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AD MAT SHELLS
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Wednesday, August 6, 2014
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Steps underway to remediate tailings spill Angie Mindus Staff Writer Likely residents are bracing for 1 a tailings what is to come after pond filled with several million
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cubic metres of mine wastewater burst its banks at Mount Polley Mine, entering Quesnel Lake at Hazeltine Creek in the early morning hours on BC Day, Monday, Aug. 4.
“It’s a very sad, tragic thing but it’s happening and we have to deal with it,” said lakefront resident Pohney Whitmer, who was busy distributing posters for a highlyanticipated town hall meeting set
to get underway with officials in Likely yesterday at 4 p.m. “Emotions are high. It’s devastating.” See QUESNEL Page A3
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Wednesday, August 6, 2014 Williams Lake Tribune
Williams Lake City Page CENTRAL CARIBOO GRANT FOR ASSISTANCE APPLICATION
Sam Ketcham Pool Referendum Question of the Week Q: Will the new pools have improved water quality? A: Yes. The project scope for the new pools includes installation of updated water treatment technology. The new equipment will help reduce the amount of chlorine required to meet regulatory standards and provide a better environment for swimmers.
On an annual basis, the City of Williams Lake (City) and Electoral Areas D, E and F of the Cariboo Regional District (CRD) jointly provide Grants For Assistance to local non-profit organizations for projects, activities and events that strengthen and enhance the well being of the community, promote volunteerism and support the goals and priorities of the City of Williams Lake and Cariboo Regional District. Application forms may be picked up and submitted to the City of Williams Lake, 450 Mart Street, V2G 1N3 or Cariboo Regional District, Suite D, 180 North third Ave., V2G 2A4 THE DEADLINE FOR APPLICATIONS IS SEPTEMBER 30th Late applications will not be considered.
Eureka Science Camp
SUMMER ICEBERG & FLOATY TOY DAYS Wednesday, August 13 - Floaty Toys
CMRC - 1:30pm - 4:00 pm SUMMER FUN DAYS Wednesday, August 6 - Survivor Day Wednesday, August 20 - Relay Day Experience FUN with science this summer! Kids will enjoy interactive days of hands-on activities, building projects, outdoor activities, and games. Areas of science covered include: biology, chemistry, physics, engineering & technology.
August 12 - 15 9:00am to 4:00pm 9 - 14 years TRU • $169
Beat the Heat! Join us at the Recreation Complex for a refreshing dip in the pool! EVERYONE WELCOME SWIM Weekdays 1:30-4:00 pm Toonie Swim Friday 3:00-5:00 pm
Check our full schedule at www.williamslake.ca
To register call 250-398-7665
In order to qualify for a Grant For Assistance, the applicant must: • Be a registered non-profit organization in good standing with the Registrar of Companies; • Provide the most recent Annual General Meeting report, financial statements and approved budget for the current year; • Demonstrate financial need; and • Provide a service, project or event that supports the priorities and goals of the City and CRD. Services, projects or events proposed by the applicant must not: • Offer direct financial assistance to individuals or families; • Duplicate or replace services that fall within the mandate of senior levels of government or local service agency; or • Support a Provincial or National fundraising campaign; OR • Be of a commercial nature Grants for Assistance will be provided under the following categories: 1. Capital Expenditure – equipment purchase, construction, repair or upgrade of facilities 2. Event – seed funding for new, ongoing events with diminishing support over three years 3. Special Project – one-time special event, program or activity
DEADLINE EXTENDED! WILLIAMS LAKE HIGH SCHOOL STUDENTS ENCOURAGED TO APPLY TO SERVE ON JUNIOR COUNCIL Williams Lake high school students interested in offering their ideas for Williams Lake and learning about local government are invited to apply to serve on Williams Lake Junior Council for the 2014-2015 term. The Junior Council is a group of high school students from Grades 10-12 that suggest ideas that could enhance life for youth in our city. Junior Council members are appointed by City Council and provide a youth voice to decisions made by the city. It is an opportunity to learn about and participate in the process of local government. Each year Junior Council sets learning goals and then chooses one or more projects to work on. Junior Council receives group facilitator and leadership training, an orientation to city operations, and participates in Council committee meetings. Over the past year they have participated in International Women’s Day, judged the regional Diversity Logo contest, hosted a volunteer fair for youth, organized Pay It Forward Day, learned about logo design and created a Junior Council logo, and helped out with the City Birthday Party. Those interested are asked to submit an application explaining why you are interested and why you think you would be a good choice for Junior Council. Include your name, address, phone number, school, and grade (Sept. 2014). Send your letter by August 15 to: JUNIOR COUNCIL APPLICATIONS City of Williams Lake 450 Mart Street, Williams Lake, BC V2G 1N3
HELP THE CITY SAVE WATER AND THE ENVIRONMENT WITH THE LOW FLOW TOILET/APPLIANCE REBATE PROGRAM Many homes in Williams Lake are equipped with older toilets, dishwashers or clothes washers that require more water to operate. New low flow toilets and appliances require much less water while doing the same function. By replacing your old toilet and appliances, you could use up to one-third less water! That could save the average household more than 300 liters per day, or 100,000 liters per year. The City is offering a MAXIMUM of two rebates per residential unit per year. 1. Toilets using 4.8 liters or less, with a Maximum Performance (MaP) Tested approved new low flow fixture. Visit website www.cwwa.ca/freepub_e.asp to view. 2. Dishwashers that are on the approved list on the City’s website. 3. Clothes washers that are on the approved list on the City’s website.
WHY HAS THE CITY INITIATED THIS LOW FLOW TOILET/APPLIANCE REBATE PROGRAM? The City of Williams Lake wants to reduce the amount of water consumed as well as the amount of water flowing into the sanitary sewer system. It costs money to treat the water coming in and going out of your house. Using less water saves both money and the environment for everyone who lives in and around the Cariboo.
WHO IS ELIGIBLE FOR THE REBATE?
This offer is only for owners of residential units that are connected to the City of Williams Lake’s Water and Sewer system. There is a YEARLY limit of two toilets/appliance rebates per residential unit. Simple toilet replacements do not require a plumbing permit. However, if you are also renovating, you must apply for a building permit.
NEW CONSTRUCTION
For new construction in the City of Williams Lake, all plumbing must adhere to the BC Plumbing codes. However, the City is providing rebates for those
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property owners or contractors who choose to install MaP approved Dual Flush toilets (3/4.8L) and 3 liter fixtures instead of the minimum code requirement for toilet installation. There is no maximum for this incentive.
WHAT ABOUT MY OLD TOILET OR APPLIANCE?
Your old toilet or appliance must be disposed of at the City of Williams Lake’s Municipal Worksyard at 555 N Second Avenue. You must have a copy of the approved Rebate Form with you when the fixture is dropped off. The form must be signed by a City representative.
WHAT DO I NEED TO APPLY FOR THE REBATE PROGRAM?
1. Pick up an application form at City Hall, Development Services, 450 Mart Street. Fill it in and return to City Hall. 2. Provide a receipt for the purchase of an approved low flow fixture. 3. Provide proof of installation of a low flow toilet or appliance and proof that the old toilet or appliance has been brought to the Municipal Worksyard. This is achieved by: • An inspection of the newly installed toilet in place by a City Representative. • A signed copy of the application form proving the old unit was dropped off at the Municipal Worksyard located at 555 North Second Avenue. 4. You must agree to permit the representative of the City of Williams Lake access to inspect the installation. Simple toilet replacements do not require a plumbing permit. However, if you are also renovating, you must apply for a building permit. City staff will review your application and, if you qualify, the City of Williams Lake will mail you a cheque for each eligible low flow toilet or appliance (up to two rebates per residential dwelling per year). This program is on a first come first serve basis. Your application must be approved by the Development Services Coordinator prior to purchasing a low flow toilet to guarantee a rebate.
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The City of Williams Lake will send a rebate cheque for qualifying installations to the registered homeowner as explained. Low Flow Toilets - Rebates for toilets will be: 1. The amount of the receipt to a maximum of $75 for each low flush (4.8L) fixture 2. The amount of the receipt up to a maximum of $100 for each dual flush (3/4.8L) fixture 3. And the amount of the receipt to a maximum of $125 for a 3 liter flush toilet. For a list of Maximum Performance (MaP) tested approved fixtures visit the website www.cwwa.ca/freepub_e.asp to view. For new construction, where dual flush (3/4.8L) fixtures are installed, the City of Williams Lake will rebate $50 with no maximum number per year and will rebate $75 for all 3 liter fixtures with no maximum number per year. Clothes Washers - Rebates for Clothes Washers will be the amount of the receipt to a maximum of $150 for appliances that have a Water Factor of less than 6 and the amount of the receipt to a maximum of $200 for appliances that have a Water Factor of 3 or less. For a list of appliances and their Water Factor, please go to www.williamslake.ca Dishwashers – rebates for Dishwashers will be the amount of the receipt to a maximum of $150 for appliances that have a Water Factor of 6 or less and the amount of the receipt to a maximum of $200 for appliances with a Water Factor of 3 or less. For a list of appliances and their Water Factor, please go to www.williamslake.ca Click on Departments, Planning and Operations, Appliance Rebates. All rebate claims are subject to verification. This offer is on a first come first serve basis and may be withdrawn at any time. Limit of 2 toilet/appliance rebates per residential dwelling per year.
To receive City of Williams Lake media releases, Council Highlights, and updates, contact Communications Coordinator Ken MacInnis at 250-392-8488 or kmacinnis@williamslake.ca
EMPLOYMENT OPPORTUNITIES
Please go to www.williamslake.ca and click on Human Resources to see employment opportunities.
Williams Lake Tribune Wednesday, August 6, 2014
www.wltribune.com A3
NEWS
Quesnel Lake impacts unknown following tailings breach Continued From Page A1 In the short term, the breach has forced an immediate and entire water ban for residents and livestock in the affected area which earlier included Quesnel Lake, Polley Lake, Hazeltine Creek and Cariboo Creek, and now also includes the entire Quesnel and Cariboo river systems right up to the Fraser River. In the long-term, however, many are worried the spill could have lasting impacts on fish and water quality in the pristine wilderness area. Imperial Metals Corporations issued a statement about the disaster Tuesday, stating the tailings dam breach had stabilized and that they are working closely with provincial ministries, local agencies and emergency response officials. “Our first priority is the health and safety of our employees and neighbours, and we are relieved no loss of life or injury have been reported. We are deeply concerned and are working to mitigate immediate effects and understand the cause,” stated the company, noting exact quantities of water and tailings discharged have yet to be determined. The company further stated the cause of the breach is unknown and that the mine has been placed on care and maintenance, with no estimate of how long it will take to restore
Creek on Aug. 4 indicated solids were settling rapidly,” Kynoch stated. Kynoch said the breach released approximately 10 million cubic metres of water into Polley Lake and Quesnel Lake, adding the company is now working with the Ministries of Forests and Environment to mobilize crews and equipment to collect and remove floating debris from Quesnel Lake. “Polley Lake rose approximately 1.5 metres above normal height and steps are being taken to pump excess water into the Springer Pit to start dropping the water level back to normal. Angie Mindus photos Based on the volume Silt and mud line the forest floor near Hazeltine Creek at Quesnel Lake where as much as 10 million cubic metres of of Quesnel Lake, tailings pond water breached the dam at Mount Polley Mine and spilled through the forest creating a massive path there was no visible of destruction. rise in water elevation. operations. health and well-being We know Hazeltine Whitmer said she of the surrounding Creek was scoured and her husband Richcommunity. Ministry through its entire ard Rujanschi first of Environment has length leaving eroded received word about been and continues banks. Access roads the breach through a to carry out water to this creek have been phone call at 4 a.m. sampling in Quesnel blocked and the creek Monday alerting Lake. We expect a is being posted for no them that the tailings good outcome from access. The public pond dam, located this sampling because is asked to stay away approximately eight the water discharged from Hazeltine Creek kilometres upstream, by the event already at this time.” had been breached at almost meets drinking A public informaabout 2 a.m. at Hazelwater standards. Spe- tion session and uptine Creek. cifically, mercury has date regarding the “We went outside never been detected in Mount Polley Mine and it sounded like Likely resident Pohney Whitmer does everything she can to help our water and arsenic Tailing Pond Breach her community including posting a notice informing residents of Niagra Falls.” levels are about one- was held in Likely at a town hall meeting yesterday with officials following the Mount Fearing what the Polley tailings pond breach on Monday. fifth of drinking water the community hall breach would bring, quality. We regularly at 4 p.m. after the Whitmer said they wait and see,” she the spill into the lake noon, Brian Kynoch, perform toxicity tests Tribune/Weekend Adawoke friends who said. which is moving to- President of Imperial and we know this wa- visor press time. Repwere visiting the On Tuesday, area ward Likely and its Metals, issued a state- ter is not toxic to rain- resentatives from the couple, pulled water residents, many of bridge. ment regarding the bow trout. Cariboo Regional pumps out of the lake whom have spent their “We are hoping it situation at Mt. Pol“We do know sus- District, Ministry of where they and most lives logging in the can be contained,” ley, giving some hope pended solids from Transportation and residents in the area area, were surveying Whitmer said of the that the contents of the tailings will need Infrastructure, Minget their drinking wa- the next immediate debris. the tailings pond may to settle out before istry of Environment, ter from and removed threat to the com“If it comes down, not be as bad as every- the water meets sus- Interior Health and their boat from the munity –– that being then we are just start- one fears. pended solids criteria. Mount Polley Mine water. the “iceberg sized” ing our disaster.” “Water quality is a Observations at the were expected to be in “Now we have to log debris dumped by Yesterday after- key issue affecting the mouth of Hazeltine attendance.
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A4 www.wltribune.com
Wednesday, August 6, 2014 Williams Lake Tribune
NEWS
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Likely residents fear worst after mine disaster Sage Birchwater Special to Tribune/Advisor A pall of uncertainty hangs over Likely as a total breach in the Mount Polley tailings pond continued (Monday) to pour a slurry of toxic water and mud into Quesnel Lake, once renowned for being the cleanest deep water lake in the world. In the early hours of August 4, the four-kilometre-long dam containing the tailings pond of the copper and gold mine burst, sending millions of tons of contaminated water, mud and mining slurry into the salmonbearing water system. Surpentine Creek, previously a stream two metres wide, is now a wasteland 50 metres across, after five million cubic metres of effluent flooded into nearby Polley Lake and carved its own canyon several kilometres in length to Quesnel Lake. Eye-witnesses to the devastation, Stan and Rosanne Siemens of Quesnel, were boating on the East Arm of Quesnel Lake. When they turned the corner on their way back to Likely they could
hardly believe their eyes.
A mile down the lake a floating mass of twisted trees stretched half way across the lake. “It’s rude up there,” Stan Siemens says. “Half way across the lake trees were sticking straight up. I’m a logger and it would take us a year to take that many trees down, and this happened in 20 minutes.” The land is destroyed, Rosanne Siemens adds. “Raft Creek is a river now. It’s all mud.” A toxic plume continues to build in the lake and move down the outflow into the Quesnel River at Likely. Before
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go back to Horsefly for Sage Birchwater photo
Rosanne and Stan Siemens of Quesnel were boating on Quesnel Lake and couldn’t believe their eyes when they saw the massive debris pile from the breach of the Mount Polley Mine tailings pond.
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nightfall the water advi-
sory for Likely had been expanded for the whole Quesnel River system to the City of Quesnel on the Fraser River. Robin Hood, president of the Likely Chamber of Commerce, is grim as his wife, Darlene, hands out water advisory notices to people recreating on the shore of the river. “The whole economy of this town (Likely) is dependent on the mine and tourism,” Hood says. “Now we might have lost both overnight.” Sitting in the shade on the porch of Likely’s general store, 28-yearold Kalvin King is checking the Internet on his smartphone. He’s from Horsefly but has a placer claim above Quesnel Forks. He’s been working four days and was going to jump in the lake and go for a swim before he got the water advisory. “I haven’t had a shower for four days so I’m pretty hot,” says Kalvin, who describes himself as a guy who’s not very concerned about anything. “I’ve worked at both Mount Polley and Gibraltar so I know what stuff is in the tailings ponds. It’s there for a good reason and it’s supposed to stay there and not leave. It’s an environmental disaster.” He says he’ll probably
his shower. Placer miner, Chris Fournier, 45, pulls up to the gas pumps of the store in his quad ATV. He lives down river from the townsite and washed his face in the river and had a drink before he heard of the breach and the water advisory. “It tasted like sucking pennies,” he said. He was fishing for Chinook salmon the day before in the Cariboo River and is worried about the effect on the various salmon runs making their way up the Fraser River. He said workers at Mount Polley Mine warned him that the tailings pond was going to breach. “And it did.” Aileen Peterson, owner of Valley General Store in Likely for eight years, said the water level on Quesnel Lake behaved strangely. “It went up and then down and few feet. We got a call at 6 a.m. that everybody had to take their boats out of the water.” Robin Hood applauds the actions of Likely First Responders who woke him up at 5 a.m. and evacuated the Cedar Point Provincial Campsite over fears that the breach would cause a Tsunami. “It’s better to err on the side of precaution,” he says.
For Likely pub owners Randy and Claudine Kadonaga, there are still a lot of unanswered questions. “So far there are a lot of rumours,” says Randy. “We’re waiting to see what happens.” “We don’t have anything to say until we know more,” adds Claudine. “We opened early on Monday and served a lot of breakfasts when they evacuated Cedar Point Park.” Waiting in the balance is the plight of 500 employees of Mount Polley Mine. Jamie Regier, who works for Ducks Unlimited, took one last dip in Quesnel River with his three-year-old daughter, Lauren, before the toxic debris reached Likely. “I’m pretty shocked,” he said. “The entire impact is going to ruin this town. I have a lot of friends at Mount Polley, and it’s going to be shut down.” An employee of Mount Polly Mine who was on shift the night of the breach and asked to remain anonymous, confirmed you can’t operate a mine without a tailings pond facility. “Thank God nobody was killed or injured. If that breach would have occurred during the day with all the contract workers in the area, it wouldn’t have been so good.” Rick Matthews, a former Moorhouse Lake resident, boated down Quesnel Lake to view the debris pile on Monday. He is worried that unless something is done, the mass of logs will get swept down the Quesnel River with devastating results. “The floating island of logs is creeping towards Likely,” he says. “There needs to be damage control or it will pile up against the bridge and could take it out.”
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Williams Lake Tribune Wednesday, August 6, 2014
www.wltribune.com A5
NEWS
2014 Art Walk begins Thursday
Angie Mindus photo
Arty the Art Walker (Willie Dye) participated in the Stampede Parade and will be on hand for the opening Thursday at Lake City Ford.
The 2014 Art Walk and Sale officially begins tomorrow, Thursday, Aug. 7 with a grand opening followed by a guided tour for art walkers of approximately 20 of the participating businesses. Arty the Art Walker aka Willie Dye says the grand opening of the 2014 Art Walk will take place at Lake City Ford at 11:30 a.m. and both MLAs Coralee Oates and Donna Barnett have been invited to attend. About noon, following the opening art walkers will be invited
to join interpreters Harry Jennings and Mary Forbes on the first art walk around the city. Following the opening to be kicked off at Lake City Ford at 11:30 a.m. Art-walkers are invited to meet at Lake City Ford and join the tour that will be guided by interpreters Harry Jennings and Mary Forbes. In a unique swap Merritt and Williams Lake have hosted some artists from their respective communities during their respective art walks,
Merritt in July and Williams Lake in August. The art walk runs Aug. 7 to Sept. 6 and features the work of 52 artists paired with local businesses for display. Artists from Bella Coola, Merritt, Sun Peaks, Horsefly, Kelowna, Hornby Island will join artists from Williams Lake in showing their work during the walk. Twenty-two of the artists will be showing their work for the first time on the art walk. There will also be great prizes, great murals to see and a great
New proposals coming in teacher talks Tom Fletcher Black Press Negotiators for the B.C. Teachers’ Federation and school districts are meeting Friday for the first time since schools were shuttered by a strike in late June, and Education Minister Peter Fassbender expects new proposals from both sides. Fassbender said Tuesday it’s the first meeting of full bargaining teams in more than a month, and the B.C. Public School Employers’ Association has some “new concepts” to bring to the discussion.
