PM41537042
Wednesday, March 4, 2015 Time to start your garden from seed indoors. We have all the supplies you need, including GMO free seeds
Vol. 7 • Issue 70
Q&A with local arts mentors See Page 12
Open house on wetland project in Meadow Creek See Page 15
Mayor, MLA question privatization of hospital laundry
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Baker Street goes to the dogs
WILL JOHNSON Nelson Star In true Kootenay fashion, a Baker Street dog parade on Sunday afternoon started approximately half an hour after it was scheduled. But once a small gathering of canine enthusiasts successfully assembled in front of Kootenay Co-op, they marched for a few leisurely blocks to showcase their support for city council’s recent decision to overturn the downtown dog ban. Nelsonite Stevland Ambrose strolled downtown with his three-year-old purebred German shepherd Kia, and said though he understood why the dog bylaw was passed in the first place, it was time for the community to move forward. “I’ve certainly in my time here seen irresponsible dog owners but I think there are fewer these days, so hopefully this will work,” he said. He said the change won’t dramatically affect his life, but he’s pleased regardless. “I don’t anticipate walking on Baker
Chris O’Gorman was one of the participants in a low-key Baker Street dog parade on Sunday afternoon. He brought along his Russian mountain dog Boris. Will Johnson photos
every day, but it’s nice to know we can walk through if we need to.” Dogs of all sizes were present for the parade, many in costumes. Chris O’Gorman’s Russian mountain dog Boris was one of the largest breeds present (dwarfed only by Titan, a Great Dane), while there were also a number of small dogs, such as Bugsy, an eightyear-old poodle in a carrier held by owner Matheson Kincaid. “I thought the bylaw was dumb,” said Kincaid. “Every other town can live with dogs on their main street, why can’t we? I don’t know what it was like in the past, but this bylaw was past its best before date.” Kincaid has ignored the ban until now. “I didn’t follow it personally. I would pick him up, because it’s dangerous for him to walk on a busy street like this anyways. We never had trouble with bylaw officers. I definitely did walk past them, but when you’re carrying a four pound poodle it takes a pretty ballsy officer to say something.”
Titan’s owner Sherry Perry said the overturned bylaw is good news for Nelson tourism, and as an owner of an off-leash dog walking company and a member of the local business association, she believed the bylaw was hurting her financially. She said tourists choose to visit Kaslo or Castlegar when they realize there are no options in the area for their pets, since they can’t leave them behind in a car or at a campground. “I moved here in 2006 from Calgary. I had a Great Dane there and I could take him everywhere — there were poo bags, no problem. I couldn’t believe when I moved here all of a sudden I couldn’t walk him downtown.” The 20-minute march down Baker Street was uneventful, with a few raised thumbs and well-wishers shouting on either side. One excrement incident which took place within a few blocks was quickly dealt with by the paraders. “Halt! We’re leaving a trail!” one woman yelled, while others rushed back with bags at the ready.
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BILL METCALFE Nelson Star If Interior Health decides to privatize the laundry service at Kootenay Lake Hospital, the hospital’s laundry would be done somewhere in the Lower Mainland or in Alberta and 17 local jobs will be lost. The health authority says its laundry equipment is outdated across the region and needs replacing at a cost of $10.5 million, and privatization would mean that the health authority would not need to incur that capital cost. However, Nelson mayor Deb Kozak objects to the privatization of the service. “That may not be the best business case for them,” she said. “I don’t know where they would send the laundry except to the coast, to a private company, and I don’t see how that would be a cost saving over the long term. “I am guessing there is not a company in the interior that can do this.” The health authority’s Alan Davies told the Star in an interview that all of the companies on its list of qualified laundry service vendors are in fact based in the Lower Mainland and Alberta. The privatization initiative also applies to laundry facilities in Vernon, Kelowna, Kamloops, and Penticton. Davies said the health authority has other impending capital costs that take priority over laundry equipment. Davies said a formal “request for solutions” will be sent soon to all the Continued on Page 4
2 nelsonstar.com
Wednesday, March 4, 2015 Nelson Star
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Business After Business visits Ward Street Place The Chamber of Commerce’s regular Business After Business group met for refreshments and socializing Thursday in a newly renovated apartment at Ward Street Place
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If you have lived through trauma that has limited your capacity to participate in community and employment, and are interested in exploring personal growth and life/career planning, join us! “Transitions was helpful to clear out my system and get me ready for work!“
9 am to 1 pm Monday to Thursday April 13th to May 21st, 2015 Nelson Community Services Centre (NCSC) in partnership with Kootenay Career Development Society (KCDS) Roger Luscombe, NCSC 250-352-3504 ext 231 Ness Benamran, KCDS 250-352-6200 ext 223.
