procurement Support Centre, Department of Highways and Public Works, Suite 101 - 104 Elliott Street, Whitehorse, Yukon (867) 667-5385. Technical questions may be directed to Jenny Richards at (867) 3936387. The highest ranked or lowest priced submission may not necessarily be accepted. This tender is subject to Chapter Five of the Agreement on Internal Trade. View or download documents at: www.gov.yk.ca/tenders/tms.html

Highways and Public Works

CALL FOR RESOLUTIONS KLUANE FIRST NATION GENERAL ASSEMBLY, JULY 26-27, 2014

Attention: Kluane First Nation Citizens From: KFN Resolutions Committee Advanced submission of Resolutions for the upcoming 2014 General Assembly will be required to facilitate a more efficient and effective resolution process. Resolutions for consideration at the 2014 General Assembly must be received no later than 5 days prior to the July 26-27, 2014 start date of this year’s General Assembly.

KFN General Assembly Resolution Deadline: Monday, July 21, 2014 Resolution guidelines and templates for draft resolutions will be available to Citizens from the KFN website www.kfn.ca. You may also contact the KFN administration office for the guidelines and templates. Please direct all resolution submissions to: Christabelle Carlick Email: executive.assistant@kfn.ca

Highways and Public Works Highways and Public Works

PUBLIC TENDER STANDING OFFER AGREEMENT FOR THE SUPPLY OF GENUINE MUNROE SANDER PARTS & ACCESSORIES FOR THE GOVERNMENT OF YUKON Submissions must be clearly marked with the above project title. The closing date for submissions is August 6, 2014. Please refer to the procurement documents for the closing time and location. Documents may be obtained from the Procurement Support Centre, Department of Highways and Public Works, Suite 101 - 104 Elliott Street, Whitehorse, Yukon (867) 667-5385. Technical questions may be directed to Jenny Richards at (867) 3936387. The highest ranked or lowest priced submission may not necessarily be accepted. This tender is subject to Chapter Five of the Agreement on Internal Trade. View or download documents at: www.gov.yk.ca/tenders/tms.html

Highways and Public Works

PUBLIC TENDER ROWLINSON CREEK BRIDGE REHABILITATION KM 30.5 MOUNT NANSEN ROAD #318

Project Description: Government of Yukon is soliciting proposals for a qualified team of consultants to undertake the completion of a Socio-economic Assessment for the Mount Nansen Remediation Project for the Assessment and Abandoned Mines branch of Energy, Mines and Resources. Submissions must be clearly marked with the above project title. The closing date for submissions is July 31, 2014. Please refer to the procurement documents for the closing time and location. Documents may be obtained from the Procurement Support Centre, Department of Highways and Public Works, Suite 101 - 104 Elliott Street, Whitehorse, Yukon (867) 667-5385. Technical questions may be directed to Monique Raitchey at (867) 6337966. The highest ranked or lowest priced submission may not necessarily be accepted. View or download documents at: www.gov.yk.ca/tenders/tms.html

Submissions must be clearly marked with the above project title. The closing date for submissions is August 12, 2014. Please refer to the procurement documents for the closing time and location. Documents may be obtained from the Procurement Support Centre, Department of Highways and Public Works, Suite 101 - 104 Elliott Street, Whitehorse, Yukon (867) 667-5385. Technical questions may be directed to Mike Otto at (867) 667-3004. The highest ranked or lowest priced submission may not necessarily be accepted. This tender is subject to Chapter Five of the Agreement on Internal Trade. Bidders are advised to review documents to determine Certificate of Recognition (COR) requirements for this project. View or download documents at: www.gov.yk.ca/tenders/tms.html