“We’ve already demonstrated our willingness to move on some key elements,” he said. “We need to see the same from the BCTF. They’ve indicated they’re willing to do that.” He wouldn’t comment on the new proposals, except to reiterate that the BCTF’s position on benefits and other compensation is not in the “affordability zone” established by other public sector union agreements. If the strike shuts schools again in September, the government plans to use the savings to compensate
parents $40 a day for each child under 13 in public school, to assist with daycare or tutoring costs. Fassbender said there would be no conditions attached to the payout. “My hope is that there isn’t a nickel available as of September, because schools are operating, teachers are back in the classroom, students are there and there is no further disruption,” he said. The B.C. School Trustees’ Association has urged the government to direct its $12 million a day in payroll savings from
the strike to a fund to address class size and special needs support. Trustees have also called on the union to moderate its benefit demands, which include parental leave, dental benefits, massage therapy and increased preparation time for elementary
school teachers. BCPSEA has offered $375 million over a six-year contract term to provide extra classroom support, and specified class size limits in the teacher contract, to address key issues in a series of court disputes.
opportunity for exercise, say organizers. As in past years there will be a silent auction of art happening during the walk. Numerous special arts and culture events are planned during Art Walk including a student walk, a bicycle tour of the walk, people’s choice award, busking. Every year Art Walk attempts to find an extra special reason for people to do the walk other than to view the great art. This year the reason is another impressive grand prize, a necklace, handcrafted
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by local jeweller Geoff Bourdon. It is a 24.04 ct. rutilated quartz in a handmade sterling silver setting. All types of art is represented on the walk including oils, water colours, pencil drawings, pottery, acrylics, weaving, photography, airbrush art, quilting, carving, jewellery, doll making and more. For complete details on participation, pick up one of the Art Walk booklets that are now available at various locations around the city.
BIG Thank You Much Appreciation &
goes out to
Tolko & West Fraser Truckers for their generous donation.
It helped us immensely with our stay in Prince George. Thanks again - Denis & Karen Carrier
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Sudoku August 6, 2014
We are looking for your favourite local hunting photo Warren Pye,
Manager Equipment Finance Group Kamloops
the
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Deadline August 29, 2014 All photos must be submitted with names of individuals & location. Supply name of photographer for photo credit. Email to kathy@wltribune.com
Answers for August 6, 2014
Please feel free to call Warren at p. 250-852-6034 c. 778-257-0379 warren.pye@ cwbank.com
HOW TO PLAY:
Fill in the grid so that every row, every column and every 3x3 box contains the numbers 1 through 9 only once. Each 3x3 box is outlined with a darker line. You already have a few numbers to get you started. Remember: you must not repeat the numbers 1 through 9 in the same line, column or 3x3 box.
A6 www.wltribune.com
Wednesday, August 6, 2014 Williams Lake Tribune
VIEWPOINTS
• Publisher Kathy McLean • Editor Angie Mindus 250-392-2331 ext 243 editor@wltribune.com Free press can, of course, be good or bad, but, most certainly without freedom, the press will never be anything but bad. - Albert Camus
Merry Minuet
Tour of breach site difficult to see first hand
M
onday was BC Day and most British Columbians probably took advantage of the good weather and enjoyed the holiday. Monday was also the 100th anniversary of the beginning of the First World War, the Great War that was to end all wars and make the world free for everyone forever. No comment. I liked it when Canada was respected as a peacekeeping nation. Now we are a buttinski nation that can’t keep its nose out of anyFrench thing the USA Connection is involved in. Diana French What are we accomplishing with our war measures? Who is benefitting? Certainly not the people who are on the front lines, nor the children on the Gaza strip. Certainly not our recent war veterans. Choosing sides in disputes can get in the way of truces, never mind peace (Israel/Palestine). Besides, it’s hard to know which side to choose — who can we believe? The Wonderful West isn’t always right, eg. the U.S. certainly mislead the world on Iraq. The world situation reminds me of the Kingston Trio’s Merry Minuet. It was written half a century ago but the lyrics are eerily apt today. Don’t have room for them all, but the song is a tongue-in-cheek poke at natural disasters plus the strife and unrest in a world that is “festering with unhappy souls.” It ends with “But we can be tranquil and thankful and proud, for man’s been endowed with a mushroom shaped cloud ... and we know for certain that some lovely day, someone will set the spark off and we will all be blown away.” The last line is my favourite. “What nature doesn’t do to us will be done by our fellow man.” That’s possible given the state of world affairs. *** Wildfires in the Cariboo have been on my worry list this summer. The Mount Polley tailings pond breach was totally unexpected. Let’s hope for the best in both regards. Diana French is a freelance columnist for the Tribune. She is a former Tribune editor, retired teacher, historian, and book author.
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Our Viewpoint
Respect, on two wheels or four A fear of death shouldn’t be what keeps people from choosing to ride a bicycle. But it might. A cyclist was killed last week in Richmond. Last Thursday, another was struck and injured by a hit-and-run driver on the Mary Hill Bypass in Port Coquitlam. In each case, it’s unclear what caused the collisions. What is clear is the devastating results of a crash between a bicycle and a vehicle. The roads are packed with vehicles, driven by motorists weighed down by a multitude of potential distractions. The Lower Mainland has been expanding its cycling infrastructure but it needs more work — lots more work. But giving cyclists plenty of room on the road doesn’t necessarily mean they’ll be safe from inattentive drivers. An average of 150 cyclists are injured in B.C. every month during peak riding season of May to October, according to ICBC. We should all be encouraging more people to strap on helmets and take to the streets
on two wheels — it’s healthy for commuters and recreational riders, the environment and a congested region. But those statistics don’t do much for a would-be cyclist’s confidence. Yes, cyclists must do their part. The insurance corporation advises them to never assume drivers can see them and to wear bright, reflective clothing, and use lights at night. But how many times have you seen a motorist park in a bike lane? Fail to yield to a cyclist? Nearly knock a rider over while passing? It happens too often, and last week one rider lost their life and another was seriously hurt. Drivers and cyclists need to watch for each other at all times, use eye contact and hand signals. Moreover, we all need to make efforts to build greater respect between drivers and cyclists. Whether on two wheels or four, that starts with every one of us.
A politically independent community newspaper published Fridays by: Black Press Group Ltd. 188 North 1st Ave., Williams Lake, B.C., Canada V2G 1Y8 • Phone (250) 392Monica Lamb-Yorski Kathy McLean Angie Mindus Gaeil Farrar Greg Sabatino 2331 Fax (250) 392-7253, emails editor@wltribune.com or Community Editor Sports Editor Reporter Editor Publisher classifieds@wltribune.com, view our web page at www. wltribune.com. The Williams Lake Tribune is a member of the British Columbia Press Council, a self-regulatory body governing the province’s newspaper industry. The council considers complaints from the public about the conduct of member newspapers. Directors oversee the mediation of complaints, with input from both the newspaper and the complaint holder. If talking with the editor or publisher does not resolve your complaint about coverage or story treatment, you may contact the B.C. Press Council. Your written concern, with documentation, should be sent within 45 days to B.C. Press Council, 201 Selby Street, Nanaimo, B.C., V9R 2R2. For information, phone 888-687-2213 or go to www.bc.presscouncil.org
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arly in the morning on Monday August 4, a terrible and tragic incident occurred at the Mt. Polley Mine site. An estimated 10 million cubic metres of water and another 4.5 million cubic metres of fine sand were released into Polley Lake. This incident is unquestionably MLA serious and that Musings is why we will be devoting all of the Donna Barnett necessary resources to assist local officials in their efforts to mitigate the impact of this tailings breach to impacted communities and the surrounding environment. The Government of B.C. through the Ministry of Energy and Mines, Ministry of Environment, Ministry of Transportation and Infrastructure and Emergency Management BC are working around the clock with local authorities and Mt. Polley Mine executives to ensure a quick and effective response to the event. We are still in the early stages, but until all environmental impact assessments have been conducted, please adhere to the water ban as issued by the Cariboo Regional District in Quesnel Lake, Cariboo Creek, Hazeltine Creek and Polley Lake area including the Quesnel and Cariboo Rivers’ right into the Fraser. On Tuesday, I conducted a tour of the breach site along with fellow Cariboo MLA Coralee Oakes. There is no doubt that it was incredibly difficult to see first hand what has occurred at the site. This event should have never of happened and we will determine the cause of the breach and prevent anything like this from ever happening again. As the situation is changing rapidly, please contact the Cariboo Regional District public information line at 250-398-5581 or visit their website at cariboord.bc.ca. As Ministry of Energy and Mines inspectors are at the mine site conducting investigations, and Ministry of Environment staff will continue to conduct water tests in our region the Government of B.C. will be providing updates and more information to the public as it becomes available. Donna Barnett is the Liberal MLA for Cariboo-Chilcotin.
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Wednesday, August 6, 2014 Williams Lake Tribune
MORE VIEWPOINTS
Message to government rather than pay parents; improve classroom conditions Editor: The average North American family has two children. How many British Columbian families fit this profile, with children under the age of 13, is anyone’s guess. Forty dollars per diem, 20 school days per month, times two children, times however many students under the age of
13 equals big bucks. The suggestion of Finance Minister Mike de Jong, to use teachers’ September payroll to compensate parents for possible missed school days, has a twofold purpose: to win over parents to the government side, especially in view of an upcoming election, and to demolish teachers’ attempts to improve learning conditions in the classroom, with
perhaps the added result of eliminating the BCTF. Has it not occurred to anyone in our illustrious government that a simpler solution would be to invest any surplus in improving classroom conditions, particularly class size and class composition? Mary Ellison 150 Mile House
Road improvements needed Editor: To whom it may concern: I like to express my disgust over the horrible shape the streets in Williams Lake are in, especially Borland Street. Instead of building an unnecessary overpass and new intersec-
www.wltribune.com A7
tion, the money should be spent on repairing the streets in town. My car is starting to get more and more rattles because of all the ruts and potholes I have to drive over. Also Mission Road is in deplorable shape. Maybe the city would like to
receive and pay for my car repair costs. Thank you for listening. Irene Pryor 150 Mile House Editor’s note: The repaving of Borland Street is currently underway.
Letters must include name, phone number, and hometown in order to be considered. Those without are filed here...
Question of the week
?
What did you do during the B.C. day long weekend?
Alyssa Shook
Brooke Matchison
Came up from Vancouver to visit friends.
We drove to Williams Lake to visit friends.
Mike Hamilton
Sarah Curtis
Went to Vancouver to the zoo and aquarium.
We went camping in Prince George.
Katie Hjeldon
Jamie Kinley
Went for a few walks around town.
Had friends visit me from Vancouver.
This week’s online question:
Will the Vancouver Canucks make the playoffs? Log onto the Opinion section at wltribune.com to vote Last week’s question: Have you sailed on the Discovery Coast Ferry?
YES: 31.2 per cent
NO: 68.8 per cent
Yarn Bombing community art project appreciated ROSES & RASPBERRIES Someone you know do something worthwhile? Or maybe not so worthwhile? Send them a Rose or Raspberry. Deliver to :
The Tribune 188 North 1st Avenue Williams Lake, B.C. V2G 1V5 Fax: 250-392-7253 editor@wltribune.com
Sponsored by Mike Austin
Letters aLways weLcome
Roses: Roses by the bushel to all the participants of the Yarn Bombings on view around our city. The creativity is quite amazing! It’s not just trees that have been wrapped in colourful designs, but full-blown scenes both large and small on fences and gates and wherever the hand-work can be secured. Such a fun and interesting way to brighten up Williams Lake. Thank you!! A large thank you as well to the city’s gardening staff who are keeping the beds and baskets look-
ing so beautiful, even through the dry and hot spells. Job well done! Rosalyn Giles *** Roses: A big thank you and much appreciation goes out to Tolko and West Fraser Truckers for their generous donation. It helped us immensely with our stay in Prince George Thanks again, Denis and Karen Carrier *** Roses: The Tsilhqot’in National Government would like to send bouquets of roses to several local organizations for their support in
the June 21 Aboriginal Day Celebrations. Thank you to the Cariboo Archers and Coyote Rock Golf Course for lending their wildlife statues, and to Canadian Tire for lending several trees used on our parade floats. Thank you to Punky Lake Wilderness Camp Society for donating gifts through their Work2Give project and Peace Hills Trust for the golf shirt. TNG would also like to thank the Cariboo Regional District for providing emergency preparedness brochures and Kurt Holley for the
use of his trailer. A big sechanalyagh (thank you) also goes to NStQ for organizing the event. Tsilhqot’in National Governement *** Roses: A special thank you to all the friends and family who came to Chuck Foulds celebration of life on July, 17, 2014. And thank you to Luke LaPrairie, all the R.C. Legion members, Wayne Lucier, Paul French and the Metis Association for putting it together. Vera Foulds, Bob Miller, Ida Wallace
The Tribune welcomes letters to the editor on local, relevant, and topical matters, up to 300 words. Letters are subject to editing for clarity, brevity, and legality. All letters and roses/raspberries must include the writer’s full name, daytime telephone number, and hometown for verification purposes. Anonymous letters or those signed with pen names will not be published. The Tribune will make every effort to print all letters and roses/raspberries that meet the above criteria, but cannot guarantee publication in any particular issue. Letters on a variety of topics by a variety of writers will be considered before multiple letters by the same author on the same topic. Letters will be published on the Tribune website at wltribune.com. E-mailed letters are preferred, and can be sent to editor@wltribune.com
Mail 188 North 1st Avenue, Williams Lake, B.C. V2G 1Y8 • E-mail editor@wltribune.com • Fax 250-392-7253
A8 www.wltribune.com
Wednesday, August 6, 2014 Williams Lake Tribune
NEWS
TNG releases draft mining policy Monica Lamb-Yorski Staff Writer The Tsilhqot’in National Government has asked for government, industry and public feedback on a draft mining policy it hopes will lead to more positive relationships with companies. “Even though we will continue discussing this into September, from our perspective any companies that want to move forward with projects in our territory should be adhering to the policy already,” said Chief Joe Alphonse, TNG tribal chair, adding most companies are. The 19-page-policy
Tribune file photo
TNG tribal chair Chief Joe Alphonse. — in English and the Tsilhqot’in language — is succinct. It outlines the TNG’s
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hope to minimize negative impacts, maximize benefits to Tsilhqot’in communities, build relationships with mining and exploration companies and clarify decision making responsibilities and priorities. Impetus for the policy began back in 2010 when the TNG were going through environmental process for the proposed New Pros-
perity Mine, Alphonse recalled. “We’d get to it and had limited resources and were finally able to get it to this stage,” he explained “We are not against mining if companies build a respectful relationship right from the start, and demonstrate that they can satisfy our cultural and environmental concerns.” The Tsilhqot’in Nation recognizes the need to clarify how industry should be engaging with them as another level of government. “While this policy opens our doors to more respectful relationships with industry, we also expect respect from industry for our sacred places like Teztan Biny. The mining industry and the provincial government should have recognized long ago that the proposed Prosperity mine was a highly sensitive cultural and environmental area.
This recognition would have saved everyone decades of grief and wasted investments in money and time from shareholders and community stakeholders.” Alphonse said there are dozens of mineral exploration projects in our territory and this policy will clarify for those proponents, government officials, and anyone else thinking of staking claims, that Tsilhqot’in laws remain in force in their territory, as they have since time immemorial. Six communities make up the TNG and include ?Esdilagh, Yunesit’in, Tl’esqox, Tl’etinqox-t’in, Tsi Del Del and Xeni Gwet’in. Each community will draw up its own agreements with companies and the community closest to any development would benefit the most, while the entire nation has input in the process, Alphonse explained. “One community
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singing in wells
Sage Birchwater photo
Hanna Eastman from Horsefly performs the song she wrote at the ArtsWells Festival over the weekend. She wrote the song in Dave Bidini’s song writing workshop that took place the week before the ArtsWells festival.
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Frost Creek Transfer Station
PUBLIC MEETING August 7th at 7 p.m. Williams Lake Sportsmen’s Association Clubhouse 920 Bond Lake Rd, Williams Lake The operation of the Frost Creek Transfer Station will be changing this fall. To help ensure successful site operations, public access hours will be limited to when an attendant is on site. This means that the transfer station will be available for residents to use within specified hours of operation.
RYE
loaded at http://www. tsilhqotin.ca/PDFs/ MiningPolicyDistribution.pdf, and a mining policy map that reflects the Tsilhqot’in Stewardship Agreement (TSA) boundaries can be downloaded at http://www.tsilhqotin. ca/PDFs/MiningPolicyMap.pdf.
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would not be able to push the envelope without the support of the entire nation,” he said. “We deal with things as a the Tsilhqot’in Nation and that’s always been the strength and why we won our title case.” The draft mining policy can be down-
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This is your opportunity to review the proposed schedules and to provide your feedback as a resident. For your convenience the schedule and survey are also available online at cariboord.ca 250-392-3351 or 1-800-665-1636 Suite D, 180 North Third Ave, Williams Lake
cariboord.ca facebook.com/caribooregion
Wildlife Reminder!
Remember not all “orphaned” baby wildlife are orphaned!! (Make sure the mother is not waiting to come back for them). Please be careful when coming in contact with wildlife and to make sure to contact your conservation officer or local wildlife rehabilitation center.
Full Service Veterinary Hospital & Mobile Services Small & Large Animals
Phone 250-392-5510 for Appointments or 24 hr. Emergency Service “When Pets need a Helping Hand”
Williams Lake Tribune Wednesday, August 6, 2014
www.wltribune.com A9
NEWS
Nature Conservancy acquires Poet Place Monica Lamb-Yorski Staff Writer While Poet Place sounds like a romantic name for the Nature Conservancy of Canada’s latest purchase the 470-acre parcel land in B.C.’s West Chilcotin is actually named after Dick Poet who originally homesteaded there. “Poet was a crop duster from the U.S.” said local author Sage Birchwater. “He came up from the U.S. in the 50s with his wife Helen to fly for Helen’s cousin Bob Stewart who had a lodge at Nimpo Lake.” It’s the second stretch of two private parcels of land in the Klinaklini Valley the conservancy has purchased, said Peter Shaughnessy NCC project manager in the Chilcotin region. There are three private parcels of land there and conservancy groups has always thought if all three could be protected it would leverage conservation on a much larger area, he explained. In 2012, NCC bought its first of the three. “We’ve been in operation in B.C. since 1988 and the first purchase in Tatlayoko was in 1999,” Shaughnessy said. “Each property gets a name. It’s the Tatlayoko Lake Ranch” Since then a total of 10 properties have been purchased in the Chilcotin by the NCC. Poet Place is amazing, Shaughnessy insisted. “The thing about the Klinaklini Valley is spectacular, not only from a scenic point but from a natural values point of view, there’s lots of wildlife and fish. The key point is it’s very much as it always has been.” There’ve been minor amounts of activity there and the properties are there because people thought they could live there and make a living, but none of those attempts have worked for any amount of time, he explained. “It’s a very roughedged place, hard to get in there, the weather and bugs are extreme. When you see it you
can understand why people might try, but if you’ve been down there enough you realize why they eventually left,” he chuckled. The property straddles the Klinaklini River and is jam-packed with wildlife. There are grizzly bear, wolf, mule deer and bull trout, as well as giant old-growth aspen and cottonwood trees and the valley is also home to cougars, trumpeter swans, wolverines, otters and many other fur-bearing animals. Shaughnessy has stood along the sandbar below the old homestead on a little patch of sand and seen grizzly bear, wolf, moose, deer, coyote and otter tracks. “The sand is plastered with all these different animal tracks,” he said. Two waterfalls bookend Poet Place and remnants of homesteading still stand, including a couple of cabins built over the years. There’s accumulated “detritus” of people taking stuff in such as bed frames, old tractors, even shoes. As a Canada-wide organization, NCC has worked for more than 50 years, primarily on private land, with the main method of conservation being to purchase significant private lands with high conservation values. More than one million hectares have been protected in total across Canada to date. All of the money NCC uses to purchase and take care of the properties forever is all through donations. Primary sources of funds come from private foundations. “Poet Place was purchased by the estate of Donald McGeachy,” Shaughnessy said. “Donald briefly passed through the Klinaklini many years ago with his family and they were awestruck by this place and he so he created a foundation.” The family McGeachy family approached NCC, asked if some conservation work could be done there, and purchased
both of the properties that have been purchased there so far. “Donald was ahead of his time in recognizing that we Canadians need to be conservationists,” the McGeachy Family said. “During his life and upon his death, he gave generously to protect and preserve special properties in Canada.” Poet’s Place will have unrestricted access, Shaughnessy said. “We might put up a sign asking people to respect it, otherwise it will be unchanged.” The property is located left off Highway 20 at Kleena Kleene but isn’t accessible by a vehicle. People would have to have mountain bikes, quads or go in on foot. “It’s a rough road that blows in frequently,” he said.