Local businesses had a chance last week to see progress to date in the makeover of a Nelson landmark. “Ward Street Place is run by Nelson CARES as a social enterprise,” said executive director Jenny Robinson. “We wanted to welcome the business community to demonstrate our commitment to being a business partner in the community and to refurbishing the commercial space Ward Street Place offers. This is one of three apartments on Victoria Street,” she said. “It is a 100-year-old apartment but it doesn’t look like that any more. It is fully accessible: it is at street level, everything is lower, all the light switches are below level, the countertops below level, and there is full radius for wheelchairs.”
Clockwise from top left: city councillor Michael Dailly, Nelson CARES board chair Ron Little, executive director Jenny Robinson, Chamber of Commerce manager Tom Thomson, and Walt Laurie; Tanya Finley and Robinson; Willa and Harold Horsfall; Loree Renwick and Ed Olthof; Little and Robinson show off the newly renovated apartment. Bill Metcalfe photos
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Nelson Star Wednesday, March 4, 2015
nelsonstar.com 3
News
NDP chooses Wayne Stetski as candidate for Kootenay Columbia Former regional environment manager and Cranbrook mayor will run federally
BILL METCALFE Nelson Star Wayne Stetski will be the NDP candidate in the next federal election in the riding of Kootenay Columbia. Nelson, Salmo, and Kaslo are now part of that otherwise East Kootenay riding since a federal boundary re-drawing in 2012. Stetski worked as a regional manager for the BC Ministry of Environment from 2002 until 2009, where he oversaw offices in Nelson, Cranbrook, Invermere and Revelstoke. He served as mayor of Cranbrook from 2011 until 2014. In an interview with the Star, Stetski said there are four national issues that concern him most. The first is the role of Canada’s military. “Historically, our role was as a peacekeeper around the world and we were recognized for that. That has changed. When our men and women do go off to war now, the way they are treated when they get back has been shameful.” The second is the future of the CBC. “The CBC is a Canadian icon, and the government is talking about cutting $150 million from the CBC budget in the upcoming year. I think we need more CBC and not less, particularly in rural areas.” The third is science and the environment. “The Conservative government has cut almost 2,000 science jobs over the last couple of years and cut institutions that were recognized internationally, and all you have to do is check the headlines to know that we are an embarrassment on the international level. They are focussed strictly on economy and are not trying to improve knowledge.
“A knowledge-based economy is a sustainable economy.” Stetski’s fourth national concern is democracy and the government’s use of omnibus bills. “We are not getting the type of debate that should be happening on some very important issues. The fact the government has whipped every vote in the last three years means members are not representing the viewpoints of their constituents, so we are not getting the kind of representation we should be getting in Ottawa.” Asked about local or regional issues, Stetski said rural attitudes and concerns need to be recognized, and used the example of the NDP’s recent recommendation that gun control be increased. Stetski says a significant number of Kootenay residents would disagree with that, and he would oppose his own party. “My job would be to represent my constituents and take that message back to Ottawa, not like the current situation where we have an MP that has been fairly open about saying
“We are not getting the type of debate that should happen … We are not getting the kind of representation we should be.”
Wayne Stetzki
that his ability to represent his constituents is constrained by the prime minister’s approach to governance.” He also cited affordable daycare as a rural issue, along with the inadequacy of infrastructure funding from the federal and provincial governments to municipalities, and tendency for senior governments to download responsibility to municipalities for social services like homelessness. In 2012, a federal commission re-drew the boundaries of many federal electoral ridings. Its stated mandate was to even out the populations between ridings and add some new ones in metropolitan areas. As a result, Nelson, Salmo, and Kaslo were moved from the Southern Interior riding to Kootenay Columbia, which constitutes most of the East Kootenay and has been a Conservative stronghold. Stetski says the re-drawing of the boundaries came down to numbers, and discounts any suggestions of gerrymandering. “One of the reasons I say that is that Nakusp was left out of the riding, so you go from Nelson and Salmo to Revelstoke and you drive
through Nakusp but they have left that in the riding to the west. So largely it was about numbers.” Asked if he could fairly represent Nelson and Kaslo while living in the East Kootenay and representing a mostly East Kootenay riding, Stetski said his job as a regional manager for the Ministry of the Environment took him all over the region and he is familiar with all of it. “I do think there is a cultural difference between the East and West Kootenays, but obviously we share concerns and values, and I always enjoyed the diversity.” Stetski says he will not take for granted the fact that inclusion of the Nelson area will increase NDP votes in the new riding. “I believe we have to earn people’s votes, regardless,” he said. Asked how he will deal with the “anyone but Harper” movement that is asking other parties to unite to defeat the Conservatives by avoiding vote-splitting, Stetski says the best gauge of how someone will vote is how they voted last time. “In this riding in 2011,” he says, “there were about 24,000 Conservative votes, 15,000 NDP, 2,500 Green and 1,500 Liberal. “I hope the people who have traditionally voted for other parties will ask themselves the question, ‘What is most important for Canada’s future?’ I think the next four years really are critical. Another four years of Harper Conservative government will change the face of Canada to the point where many of us will not recognize the country we love, so they will have to ask themselves whether they are willing to come together around one candidate for this election.” In the election, Stetski will face incumbent Conservative MP David Wilks and Green Party candidate Bill Green. The Liberal Party has not yet chosen a candidate. The Star will profile Wilks and Green over the next few weeks.