Project Description: The project includes demolition of the existing bridge timber abutments, installation of new galvanized steel bin type abutments, supply and installation of new pressure treated timber wing walls, ballast walls, mud sills, corrugated steel pipe (CSP) culvert, repair existing bridge timber deck, reconstructing approach roads and other miscellaneous work. Submissions must be clearly marked with the above project title. The closing date for submissions is August 5, 2014. Please refer to the procurement documents for the closing time and location. Documents may be obtained from the Procurement Support Centre, Department of Highways and Public Works, Suite 101 - 104 Elliott Street, Whitehorse, Yukon (867) 667-5385. Technical questions may be directed to Khusru Zaman at (867) 6337902. The highest ranked or lowest priced submission may not necessarily be accepted. This tender is subject to Chapter Five of the Agreement on Internal Trade. The Yukon Business Incentive Policy will apply to this project. Bidders are advised to review documents to determine Certificate of Recognition (COR) requirements for this project. View or download documents at: www.gov.yk.ca/tenders/tms.html

Energy, Mines and Resources

Highways and Public Works

Highways and Public Works

REQUEST FOR PROPOSAL MOUNT NANSEN SOCIOECONOMIC ASSESSMENT

REQUEST FOR PROPOSAL SUPPLY AND INSTALL OF NEW PLAYGROUND EQUIPMENT AT CARMACKS AND PELLY CROSSING SCHOOLS


38

YUKON NEWS

FIX-IT Commercial-Residential Renovations and repairs Fine finishing and painting Handyman services Free estimates, local references Phone 335-8924 bradmre@gmail.com Simply Seamless Eavestroughing Free Estimates Leaf Guard Avalanche Guard Installation, Cleaning & Repair of 5� continuous eavestroughing Phone 867-334-3195 simplyseamlessyt@gmail.com

Lost & Found FOUND: MASTERCRAFT circle saw set last week in front of Yukon Employees' Union building, please call 667-2331 to identify and claim

LOST: 1 pair brown frame reading glasses, reward offered, 667-7756 FOUND: MENĘźS coat at Fox Lake boat launch on June 27, company logo on the chest, 667-7455 LOST: WHITE Bushnell rangefinder in white case, $50 reward for its return, Wayne at 335-1897 LOST: WINDOWS HTC smart phone, 8X, 667-6530 FOUND: WATCH with plastic band @ 602 Main St. 335-2063

Business Opportunities 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. ALL SEASON ALTERATION Business for Sale Everything Must Go 668-3818

Advertising

PUBLIC TENDER

It’s good for you.

If documents are available they may be obtained from Yukon Housing Corporation, 410 Jarvis Street, Whitehorse, Yukon. Technical questions may be directed to Wendy Andrea at 867-996-2358. Joint tender closing in Mayo and Whitehorse The highest ranked or lowest priced submission may not necessarily be accepted. View or download documents at: www.gov.yk.ca/tenders/tms.html

Advertise in The Yukon News ClassiďŹ eds!

Take Advantage of our 6 month Deal... Advertise for 5 Months and

Get 1 MONTH OF FREE ADVERTISING Book Your Ad Today! 4 s & E: wordads@yukon-news.com

Sports Equipment AIR HOCKEY table w/digital scoreboard & music adaptor, exc cond, hardly used, $100. 633-4827 TREADMILL, TEMPO 632T, wide track, 2.5 years old, gently used, in excellent condition, $450. 334-2041 SNOW BOARD boots, Osiris-D3, child size 5, white/navy, exc cond, $20. 668-4129

MAINTENANCE & EMERGENCY REPAIRS YUKON HOUSING UNITS MAYO, YUKON Submissions must be clearly marked with the above project title. The closing date for submissions is August 5, 2014. Please refer to the procurement documents for the closing time and location.

Looking for NEW Business / Clients?