Photo submitted
Poet Place in the Chilcotin was recently acquired by the Nature Conservancy of Canada.
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Bruce & Sue Certified Picture Framer are on a Bucket List Trip and Frame Creations will be closed until the end of September
free ideas • free estimates • frame creations
Thursday, August 7th 6 pm - 8 pm Boitanio Park
6pm - Point Blank 7pm - Genevieve Chatwick Sponsored by Johnston Meier Insurance, Signal Point Gaming, Rotary Club of Williams Lake Special Event: Arty the Artwalker on site as part of the 2014 Art Walk and Sale
Presented by: Brought to you in part by Gold Sponsor Fraser Bevz Broughton Chartered Accountants LLP. Sponsored by: Williams Lake Tribune, The Goat, Cariboo Country, Caboodle.ca, Cariboo Radio Food by: Smashin’ Smoothies, Cody’s Bannock, Taylor Made Cakes & Sweets
NEWS
Wednesday, August 6, 2014 Williams Lake Tribune
Agriculture minister updates chamber of commerce Monica Lamb-Yorski Staff Writer B.C.’s agriculture minister Norm Letnick kicked off a three and a half-week consultation tour of the province in Williams Lake Thursday. Letnick is hoping to gain feedback on Bill 24 regulations and how to improve the future of agriculture in the province, Cariboo-Chilcotin MLA Donna Barnett said as she introduced him at the Williams Lake and District Chamber of Commerce monthly lunch meeting at Sig-
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nal Point. “I’m getting out to talk to farmers and ranchers in the Cariboo for two days,” Letnick said. “Next week I’ll be in the Kootenays.” Three weeks ago Letnick was in China singing a deal for free access for B.C. cherries, which Letnick said will be a major contribution to the economy. His ministry is also pursuing free access agreements for blueberries and blueberries will be inspected this year. “All those blueberry crops that people have been planting, especially down in the Lower Mainland, will hopefully have free access too.” Foreign markets only happen in the Far East because of relationships because there is so much competition, Letnick said. The Australians, Americans and people from Europe are all pursuing those markets as well. During the next
three years the goal for agriculture in the province is to reach $14 billion in sales, up from the present which is just over $12 billion, the minister explained. “It’s important to expand the opportunities for British Columbians and we’re doing that in agriculture by expanding our markets,” Letnick suggested. Bill 24 is amending the agriculture land commission and as part of the process of consultation on the regulations, the ministry has put a survey (http://fluidsurveys. com/s/BCGOV-ALCA/) on its website on July 22 containing 12 questions that invite public feedback until Aug. 22. People who don’t have access to a computer can get a paper copy of the survey from their local MLA’s office. “That way when we design the regulations this fall we’ll have a good sense where the public is, not only
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Monica Lamb-Yorski photo
Agriculture Minister Norm Letnick kicked off his B.C. consultation tour in Williams Lake last week. throughout the whole province, but in the different six regions,” Letnick said. Highlands Irrigation’s Dick Ford told Letnick he’d like to see the province develop agriculture land leases. “Much of the growth of family development in agriculture comes from tenure on land,” Ford said. “The most recent example I can think of here were the agricultural land leases that people took up years ago and had the opportunity to buy.” As the forest industry declines, some Crown land could be made available to qualified young agricultural people to get tenure at a reasonable rate to develop, have a home and family life, and perhaps even adding something like a woodlot license to it, he suggested.
“It seems to me a lot of the development of the Interior economy in the last 30 and 40 years came out of those agricultural leases.” It would be a great way to move the economy out of the cities, Ford added. Letnick responded that the ALC is going through region by region in the province and identifying lands that should come out of the Agricultural Land Reserve and lands that should go in. “I wasn’t here in 1972 when the ALR was created,” he said. “It was a kind of big broad brush and over the years as people have applied to change the boundaries or remove parcels of land, not too many people put parcels of land in, that big brush is becoming a little more specific.”
A11 www.wltribune.com
Wednesday, August 6, 2014 Williams Lake Tribune
COMMUNITY
Phone 250-392-2331 ext 219 • E-mail community@wltribune.com • Fax 250-392-7253 • Gaeil Farrar Community Editor
COMMUNITY NOTEBOOK Wednesday, Aug. 5 to 28 Math games
The Child Development Centre and the Learning Disabilities Association of Williams Lake are offering a math group in August called “Master the Game of Math.” This group is intended for students ages 10 to 14 who struggle with mental math (especially times table facts). The group will meet Tuesdays, Wednesdays, and Thursdays August 5 to 28 to build mental math skills through playing games and mini-lessons. The cost is $100 for the month.
Thursday, Aug. 7
Frost Creek transfer station meeting A public meeting will be held Thursday, Aug. 7 at the Williams Lake Sportsmen’s Association Clubhouse at 920 Bond Lake Road in Williams Lake to discuss the Frost Creek Transfer Station. Monica Lamb-Yorski photo
Junior council members Monica Rawlek (left), Gagan Vaid and Hanna Hett encourage youth in the city to consider signing up for the council.
City’s junior council empowers youth Monica Lamb-Yorski Staff Writer Leadership skills, confidence and making a difference. These are some of the things youth who participated in Williams Lake’s junior council this last year said they experienced. In fact, Grade 11 student Monica Rawlek intends to continue on the council. “People our age might think it’s going to be scary or superficial, but we were always learning new things,” she said. The council meets every second week after school with the city’s manager of social development Anne Burrill and city councillor Geoff Bourdon. They also take turns attending committee of the whole (COW) meetings, where there’s a seat at the table for the youth to join in discussions, even though they cannot vote. Monica said it was interesting to learn how council works.
Watching something go to the COW meeting table and then to regular council meetings. Hanna Hett graduated this year so she won’t be returning to the council, however, she enjoyed serving a one-year term and felt she had a chance to make a difference. “It also gives youth knowledge about current events in the city — things I would have never known about before,” Hanna said. “We also watched how council solves problems.” Along with council member Gagan Vaid, who also graduated this year, Hanna co-ordinated Pay It Forward Day in Williams Lake this year. They were responsible for planning and felt it made a difference. “Outside of Safeway a man said, ‘there are actually nice people here,’” Hanna recalled. Each year the new council participates in a leadership workshop with a fun trainer,
followed by a tour of all the city’s facilities. For newcomers who don’t know each other, the workshop is always a great way to get to know everyone, the youth said. After the training the group decides projects for the upcoming year and this year was a busy one. Aside from Pay it Forward Day, Monica attended a City’s Fit For Children conference in Surrey, council members participated in the city’s 85th birthday celebration and two members co-ordinated a volunteer fair for students at Lake City Secondary’s Williams Lake campus. “They learn how to plan a project, bring it to city council for approval, and then implement it, Burrill said. It was also a big year for junior council politically because a resolution the group put forward at the North Central Local Government Association
urging the creation of a youth caucus was adopted and will go the Union of B.C. Municipalities in the fall. “Junior council has actively effected change at a provincial level,” Burrill suggested. City council has put out a call for interested youth to apply by Aug. 13, and Hanna hopes youth will step forward. They might think it’s boring, but it’s not, she said. “I was really surprised at how much we got to decide. I want to thank Anne for backing us up, working for us and helping us out,” she smiled. Membership on the council is open to students Grades 10 through 12. Terms are one year with a maximum of two terms and meetings are scheduled according to what works best for the group. Other members of the council this year were Tanner Nickel, Rebekah Corbett and Brooklyn Thiessen.
Thursday, Aug 7
Performances in the Park Performances in the park Point Blank kicks off Performances in the Park in Boitanio Park tomorrow tonight at 6 p.m. followed by Faye Blais and Genevieve Chatwick at 7 p.m.
Thursday, Aug. 7 Art Walk begins
The 2014 Art Walk and Sale officially begins Thursday, Aug. 7 with a grand opening followed by a guided tour for art walkers of approximately 20 of the participating businesses. Arty the Art Walker aka Willie Dye says the grand opening of the 2014 Art Walk will take place at Lake City Ford at 11:30 a.m. and both MLAs Coralee Oates and Donna Barnett have been invited to attend. About noon, following the opening art walkers will be invited to join interpreters Harry Jennings and Mary Forbes on the first art walk around the city. Following the opening to be kicked off at Lake City Ford at 11:30 a.m.
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Wednesday, August 6, 2014 Williams Lake Tribune
COMMUNITY
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Greg Silvey, (back left) Salvation Army case worker, WLFD Deputy Chief Rob Warnock, Sabrina Silvey, Salvation Army family services coordinator, and fire prevention officer Joan Flashpohler join Salvation Army volunteers William McIntrye, (front left), Sampson Robertson, and Lynn Alexis show off the amazing haul of food from the Williams Lake Fire Department and Salvation Army’s Christmas in July event.
DID YOU JUST SEE Firefighters SOMETHING BIG Christmas in July restocks SA shelves HAPPEN? Got a news story or picture you would like to share with the community? E-mail us at...
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Sean Glanville Staff Writer The Williams Lake Fire Department and Salvation Army held their fifth annual Christmas in July Food Drive last week. “Last Tuesday we had three crews in pick-up trucks heading door to door all over town collecting food for the Salvation Army,” said Rob Warnock, WLFD Deputy Chief. The community once again came through with flying colours as dozens of boxes of food were collected which will
go towards filling the shelves at the Salvation Army. “Our shelves were at an all time low so it was the perfect time for the event. We are very pleased with the amount of food collected and will use this to restock our shelves,” said Sabrina Silvey, Salvation Army family servicers coordinator. A number of businesses chipped in as well as Barton Insurance hosted their own food drive and filled up half a truck load and Save On Foods donated 12 boxes of tomato soup.
Of the five food drives held so far, Warnock claims this was likely the biggest or one of the biggest. Many people in the community who the Fire Department were not able to reach their residences on Tuesday night also took it upon themselves to drop off boxes of food at the Salvation Army. “The houses that we missed we asked if they would please drop off their items at the Salvation Army and we ended up filling more than 20 additional boxes,” added Silvey.
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Williams Lake Tribune Wednesday, August 6, 2014
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COMMUNITY
This week’s feature: ure: Challenger revs up!!
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Phyllis Webstad with her family at the first-ever Orange Shirt Day held in Williams Lake in September 2013.
Orange Shirt Day goes national Monica Lamb-Yorski Staff Writer Orange Shirt Day is going national. Last year the firstever Orange Shirt Day, Every Child Matters events took place in Williams Lake and 100 Mile House, inspired by a memory shared by Phyllis Webstad. Webstad, originally from Canoe Creek, attended St. Joseph Mission residential school for a year when she was six. When she arrived for her first day of school, the brand new orange shirt her grandmother
had bought her to wear to school, was taken away. Even though she only stayed at the school one year, the colour orange always brought back memories. During the Truth and Reconcilation Hearings and the St. Joseph Residential School Commemorative Project which took place in May of 2013, Webstad’s story took on a life of its own and with help of local government a communitywide celebration was held. At the Assembly of First Nations (AFN)
Chiefs Assembly in Halifax, N.S. last week, delegates passed a resolution supporting Sept. 30 as Orange Shirt Day across Canada. It was resolved that Chiefs-in-Assembly declare the day annually, commit to brining the message home and doing their part to raise awareness behind the essence and meaning of Orange Shirt Day. The resolution also directed the AFN executive to promote and uphold the meaning of Orange Shirt Day, Every Child Matters and pass along the message to the Canadian gov-
ernment and churches responsible. Canadians will be asked to listen with open hearts to the stories of survivors and those affected by residential school to fully comprehend each other.
This is a first step in reconciliation. Tk’emllups Indian Band Chief Shane Gottfriedson moved the resolution seconded by Chief Maureen Chapman from Skawahlook Band Sto:lo, Agassiz.
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Wednesday, August 6, 2014 Williams Lake Tribune
arts & life
• arts • culture • entertainment
outdoor movie popular Sean Glanville photo
Amelia Dell (left), 5, Lexi Mueller, 6, and Holden Dell, 3, get cozy with their blankets and lawn chairs to watch the free outdoor screening of Despicable Me 2 in Boitanio Park last Thursday night.
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Melinda has spent her whole life in Williams Lake and looks forward to engaging and working with her community to create positive change in the Cariboo. Melinda can be reached at melinda@unitedwaytnc.ca or 250-392-8145.
Point Blank kicks off Thursday concert Point Blank, a new exciting duo that plays the best of blues and rock covers on acoustic versions, will kick off Performances in the Park Thursday evening. Peter Thorne has more than 35 years in the music industry, from recording and producing music in many, many bands from blues, to rock and roll and country, says event organizer Angela Sommer. He also makes custom box guitars. Shayne Cowic has been a lead singer and guitar player in local bands for more than years. Influences from ZZ Top to the Beatles have shaped his styles. Point Blank is on stage in Boitanio Park, Thursday, Aug. 7 starting at 6 p.m. Sommer says the second act starting at 7 p.m. is Genevieve
Chatwick of Australia who sings blues, roots, folk, and world beat music. She is joined by Canadian Faye Blais. Imagine if Janis Joplin and John Lee Hooker had a baby together; musically, this girl would be the offspring of that union. She looks like an angel, roars like a lion and plays guitar like a demon! Without doubt, Genevieve Chatwick is an extraordinary performer who exudes raw energy by the bucket load. The Waterwise Brigade and Laura Patterson are providing children’s activities and Arty the Art Walker is putting up a display about the 2014 Art Walk and Sale. Cody’s Bannock, Smashin’ Smoothies, M&M Meats and Taylor Made Cakes will
be on hand to provide snacks. Performances in the Park is presented by the Central Cariboo Arts and Culture Society, the Cariboo
Regional District, the City of Williams Lake, with sponsorship by various local businesses and community organizations.. For more informa-
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tion, details and pictures check out the Performances in the Park website at www. centralcaribooarts. com/perfor mances. html
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Williams Lake Tribune Wednesday, August 6, 2014
DrivewayCanada.ca |
www.wltribune.com A15
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Visit the 2015 Challenger gallery at DrivewayBC.ca
Challenged by one Hellcat of a muscle car Portland, Oregon – Do I take the red key or the black key? The black key limits horsepower to 500. Jaws drop. If you put it in valet mode, rpms are limited to 4,000. Gosh, I really hope I can take the red key… This Matrix-like conundrum is a good one to have. Take the safer route (black key) if you’d rather ease off on harnessing the gargantuan horsepower of the 2015 Dodge Challenger Hellcat. It’s the most powerful production Chrysler V8, as well as the most powerful production muscle car to date, so it needs to be treated with respect. But then again, the red key will allow me to tame this muscled feline one shift at a time, whether through the 6-speed manual or an 8-speed automatic. Looks like the decision has been made for me. Red key is sitting pretty in the centre console. And it’s in track mode. Electronic intervention is minimal. I
have access to all 707 horsepower and I’m at the Portland International Raceway. I’d say this will be a heavenly day. With a new look on the inside and outside, the 2015 Dodge Challenger is ready to take on its Ford Mustang and Chevrolet Camaro competition head-on. According to market research, two thirds of Challenger buyers say they don’t cross-shop anything else. That said, those who did cross-shop, and decided to go in another direction, attributed it to its archaic interior. That problem is no more. Now Challengers come with a driver-centric and cool-looking interior setup. Whether you have the standard 5-inch touchscreen or the optional 8.4-inch (the biggest touchscreen in its segment), you can’t lose. Then there’s a new 7-inch multi-view driver information display instrument cluster that adds to the chic execution; standard
on all models. Not to mention, it displays all the vital stats that you’ll need when driving. Combined with physical buttons – for those who don’t like to control everything by a screen – its evolutionary changes certainly help its cause. A lot. But the heart of the Challenger lies underneath its sheet metal – the curves and edges that were inspired by the ’71 Challenger. When it comes to engine choices, you’re not without options. There are four.
different packages – the thing that stood out the most to me is how good of a car it actually is. Even on a quaint suburban drive through a national park where speed limits It’s the most were posted at 35 mph, powerful production I was impressed with Chrysler V8, as well its road manners. And considering I had almost as most powerful 485 horsepower (with production muscle the 6.4L engine), it was car to date, so it as docile as a lethargic needs to be treated lion, yet ready to pounce when the opportunity with respect. presented itself. Alexandra Straub Both track time and road time added to the multi-dimensional admiration for the two-door. Here’s the skinny: Sure, visibility isn’t ideal. The C pillars 1) A 3.6L, Pentastar V6 producing are huge and cut into sightlines when 305 horsepower and 268 lb-ft of torque looking rearward. The rear seats don’t 2) A 5.7L, V8 HEMI with 372 horseoffer a ton of legroom – especially for power (with the 8-speed automatic) the individual stuck in the middle – but 375 horsepower and 410 lb-ft of heck, it does have room for five. torque with the 6-speed manual Fuel economy, well, you’re not buying 3) A 6.4L, V8 HEMI with 485 horsethis car for its estimated numbers! power and 475 lb-ft of torque That’s for sure. Last but not least, But it does offer an emotional experi4) A supercharged 6.2L, V8 HEMI ence. It turns heads and is sexy as hell. with 707 horsepower and 650 lb-ft of Even the V6 on the track did a bang torque. up job. All engines except the V6s can be And with a starting MSRP of $28,995, paired with a manual or an automatic. the Canadian-built Challenger is up The V6s only come with the 8-speed to the task, will kick butts, and take automatic. Again, no matter what you names. All at the same time. choose, you’ll come out singing. Back Visit www.dodge.ca for more details. to the road. Having tested all four models – with alexandra.straub@drivewaybc.ca
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Wednesday, August 6, 2014 Williams Lake Tribune
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Williams Lake Tribune Wednesday, August 6, 2014
www.wltribune.com A17
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Seniors’ Maintaining Active Retirement Today ROBBERIES ON CARIBOO WAGON ROAD A18 and A20 ELKS HALL NEEDS COMMUNITY SUPPORT A19-20
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Important numbers Ambulance ...................... 911 City Hall ........... 250-392-2311 CRD................... 250-392-3351 Library ............. 250-392-3630 Cariboo Health Services........... 250-392-8202 Cariboo Memorial Hospital ........... 250-392-4411 Gateway Crisis 250-302-3261 Home and Community Care.................. 250-305-4060 Home Support . 250-392-8256 Public Health... 250-302-5000 Death Certificates...... 250-952-2681 Family
Stagecoach robberies on wagon road Barry Sale Special to Tribune/Advisor
For more than 50 years, from 1863 until 1917, the red and yellow B.C. Express Company’s stagecoaches transported mail, express, and passengers from Yale to Barkerville, an 800 mile return trip. The company was founded by Francis Jones Barnard, and at first was called the Barnard Express, or BX as it was known to three generations of Cariboo residents. In the early 1860s Barnard began carrying letters on foot from New Westminster to the Cariboo goldfields. Gradually, he earned enough money to purchase some horses and start a pony express. By late 1863, he had established a regular stagecoach service, from Yale up to Soda Creek. With the completion of the CPR Railway in 1886, however, the new community of Ashcroft became the major southern terminus of the stagecoach route. To those of us who grew up on a diet of western movies, the term “stagecoach” brings to mind images of masked men on horses waiting in Ambush, holding up terrified passengers and galloping off with sacks of gold.