Wayne Stetski says his chief national concerns are the role of Canada’s military, the future of the CBC, science and the environment, and the government’s use of omnibus bills. Submitted photo
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Thank You To all of these Nelson business leaders and teachers who have supported the Nelson & District Hospice Society (NDHS) so willingly during the month of February. Their donations have enabled us to create a great learning environment for our Basic Training Program for Hospice Caregivers. These new recruits will be joining the NDHS Team to bring physical, emotional and spiritual comfort to people in their final journey. OSO NEGRO COFFEE KOOTENAY BAKERY CAFE CO-OP ELLISON’S MARKET KOOTENAY COUNTRY STORE CO-OP SAVE-ON-FOODS SAFEWAY LUCKY CUPCAKES ALLIGATOR PIE CATERING ALL SEASONS CAFE NELSON STAR COWAN’S OFFICE SUPPLIES FACILITATORS All donating their time and skills: SHAYLA WRIGHT - Wide Awake Heart, Coaching Courses & Training MARGO MACLEAN - Home Care Nurse, Nelson District DAVE SCANLON - Social Worker ROSALYN GRADY - Funeral Celebrant & Counselor TREVOR JANZ. - Physician MEGAN JOHNSON Mortician -Thompson Funeral Home
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Wednesday, March 4, 2015 Nelson Star
News
Health minister, Mungall disagree in legislature over value of laundry service Continued from Page 1 companies on the approved laundry vendor list, with a response period of 60 days. But Davies said the health authority is not actually sure privatization would be cheaper in the long run than purchasing new equipment. Asked what the comparative costs would be, he said they don’t know, but the request for solutions process will help them find out. “We don’t know at this point,” said Davies, “because we have never gone to the marketplace and asked what it would cost for them to do what we do. Until we have that figure, we don’t know what we are comparing to.” Health Minister Terry Lake supports the proposal. “They’d rather spend that [money] on hip replacements than on washing machines,” Lake said in question period in the legislature on Monday. “Doing laundry and washing
bed sheets are not health care.” Nelson-Creston MLA Michelle Mungall took issue with Lake’s comments. “It’s not just Nelson. Penticton, Kamloops [the minister’s own riding], 100 Mile House, Williams Lake are all about to see familysupporting jobs shipped out of their communities.” she said. “Taxpayers are going to foot the bill for these services regardless of who is doing them. So let’s do them in our communities, and let’s save on the shipping costs.” “It’s obviously an important service,” Lake responded, “but it is not front-line health care. Those jobs are going to be staying in British Columbia. We’re looking for efficiencies.” But according to the health authority news release announcing the initiative, the privatization plan is not about efficiency. “The decision ... is not about efficiency of our operations,” it
reads. “It is about avoiding future significant spending to replace aging equipment.” Mungall says it’s not about cost or efficiency but about “an ideology of privatization.” In the meantime, Nelson city councillor Michael Dailly said Monday he wants council to petition the health authority to keep the laundry service in Nelson and to refer the matter as a resolution to the Union of BC Municipalities. That will be discussed and decided at council’s next regular meeting. The collective agreement between the Hospital Employees Union and the health authority stipulates the employer must formally consult the union in the event of a privatization initiative. That has already been done in this case, says the union’s Mike Old, but the collective agreement also says those discussions must be kept secret, so the results are not available to the public.
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Small BuSineSS WorkShopS Community Futures offers a variety of workshops to help Central Kootenay residents develop the skills they need to run a successful small business. Here are some of the workshops coming to our Nelson training Centre:
Building Your Online Store with Shopify March 11 & 12 (9am to 4pm, both days) – $300+GST Instructor: Nikta Boroumand (Maverick Design) Learn to create, build and manage your own online store with Shopify. Bring your product description, photos, other text (eg. shipping details, logos, images) and imagination to craft your own fully functioning ecommerce site by the end of the workshop.