5-SPD GIRLS bike, 5-12 year old girl, excellent tires/ brakes, steel frame, $75 obo. 393-2545

5BÂľBO ,XjDIÂľjO $PVODJM *OEVTUSJBM 3PBE 8IJUFIPSTF :VLPO : " 5 5FMFQIPOF

3 & 2 6 & 45 ' 0 3 1 30 1 0 4 " - 4

/FHPUJBUPS "O *NQMFNFOUBUJPO PG -BOE $MBJNT /FHPUJBUPS JT SFRVJSFE UP XPSL DPMMBCPSBUJWFMZ BOE JO DPOKVODUJPO BOE DPOTVMUBUJPO XJUI UIF $IJFG %FQVUZ $IJFG &YFDVUJWF "ENJOJTUSBUPS BOE *NQMFNFOUBUJPO 0GžDFS SFQSFTFOUJOH 5,$ BU UIF 1SPHSBN BOE 4FSWJDFT 5SBOTGFS "HSFFNFOU 145" BOE "ENJOJTUSBUJPO PG +VTUJDF OFHPUJBUJOH UBCMFT BT XFMM BT XPSLJOH PO PUIFS žMFT :PV XJMM EFWFMPQ TUSBUFHJFT BOE QMBOT GPS UIF OFHPUJBUJPOT PG 145" XJUI WBSJPVT 'FEFSBM BOE 5FSSJUPSJBM BHFODJFT UP GBDJMJUBUF UIF JNQMFNFOUBUJPO PG UIF 5,$ 'JOBM BOE 4FMG (PWFSONFOU "HSFFNFOUT 4VCNJU BO FOIBODFE QSPQPTBM XIJDI JODMVEFT ZPVS OFHPUJBUJOH FYQFSJFODFT XJUI :VLPO 'JSTU /BUJPOT 'FEFSBM 5FSSJUPSJBM BOE PUIFS (PWFSONFOUT BOE UIF FYQFDUFE GFF

PUBLIC TENDER RELOCATION OF GRANULAR MATERIAL FROM MCINTOSH PIT TO HAINES JUNCTION AIRPORT Project Description: The relocation of granular material (Granular F) located at the McIntosh Pit, km 1589.8 Alaska Highway to the Haines Junction Airport at #3444 Tait Road, Haines Junction Submissions must be clearly marked with the above project title. The closing date for submissions is August 6, 2014. Please refer to the procurement documents for the closing time and location. Documents may be obtained from the Procurement Support Centre, Department of Highways and Public Works, Suite 101 - 104 Elliott Street, Whitehorse, Yukon (867) 667-5385. Technical questions may be directed to Chris Toleman at (867) 456-6732. The highest ranked or lowest priced submission may not necessarily be accepted. View or download documents at: www.gov.yk.ca/tenders/tms.html

Highways and Public Works

5FSN "VHVTU UP .BSDI 46#.*5 130104"-4 #: "VHVTU CZ FNBJM UP SLVGFMEU!UBBO DB

PUBLIC NOTICE Yukon Government gives notice of the following application to amend the Golden Horn Local Area Plan and the Golden Horn Development Area Regulation (O.I.C. 2011/125): To change the plan designation and the zoning of a portion of Lot 76 Golden Horn Plan 32474 LTO from Aggregate and Light Industrial to Commercial. The proposed amendments are required to facilitate a lot consolidation and enlargement involving Lot 76 and Lot 122, a portion of a road Right-of-Way and an existing building that crosses a property line. Comments on the proposed amendment will be accepted until August 16, 2014 and can be mailed to: Land Planning Branch (K-320LP) Box 2703 Whitehorse, Yukon Y1A 2C6 Faxed to 393-6340 or emailed to judy.linton@gov.yk.ca For more information or to comment please contact the EMR Land Planning Branch at 667-3531.

WEDNESDAY, JULY 16, 2014 GIRLS FIGURE skates, like new, size 6, $15, Graf 370 Supra hockey skates, size 2.5, $15, Easton Synergy Hockey Pants, YT(XL), 16"-28", $15, snowboarding helmet, small (53-55cm), $15. 456-7758 SHIMANO SPD MO71 bike shoes, menĘźs size 10.5, $15. 668-4129