However, during its decades of service, the BX, which was considered one of the most prominent stagecoach lines in North America, built up an outstanding reputation for reliability and service. It saw remarkably few holdups, even though it carried literally tons of gold. in 1866 for example, the New Westminster newspaper reported that the BX made 80 return trips to Barkerville from Yale and carried a total of $4,619,000. worth of treasure and valuables. At first, a mounted provincial policeman rode with each stage as an escort during the months when the heaviest gold shipments were made. This did not prove to be an effective use of the police officer’s time, so the company took on the responsibility and hired armed men to “ride shotgun and guard the valuables. However, after a few years, even this practice was discontinued because it was consid-
ered to be an unnecessary expense. After that, the drivers were on their own, although most of them were always heavily armed. In researching this article, I could find information on only five robberies over the life of the B.C. EXpress Co’s stagecoach era. The first holdup occurred in 1885 near 85 Mile, where two highway men made off with $4,000 in gold. A few years later, another robbery took place between Soda Creek and Quesnel. Those thieves got away with approximately $2,000. In both of these instances the criminals were never apprehended, and the gold was never found. These were the only two successful holdups in the company’s history. A much larger robbery occurred in July of 1890 at the bottom of the Bridge Creek Hill near 100 Mile House. The robber got away with more than $15,000 in gold. A few weeks later a man named Martin van Buren Rowlands arrived in Ashcroft, saying that he had struck it rich at Scotty’s Creek, some 19 miles to the north. This news started a mini gold stampede to the area, but strangely, nobody else found any
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249 Barnard St. Williams Lake • COSMETIC DENISTRY • IMPLANTS • ORTHODONTICS • ORAL HEALTH • • BONE GRAFTING • ORAL SURGERY • SEDATION DENISTRY • • ADVANCED RESTORATIONS • GENERAL DENTISTRY •
gold there. Lowlands continued to bring gold from his find into Ashcroft, spending it very freely, mainly in saloons and on gambling. The authorities became suspicious. They obtained some of the gold and had it examined. It was found to be an exact match to the type of gold stolen from the stage Bridge Creek. What Rowlands did not realize was that gold from each individual creek is different, with its own unique properties, and that people with experience could identify the creek and the area it came from just by examining the gold. Rowlands was arrested. He confessed to the robbery and was sentenced to seven years in the penitentiary at New Westminster. Somehow, he managed to escape after being there for two years, and he was never seen again. In June of 1894, a rough character named Red Bluff Charlie held up the stagecoach at 150 Mile House and escaped with the meagre total of $45 in gold dust. He was captured the next day on the road to Dog Creek. Two weeks later he appeared before Judge Clement Cornwall and was sentenced to 10 years in prison. He did not escape. Don’t you wish that our present day justice system worked as well ad as quickly as this? The last holdup, which happened in November, 1909, is also reputed to be the last holdup of an overland stagecoach on the North American continent. This one took place between 141 Mile and 144 Mile on the Cariboo Road. A man and woman stopped the stage at rifle
point and demanded all the registered mail sacks from 150 Mile and points north. The driver, Charles Westoby, who was quite deaf, pretended that he couldn’t understand their instructions. In the confusion, he managed to keep bak some of the full sacks and substitute them for empty ones, so that the thieves got away with only about $2,000. (One of the sacks that Westoby hid contained more than $5,000 in currency from the bank in Quesnel). The stage was then ordered to drive on, and it made good time to 134 Mile House, where word was telegraphed up and down the line and the police were notified. A posse of BX employees, ranchers and police proceeded to the scene of the crime. There they found the mail sacks in the bush, all cut open and all currency removed. The couple’s horses were tracked for several miles, until they mingled with the tracks of some wild horses and the trail was lost. However, the “moccasin telegraph” was very active, and after a process of careful elimination and checking, the authorities finally decided that the culprits were a woman and a man whom she claimed was her brother-in-law. They had been living in the 150 Mile area for only a few weeks. The pair were quickly arrested, but no money was found. However, the prisoners were taken to Ashcroft., put on a train, and told to get out and stay out of Canada. See STAGECOACHES Page A20
Serenity Garden • Columbarium • Scattering Gardens • Memory Berm A serene and tranquil place of beauty where you can lovingly remember those you cherish...
COMPASSIONATE CARE & SERENITY GARDEN Ron Malmas ~ Managing Director
250-392-3336
180 Comer Street
Cell: 250-302-1502
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Williams Lake Tribune, Wednesday, August 6, 2014
www.wltribune.com A19
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Help needed to save the Elks Hall ► ►Mortgages Mortgages ► Mortgages ►► Mortgages ►Loans Loans Mortgages ► Loans ► Loans ► Loans
Arnie Zimmerman Special to Tribune/Advisor For over 85 years the hall has served as the largest, most-used, most-loved gathering place in the history of the City of Williams Lake and district. A lot of people have many warm memories of special times at the hall. The Elks Hall is used for many functions. The Sea Cadets use it for their training programs. The Good Food Box uses the hall to sell their food. No charge to them. The Elks will be celebrating their 85th anniversary in October of this year. The Williams Lake Royal Purple are celebrating their 65th anniversary this year. That means 145 years of combined years serving this community. I am a 25-year member of the Williams Lake Elks and
On the cover 2013 Stampede Queen Rachel Abrahamse visits with Eileen Dell during the Strawberry Tea for seniors held at the Elks Hall this spring.
Experience Experience the the power power of of Experience the power of Experience the power of SUPERIOR FINANCIAL SERVICE Experience the power of SUPERIOR FINANCIAL FINANCIAL SERVICE SUPERIOR SERVICE SUPERIOR FINANCIAL SERVICE SUPERIOR FINANCIAL SERVICE
www.wldcu.com www.wldcu.com www.wldcu.com www.wldcu.com www.wldcu.com Williams Lake Branch
Williams Lake Lake Branch Branch Williams Williams Lake Branch 139 Avenue 250-392-4135 139N NThird Third Avenue 250-392-4135 139 N Third Avenue 250-392-4135 139 N ThirdWilliams Avenue Lake Branch 250-392-4135 139 N Third Avenue 250-392-4135
Alliance Church
Arnie Zimmerman photo
Ray Reissner (left), Joyce Reissner, Lorraine Schactel, Lezle Loewen, and Wendel Schactel enjoy the Strawberry Tea held for seniors annually at the Elks Hall and hosted by the Royal Purple and Elks free of charge. Many other community events are held in the hall each year such as craft fairs and Stampede fundraisers and special events, dances and activities for youth such as cadets. during that time the Elks and Royal Purple have donated thousands of dollars to people in need in our community. The Elks and Royal Purple have given thousands of dollars in bursaries to students wanting to further their education and pursue their dreams. The Williams Elks Lodge was founded in Williams Lake in 1930. The impact these dedicated men and women have had on
virtually everyone in Williams Lake is a matter of record. Through the volunteer efforts over the decades, they have raised more than $1 million dollars
through bingos, bake sales, catering, and hall rentals for charities. The roof repairs done in 2008, set us back financially, leaving us with a debt of
$110,000. It is very difficult for us to pay off this debt. See ELKS Page A20
Jill, dyan, Jedda, Wilfred
This program is designed to help minimize the confusion with taking medications. Each blister package can hold a 7 day supply of all your medications in 4 different time slots. Some of the Special ServiceS we offer are:
• Nutritional Tours • Blood Pressure Monitoring • Diabetes and Asthma Care • Travel and Booster Vaccinations • Safe Medication Disposal • Automated Prescription Reminders • Medication Reviews • Online Pharmacists at saveonfoods.com, and much more.
Nadheen Murray
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Sunday School for Children’s Preschool and Grades, Nursery Available. Blended Worship Style.
261-3rd Ave. S. Chris Harder 250-392-4280
Evangelical Free Church
Sunday Worship 10am Sermon 10:30am
1100-11th Ave. N. Williams Lake
250-392-2843
Affiliated with PAOC
Medication ReMindeR Pack PRogRaM
Free Blister Packaging Free Local Delivery of Blister Packs
Services Sunday 10:30am
625 Carson Drive, Williams Lake 250-392-5324
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► ►Investments Investments ► Investments ►► Investments Planning ►Financial Financial Planning Investments ► Financial Planning ► Financial Planning ► Financial Planning
NEW SUMMER PHARMACY HOURS MONDAY-FRIDAY 9AM-9PM SATURDAY-SUNDAY 10AM-6PM
Sunday Morning Service at 10:00 am KidsStreet at 10:30 am - Ages 2-11 Programs for all Ages Lead Pastor: Corwin Smid Associate Pastor: Joe Martinsen www.calvarychurchwl.com
St. Andrews United Church 1000 Huckvale Place (just off Midnight)
SERVICES AT 10am SUNDAY
Rev. Jenny Carter 250-398-6745
Sacred Heart Catholic Church Priests: Father Derrick Cameron Father Clinton Pendleton
Sunday Mass 9:30 and 7:00 pm Saturdays 5:00 pm anticipated for Sunday 450 Pigeon Ave Williams Lake Phone: 250-398-6806 sacredheartwl.ca
Advertise your church here! Contact Lori at 778-417-0023 Next Deadline: August 29, 2014
A20 www.wltribune.com
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Wednesday, August 6, 2014 Williams Lake Tribune
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Stagecoaches on display Continued From Page A18
The Ashcroft newspaper noted that “They were undoubtedly guilty and were obviously relieved to get off so lightly.” In all, the B.C.
Express stagecoaches carried tens of millions of dollars in gold from the creeks of the Cariboo to Yale and Ashcroft. They were a familiar sight on the Wagon Road, but by the end of the First World War
they had been relegated to history, replaced by big Winton touring cars. Only two original BX stagecoaches remain, one at the Hat Creek Ranch and the other on display at the Red Coach Inn at 100 Mile House.
Word Search SMART LIVING
Cory Paterson (left), Lulu Forseille, Mary McKenzie, and Colleen Dubray visit at the spring Strawberry Tea for seniors held at the Elks Hall.
Elks and Royal Purple seeking new members Continued From Page A19
55 Sudoku 55 plus
We need to get rid of this debt in order for us to survive. We, the Williams Lake Elks and Royal Purple are hoping the community of Williams Lake will help us save our Elks hall. For the past four years the Elks and Royal Purple have only been able to pay down the interest on our loan which puts us in danger of losing the hall and our current call for help from the public. The only source of revenue we have is the rental of the Elks Hall and donations from the community. We are struggling to pay our bills with the rev-
Arnie Zimmerman photos
The Elks and Royal Purple are continuing to work to pay for recent renovations on the Elks Hall and need the community's help with donations and fundraising ideas. enue we are currently earning. We need help from the community now
and new members to carry on all the good things we do, helping people in need.
The Markets Have Changed – Has Your Portfolio? Individual Solutions from Independent Advisors
• Investment Funds • Bonds • stocks • PensIons David Hall
Financial Advisor david.hall@raymondjames.ca
250-398-2222 Raymond James Ltd., member Canadian Investor Protection Fund.
Mike Austin
Financial Advisor mike.austin@raymondjames.ca
180C North 3rd Ave., Williams Lake • 1-800-398-5811
If you are interested in joining the Elks or Royal Purple, please contact Arnie Zimmerman at 250-3925451 or by e-mail at arniezim@shaw.ca. You may also contact any of our members for more information. A donation to the Elks is a donation to our community itself! The Elks, the Royal Purple and the hall are woven into our culture and history. Please give the Elks and the Royal Purple a helping hand. Remember, it’s your Elks Hall too!
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Williams Lake Tribune Wednesday, August 6, 2014
www.wltribune.com A21
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Seniors’ Maintaining Active Retirement Today
SUN
55Calendar of Events August 2014
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MON
TUES
WED
THUR
FRI
Do you have an event happening catering to seniors?
3
4
● BC DAY! 3:00 Cribbage in the Bistro
★ Centre Closed BC Day
● 1:30 Bank Run 2:30 Music with John McKenzie (MD) 6:30 Knotty Knitters
5
★ 1:00 Seniors Advocate 1:00 Casual Bridge
● 2:30 Calvary Tabernacle Church (MD)
10
11
● 10:30 Catholic Mass 2nd New 1:30 Blood Pressure Clinic 3:00 Cribbage in the Bistro
12
★ 1:00 Seniors
Advocate 1:00 Casual Bridge
★9:00 Walking Group 1:00 Carpet Bowling 1:00 Cribbage
● 2:30 Seventh Day
Church (MD)
17
18
● 12:00 SPCA Visit (B) 2:00 Tenant Council Meeting (GD) 3:00 Cribbage in the Bistro
19
6
● HAPPY BIRTHDAY ● 1:45 Jeopardy EDITH BORKOWSKI in the Bistro 10:00 Library Visit (B) 3:00 Happy Hour 7:00 Just for Fun Practise 4:30 Current Events (L) 6:30 Prize Whammo (MD)
2:30 Cariboo Bethel Church (MD)
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25
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★ CENTER CLOSED
★ CENTER CLOSED
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★ CENTER CLOSED
★ CENTER CLOSED
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● 5:00 Music in the ● 2:00 Bill’s Going Park and Picnic Away Party (MD) Dinner 3:00 Happy Hour 7:00 Just for Fun Practise ★9:30 Senior Advocate (MD) 12:30 Bridge ★10:00 Water Color Paint 9:00 Walking Group 1:00 Carpet Bowling
● 1:45 Trivia in the Bistro 2:30 Happy Hour on the Patio
● HAPPY BIRTHDAY MARY HAFFNER 1:30 Walmart Run 6:30 Knotty Knitters
8
● 10:30 Picnic at Scout Island 2:30 Bingo (MD)
★ 10:15 Walking Group 7:00 Cribbage
● 10:30 Fall Fair Meeting (CK)
9
27
● 1:45 Jeopardy in the Bistro 2:00 Anglican Church (MD) 3:00 Happy Hour (B)
★ CENTER CLOSED
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15
● HAPPY BIRTHDAY JESSE VOTH & MARY CORNISH 10:30 Out to the Yellow Umbrella for Lunch 2:30 Bingo (MD)
Doors open 11:00 am Starts 12:00 pm
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★ CENTER CLOSED
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29
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30
★ CENTER CLOSED
★ CENTER CLOSED
★ CENTER CLOSED
★ Bingo
7:00 Cribbage
● 10:30 Hot Dogs on the Patio 2:30 Bingo (MD) 4:30 Dinner Music with Steve (B)
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● 2:30 Accordion Time with Gordon (MD)
★ 10:15 Walking Group
● HAPPY BIRTHDAY WINSTON McKAY 10:00 Library Visit (B) 4:30 Current Events (L) 6:30 Place your Bets!
● 5:00 End of Summer Barbecue on the Patio
★ Bingo
Doors open 11:00 am Starts 12:00 pm
12:30 Bridge
● HAPPY BIRTHDAY JOSEF STEINBICHLER 1:30 Grocery Run 6:30 Knotty Knitters
● 2:00 Tenant Info Session (MD) 3:00 Cribbage in the Bistro
7
★10:00 Water Color Paint ★9:30 Senior Advocate
★ CENTER CLOSED
● HAPPY BIRTHDAY IRENE DUMONTIER
2
Doors open 11:00am Starts: 12:00pm
7:00 Cribbage
9:00 Walking Group 1:00 Carpet Bowling
● 1:30 Walmart Run 6:30 Knotty Knitters
★ Bingo
★ 10:15 Walking Group
Phone 250-392-2331 to have your event added to the next calendar.
● 10:00 Presbyterian Church Service (GD) 2:30 Evangelical Free Church (MD)
1
● 10:30 Out to Signal Point Gaming 2:30 Bingo (MD)
SAT
● HAPPY BIRTHDAY PAT PEELE 10:30 Memorial Tea (MD) 11:00 Lunch at the Friendship Centre 2:30 Prize Bingo (MD)
★ CENTER CLOSED
●10:30 Seniors
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Village Brunch (MD) 2:30 St. John’s Lutheran Church (MD)
●
WILLIAMS LAKE SENIORS VILLAGE 1455 WESTERN AVENUE, WILLIAMS LAKE PHONE 250-305-3318
★
SENIORS ACTIVITY CENTRE 176 NORTH 4TH AVENUE, WILLIAMS LAKE PHONE 250-392-7946
*These programs have limited space. Please sign up at the Front Desk or see Recreation Staff for requests. - Recreation programs are subject to change. Recreation Phone number is 250-305-3314
10
Customer Appreciation Day
%
OFF
1st Tuesday of every month or 10x base
AIRMILES®
reward miles on your total grocery purchase!*
With Club Card Mininum $35.00 purchase required. Purchase must be made in single transaction. See in-store for details.
Meat Draw
Every Friday 5pm Every Saturday 3pm
Members and guests always welcome!