Managing For Results: How to Get the Most Out of Your People by Creating a Win-Win Environment March 16 (9am to 4pm) – $80+GST Instructor: Charlotte Ferreux (Thrive Leadership Consulting) Want to inspire your team and get results in the workplace? This workshop will teach you to be a leader – rather than a manager – with specific tools you can put into action immediately. You will leave understanding your impact in developing your team to success.
Full course descriptions are online at futures.bc.ca/workshop-schedule/ For more information and to register call the Community Futures at 250-352-1933, ext. 100
futures.bc.ca • facebook.com/communityfutures • twitter.com/Comm_Futures
Laundry service at Kootenay Lake Hospital could not only be privatized, but moved elsewhere entirely. Photo courtesy of Interior Health
Thank You
The recent “Pete Seeger memorial musical event” was a huge success!
Held on Jan 31st, the building was full and there were non-stop comments on the quality of the food, the music and the venue. Most importantly $5396.60 was raised for International Justice Mission’s work freeing captives in slavery who are in desperate need today. Raising awareness for the justice cause is our goal and we thank our MP Alex Ademenenko for his support and attendance. The www.justiceatthejunction.org team wants to thank the entire West Kootenay community for their support of this important event. Thank you to the Junction Church for their building use. We also want to issue special thanks to the musicians; Dan Perrault, Sugar and Spice, Bo Conlin, Roxanne Hall, Catherine McGrath, Anneke Rosch, Cindy Moore. Gisele d’Entremont, Ron Butler, Sonika Waira, Holly Hyatt, Jon Burden, Kenny Konrad and Olin McKay also Donna Wright and Gerry Rempel for the indigenous welcome. Also the following businesses for their support; Save on Foods, Safeway, Eddy Music, Gaia Tree, Biggest Little Fruit Stand and All Seasons Restaurant. This event would not have been a success without the volunteer time of many others not mentioned here. Thank you and please continue to “PURSUE JUSTICE”!
Tammy Darough (RHC Insurance) and Maurice Poulin (Poulin Agencies) join to better serve their clients. Two long time Nelson businesses merged together earlier this year. Poulin Agencies was established in Nelson in 1928. They have joined with RHC Insurance Brokers Ltd which was first started in Nelson in 1908. With a combined service to the local community of nearly 200 years, RHC Insurance remains the largest independent broker in the Kootenays. Clients will enjoy the same great service at any one of our three Nelson locations or any of the nine Kootenay locations. Maurice Poulin confirms that “We are very excited about the opportunities for our staff and the additional products we can offer our clients”. Tammy Darough explains “With Maurice joining our team we are pleased to keep the Poulin tradition of excellent service. Furthermore, we are happy we will remain a locally owned and operated business”.
Nelson Star Wednesday, March 4, 2015
nelsonstar.com 5
News
Kootenay Lake school board: ‘Discrimination is unacceptable’ On the eve of Pink Shirt Day, board passes policy amendment to protect students from bullying due to gender identity and sexual orientation
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All things Beautiful! The Kootenay Lake school board adopted a policy that enshrines the right of students not to be bullied due to their gender or sexual identity. The next day at noon Rosemont Elementary demonstrated their commitment to anti-bullying with a choreographed flash Will Johnson photo mob (above) as part of Pink Shirt Day. WILL JOHNSON Nelson Star Before the Kootenay Lake school board approved a policy amendment last week intended to protect students from discrimination and bullying due to their sexual orientation or gender identity, superintendent Jeff Jones took the opportunity to add his voice to the debate. “It’s really timely that this has finally come to the board for consideration because Feb. 25 is Pink Shirt Day,” Jones said, expressing his admiration for the high school students responsible for starting the anti-bullying initiative. In an emotional public address, Jones recounted how while looking for a superintendent position years ago he had to keep in mind whether his new community would accept his relationship with his husband, on account of still-prevalent homophobia in Canada. And though Jones believes the Kootenays are a fairly progressive, accepting environment, he believes there’s more work to be done before students will live in a hate and bullying-free environment. “In speaking with my husband, he has told me we’re not as far along as we’d like to think. As superintendent I can talk very openly about my relationship with my husband, but I had to look for a community where I would feel safe. That tells me we’re not very far along.” Jones said he surrounds himself with like-minded individuals, but noted that’s not always an option for students.