Livestock HORSE HAVEN HAY RANCH Dev & Louise Hurlburt Irrigated Timothy/Brome mix Small square & round bales Discounts for field pick up or delivery Straw bales also for sale 335-5192 • 668-7218 QUALITY YUKON MEAT Dev & Louise Hurlburt Grain-finished Hereford beef Domestic wild boar Order now for guaranteed delivery Payment plan available Samples on request 668-7218 335-5192 Free Range grass-fed Chickens & Turkeys Irrigated & fertilized Brome Hay Standing dead pine firewood Call 334-8960 FREE RANGE, ORGANICALLY FED, locally reared; Fresh Chickens, Ducks and Turkeys. Remember what chicken tasted like... this is it. Processed whole birds will be ready mid-July. Robert 334-8444 ibexvalleyfarm@gmail.com KUBOTA DIESEL tractor, BX25D, backhoe & loader, 3pt hitch, 30 hrs, under warranty, $18,500. 862-7047 USED FARM MACHINERY Mower Conditioner, Round Bailer, Square Bailer, Seed Drill, Swather Disc, Hay Rake Machinery is older in working condition 335-5192 or 668-7218 2 ENGLISH riding jackets, ladies size 14-16, one black Devonaire, one dark grey wool, plus one sleeveless blouse, $60 for all, anna.lorrina@gmail.com SADDLEBRED MARE, 13yrs, 15hh, pretty sorrel, good temperment, light touch response, nice gait, good on trails, good with feet, many good qualities, serious enquiries only $2,000 firm, approved home only. 333-9841 COMING TO the Yukon with an empty horse/stock trailer? We have 2 Llamas to pick up in Barriere near Kamloops. Preferably the 1st half of August. Call evenings at 994-3102

REQUEST FOR PROPOSAL SUPPLY AND INSTALL OF NEW PLAYGROUND EQUIPMENT AT HAINES JUNCTION AND DESTRUCTION BAY SCHOOLS

4 ROLLS of barbed wire (1,300m ea), paid $100 ea, asking $80 ea. Lisa @ 334-3650 3 1/2 month old goats, 1 wether & 1 doe, dehorned, healthy & robust for meat or milking, Alpine Myotonic cross, $125 ea. 634-2501 SCYTHE WITH wooden handle and stone, almost new, $50. 633-5246

Baby & Child Items CHILDRENĘźS CLOTHING in excellent condition, given freely the first & third Saturday monthly at the Church of the Nazarene, 2111 Centennial. 633-4903 GRACO INFANT car seat, $15, basic white crib, no mattress, $10. 334-7061 BABY CRIB, good cond, $30. 334-7061

Furniture FUTON QUEEN size bed, clean, $40. 633-2837 BEDROOM SET, 7-piece solid hickory wood, $650 obo. 668-2972 DOUBLE BED, very clean, in gd cond, $150. Rocking chair, older antique style. 333-9020 WOODEN KITCHEN table & chairs, $75. 335-6042 lv msg COUCH & loveseat, rust colour, faux suede, easy to clean, $600 obo. 336-846 MOVING OUT: Couch & love seat, exc cond, $250 obo. 393-3113 SMALL RECLINER, blue, free. 633-4827 UMBRELLA PATIO set incl couch & 2 chairs, $100. 4 antique dining chairs, matching setee w/floral upholstery, very comfy w/arms, offers. 667-4090 LARGE SECTIONAL-L Couch w/blue, green, grey shades, Country House, $200 obo. White 5-drawer chest of drawers, $40. Small shelving units, $20 ea. Antique tri-light floor lamp, $150. 667-4090 LARGE COUCH, black/multi-colour, $50; dark green recliner, $50, both in good cond. 633-5324 WOODEN FRAME futon, magazine racks on side, mattress, beige, $100, high stone top patio table w/3 wooden chairs, $50, bookcase $20, corner TV unit, $40. 393-3143 COUCH, $75 obo. info @ 334-1732 SMALL STAINED spruce study desk with three drawers, built-in light and cork back board, great for small office space/kids bedroom, $50. 456-7944 CONTENTS OF 1-bdrm apt, $2,500 obo for complete contents picked up, no partial inquiries, serious inquiries to arrange viewing by appointment only, e-mail thebigcontentsdeal@gmx.com QUEEN SIZE box spring & mattress, clean, $75. 633-6775 COUCH, 633-6775

CLEAN & comfortable, $50.