250-398-6581
385 Barnard Street, 250-392-7311 (Office) • 250-392-4255
Seniors receive:
20
%
off
MERCHANDISE* every Thursday
Our seniors discount starts at 50
OPEN:
Monday to Friday - 8 am to 9 pm Saturday - 9 am to 6 pm • Sunday 10 am - 6 pm
12 S Second Ave.
excludes sale items
*
250-392-3333
A22 www.wltribune.com
SPORTS
Wednesday, August 6, 2014 Williams Lake Tribune
Phone 250-392-2331 ext 218 • E-mail sports@wltribune.com • Fax 250-392-7253 • Greg Sabatino Sports Editor
Contingent to take national rugby stage Sean Glanville Staff Writer An unprecedented six Williams Lake rugby players have cracked roster spots on the BC Rugby provincial teams. Carleigh Walters and twins Laura and Emma Pfliederer were all selected to the U-16 girls team, Sheridan Davis and Tasha Johnson to the U-18 girls team and Jaye Richards to the U-16 boys side. All six will represent B.C. at the Rugby Canada National Championship Festival Aug. 4-10 at Calgary Rugby Park. The U-16 and U-18 men’s and women’s nationals will be jointly held featuring teams from seven provinces including B.C., Alberta, Saskatchewan, Manitoba, Ontario, Quebec and Nova Scotia. The players had to attend provincial selection camps in the Lower Mainland. For the U-16 girls, it was their first time attending a provincial camp and they were a little nervous. “Pretty much all the players are from Vancouver Island or the Lower Mainland and we kept having to explain to our coach where Williams Lake was,” laughed Laura. For Walters and the Pfliederer sisters, they had to make two trips south as the initial selection camp July 18-19 ran the same weekend as the BC Summer Games in Nanaimo so many players could not attend the initial tryouts. “We had to drive down to a camp in Abbotsford and then a second tryout a week later in Delta which was a lot of driving,” said Emma. “Having my sister and Carleigh there at the tryouts really helped and took away some of the nerves.” Richards, 16, played for Team BC last year when B.C. hosted nationals at UBC and knows what to expect this time around. He played with Team BC ‘B’ last year which finished third at nationals with Team BC ‘A’ winning gold. Richards who plays flank and 8-man, cracked the ‘A’ roster this year and expects a gold medal to be hanging around his neck this August. “I try to bring leadership and physical strength to the team and I hope to continue improving my game and one day play for the
SPORTS NOTEBOOK Saturday, Aug. 23
ASA Sportsman Series and All Class Racing Thunder Mountain Speedway hosts the fastest cars in the province as the ASA Sportsman Series cars return to Williams Lake after the originally scheduled event was cancelled due to rain. Additionally, all of the local classes — bone stock, pro mini and street stock — will be in action. Time trials start at 5 p.m. with racining to begin at 6 p.m. For more visit www. thundermountainspeedway. ca
Friday, Aug. 29 to Sunday, Aug. 31 BC Barrel Racers Provincial Finals
Sean Glanville photo
Williams Lake rugby players Jaye Richards (left to right), Tasha Johnson, Emma Pfleiderer and Laura Pfleiderer are four of the six lakecity athletes that have been selected to the BC Rugby provincial teams that will represent the province at the nationals in Calgary, Alta. Aug. 4-10. Missing are Sheridan Davis and Carleigh Walters. national team,” said Richards. Johnson also represented Team BC last year and the 17-year-old scrum-half, like Richards, made the jump from Team BC’s ‘B’ team to the top tier squad this time. Unfortunately, due to a stress fracture, Johnson is unable to take part in the nationals. “Last year I played on the ‘B’ team and we finished fourth so it’s disappointing this time around I have to take time off due to injury,” said Johnson. “When I play I try to really encourage togetherness and make sure the team feels like a family.” Johnson hopes to be fully recovered for sevens rugby this fall as she enters her Grade 12 year at Williams Lake Secondary. The players from the lakecity will not be carpooling to Cal-
gary next week as BC Rugby makes it a point to have all the teams do everything together. The players all pay a $1,650 fee upfront to BC Rugby which covers their flights, kit, meals and accommodation. “It’s nice because we travel as a team and don’t all drive on our own. We pay the fee and everything is taken care of,” said Richards. Coincidentally, the Pfliederer sisters, Walters and Johnson all live in the 150 Mile House area. There might be something in the water there that produces top level rugby players. “It’s funny because when the bus stops at 150 Mile on the way back from a rugby trip almost everybody gets off,” said Laura. All the rugby girls are multisport athletes who not only excel
at rugby. Johnson plays rep soccer and is also a roper and barrel racer which she took up growing up on her parents property, Stump Lake Ranch, at 153 Mile House. The Pfliederer sisters both excel at basketball, soccer and volleyball and Davis and Walters are also avid soccer players. All six players got their rugby careers started in Grade 8 at Williams Lake secondary. They credit their coaches including Todd Pritchard, Tara Sherlock, Oren Caddy and Morley Wilson, as well as the Williams Lake Rustlers, Hytest Timber and many others for helping them achieve their success. They all hope to take the sport as far as they can go and eventually go on to play national team or university rugby.
The BC Barrel Racers Provincial Finals will be held Aug. 29-31 in WIlliams Lake at the Williams Lake Stampede Grounds. In 2013 the event awarded approximately $101,000 in prize money. The youngest competitor was four, the oldest was 70 last year, making it an all-age affair. There are more than 300 competitors expected to take part this year. For more information visit the BC Barrel Racers Association website at www.bcbra.com.
Saturday, Sept. 6 Tour de Cariboo
Take part in this challenging 75km ride from Williams Lake to Gavin Lake. The ride features spectacular scenery, varied terrain, and great fun. You will be fully supported with bike maintenance, support drivers, first aide on route, and rest stops providing lunch and refreshments along the way. Ride on your own, or join a relay to break up the trip. This event is yours to make it a ride, race or relay. For information visit ww.bbswlake.com or call 250-398-8391.
Williams Lake Tribune Wednesday, August 6, 2014
www.wltribune.com A23
SPORTS
Three lakecity players in Kamloops’ soccer finals Monday’s men’s soccer final in the competitive division of the Kamloops Invitational Tournament between Norvan (North Vancouver) and TRU Alumni (Kamloops) featured plenty of Williams Lake content. Three lakecity players took part as both Sean and Ryan Glanville donned a TRU jersey and Brent Dodge laced up the boots for Norvan. What most were expecting to be a close final Monday afternoon at Macarthur Island Park turned into a blowout as TRU went on to a convincing 5-0 win. For the Glanville brothers, it put an end to losing in heartbreaking fashion at the tournament for the past nine years.
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Williams Lake Slo-Pitch League Standings as of July 26
photo sumbitted
TRU Alumni player Fraser Leveay (left) battles with Norvan’s Brent Dodge for possession during Monday’s men’s competitive division final at Macarthur Island Park. Alumni won the game 5-0. “We started com- we’ve been eliminated so part of me felt like I ing to this tournament in a shootout in either was cursed to never win in 2006 and every year the semi final or final, the tournament,” said Ryan Glanville. “This we didn’t have to TH year go to penalties which was nice.” Set your next fitness challenge on the TRU defeated Latin Tour de Cariboo, a 76km bike ride from America FC from VanWilliams Lake to Gavin Lake. couver in game one Sat76km a bit much for you? urday 3-1 before downSplit it up with friends and form a ing two-time defending relay team. There are absolutely champions Estrella de Chile of Vancouver 3-1 NO RULES for the team. Make up your own! in game two late SaturHave as few or as many riders as day. you like. Ride a little or ride a lot. In game three Sunday morning TRU downed CHALLENGE YOURSELF Medicine Hat College Rattlers 5-0 with Ryan Glanville pacing the offence with the opening two goals. TRU’s lost their final round-robin game Sunday afternoon, a preview of Monday’s final, 2-0 to Norvan. Over half the TRU roster was attending a wedding and they were forced to play shorthanded. All three lakecity players were members of the Williams Lake Lightning soccer team coached by Clark Glanville which had plenty of success at the amateur levels. Both Ryan Glanville and Dodge played university soccer Chilcotin Lodge together and were teammates on the 2005 NaTo learn more about the Tour visit www.bbswlake.com tional Champion UBC or give us a call at Big Brothers & Big Sisters 250-398-8391 Thunderbirds team.
TOUR DE CARIBOO - SEPTEMBER 6
SPONSORED BY
The Historic
A Division: 1.) Total Ice Baby 2.) Rowdies 3.) Wild Chickens 4.) Rookies 5.) Lakers 6.) Bears
W L T PTS GP 10 1 0 20 11 10 2 0 20 12 10 3 0 20 13 8 3 0 16 11 7 3 0 14 10 5 8 0 10 13
B Division: 1.) Highlife 2.) Qwesqi 3.) Brew Jays 4.) Arrows 5.) Sticks and Stones 6.) Ball Breakers
W L T PTS GP 7 4 1 15 12 5 8 0 10 13 4 8 0 8 12 4 6 0 8 10 1 10 1 3 12 0 12 0 0 12
C Division: W L T PTS GP 1.) Giants 11 2 0 22 13 2.) Fireballs 9 4 0 18 13 3.) Beer-O-Crats 8 3 2 18 13 4.) Cowboys and Indians 8 5 0 16 13 5.) Those Guys 8 5 0 16 13 6.) Maintainers 4 8 1 9 13 D Division: W L T PTS GP 1.) Broke Millionaires 7 6 0 14 13 2.) Rez Bulls 7 5 0 14 12 3.) Sluggers 6 7 0 12 13 4.) Y-Nots 3 10 0 6 13 5.) Warriors 2 11 0 4 13 6.) 2C Rez Riders 0 10 1 1 11 E Division: W L T PTS GP 1.) Vigilantes 10 1 0 20 11 2.) Status 8 2 0 16 10 3.) Sons of Pitches 7 4 1 15 12 4.) Swinging Richards 5 5 1 11 11 5.) Nemiah Raiders 1 8 2 4 11 6.) Road Kill 1 9 0 2 10 Ladies Golf Results (July 22) Flight One 1.) Gina Alexander 2.) Caroline Munich 3.) Doris Gage Flight Two 1.) Joyce Beath 2.) Ellen Wiege (retro) 3.) Kris Ouimet Flight Three 1.) Lina Cameron 2.) Christine Erickson (retro) 3.) Joanne Harvey Business Hole Winners: Hole Ten — F3 - Longest Putt - Cobalt Spas - Christy Smith Hole Twelve — F2 — KP Chip Shot - Credit Union - Karin Brink Hole Thirteen — F1 — Longest Putt — Windsor Plywood - Lisa Kerley Hole Fourteen — OPEN — Longest Putt — Cariboo-U-Brew - Mabel Cornwall Hole Fifteen — F3 - KP Chip Shot - Boston Pizza - June Hutchinson Hole Sixteen — F2 - Longest Putt - Trattoria - Kris Ouimet Hole Seventeen — F1 - KP Chip Shot - Tender Touch Massage - Allison Levens Williams Lake Ladies’ Final Soccer League Standings Rank Team GP W T L PTS 1.) U17 Rep Team 12 8 0 4 24 2.) Windsor 12 6 0 6 18 3.) Caribou Ski 12 5 1 6 16 4.) CICS 12 5 1 6 16 5.) Beamac 9 4 2 6 14
A24 www.wltribune.com
Salvation Army Food Bank is in desperate need of Protein - canned pasta, beans, tuna, salmon, ham. Please drop off or call Sabrina if you have any questions 250-392-2429.
Andrea Cass, AMP Mortgage Broker • Professional Advice • Customized Mortgages • Proven Results
250-392-5005 / 877-715-5005
565 A Oliver Street • andreacass@invis.ca
Treat Yourself to a Visit from
Welcome Wagon! It’s FREE!!!
We are a community service whose aim is to bring you greetings, gifts & information regarding the area you live in.
Contact Welcome Wagon today if you are moving or getting married.
Call Deborah at 250-305-4405 or toll free 1-866-856-8442 www.welcomewagon.ca
Bringing local community information & gifts since 1930
SPORTS
Training tips for Tour de Cariboo Brittany Klingmann Special to Tribune/Advisor The details of a training program can be multi-faceted and complicated. While it’s critical a training program is appropriately planned for a competitive cyclist, this can be overwhelming and intimidating for beginners when it doesn’t have to be. For those who are relatively new to cycling or just starting out, the important thing is that you are out there on a regular basis getting physical activity. Many health benefits can be achieved through regular moderate intensity physical activity including: decreased risk of cardiovascular disease and type two diabetes, improved mental health, improved sleep and energy and it’s a great way to achieve your weight loss goals. Keeping this in mind, today’s article is
Photo submitted
After completing the Tour de Cariboo a relaxing and refreshing day awaits. The 75-kilometre ride from Williams Lake to Gavin Lake goes Saturday, Sept. 6, beginning at the Cariboo Memorial Recreation Complex. going to touch on some basic training tips that will help you prepare for the 22nd Annual Tour de Cariboo on September 6, 2014. The first important piece of a training program is to be consistent! Aim for 3-4 days per week on the bike.
Sign Up Today! Executive Assistant Diploma
A Step Ahead CENTRAL CARIBOO GRANT FOR ASSISTANCE APPLICATION
On an annual basis, the City of Williams Lake (City) and Electoral Areas D, E and F of the Cariboo Regional District (CRD) jointly provide Grants For Assistance to local non-profit organizations for projects, activities and events that strengthen and enhance the well being of the community, promote volunteerism and support the goals and priorities of the City of Williams Lake and Cariboo Regional District. Application forms may be picked up and submitted to the City of Williams Lake, 450 Mart Street, V2G 1N3 or Cariboo Regional District, Suite D, 180 North third Ave., V2G 2A4 THE DEADLINE FOR APPLICATIONS IS SEPTEMBER 30TH Late applications will not be considered. In order to qualify for a Grant For Assistance, the applicant must: Be a registered non-profit organization in good standing with the Registrar of Companies; Provide the most recent Annual General Meeting report, financial statements and approved budget for the current year; Demonstrate financial need; and Provide a service, project or event that supports the priorities and goals of the City and CRD. Services, projects or events proposed by the applicant must not: Offer direct financial assistance to individuals or families; Duplicate or replace services that fall within the mandate of senior levels of government or local service agency; or Support a Provincial or National fundraising campaign; OR Be of a commercial nature Grants for Assistance will be provided under the following categories: 1. Capital Expenditure – equipment purchase, construction, repair or upgrade of facilities 2. Event – seed funding for new, ongoing events with diminishing support over three years 3. Special Project – one-time special event, program or activity
CITY OF WILLIAMS LAKE
Wednesday, August 6, 2014 Williams Lake Tribune
CO L L E G E
UPON INSTRUCTIONS FROM WEST FRASER MILLS LTD.
HOUSTON FOREST PRODUCTS
SAWMILL AUCTION THURS. AUG. 14, 9AM
PREVIEW: TUES/WED AUG 12 & 13 1300 MORICE RIVER RD. HOUSTON, BC OPTIMIL CANTERLINE • (4) DEBARKERS • (4) EDGERS • (5) SORTERS • (5) STACKER SYSTEMS • (8) DRY KILNS • LUG LOADERS • SINGULATOR • TRIMMERS • BOILERS & SUPPORT EQUIP. • CHIP SCREENS • CHIPPERS • VIBRATORY CONVEYORS • CHIP BIN • CYCLONES • BAGHOUSE • STRAPPER • STICK RECOVERY & LUMBER SQUEEZE • STEP FEEDERS • LOG HAULS • TRANSFER DECKS • UNSCRAMBLERS • TILT HOISTS • ROLL CASES • MCC’S • BELT CONVEYORS • FILING ROOM • AIR COMPRESSORS • CAT FORKLIFTS, ETC SEE DETAILED LOT BY LOT CATALOGUE AT
MAYNARDS.COM
OR CONTACT MIKE SEIBOLD (604) 675-2227 | MICHAEL@MAYNARDS.COM Sale Conducted By:
AUCTIONS | LIQUIDATIONS | APPRAISALS
1837 Main St. Vancouver, BC V5T 3B8 (604) 876-6787 www.maynards.com
Start slow and gradually build up to longer rides as your fitness allows. Shorter rides are usually easier to fit in during the week, while you can plan longer rides on the weekends. As a general rule — if you increase your weekly mileage or time spent on the bike by 10 percent per week you are progressing at a good rate. Also, schedule in 1 “recovery week” every month where you cut back on the longer rides to allow your body to adapt to the new stresses placed on it and prevent injury. For comfort while riding, try and change positions frequently and occasionally stand out of your saddle. You may even want to stretch your neck and roll your shoulders if they get stiff. To be most efficient and to assist with developing a good pedaling style, aim for a cadence (revolutions per minute RPM) of between 80100 RPM. If you have a heart rate monitor you will want to keep your heart rate between 6580% of your maximum heart rate during the first several weeks of your training. An easy way to calculate your estimated
maximum heart rate is by using the following equation: 220-age = maximum heart rate in beats per minute. Then multiply by .65 to get the lower range and by .80 to get the upper range. For example, I am 30 years of age. So to calculate my estimated maximum heart rate is as follows: 220-30 = 190 / 190 x .65 = 123.5 (round up to 124) and 190 x .80 = 152. Therefore, my target heart rate range would be between 124-152 beats per minute. If you don’t have a heart rate monitor, or you are not all that keen about math — don’t worry, you can also use the talk test — which is an easy and convenient way to ensure you are working at the right intensity. If you are riding with a partner just make sure you are able to maintain a conversation (one to two sentences at a time) without needing to pause or gasp for air. Once you have established a reasonable base — approximately four weeks of consistent riding, it will be a good idea to include some higher intensity work by doing some hill training as there are a few challenging
hills to conquer during the ride. Sitting is the most effective and efficient way to climb a hill. It’s important to change gears as needed at the bottom of the hill, transfer your weight forward on the saddle and lower your trunk over the handlebars. Attempt to keep your revolutions between 60-80 RPM up the hill. If the hill is too steep or you need to change up the muscles you are working, change to one gear harder and stand out of the saddle and your cadence may drop slightly which is okay. Remember — the most important thing is that you have chosen to participate in the 22nd Annual Tour de Cariboo — whether it is for fun, health, fitness or all of the above, so congratulations. If you still have not registered, don’t wait any longer, contact Williams Lake Big Brothers and Big Sisters by phone at 250398-8391 or on-line at www.bbswlake.com to register today. Stay tuned for the next article on nutrition and hydration. - Brittany Klingmann, MPT, BSc Kin, CAFCI
The Willams Lake Tribune Wednesday, August 6, 2014
www.wltribune.com A25
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250.392.2331 fax 250.392.7253 email classifieds@wltribune.com Family Announcements............001-007 Community Announcements............008-076 Children........................080-098 Employment..................102-165 Services........................170-387 Pets/Livestock...............453-483 Items For Sale/Wanted..503-595 Real Estate....................603-696 Rentals..........................700-757 Transportation...............804-860 Marine...........................903-920 Legals................................Legal
AGREEMENT
It is agreed by the advertiser requesting space that the liability of the Tribune (Black Press Group Limited) in the event of failure to publish an advertisement in or the event of an error appearing in the advertisement as published shall be limited to the amount paid by the advertiser for only one incorrect insertion or the portion of the advertising space occupied by the incorrect or omitted item only, and that there shall be no liability in any event greater than the amount paid for such advertising. All claims of errors in advertising must be received by the publisher within 2 days after the first publication. All advertising is subject to the approval of the publisher. The Tribune reminds advertisers that under Provincial legislation, no person shall use or circulate any form of application for employment, publish or cause to be published an advertisement in connection with employment or prospective employment, or make any written or oral inquiry of an applicant that (a) expresses, either directly or indirectly any limitation, specification or preference as to race, religion, color, sex, marital status, age, ancestry, or place of origin or a person; or (b) requires an applicant to furnish any information concerning race, religion, color, ancestry, place of origin or political belief. In order to be credited for any mistakes the Tribune is responsible for, corrections must be made before the second insertion.
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Announcements
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Information
Help Wanted
BOARDROOM FOR RENT
Education/Trade Schools
Help Wanted
Celebrating the Life of Barry Martin Lang August 10, 1948 December 26, 2013
Business Opportunities 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 or 1-888528-0809 to start training for your work-at-home career today!
APARTMENT/CONDO MANAGER TRAINING
Rob Menzies Contracting Grapple Skidder Operator required for work in the West Chilcotin. This is a full time camp job. Must have 5 years experience. Email resume to rkjcmenzies@shaw.ca or fax 250-398-6273 attn: Rob Menzies
Rob Menzies Contracting Logging Camp Cook required for work in the West Chilcotin. Must have Food Safe and a minimum 5 years experience in camp cooking. Email resume to rkjcmenzies@shaw.ca or fax 250-398-6273 attn: Rob Menzies.
Anyone familiar with Barry knew him as a man who enjoyed the simple things in life so family and friends are getting together to honor his life in a setting he enjoyed. Please join us for appies, soft drinks and treasured stories about Barry. August 9, 2014 @ 1pm The Legion Campground, Felker lake, BC
Seats up to 25 max. $100 full day, $50 half day. 50% of proceeds to Boys & Girls Club. Phone 778-412-4200
Help Wanted Personals MEET SINGLES right now! No paid operators, just real people like you. Browse greetings, exchange messages and connect live. Try it free. Call now: 1-800-712-9851.
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Timeshare CANCEL YOUR TimeshareNo Risk Program, Stop Mortgage & Maintenance Payments Today. 100% Money Back Guarantee. Free Consultation. Call Us Now. We Can Help! 1-888-356-5248.
FOUNTAIN OF Youth RV Resort offers more Winter Vacation for Less money. Hot mineral springs, events, activities, fitness, entertainment. Web: foyspa.com or 888-800-0772.