REQUEST FOR PROPOSAL

Submissions must be clearly marked with the above project title. The closing date for submissions is August 12, 2014. Please refer to the procurement documents for the closing time and location. Documents may be obtained from the Procurement Support Centre, Department of Highways and Public Works, Suite 101 - 104 Elliott Street, Whitehorse, Yukon (867) 667-5385. Technical questions may be directed to Mike Otto at (867) 667-3004. The highest ranked or lowest priced submission may not necessarily be accepted. This tender is subject to Chapter Five of the Agreement on Internal Trade. Bidders are advised to review documents to determine Certificate of Recognition (COR) requirements for this project. View or download documents at: www.gov.yk.ca/tenders/tms.html

Project Description: Monitor Yukon radio and television broadcasts, provide transcripts Submissions must be clearly marked with the above project title. The closing date for submissions is July 31, 2014. Please refer to the procurement documents for the closing time and location. Documents may be obtained from the Procurement Support Centre, Department of Highways and Public Works, Suite 101 - 104 Elliott Street, Whitehorse, Yukon (867) 667-5385. Technical questions may be directed to Nicole Goulah at (867) 667-8466. The highest ranked or lowest priced submission may not necessarily be accepted. View or download documents at: www.gov.yk.ca/tenders/tms.html

Highways and Public Works

Executive Council Office

MEDIA MONITORING SERVICE


WEDNESDAY, JULY 16, 2014

39

YUKON NEWS

ROCKING CHAIR, older antique style, 333-9020 ANTIQUE OAK hutch, completely refinished including glass doors, 6ʼ long, exc cond, $1,000. 633-6244 QUEEN SIZE oak bed frame, some rod iron design, with tall dresser and 2 night tables, $650. 336-8666 lv msg

Personals DRUG PROBLEM? Narcotics Anonymous meetings Wed. 7pm-8pm #2 - 407 Ogilvie St. BYTE Office FRI. 7pm-8:30pm 4071 - 4th Ave Many Rivers Office ARE YOU MÉTIS? Are you registered? Would you like to be involved? There is a Yukon Metis Nation that needs your support Contact 668-6845 CITIZENS ON PATROL. Do you have concerns in your neighborhood & community? Be part of the solution! Volunteer valuable time to the C.O.P.S. program. With your eyes & ears we can help stomp out crime. Info: RCMP 867-667-5555

PUBLIC TENDER

REQUEST FOR PROPOSAL SUPPLY AND INSTALL OF NEW PLAYGROUND EQUIPMENT AT VARIOUS WHITEHORSE AREA SCHOOLS

New York Times Crossword

PUBLIC TENDER

C U B I C

S2014/04 SALE OF SURPLUS RECREATIONAL & TRADES EQUIPMENT

Submissions must be clearly marked with the above project title. The closing date for submissions is August 5, 2014. Please refer to the procurement documents for the closing time and location. Documents may be obtained from the Procurement Support Centre, Department of Highways and Public Works, Suite 101 - 104 Elliott Street, Whitehorse, Yukon (867) 667-5385. Technical questions may be directed to Mike Otto at (867) 667-3004. The highest ranked or lowest priced submission may not necessarily be accepted. This tender is subject to Chapter Five of the Agreement on Internal Trade. Bidders are advised to review documents to determine Certificate of Recognition (COR) requirements for this project. View or download documents at: www.gov.yk.ca/tenders/tms.html

Project Description: Sale of Surplus Yukon Government Equipment Submissions must be clearly marked with the above project title. The closing date for submissions is July 29, 2014. Please refer to the procurement documents for the closing time and location. Documents may be obtained from the Procurement Support Centre, Department of Highways and Public Works, Suite 101 - 104 Elliott Street, Whitehorse, Yukon (867) 667-5385. Technical questions may be directed to Stan Dorosz at (867) 667-3164. Viewing Dates: Tuesday, July 15, 2014: 12:00 PM to 2:00PM Tuesday, July 22, 2014: 12:00 PM to 2:00 PM The highest ranked or lowest priced submission may not necessarily be accepted. View or download documents at: www.gov.yk.ca/tenders/tms.html