Wednesday Issue 3:00 p.m. on the preceding Friday Friday Issue 3:00 p.m. on the preceding Tuesday
weekend
advisor
Children Daycare Centers Sunshine and Smiles Daycare Centre has a part time/full time position for an ECE Assistant. Must have license to practice, first aid, and physicians letter. Qualified applicants can apply with cover letter and resume at 452 Borland Street. Only those selected for an interview will be contacted.
Call (250) 392-2331 188 North 1st Ave. Williams Lake
Information
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0HPEHUVKLS %HQHÀWV
Community Services & Promotional Advantages*
188 N. 1st Ave., Williams Lake, B.C. V2G 1Y8 250-392-2331 Fax 250-392-7253 classifieds@wltribune.com All Tribune and Weekend classified ads are on the Internet at bcclassified.com ... also with a link through wltribune.com
• Pride of involvement: Chamber sponsors a $750 annual bursary at Columneetza Secondary or Williams Lake Senior Secondary for a graduating son/daughter of a Chamber Member • Opportunity for your business to sponsor the Chamber’s Annual Business Excellence Awards • Opportunity to enjoy guest speakers and network at Chamber monthly luncheons • Opportunity to promote your business through advertisements or feature stories in the Chamber’s respected Newsletter Williams Lake & District CHAMBER OF COMMERCE “THE VOICE OF BUSINESS”
*See Chamber for details
Phone: 250-392-5025 Toll Free: 1-877-967-5253 1660 South Broadway
Part Time/Full Time all
Drivers/Courier/ Trucking
shifts at Chevron Town Pantry. Please drop off your resumes.
Kohnke Trucking requires immediately long distance truck drivers. Steady run to Yukon, competitive rates and new equipment. Call Tyler at (250)302-1969
An Alberta Oilfield Company is hiring experienced dozer and excavator operators, meals and lodging provided. Drug testing required. 1-(780)7235051.
Haircare Professionals
Haircare Professionals
Experienced mature needed at Dog ‘N Please drop off resume.
cook Suds.
Automotive
Automotive
Join Our Growing Team
Lube/Tire Technician Quick Lane Tire & Auto Centre requires a Lube/Tire Technician for a full time position to start immediately. We offer competitive wages based on training and experience and a benefit package with a pension. Send resume to (sgroundwater@lakecityford.ca) or drop off in person.
Eloquence Spa & Salon is looking for a Hair Stylist. Please apply in person or by email to info@eloquencespa.ca 180 Yorston Street
Travel
Flyer Booking
the
• Certified Home Study Course • Jobs Registered Across Canada • Gov. Certified www.RMTI.ca / 604.681.5456 or 1.800.665.8339
Only those selected for an interview will be contacted.
Hotel, Restaurant, Food Services
Hotel, Restaurant, Food Services
MAINTENANCE • TIRES • BRAKES • OIL & FILTER • BATTERIES • ALIGNMENT
250-392-7700
715 Oliver St.
Career Opportunities
Career Opportunities
CARIBOO FRIENDSHIP SOCIETY Little Moccasins Learning Centre
Service Technician
Term Position September to June
JOB TITLE:
We have a position available for a Service Technician in our Williams Lake location.
FOOD MANAGER
JOB PURPOSE: To carry out the goals and objectives of the Little Moccasins Learning Centre, the Cariboo Friendship Society, and to provide nutritional meals for children in the program. ESSENTIAL JOB RESULTS: • Provide healthy nutritious meals for the children • Maintain an environment as required by licensing • Maintain a positive nature with staff, children, parents and visitors to the program. SPECIAL REQUIREMENTS: 1. Current criminal records check 2. Food Safe certificate 3. Good knowledge of the Canada Food Guide 4. Ability to provide nutritious meals for children 5. Ability to work within a budget as specified by the Program Coordinator Closing Date: August 18, 2014 Submit: Please provide resume, covering letter and three work related references to Cariboo Friendship Society, 99 South Third Avenue, Williams Lake.
brandtjobs.com
INDEX IN BRIEF
The successful applicant for this position will be responsible for the repair and maintenance of construction and forestry based equipment and attachments. Previous mechanical experience in a heavy equipment environment is an asset. Enrolled as an Apprentice or a certified Journeyman in the Heavy Duty Equipment technician trade or equivalent designated trade is preferred. Find out more about our exciting career opportunities at www.brandtjobs.com or by calling 306-791-8923. To apply for this position please visit brandtjobs.com and enter the tracking code 736-046 into the search field on the Job Opportunities page. Brandt Tractor is the world’s largest privately held John Deere Construction and Forestry Equipment dealer and a Platinum member of the Canada’s Best Managed Companies Program.
Please note: Pursuant to section 41 of the BC Human Rights Code, preference will be given to applicants of Aboriginal ancestry.
For your convenience Tribune obituaries can be viewed on our website; www.wltribune.com
REMEMBER YOUR LOVED ONES 250-392-2331
A26 www.wltribune.com
Employment Help Wanted
EMPLOYMENT OPPORTUNITY Applicant must be 19+, have excellent customer service skills and ability to obtain Serving It Right Certificate. Some evenings and weekends required. Apply in person to 1730B South Broadway (under the Laughing Loon) attention Lynn.
Wednesday, August 6, 2014 The Willams Lake Tribune
Help Wanted
Help Wanted
NOW HIRING PART TIME CASHIER & SALES TEAM MEMBER Please apply in person to Rona Williams Lake, 298 Proctor Street
Successful candidates will be outgoing, confident, ambitious & assertive! Must be able to multi-task in a fast paced environment. Full-time Position Available: Salary/commission/perks with potential wage of $35,000 - $60,000. Plus medical and dental benefits. Apply in person with resume at Andre’s Electronic Experts 1148 Broadway Ave. S. Williams Lake
RESIDENTIAL BUILDINGS MAINTENANCE PERSON This is a full time position and at times requires emergency evening and weekend call-outs. The successful candidate would be responsible for a variety of residential building maintenance and repair in multiple buildings. Must be bondable, hard-working, organized, have own tools and transportation, be able to work independently or with others and provide estimates and timelines for work to be performed. Please send your resume by fax 250-305-2293 or by email dbhendricks@hotmail.com JANITORIAL Service Requires Part Time Worker. Two Days a week plus Vac. relief. Must have valid Drivers License Ph: 250-398-6308 or 250-392-7274 Scheiber Installations Quesnel has openings for the following fulltime positions for shop & field pulp & paper work. Pressure Welder, Millwright, Pipefitter & Field Supervisor. Competitive wages & benefits apply. Email resume to scheiberinstall@shaw.ca
Medical/Dental Full time Certified Dental Assistant required for team orientated family dental practice. Awesome wage and benefits package. Apply by resume to: 121 N. 1st Avenue, Williams Lake, BC V2G 1Y7, Fax: (250)398-8633 or by E-mail: vitoratos@shaw.ca Visit our website: www.cariboodentalclinic.com
Ofce Support FULL TIME BOOKKEEPER required. 2-3 Years Experience is an asset. Monday to Friday. Please Fax resume to 250398-2289
Trades, Technical Looking for a heavy duty mechanic for a busy shop in Kamloops full benefits great wage no night or shift work please fax or e-mail resume to Fountain Tire Kamloops 916 Yellowhead Hwy V2H1A2 fax number 250.851.7619 e-mail f105@fountaintire.com STRATHCONA COUNTY, Alberta requires a full-time Licensed Heavy Duty or Automotive Technician with thorough knowledge of heavy equipment, including vehicle and bus repair. Competitive compensation and work-life balance in Alberta’s energy and agricultural heartland. Visit www.strathcona.ca/careers
Help Wanted
W O W WHAT A DEAL! Have we got a deal for you! Items for $100 & Under are $1 per insertion* Items for $200 & Under are $2 per insertion*
1730 South Broadway Ave
There is an opportunity to join our Andre’s Electronic Experts/Telus Sales Team!
Help Wanted
AINSWORTH ENGINEERED 100 MILE HOUSE OSB HAS OPPORTUNITIES FOR YOU! We are a leading Canadian forest products company with half a century reputation of exceptional product quality, customer service and innovation. We are operated by people who take pride in their work and are rewarded for their ability and entrepreneurship. We are seeking exceptional individuals for the following positions:
Items for $300 & Under are $3 per insertion* Items for $400 & Under are $4 per insertion*
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Country Cottage Hairstyling
Welcomes d Tracy Fodchuk Evening Appointments Available for your convenience
250-398-STYL | 250-398-7895 | 250 Barnard Street
One item per ad - based on 3 lines/12 words. each additional line is $1 per insertion.
More than 100 diseases and illness can be treated by using acupuncture.* Check us out!
Site Manager The Site Manager is responsible for planning, coordinating and leading the activities of the 100 Mile House facility within the guidelines of company policy to achieve established goals and objectives. Other areas of responsibility include, but are not limited to, the following: Safety, Production, Quality, Process Control, Maintenance, Administration of Personnel, Forecasting and Budgeting. As the ideal candidate, you have a minimum of 5 years experience in wood products manufacturing plant, preferably OSB and proven in–depth knowledge of the OSB process. In addition, you have a minimum of 5 years experience in management positions where excellent performance and employee management skills have been emphasized. You also possess strong team development skills; a good sense of judgment and a proven record of hiring, leading, coaching and developing resources through exceptional people management skills. Extensive experience using Microsoft Office is required.
Maintenance Team Leader This is a front-line leadership position responsible for managing labour requirements and maintenance (preventive, predictive and unscheduled) of all mill equipment and machinery. This position leads maintenance teams with a strong emphasis on safety, quality and efficiency. The Maintenance Team Leader relies on leadership abilities, in conjunction with a continuous improvement / preventive maintenance mindset in order to support and promote excellence as established in the Company vision, mission and values. The ideal candidate will have 5+ years of manufacturing experience as a Journeyman Millwright, Electrician, HD Mechanic or Machinist, with 1-2 years of supervisory experience. Excellent working knowledge of an industrial environment and strong interpersonal and communication skills are necessary. Hydraulic knowledge and additional trade’s experience are assets. Experience in OSB manufacturing is preferred. You should have a demonstrated knowledge of team processes and the ability to model, encourage and influence team behaviour and decision making. Proficiency of Microsoft Office is considered an asset.
Journeyman Millwright As the ideal candidate you will have experience as a Journeyman Millwright with the ability to work in a safe and efficient manner as an integral member of the Maintenance team. You have Red Seal Certification, strong hydraulic knowledge with excellent troubleshooting skills and the ability to read hydraulic & air schematics
188 North 1st Ave. WL 250-392-2331
Williams Lake Acupuncture & Herbs Clinic
www.williamslakeacupuncture.com
143 4th Ave South ( Yorston Medical Building) 778-412-0153
Brad Huston
EXCO INDUSTRIES We are a well established Design / Engineering / Steel fabrication / Machining facility located in 100 Mile House British Columbia, in operation for forty plus years, a division of Ainsworth Engineered. Our core business is design and fabrication for the forest and mining sectors, working mostly in Canada with projects in several countries outside of North America as well. Our employees take pride in their work and are key to our successful safety and quality reputation.
• Small Appliance Recycling Depot • E-Waste Electronic Recycling Center 250-982-2611 Daily service to Quesnel Wednesday & Friday to Bella Coola In-Town Deliveries
Bella Coola
250-392-7567 Williams Lake
405 Mackenzie Avenue South, Williams Lake
We are currently seeking an individual for the following vacancy:
Fax 250-392-5440 • www.beelinecourier.ca
SITE MANAGER EXCO Division, 100 Mile House, BC
C & Ski Small Engines
Reporting to the General Manager Capital Projects, the Site Manager is responsible for planning, coordinating and leading the activities of EXCO Industries within the guidelines of Ainsworth company policy to achieve established goals and objectives. Other areas of responsibility include, but are not limited to the following: Safety, Production, Sales & Marketing, Estimating, Administration of Personnel, Cost and Manpower forecasting, Capital expense budgeting. As the ideal candidate, you have a minimum of five years experience in the steel fabrication industry, preferably with wood products and mining equipment experience. In addition, you have a minimum of 5 years experience in management positions where excellent performance and employee management skills have been emphasized. You also possess strong team development skills; a good sense of judgment and a proven record of hiring, leading, coaching and developing resources through exceptional people management skills. Computer skills are necessary, Microsoft office and some AutoCAD experience required. Please submit your resume, in confidence to:
Work Where You Live, Commitment to Safety without Compromise, Competitive Wages & Benefits, Great Team Environment, Training & Development, Values of Respect, Integrity, Safety, Excellence & Sustainability.
Ainsworth Engineered Canada LP Attention: Human Resources – Vancouver P.O. Box 49307 3194-1055 Dunsmuir Street, Vancouver, BC V7X 1L3 Fax: 604 661 3201 Email: jobs@ainsworth.ca
CHECK US OUT ONLINE AT www.ainsworthengineered.com TO VIEW THE COMPLETE JOB DESCRIPTIONS
OR EXCO Industries Attention: Peter Smirfitt
We look forward to hearing from you; please submit your resume online to Jobs@ainsworth.ca or fax to 604 661 3201
P.O. Box 790 100 Mile House, BC V0K 2E0 Email: peter.smirfitt@ainsworth.ca
Working at Ainsworth Means:
*World Health Organization
Sales and Service of All Small Engine and Marine Equipment
Colin Stevens Over 25 years experience
• 2 and 4 stroke engine rebuilding • Buy and sell used equipment all makes and models • Many parts - new and used available in stock • Dealer for Motovan, Kimpex, Trans Can Imports, Western Marine and many more • Warranty Contractor for Sears • Specials on in-stock ATV tires, motocross tires and helmets
250-296-3380
3616 Stanchfield Road - 15 mins up Horsefly Road candski@xplornet.ca
COMPUTER SERVICES • Software & Hardware Installation • Computer & Router Set Up • General Computer Help
Gilles Mailhiot
250.392.7629
Email: gilles_mailhiot@hotmail.com
Rent a High Definition Projector and 100” Screen for only $ 199/night or $249/weekend 250-392-7455 234 Borland St.
The Willams Lake Tribune Wednesday, August 6, 2014
www.wltribune.com A27
Employment
Employment
Employment
Employment
Employment
Trades, Technical
Help Wanted
Help Wanted
Help Wanted
Help Wanted
Full Time Automotive Technician
with custom exhaust experience required at busy shop. We offer competitive wages and a benefit package. Drop resume off in person or email resume to rridley@wlake.com 665 Oliver Street 250-392-6828
Services
Financial Services ARE YOU $10K Or More In Debt? DebtGo can help reduce a significant portion of your debt load. Call now and see if you qualify. 1-800-3511783. GET BACK ON TRACK! Bad credit? Bills? Unemployed? Need Money? We Lend! If you own your own home - you qualify. Pioneer Acceptance Corp. Member BBB. 1-877-987-1420 www.pioneerwest.com 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. UNFILED TAX Returns? Unreported Income? Avoid Prosecution and Penalties. Call a Tax Attorney First! 1855-668-8089. (Mon-Fri 9-6 ET)
Home Repairs FULL SERVICE Plumbing from Parker Dean. Fast, reliable, 24/7 service. Take $50 off your next job if you present this ad. Vancouver area. 1800-573-2928.
Recycling RECYCLING
Depot for batteries, rads, copper, aluminum, catalytic converters, alts. and starts. Will p/u, will pay cash! Phone 250-398-0672
Pets & Livestock
Equestrian 13 Year Old mare Quarter horse cross. $1000. (250)2963635 or (250)305-4450
Merchandise for Sale
Antiques / Vintage Selling some of our antique furniture. Roll top desk, elaborate side-board, china cupboard, bedroom suite, and various other items. What do you want? We may have it! (250)296-0139
Appliances FRIDGE for sale, Kenmore, white, side by side, ice & water, very clean, perfect working condition, 9 yrs old, 30”d x 35.5”w x 69”h. Asking $750 obo paid $2000 new. 250-2676914 White LG front loading washer/dryer. New condition. Gently used less than 1 year. $1200. Shawn 250-398-8885
Auctions ONLINE AUCTION - Salmon Arm: Equipment & Recreation Event! Modified snowmobile, boat, sled trailer, Suzuki bike, gang edger for planks - more! www.mcdougallauction.com Phone Mike: 1-250-833-1400, 1-800-263-4193 DL#319916.
$100 & Under 10” Craftsman Cutoff Saw. Barely used. $70. 250-3987594 RV SPECIAL! 15” TV 12 volt & 110. $30 250-305-3347
$200 & Under 10” Rockwell Beaver Table saw. Good condition. $200. 250-398-7594
is now hiring! FRONT DESK CLERK
The Ramada Williams Lake has an immediate opening for a part time receptionist/desk clerk for audit or afternoon shift. The successful applicant should have a general knowledge of bookkeeping, cash handling, use of debit machines and comfortable with computers. The ability to make decisions and multi-task are important. Please bring your resume to the front desk. You will be requested to fill out an application.
HOUSEKEEPING
The Ramada Hotel also requires experienced housekeepers for on call Sunday to Saturday day shifts. Must have reliable transportation and phone. Competitive wages. 1118 Lakeview Crescent, Williams Lake
Esk’etemc (Alkali Lake) Esk’etemc is on the forefront of an exciting new era in governance and leadership. If you are seeking a challenging and rewarding career experience in a progressive and dynamic organization, please consider these job postings to work in a truly unique community. Director of Capital & Housing – Job Summary Reporting to the Managing Director, this position is responsible for the management of Esk’etemc housing and property, for housing maintenance, management and monitoring of budgets, work plans and reports. The incumbent shall be responsible for developing and maintaining a capital and housing plan, including roads, water and infrastructure and is expected to do appropriate proposal writing for projects and plans. The incumbent supervises the operations and maintenance, carpentry contracts, and housing support staff. The Director of Capital & Housing is a frontline worker for Esk’etemc and must be able to represent Esk’etemc in a professional and courteous manner. The work of the position will be conducted in accordance with the Esk’etemc personnel policies and procedures. Qualifications, Experience & Technical Skills The incumbent must have previous experience in capital project management, Certificate(s) in the trades and Occupational Health and Safety, management and supervisory skills, proficient office skills, journeyman certification would be an asset. This position requires an individual who is genuinely interested in the development and administration of the Capital and Housing departments and staff as well as implementation of the Capital and Housing policy and procedures. This individual must be able to lead a team with energy and motivation and able to work under pressure from time constraints, budgets and community pressure. He/she must demonstrate reliability and confidence in his/her work. The successful applicant will have a reliable vehicle and valid BC Driver’s license. Director of Education– Job Summary The Director of Education will be responsible for the organization, management and administration of the Esk’etemc Education Program and shall report directly to the Managing Director. The incumbent will have experience working with First Nations community/organization; responsibilities are complex and diversified to carry out initiatives and direct all education operations. A visionary, a well-respected educational leader with proven track record, is results-oriented and will strategically foster growth and opportunities for Esk’etemc band membership; and will build strong relationships to develop a systems approach in collaboration with the Esk’etemc Chief & Council, community and education stakeholder’s. The incumbent will coordinate education initiatives between Sxoxomic Community School, Esk’etemc Training/Employment program, Social Services and Health to develop a comprehensive approach to education in Esk’et. The successful applicant will also manage the post-secondary program. Qualifications, Experience & Technical Skills Ideal (preferred) candidate will have a minimum of Bachelor of Arts and/or Education, proven administrative experience, life-long learner, and knowledge of current issues facing First Nations. The incumbent will have excellent interpersonal and communication skills for community members and key education stakeholders. The successful candidates will be a visionary with proven educational leadership experience and ability to inspire and engage community to achieve the Esk’etemc vision. He/she must be results-oriented with a high level of integrity and energy to champion student success, be committed to the development and implementation of Esk’etemc culture and traditions and willing to learn the Secwepemc language. Submit cover letter, resume and three (3) CURRENT work related references to: Norma Sure, Managing Director, managingdirector@esketemc.ca Deadline – August 14, 2014 @ 4:30 pm. Only those accepted for an interview will be contacted.