Highways and Public Works

Highways and Public Works

SOIL REMEDIATION YHC UNIT #260400 ROSS RIVER, YUKON Submissions must be clearly marked with the above project title. The closing date for submissions is August 6, 2014. Please refer to the procurement documents for the closing time and location. If documents are available they may be obtained from Yukon Housing Corporation, 410 Jarvis Street, Whitehorse, Yukon. Technical questions may be directed to Laura Vanderkley at 867-667-8114. The highest ranked or lowest priced submission may not necessarily be accepted.

A N O D E

W E E V I L

S W I V E L S

D R Y E R

R E S O N A H A T A R E S T A S T T A I I L T T E R A L O T I R E T I S E G R A G A M E L I M

E E L W I L G O A T U N T S D O D A R F E L N T O E R R O R D D E S H S E W H A H U R O N S T E S

G O L D M I N E

M V P R A T T L E R S

O T R R B E B V A I Y E E I S R S T M A S R E R T I T A S E W A T E R O N I T I R O N O U I P P Y

L E O N A R D

A W N E Y S T M W A I O N G M A A R E I L L O K S R K S S G O B L S A E R G H I E A U R P M

A R O O M H A D S E A M R E N I T R A A L N O V A S

N U G G E T

B E R E T

S U M O S A A A S

N O S

I D E S C E N T E L S E A N A I Y A M M E R E I D E D T A R K T I N G O V E R R I S E E S A C R E S H A T E E W A B E S M U T O U G H U S L E T E E R

NOTICE TO CREDITORS AND CLAIMANTS IN THE MATTER of the Estate of BERNARD LESLIE ROBERGE, deceased, late of Whitehorse, Yukon Territory, who died August 24th, 2012, in Vancouver, British Columbia. All persons having claims against the above-mentioned estate are requested to file the same, supported by Statutory Declaration, with the undersigned on or before August 6th, 2014, after which date the said estate will be distributed having reference only to claims which have been so filed. All persons indebted to the said estate are requested to make immediate payment to the Estate in care of the undersigned. Christine M. Hakim Lamarche & Lang Barristers and Solicitors 505 Lambert Street, Whitehorse Yukon Y1A 1Z8

PUBLIC TENDER

PUBLIC TENDER

PUBLIC TENDER

WHISTLE BEND SUBDIVISION PHASE 1 & 2 LANDSCAPE CONSTRUCTION CONTRACT 3 WHITEHORSE, YUKON 2014

TRAILER MODIFICATIONS

REMOVE AND INSTALL CULVERTS VARIOUS LOCATIONS DEMPSTER HIGHWAY #5

PUBLIC TENDER RE-ABANDONMENT OF WELL B-62 Project Description: Drilling, testing, plugging, and clean-up of an existing petroleum exploration well in Eagle Plains, Yukon. Submissions must be clearly marked with the above project title. The closing date for submissions is August 6, 2014. Please refer to the procurement documents for the closing time and location. Documents may be obtained from the Procurement Support Centre, Department of Highways and Public Works, Suite 101 - 104 Elliott Street, Whitehorse, Yukon (867) 667-5385. Technical questions may be directed to Kyle Rolling at (867) 667-3565. The highest ranked or lowest priced submission may not necessarily be accepted. This tender is subject to Chapter Five of the Agreement on Internal Trade. Bidders are advised to review documents to determine Certificate of Recognition (COR) requirements for this project. View or download documents at: www.gov.yk.ca/tenders/tms.html

Energy, Mines and Resources

PUBLIC TENDER EROSION PROTECTION AND BRIDGE RETROFIT, ENGINEER CREEK, KM 194.6, DEMPSTER HIGHWAY, #5

Submissions must be clearly marked with the above project title. The closing date for submissions is August 5, 2014. Please refer to the procurement documents for the closing time and location. Documents may be obtained from the Procurement Support Centre, Department of Highways and Public Works, Suite 101 - 104 Elliott Street, Whitehorse, Yukon (867) 667-5385. Technical questions may be directed to Mike Otto at (867) 667-3004. The highest ranked or lowest priced submission may not necessarily be accepted. View or download documents at: www.gov.yk.ca/tenders/tms.html