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250-392-2331
PRODUCTION EMPLOYEES Williams Lake, B.C.
Tolko Industries Ltd. is currently seeking ProducƟon Employees to join our team at the Lakeview and Soda Creek Divisions in Williams Lake. Tolko is a forest products company with markeƟng, resource management and manufacturing operaƟons throughout Western Canada.
POSITION OVERVIEW:
As part of a skilled and moƟvated producƟon team, ProducƟon Employees will play an important role in maintaining the cleanliness of the mill environment and operaƟon of lumber processing equipment to assist in the producƟon of wood products. We require people interested in working in the wood processing industry with a high commitment for safety and working in a team environment.
Lindsay Satchell IAT, ILE-HIS, BC-HIS Hearing Instrument Specialist
For All Your Hearing Needs
NOW AT OUR NEW LOCATION 197C - 4th Ave. S. (Barnard Square)
Ph: 250-392-2922 • Fax: 250-392-2947 • Toll Free: 1-866-327-8678
QUALIFICATIONS: • • • • •
Able to work both independently and in a team environment Ability to analyze and troubleshoot Strong communicaƟon and interpersonal skills EnthusiasƟc and posiƟve aƫtude Flexible to work a variety of shiŌs and weekends
Guided Counsel
Readings by Vicky
tarot card advisor
APPLY TODAY!
If you are interested in exploring this opportunity and being part of our community, please visit our website at: www.tolko.com and submit your resume. Resumes will also be accepted at the Tolko Regional oĸce located at 180 Hodgson Road, Williams Lake, B.C.
by appointment only
778-412-9199
248 N. FIFTH AVE. Williams Lake
We thank all candidates for their interest; however only those selected for an interview will be contacted.
FOR ALL YOUR AUTO REPAIRS
Apply Today!
Serving the Cariboo since 1981
www.tolko.com Soda Creek Indian Band Natural Resources Referrals Officer
Job Summary: The Referrals Coordinator will contribute to the overall success of the Soda Creek Natural Resources department by organising and coordinating responses to government and third party referrals within the Xats’ull Territory. The Officer will also be responsible for information management and research as required by the Natural Resource department. Duties and Responsibilities: • Coordinate referrals in conjunction with Natural Resource staff and consultants • Liaise with government/third party interest groups regarding information requests and referrals • Data entry and information compilation from various external agencies • Mapping, research, and documentation of Traditional Knowledge & Use studies • Field work and site visits as required • Assist in development and implementation of the Xats’ull First Nation stewardship plans Qualifications: • Further education in Natural Resource Management, Geographic Information Systems (GIS) or comparable program • Experience working in natural resource related industries • Office related experience required • Familiarity with natural resource issues, legislation and operations • Intermediate experience using computer programs, digitized mapping, email and internet • Able to work independently and proactively to identify and address new opportunities • Strong interpersonal skills to build professional and cooperative relationships with colleagues, community and external organizations • Accountable; able to meet deadlines, uphold attention to detail and maintain confidentiality • Knowledge of Secwepemc language, culture and history is an asset • Experience driving in all weather and road conditions an asset Conditions of Employment: • Must have a valid Class 5 BC Drivers Licence • Must be physically able to meet fieldwork requirements (moderate hiking in remote site locations) • Able to work non-standard hours of work as required • Office hours 8:30am-4:30pm, Monday to Friday Please submit a cover letter and current resume with three references by: 4:00 pm, Friday, August 15th 2014 to: Donna Dixon, Natural Resource Executive Assistant (in person, or email: nrexecasst@xatsull.com)
Government Inspections Shuttle Service
STAN POGUE
Licensed Technician
Tuesday to Friday 7:30 am to 5:00 pm Saturday 7:30 am to 4:00 pm
A.R.S. Enterprises Ltd 1075 N. Mackenzie Ave.
Stu
Phone 250-392-3522 • Fax 250-392-3548
m p y ’s
Stump Grinding Colin Nivison ~ Phone: 250-791-6497 email: nivison@shaw.ca ~ Cell: 250-706-7220 www.stumpysstumpgrinding.com Remove unwanted stumps • Serving the South Cariboo
Recharge Special! Let Grant Help You Chill Out Air Conditioning Service/Recharge
9995
$
Ü Betcha!
Grant Abel
Licensed Mechanic
250-398-8279
Open Mon-Fri: 8am to 5pm Sat: 9am-5pm DL#30676 550 North 11th Ave
Consistent Advertising = Familiarity = Trust = Customers You can trust me with your advertising.
Lori Macala
Advertising Consultant
188 North First Avenue Williams Lake, BC V2G 1Y8 Bus: 250-392-2331 Fax: 250-392-7253 sherri@wltribune.com
A28 www.wltribune.com
Wednesday, August 6, 2014 The Willams Lake Tribune
Merchandise for Sale
Real Estate
Real Estate
$200 & Under
For Sale By Owner
Houses For Sale
2 front fenders for ‘87 Chev 4x4. Good condition. $200. 250-398-7594.
$300 & Under Bradley Smoker - never used. $250. Phone: (250)9891158 Singer Sewing Machine, with foot pedal, good working condition. Asking $260. OBO Call Louise (250)398-5372
$400 & Under Brown electric recliner chair, very good condition with side pocket, Mancini collection. Asking. $390 OBO Call Louise (250)398-5372
$500 & Under Cattle Rack. Great condition, no dents or bends. $500 250296-3500
Free Items Alaskan-Malamute female pup. 11 mons. old. Free to approved home. 250-398-5511. Giving away Ranger box liner, Ranger trailer hitch, 1976 VW engine w/transmission and other parts. You pick up. 250-392-3466.
Medical Supplies Quickie 2 lightweight, quality wheel chair with Roho Cushion. Excellent condition. $800 obo. Call 250-303-3388.
Misc. for Sale A- STEEL SHIPPING DRY STORAGE CONTAINERS Used 20’40’45’ 53’ and insulated containers all sizes in stock. SPECIAL Trades are welcome. 40’ Containers under $2500! DMG 40’ containers under $2,000 each. Also JD 544 &644 wheel Loaders Wanted to buy 300 size hydraulic excavator Ph Toll free 1-866-528-7108 Delivery BC and AB www.rtccontainer.com KILL BED Bugs & Their Eggs! Buy Harris Bed Bug Killer Complete Treatment Program or Kit. Available: Hardware Stores, Buy Online: homedepot.com KILL ROACHES! Buy Harris Roach Tablets. Eliminate bugs- guaranteed. No mess, odorless, long lasting. Available at Ace Hardware & The Home Depot.
1735 Richland Drive 1972 Deregistered trailer Complete kitchen reno (new cupboards, windows, floor & appl.) Large addition with woodstove. 3 bdrms, 1384 sqft on .81 acre lot with utility shed and large wood shed/shop. Only 5 min from Williams Lake. Very spacious inside and outside and so much more potential. Open House planned for Aug. 22 (4pm - 8pm) and Aug. 23 (10am - 2pm) Private viewings by appt. only. Asking $186,000. Call (778)412-7375 or 1(780)832-5611
Beautiful Pioneer Log home in Borland Valley on 2.7 acres in 150 Mile House Log shop with 12’x11’ roll up door, 30’ Lean-to, Log yard shop with 220 wiring, BBQ shelter on cement slab, Natural Douglas Fir growth, mostly rail fenced, red metal rooďŹ ng on all buildings, natural pond at back fence.
3 bedroom, 1 bath 1400 sq.ft. home on “TWO� unsubdivided beautifully treed lots. 20 x 24 shop/garage. 334 - 5th Avenue N. $279,900. 250-398-0987
Mobile Homes & Parks 12x68 Trailer w/addition in Wildwood Trailer Park. 3 bdrm, f/s, w/d. New hot water tank, new carpets. $260 pad rent. 250-989-4711
1975 mobile in Fran Lee Trailer Park. 12x64 3 bdrm, 2 bath, f/s, w/d. New roof. New furnace. Asking $35,000. Call 250-989-7976.
2014 Double Wide 3 bedroom, comes with fridge, stove, dishwasher. Located at Fran Lee Mobile Home Park. Factory Warranty. Move in today. (250)392-3879
Real Estate ONLINE AUCTION: 60 acre idyllic Mountain Ranch with buildings located on Foghorn Creek, Clearwater, British Columbia. View at www.mcdougallauction.com. Call Mike: 1250-833-1400 or 1-800-2634193. DL#319916.
Rentals Want Acreage to Rent. Young family of 5, horse, cow & dog. 5+ acres. Excellent references. Long term preferred. 250398-5422 Darryl & Rebekah.
Quality hay. $5/ bale. No rain, no dust, no noxious weeds, 1250-243-2222 (Big Lake) STEEL BUILDINGS/Metal buildings 60% off! 20x28, 30x40, 40x62, 45x90, 50x120, 60x150, 80x100 sell for balance owed! Call 1-800-4572206 or visit online at: www.crownsteelbuildings.ca
Misc. Wanted Collector Buying Coin Collections, Native Art, Estates, Gold, Silver + 778-281-0030 FIREARMS. All types wanted, estates, collections, single items, military. We handle all paperwork and transportation. Licensed Dealer. 1-866-9600045. www.dollars4guns.com.
Real Estate For Sale By Owner MOVE IN READY. Custom renovated 4 bd, 2 ba double garage, Geothermal heating/ cooling, media room, large deck, 1/2 acre fenced yard close to town on Gilbrator route. www.richlanddrive.blogspot.ca $339,000.00 Tammy @ 250392-2900
Help Wanted
Join Our Growing Team
Sales Professional
If you are seeking a challenging career Zhere the ¿nancial reZarGs are liPiteG only by your efforts, JOIN OUR TEAM. :e SroviGe training along Zith an e[cellent incoPe anG bene¿ts. 3lease Geliver your resuPe to %evan .och at 15 Oliver 6treet or ePail bkoch#lakecityforG.ca • SALES • PARTS • SERVICE • COLLISION CENTRE Sales 250-392-4455
1-800-668-3994
Multi-family Garage Sale Saturday, August 9th 9:00 am to 3:00 pm 477 Roberts Drive
SELLING: Bike trailer, canoe, bike racks, air hockey table, Playmobil and much more! Sunday Aug. 10, 8:00 am - 12:00 noon. 1420 Eleventh Avenue North, Williams Lake.
Service 250-392-4499
715 Oliver Street, Williams Lake • www.lakecityford.ca • DL#30505
Trades, Technical
Trades, Technical
Are you ready to discover opportunity with one of North America’s most successful forest companies? Rated as one of Canada’s Top 100 Employer’s two years in a row, we are a growing Company looking for talented people to be part of our team. Quesnel Plywood, a Division of West Fraser Mills Ltd. is a union operation and has an opening for a: The successful candidate will be responsible for:
Acreage
Norwood 2000 Sawmill. Low hrs, 20hp Honda V-twin DHV engine with elec. start. Comes with NRN accessories. $12,000 obo 250-3928784
Sales
CERTIFIED MILLWRIGHT
MUST SEE! For More Information 1-250-296-0139
Incredible Views! 3020 Desous Mtn. Road Quiet & secluded, 1300sqft mobile with addition on 10+ acres overlooking the Fraser River. Storage sheds, raised garden beds & dog kennel. Reno’d inside & out. New hot water/pressure tank. Hiking, biking, fishing, horse riding trails & wildlife at your back door. $178,000. Call for appointments. (250)398-5986 Serious Inquiries Only!
Sales
Help Wanted
INLAND KENWORTH PARKER PACIFIC
Requires a Commercial Transport Mechanic to start immediately. We offer an excellent career opportunity with top wages and benefits. Apply in person with resume to Brandon 1560 Broadway Avenue South or email bstratton@inland-group.com
RETAIL SALES ASSOCIATE Retail Sales Associate position available immediately for well established plumbing, heating and electrical company in Williams Lake. Responsibilities include: Provide high level of customer service, support and sales; assist customers with plumbing, heating and electrical needs; communicate well with co-workers and customers. Qualifications: Excellent customer service skills, self motivated, mature attitude; knowledge of plumbing, heating and electrical products; ability to work flexible schedule; positive attitude; past cashier experience an asset. Competitive wage and benefits. Call 250-392-3301 days, fax 250-392-6737 or email rick@burgessphe.com
• Manufacturing Process And Preventative Maintenance • The Operation Of Hoisting Devices • Inspection And Examination Of Operating Equipment • Repairs Of Hydraulic Equipment And Cylinders • Identifying Opportunities For Improvements And Savings • Documentation Of Work Performed
QualiÀcations:
• A valid inter-provincial certiÀcate • An ability to read and interpret blue prints, plans and schematics • A commitment to work safely • Flexibility for day, afternoon, g/y and weekend shifts.
Interested applicants should, before August 22nd forward a resume to: qplywood@westfraser.com Attn: Mike Moleski, Maintenance Superintendent PO Box 2000 Quesnel B.C. V2J 5W1
For more information on West Fraser and other career opportunities, visit our website at: www.westfraser.com/jobs
Ofďƒžce Support
Ofďƒžce Support
Misc. for Sale
Misc. for Sale
TARPS! TARPS! “BEST PRICES IN TOWN!�
BLUE TARPS
10X8 weave (Medium Duty) WEST FRASER Williams Lake Plywood Division
Accounts Payable Company Information West Fraser is currently looking for individuals who are interested in a full time long-term career. We offer an excellent compensation package including: a competitive salary, excellent benefits, and an outstanding pension plan. Our employees can expect a challenging stable work environment with career development opportunities. West Fraser Timber Co. Ltd. is one of the leading integrated forest products companies in North America, with annual sales of $3 billion dollars. West Fraser is diversified in both products and geography. The company has lumber, plywood, laminated veneer lumber, MDF, pulp and newsprint operations across Canada and the US. We believe that people are our most valuable asset and pride ourselves on providing a challenging environment with continuous development. Job Description West Fraser is currently seeking a high caliber candidate for a permanent position in the Office Administration Group at our Williams Lake Plywood Operation. As part of the Office Administration Group, this role will be responsible for: • Reception duties, • Processing invoices, • Preparing daily production stats, • Vacation relief for Human Resources and Payroll. The ideal candidate will be a self-starter, possessing exceptional communication, planning, organization, and computer skills. Knowledge of Oracle Financials is an asset. A degree or diploma in office administration or payroll certification is preferred.
STARTING AT $2.19
WHITE TARPS 10X10 weave (Heavy Duty)
STARTING AT $3.99
BLACK TARPS 14X14 weave (Industrial Duty)
STARTING AT $5.49
FOAM SHOP MATTRESS REPLACEMENTS SINGLE TO KING SIZE 2� TO 6� THICK - CUSTOM CUT OR CUSTOM ORDER MEMORY FOAM TOPPER PADS - 3LB DENSITY SINGLE TO KING SIZE - 2� & 3� THICK
CUSHION REPLACEMENTS TORN OR TATTERED? SOFAS, CHAIRS, OTTOMANS, SNOWMOBILES SEATS, TRACTORS
YOU NEED IT - WE WILL CUT IT!
CAMPING FOAM, MEDICAL WEDGES & BOLSTERS, PILLOWS
“ A CUT ABOVE THE REST�
Apply with resume to wlplywood@westfraser.com Closing Date: August 22, 2014 We thank all candidates for their interest; however, only those selected for an interview will be contacted.
FIND US ON FACEBOOK
www.surplusherbys.com
527 MACKENZIE AVE., WILLIAMS LAKE 250-392-5362 • OUT OF TOWN CALL 1-800-661-5188
The Willams Lake Tribune Wednesday, August 6, 2014
www.wltribune.com A29
Rentals
Transportation
Transportation
Transportation
Transportation
Transportation
Apt/Condo for Rent
Suites, Upper
Trucks & Vans
Trucks & Vans
Trucks & Vans
BOITANIO PLACE APARTMENTS
Cars - Sports & Imports
Recreational/Sale
3 bdrm upstairs suite. Centrally located. Bright, clean & large yard, w/d, n/p, n/s. Prefer quiet tenants. R/R. Avail. Sept 1. $1050/mon + 2/3 util. 250392-9373.
Rentals
1 & 2 bedroom suites. Most desirable apartments for seniors. Clean and quiet. Next to Boitanio Park behind Boitanio Mall. Suite comes with heat, hot water, elevator, patio or balcony, fridge, stove and dishwasher. Laundry facility on site, no pets.
1995 Mazda 2 door hatch Automatic, P/S, P/B, stereo, low mileage. Clean, economical, dependable car. One owner. $1750.00 (250)303-0941
250-392-6450 2bdrm apt for rent. Suitable for family with one child or single parent, one child. One family member must have a disability & they must qualify for subsidy. Phone: (250)392-7712
2007 Nissan Versa 4 door hatchback 6 speed manual 6 CD changer Bluetooth Alloy wheels and 4 studded snow tires on steel rims. $6000. Call (250)267-8429 or (250)398-7077
2bdrm suite in 4plex, downtown, clean heat incl, coin w/d, storage, cat/sm dog ok, $723 Avail Sept 1st (250)296-4429
CLEARVIEW APARTMENTS 1 and 2 bedroom suites, furnished or unfurnished. Clean, quiet, secure building, R/R, no pets. Suit working professionals. Call 250-392-2997 or 250-302-9108 Check out our website www.williamslakeliving.com
CARSON DRIVE APARTMENTS
1 and 2 bedroom suites, furnished or unfurnished. Clean, quiet, secure building, R/R, pets negotiable. Suit working professionals. Call 250-305-4598 or 250-302-9108 Check out our website www.williamslakeliving.com
Mobile Homes & Pads 3bdrm mobile, fridge & stove. n/p (250)392-7617 Trailer Pad for rent in Wildwood starting July 1st. Suitable for double-wide. $260/mon. Call Liz at 250-9894711
Homes for Rent
Transportation
Cars - Domestic
Our classified ads are on the net! Check it out at www.bcclassified.com Motorcycles
1967 El Camino 350 cu in, 327 heads, 2 speed glide automatic $9500. OBO (250)392-3509 1986 Dodge Lancer
4 door, hatch back. 4 cyl turbo, auto, plus 4 extra tires. Runs good. Dependable. $900 or possible trade for firearms. 250-394-4607 2002 grey Ford Taurus SEL. V6 24 valve DOHC. Fully loaded w/command start & 4 winter tires on rims.162,000 kms. $3,500 obo. 250-392-2763
2007 Kawasaki KLX 250 Dual Sport Excellent condition. Low kms, after market gas tank. $3200 call 250-302-1195
Suites, Lower
PARKVIEW APARTMENTS 1 and 2 bedroom suites available, located downtown R/R, pets negotiable.
2010 Harley Street Glide 16,000 kms, ABS brakes, anti-theft system. All black. Lots of chrome. Beautiful bike. $18,000. 250-267-1037
Off Road Vehicles 2007 Honda ATV 400cc, 60000 kms, winch, ESP controls, GPS, good condition. $4600. obo 1(250)243-2112
Recreational/Sale 1994 Gulfstream Tour Master.
2008 Ford Fusion AWD V6 SEL Automatic only 65,000kms $12,000. OBO (250)392-3509
40 ft. 300 Cummins 6 speed Allison. 60,000 miles. $36,500. 250-989-2210 2005 GMC Citation Supreme Class C Motorhome
1 bdrm suite. $700/mon. incl. util. 250-296-3131 3 bdrm. duplex on Pigeon Ave. W/D, patio and yard. $890/month (250)392-9119
2.71 4 cyl., standard, tow package. Low mileage and all maintenance records. ONLY $17,900. Call Sherry or Jim at 250-296-3235 or Sherry at 250-706-2098.