Project Description: Landscape construction for Casca Boulevard Buffer, additional planting from station 100+120 to station 101+380, Bellingham, Aksala and Caprioce parkettes, including Erosion Repairs and Hydroseeding Submissions must be clearly marked with the above project title. The closing date for submissions is August 7, 2014. Please refer to the procurement documents for the closing time and location. Documents may be obtained from the Procurement Support Centre, Department of Highways and Public Works, Suite 101 - 104 Elliott Street, Whitehorse, Yukon (867) 667-5385. Technical questions may be directed to Brian Ritchie at (86) 667-3093. The highest ranked or lowest priced submission may not necessarily be accepted. This tender is subject to Chapter Five of the Agreement on Internal Trade. Bidders are advised to review documents to determine Certificate of Recognition (COR) requirements for this project. View or download documents at: www.gov.yk.ca/tenders/tms.html

Project Description: Supply and install modifications to a cargo trailer to convert the use to a mobile incident command post/telecommunications unit Submissions must be clearly marked with the above project title. The closing date for submissions is August 21, 2014. Please refer to the procurement documents for the closing time and location. Documents may be obtained from the Procurement Support Centre, Department of Highways and Public Works, Suite 101 - 104 Elliott Street, Whitehorse, Yukon (867) 667-5385. Technical questions may be directed to Michael Templeton at (867) 667-5220. A site visit will be required for all bidders to view the trailer and its current configuration. The site visit will be conducted at the Emergency Measures Organization office at 60 Norseman Road on July 22, 2014 between 10:00 and 11:30. All potential bidders must attend the site visit or their bid will not be accepted. No other site visits will be established or entertained. The highest ranked or lowest priced submission may not necessarily be accepted. View or download documents at: www.gov.yk.ca/tenders/tms.html

Project Description: This project involves the removal of existing culverts and installation of new culverts at various locations on the Dempster Highway. Submissions must be clearly marked with the above project title. The closing date for submissions is August 5, 2014. Please refer to the procurement documents for the closing time and location. Documents may be obtained from the Procurement Support Centre, Department of Highways and Public Works, Suite 101 - 104 Elliott Street, Whitehorse, Yukon (867) 667-5385. Technical questions may be directed to Sandra Orban at (867) 633-7935. The highest ranked or lowest priced submission may not necessarily be accepted. This tender is subject to Chapter Five of the Agreement on Internal Trade. The Yukon Business Incentive Policy will apply to this project. Bidders are advised to review documents to determine Certificate of Recognition (COR) requirements for this project. View or download documents at: www.gov.yk.ca/tenders/tms.html

Project Description: The project includes loading, hauling and placing of rip rap armour along Engineer Creek and substructure retrofit including supply and installation of bin type walls and steel plating. Submissions must be clearly marked with the above project title. The closing date for submissions is August 5, 2014. Please refer to the procurement documents for the closing time and location. Documents may be obtained from the Procurement Support Centre, Department of Highways and Public Works, Suite 101 - 104 Elliott Street, Whitehorse, Yukon (867) 667-5385. Technical questions may be directed to Sandra Orban at (867) 633-7935. The highest ranked or lowest priced submission may not necessarily be accepted. This tender is subject to Chapter Five of the Agreement on Internal Trade. The Yukon Business Incentive Policy will apply to this project. Bidders are advised to review documents to determine Certificate of Recognition (COR) requirements for this project. View or download documents at: www.gov.yk.ca/tenders/tms.html

Highways and Public Works

Community Services

Community Services

Highways and Public Works

Highways and Public Works

View or download documents at: www.gov.yk.ca/tenders/tms.html

REQUEST FOR PROPOSAL SUPPLY AND INSTALL OF NEW PLAYGROUND EQUIPMENT AT ROBERT SERVICE SCHOOL

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40

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