2000 GMC Savana Cargo Van 1500.
Tenders
Tenders
Northern Lite Camper
TENDER
One owner. In excellent condition all around. Service records available. Includes owner’s manual & a full tank of gas. Asking $3000. 250-398-7595
2001 Ford Supercab.
This hard to find little gem fits a small truck. Good condition. Stove, fridge, furnace. $6,000. Open to offers. 250-296-3066
Diesel, 7.3L, 4x4, auto. New transmission. Gold in colour, good shape. 310,000 kms. $8,000 firm 1-250-243-0044 (Big Lake)
Sport Utility Vehicle
2003 Jeep Liberty, Five speed, V6, 166,000 km, New tires, this spring, $5500 778-267-5309
Trucks & Vans
Cadillac Deville Everything in Pristine Condition. 130,000 kms, Sunroof, Leather, Excellent on fuel. Too many options to list. $3700. (250)398-2223
MAINTENANCE OF THE NAZKO LANDFILL SITE
dhe Cariboo ZeŐioŶal istrict is accepƟŶŐ teŶders for the maiŶteŶaŶce of the EanjŬo laŶdĮll site. dhe ǁorŬ ǁill iŶclude serǀiciŶŐ the site oŶe day per ǁeeŬ uƟlinjiŶŐ a craǁler tractor loader ;miŶimum ϲ0 &.t.,.W.Ϳ to coŶĮŶe, spread, compact aŶd coǀer accumulated refuse. dhe Cariboo ZeŐioŶal istrict does Ŷot biŶd itself to accept the loǁest or aŶy Ƌuote aŶd reserǀes the riŐht to reũect all Ƌuotes aŶd ŶeŐoƟate ǁith aŶy bidder. SelecƟoŶ ǁill be based upoŶ such factors as ƋualiĮcaƟoŶs, experieŶce ;especially oŶ similar proũectsͿ, ability to perform the coŶtract accordiŶŐ to its terms ;iŶcludiŶŐ ƟmiŶŐ reƋuiremeŶtsͿ, aǀailability of coŶtractor͛s ǁorŬforce aŶd subcoŶtractors, if applicable, reputaƟoŶ of Ƌuality of ǁorŬ aŶd for ƟmeliŶess, ĮŶaŶcial stability of Įrm, aŶd cost. deŶder documeŶts aŶd further details are aǀailable from the uŶdersiŐŶed. Completed teŶders are to be deliǀered Ŷo later thaŶ 2͗00 pm uŐust 20, 201ϰ to the address beloǁ, at ǁhich Ɵme a public opeŶiŶŐ ǁill taŬe place. dera Grady Superǀisor of Solid taste DaŶaŐemeŶt Suite , 1ϴ0 Eorth ϯrd ǀeŶue tilliams >aŬe, BC s2G 2 ϰ WhoŶe͗ 250Ͳϯϵ2Ͳϯϯ51 1Ͳϴ00Ͳϲϲ5Ͳ1ϲϯϲ
7 passenger. 124,000 miles. 1 owner. New summer & winter tires. Excellent condition. $5,000 firm. 250-398-5576. 2008 4x4 B4000 Mazda
5 speed manual, spray-in bed liner, Leer canopy. Rigid industry lights, new auto start. New battery. Excellent condition. Red exterior with grey interior. Low kms. $14,500 obo. Call Rick 250-398-6019.
Head gasket leaks $2000 250-392-3844 1996 F150 short box, 4x4, 230,000 kms, airbags, boat rack. $2500. 1(250)243-2112
1-800-222-TIPS
Apt/Condo for Rent
Apt/Condo for Rent
RENTALS
1, 2 & 3 Bedroom Apartments & Townhouses
Check out our website www.williamslakeliving.com
Suites, Upper
Sleeps six with walk around queen. Lots of storage. Asking $17,800. To view call 250-392-9711.
1984 Toyota
Call 250-305-4972 or 250-302-9108
Large 1bdr. furnished suite, util. & cable incl., private entrance & parking, n/s, pets negotiable. $700/mo. Avail. immed (250)267-9476
2008 Toyota Tundra 4x4 Auto, minor scratches on body, one owner. All season tires and tonneau cover. 38,000 kms. $29,000. 250-392-6225 or 250-302-2838
2006 Dodge Caravan SLX
1 & 2 bdrm. houses. F/S natural gas heat. Please call (250)392-7617. 1bdrm small house & a bachelor suite. South Lakeside. Ideal for single working person. No dogs. Call (250)392-3037 after 5:30pm
2011 22’ Jay Flight
1987 Chevy 2500 4x4. Truck is restored. 300hp, 350cubic in. Canopy with boat loader, new tires, front hitch, 100% propane fuelled. Standard, wired for camper/trailer tow. Ready to go. Asking $5,500. 250-392-3466
INVITATION TO
Duplex / 4 Plex
Misc for Rent
2007 Okanagan 10’ Camper basement model with slide-out. 6 cu ft. twodoor fridge. Queen bed, sky light. Double sink, full bathroom with fan. Electric jacks. $15,500 obo. 250-392-8784
Cariboo Regional District
2 bdrm handicap apt. downtown avail. immed. $570/mon. Please call Mary at Cariboo Friendship Society 250-3986831
Beautiful spacious 2bd suite in 4-plex. 1 (604)767-1600 www.LivingSpace4Rent.com
ONE OWNER 2009 Toyota Tacoma 4x4 Access Cab.
25 ft., automatic. Low mileage 41,000 kms. $45,000 obo 250-267-8187
Furnished and Unfurnished Various locations in and around town. Short term rentals negotiable for furnished suites.
Older 8’ 6” Camper. Fridge, oven, 4 burner. No bathroom. Excellent condition. $2200. 250-398-8771
Visit williamslakeliving.com or call 250-302-9108 to inquire.
building communities together ǁǁǁ.cariboord.bc.ca
Cariboo Regional District
INVITATION TO
QUOTE
CONSTRUCTION OF ATTENDANT SHEDS AT VARIOUS CRD REFUSE SITES dhe Cariboo ZeŐioŶal istrict is accepƟŶŐ Ƌuotes for the coŶstrucƟoŶ of four ;ϰͿ aƩeŶdaŶt sheds for ǀarious refuse sites iŶ the ceŶtral aŶd Ŷorth Cariboo for compleƟoŶ Ŷo later thaŶ Kctober 1, 201ϰ. Yuote documeŶts aŶd further details are aǀailable from the uŶdersiŐŶed. Completed Ƌuotes are to be deliǀered Ŷo later thaŶ 1͗00 pm, uŐust 20, 201ϰ to the address beloǁ, at ǁhich Ɵme a public opeŶiŶŐ ǁill taŬe place. dhe Cariboo ZeŐioŶal istrict does Ŷot biŶd itself to accept the loǁest or aŶy Ƌuote aŶd reserǀes the riŐht to reũect all Ƌuotes aŶd ŶeŐoƟate ǁith aŶy bidder. SelecƟoŶ ǁill be based upoŶ such factors as ƋualiĮcaƟoŶs, experieŶce ;especially oŶ similar proũectsͿ, ability to perform the coŶtract accordiŶŐ to its terms ;iŶcludiŶŐ ƟmiŶŐ reƋuiremeŶtsͿ, aǀailability of coŶtractors͛ ǁorŬforce aŶd subcoŶtractors, if applicable, reputaƟoŶ for Ƌuality of ǁorŬ aŶd for ƟmeliŶess, ĮŶaŶcial stability of Įrm, aŶd cost. dera Grady Superǀisor of Solid taste DaŶaŐemeŶt Suite , 1ϴ0 Eorth ϯrd ǀe. tilliams >aŬe, BC s2G 2 ϰ WhoŶe͗ 250Ͳϯϵ2Ͳϯϯ51 1Ͳϴ00Ͳϲϲ5Ͳ1ϲϯϲ
building communities together ǁǁǁ.cariboord.bc.ca
A30 www.wltribune.com
Wednesday, August 6, 2014 Williams Lake Tribune
MAINTENANCE • TIRES • BRAKES • OIL & FILTER • BATTERIES • ALIGNMENT
AT QUICK LANE, WE’VE GOT YOU
COVERED!
For quality you can trust at prices you can afford, visit Quick Lane today.
ments are for dentists. edule is our schedule.
We service all makes and models
ervice on all makes, with no appointment necessary. THE
WORKS
D
FOR ONLY
69 XX
$
‡
There’s more to it than oil* and a filter.
99 XX
‡
Up to 83-point inspection, including brakes, hoses, belts, fluids and more. Motorcraft® premium oil and Motorcraft® filter change* Rotate and inspect four tires INQUIRE ABOUT OUR DIESEL WORKS† PACKAGE.
Motorcraft®
FROM
199 XXX
95 BRAKE PADS $ XX** OR SHOES INCLUDES INSTALLATION With Lifetime Warranty▲
Replacement of front or rear brake pads or shoes** Inspection of rotors, hydraulic system and brake fluid levels
Simone Groundwater Manager
Phil Hunt
Mike Clark
Dennis St. Amand
Amar Sahota
250-392-7700
his spring. Get new wiper blades installed from $16.99 each.^
Located Inside Lake City Ford Sales Ltd.
NSERT DEALER INFO HERE>
APPLICABLE TAXES AND PROVINCIAL LEVIES NOT INCLUDED. OFFER(S) VALID AT ADVERTISING QUICK LANE ONLY, AND MAY NOT BE COMBINED WITH DEALER AREA ANY OTHER OFFER. DISCOUNT OFF REGULAR RETAIL PRICE OF ALL QUICK LAND PARTS OR SERVICE. ALL PARTS MANUFACTURER WARRANTIES APPLY. SOME CONDITIONS AND LIMITATIONS MAY APPLY - TALK TO YOUR QUICK LANE MANAGER FOR DETAILS.
Life is better in the Quick Lane.™
Lane Manager for complete details. Applicable taxes and provincial levies not included. Quick Lane Dealer may sell for less. Only available at participating locations. ‡Applies to single rear wheel vehicles only. s. †Offer applies to single rear wheel vehicles. Taxes and disposal fees extra. Diesel Exhaust Fluid (DEF) excluded. Dual rear wheel models qualify at additional cost. Up to 16 litres of oil. ††In order to receive a local aler; (ii) customer must present the competitor’s actual, local advertisement (containing the lower price) which must have been printed within 30 days of the sale; and (iii) the tires being purchased must be the ble at participating Quick Lane dealerships. This offer is valid on the cost of the tire only and does not include labour costs, valve stems, mounting, balancing, disposal, and taxes. Offer does not apply to quotes or closeout, special order, discontinued, and clearance/liquidation offers. Limited time offer. Offer may be cancelled or changed at any time without prior notice. See your Quick Lane Manager for details. ‡‡Rebate General Tire (credit card gift card), Goodyear (credit card gift card), Dunlop (credit card gift card), Hankook, Pirelli, Toyo Tires, Yokohama, Michelin, BF Goodrich, Firestone (credit card gift card), and Bridgestone pating locations during the respective promotion periods for each tire brand. Offers are valid on the cost of the tire(s) only and do not include labour costs, valve stems, mounting, balancing, disposal, and taxes. nding on tire manufacturer. It is the responsibility of the customer to submit the required claim forms and proof of purchase to the relevant tire manufacturer with sufficient postage by the required deadline for vary by brand and size and are available on sets of four tires from select brands at participating locations only. See Dealer for full details. ▲Ford Protection Plan (“FPP”) is only available for purchasers of Ford or , labour and towing excluded) beyond the expiry of the standard Parts & Accessory Warranty. If a FPP-eligible Ford or Motorcraft® part fails due to a defect in material or workmanship, wear out or rust through,
Williams Lake Tribune Wednesday, August 6, 2014
www.wltribune.com A31
SPORTS
GARDEN CENTRE
E C N A R A CLE
50
%
Photo submitted
The Williams Lake Storm under-14 boys rep soccer team of assistant coach Hailey Tazalaar (back from left), head coach Rob Tazalaar, Landon Christensen, Cole Turner, Jared Brown, James Kaufman, Dylan DeRose, Kyle Hubner, Mokam Mahil, assistant coach Mark Thiessen, Ethan Alexander (front from left), Logan Hutchinson, Cade Enns, Eric Christensen, Jack Zavitz, Carson Menzies, Justin Foster, Zion Faubert, Joseph Brinoni, Sam Thiessen, as well as (missing) Josh Rhodes, Dawson Billyboy and Jacob Helminger will be hosting a soccer fundraiser this Thursday, Aug. 7 at Dairy Queen from 4 to 8 p.m.
Soccer fundraiser Thursday The Williams Lake Storm under-14 boys rep soccer team — champions of their division in this year’s Cariboo Youth Soccer League — will be
hosting a fundraiser at Dairty Queen in Williams Lake on Thursday, Aug. 7. Players will be helping make and serve food from 4 to 8 p.m.
and a portion of the sales from that time period will go to the team to help pay for indoor facility rental during the winter, equipment, tournament registration fees
and coaching. Dairy Queen provides the opportunity for clubs and sports groups to volunteer their time regularly to help support local organizations.
OFF
TREEHSAD:E,
FRUIT, S REENS G R E V E , L A T N E M A ORN
, S B U R H S N U S & SHADE FERNS 1050 South Lakeside Drive
250-392-3303
HOT AUGUST NIGHTS BQ B
Y DAY R E V E
3 DAYS ONLY • AUGUST 7, 8, 9
at Stampede Park
was $58,319
NOW
$51,767
336 2015 Chevrolet Silverado 3500 Crew Cab $
STK# 15T014
* 80 //bwkly bwkly
6.0L Gas
0
%
All 2014’s up to 84 mo on everything**
O
% was $52,579
NOW
$48,159
303/bwkly 2014 GMC Sierra Double Cab, P. Pedals, Heated $
STK# 14T027
72*
& Cooled Seats
O
%
m Choose frole 3 incredibrs. sports ca
Pick a key an starts our 2SS d if it Re Convertible ydoCamaro WIN A TRIP u LAS VEGASTO One Grand P Winner Take rize All!
STK# 15T024
36974*
$
NOW
was $51,264
NOW
$45,203
295 /bwkly 2015 Chevrolet Silverado 2500 HD
STK# 15T005
$
07*
Vortec 6.0L
was $77,619
3500 HD Crew Cab Duramax Save thousands!
25778*
$
/bwkly
Chevrolet Silverado 2500 HD Z71
STK# 15T026
$40,694
2014 GMC Sierra 1500 Double Cab
$55,431
PRICED TO SELL!!! NOW BIGGEST SELECTION $69,548 OF PRE-OWNED VEHICLES AT THE BEST $ 44987* PRICING OF THE YEAR! 2015 Chevrolet Silverado
was $44,979
STK# 14T051
was $62,274
NOW
/bwkly
*Stock# 15T024 Selling price $55,431.00, 4.24% interest rate, cost of borrowing $11,782.04, 96 month term, $369.74 Bi weekly pmts, Total financed $65,123.45 OAC. Stock# 14T027 Selling price $ 48,159.00, 0% interest rate, cost of borrowing $0, 84 month term, $303.72 Bi weekly pmts, Total financed $55,276.59 OAC. Stock# 14T051 Selling price $ 40,694.00, 0% interest rate, cost of borrowing $0, 84 month term, $257.78 Bi weekly pmts, Total financed $46,915.79 OAC. Stock# 15T014 Selling price $ 51,767.00, 4.24% interest rate, COB $10,732.55, 96 month term, $336.80 Bi weekly pmts, Total financed $ 59,322.55 OAC. Stock# 15T005 Selling price $45,203.00, 4.24% interest rate, cost of borrowing $9,402.50, 96 month term, $295.07 Bi weekly pmts, Total financed $ 51,970.87 OAC. Stock# 15T026 Selling price $69,548.00, 4.24% interest rate, cost of borrowing $14,335.49, 96 month term, $449.87 Bi weekly pmts, Total financed $79,237.27 OAC. ** Does not include Cadillac or Corvette.
250-392-7185 • 1-855-GO4-CHEV • 370 S. Mackenzie • cariboogm.ca
DL#5683
/bwkly /bwkly
A32 www.wltribune.com
Wednesday, August 6, 2014 Williams Lake Tribune
KELOWNA
2153 Springfield Road (250) 860-2600
VERNON
200-3107 - 48th Ave. (250) 542-3000
PENTICTON
ANDRES CAR AUDIO WEST KELOWNA 1881 Harvey Avenue (250) 860-1975
ANDRES WIRELESS
101-2601 Skaha Lake Rd. (250) 493-3800
VERNON
WEST KELOWNA
KAMLOOPS
101-2601 Skaha Lake Rd. 200-3107 - 48th Ave. (250) 493-3800 (250) 542-3000
#200 - 2180 Elk Rd. (250) 707-2600
KELOWNA
2153 Springfield Road (250) 860-2600
Villiage Green Mall (250) 542-1496
PENTICTON
ANDRES WIRELESS Cherry Lane Mall (250) 493-4566
#200 - 2180 Elk Rd. (250) 707-2600
KELOWNA
2153 Springfield Road (250) 860-2600
WEST KELOWNA #200 - 2180 Elk Rd. (250) 707-2600
745 Notre Dame Drive (250) 851-8700
VERNON
200-3107 - 48th Ave. (250) 542-3000
KAMLOOPS ANDRES WIRELESS ANDRES WIRELESS ANDRES B USINESS ANDRES CAR AUDIO
745 Notre Dame Drive (250) 851-8700
CASTLEGAR
Aberdeen Mall (250) 377-8880
215 - 450 Lansdowne Mall (250) 377-8007
CRANBROOK
200-1965 Columbia Ave. 101 Kootenay St. North (250) 365-6455 (250) 426-8927
300 St. Paul Str. (250) 377-3773
TELUS KIOSK
KELOWNA
NELSON
2153 Springfield Road (250) 860-2600
Chahko Mika Mall (250) 352-7258
PRINCE GEORGE WILLIAMS L AKE 100 MILE H OUSE 2591A Vance Rd. (250) 563-4447
299 Oliver Str. (250) 398-8522
916 Alpine Ave. (250) 395-4015
KELOWNA CAR AUDIO KAMLOOPS CAR AUDIO WEST KELOWNA CO M M U N IT Y
1881 Harvey Avenue (250) 860-1975 BU YI NG
154 Victoria Str (250) 314-9944
PO W ER
100 MILE H OUSE WILLIAMS L AKE P R IC E
SE TI R PE EX
916 Alpine Ave. (250) 395-4015
WE WILL NOT BE BEAT!
WILLIAMS L AKE 1148 299Broadway Oliver Str.Ave S (250) 398-8522 (250) 398-8522
299 Oliver Str. (250) 398-8522
KELOWNA
#200 - 2180 Elk Rd. (250) 707-2600
VERNON
200-3107 - 48th Ave. (250) 542-3000
KAMLOOPS
2153 Springfield Road 745 Notre Dame Drive (250) 860-2600 (250) 851-8700
154 Victoria Str (250) 314-9944
WEST KELOWNA #200 - 2180 Elk Rd. (250) 707-2600
KAMLOOPS
VERNON
PENTICTON
VERNON
745 Notre Dame Drive 200-3107 - 48th Ave. (250) 851-8700 (250) 542-3000
101-2601 Skaha Lake Rd. 200-3107 - 48th Ave. (250) 493-3800 (250) 542-3000
KAMLOOPS
745 Notre Dame Drive (250) 851-8700
PRINCE GEORGE 2591A Vance Rd. (250) 563-4447
PRINCE GEORGE 100 MILE H OUSE 2591A Vance Rd. (250) 563-4447
916 Alpine Ave. (250) 395-4015