FOR THE RECORD
He said this policy, which has been years in the making, will help make school environments more inclusive for students of every sexual identity and gender. But he was initially reluctant to bring it forward. “As many people know, I’ve been hesitant because I didn’t want the community to get confused and think I was bringing it forward as a personal agenda item.” And though he wasn’t involved in the voting process, he expressed his enthusiasm for hearing the debate. “This policy has been a long time coming,” said board chair Lenora Trenaman. “Change or not, I’m hoping we’ll put this forward to the right committee for the right step.” Curtis Bendig spoke in favour of the motion, saying it enshrines what “the vast majority of us now know intuitively: discrimination is unacceptable. “There is no question our board and district are committed to creating a safe, progressive community for our students and staff. I would urge my fellow trustees to bring this policy into effect.” Trustee Sharon Nazaroff proposed an amendment to the policy, but some board members took issue with a phrase that asserted queer students face “difficult and unique challenges” and voted it down. “There’s a certain assumption here I’m not prepared to make about a large group of very diverse people, though I appreciate the intent,” said Bendig. In a conversation with the Star after the
• A photo caption Friday (“The Power of Pink”) erroneously stated that “hundreds” of Rosemont Elementary students participated in the Pink Shirt Day flash mob. In fact, the school’s population is only 113.
meeting, Bendig said he believed the additional clause was voted down due to the board’s reluctance to mess with the policy’s wording at the last minute. “The important piece to me was respecting the work of the policy and governance committee. I wasn’t comfortable doing all this word-smithing at the 11th hour.” Becky Blair, president of the Creston Valley Teachers Association, was present specifically to see if the policy would pass. “Within our union we’ve wanted this policy for many years,” she said. She noted that when the policy was first brought to the board, ten districts already had a similar one in place. There are now 30 districts with comparable policies. “We’re finally catching up. We’re about in the middle of the pack,” she said. When she learned the policy had passed, Blair called herself “joyous” and said she wanted to “dance on the tabletops.” “I hope this shows that this board recognizes the fact there is a group of students who need particular policies and procedures to ensure they’re well treated. What we would like to see is programs and club in school that address these concerns.” Trenaman said ultimately the policy is intended to include every student, regardless of religion, skin colour or sexual identity. “It’s about creating an environment where everybody feels like they have a place and will be embraced. Everyone has to feel they have a safe place.”
• A story Friday (“Dooley was top spender in Nelson mayor’s race”) may have left the impression Deryn Collier’s $3,120 contribution to the Deb Kozak campaign was in cash. In fact, it was all in services.
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6 nelsonstar.com
Wednesday, March 4, 2015 Nelson Star
Editorial
Editor: Greg Nesteroff Publisher: Karen Bennett facebook.com/nelsonstarnews • Twitter: @nelsonstarnews
Kootenay Co-op development Tax thoughts spring forth has credible business plan S
Re: “Philosophical observations about Nelson,” February 25 I read Maurice Rhodes’ letter with interest on Wednesday until he abruptly turned his attention to the Kootenay Co-op and suggested that with its new store “it will no longer be the co-op but a miniaturized real estate deal.” These suggestions that somehow the co-op is about to lose its soul are not entirely new. Moving from the Slocan to Nelson (into what is now the Gericks building) and then to the current location across from the Bank of Montreal also called forth predictions of imminent demise. What is puzzling in his efforts to assert that Nelson is a small town (“We are not big business”) he says that the real entrepreneurs of this world — Home Depot and Costco — are smart enough to stay away as we are obviously “amply served.” Of course the food business here in Nelson is dominated by the three wealthiest families in Canada — Pattisons, Sobeys and Westons and how dare the co-op think it has any right to lay claim to a larger share of their business? Mr. Rhodes in dissecting the failure of so many local start-ups suggests that the co-op is among those who fail because of “the failure to do a good business case that would let the business live beyond that fatal two-year period.” I ask him how he thinks for one minute the co-op has been able to raise $27 million without a credible business plan. Has he any idea the extent to which the banks, the key players and the investors have scrutinized our plans and run us through the ringer frontwards and backwards before giving us the
green light? Hard to understand why Mr. Rhodes couldn’t see that the co-op (now in its 40th year) is bursting at the seams to the point that it can no longer meet the needs of its 12,000 members nor provide a safe working environment for its 90 staff. Ten years after initiating its search for a permanent uptown site that could be purchased after years of renting was clearly the most important way to secure the long term viability of the co-op. When the former Extra Foods site became available in 2012 we saw it as a critical property to keep “in the Nelson family” as it were and the co-op stepped forward and paid a significant price to secure the site. We heard there were talks to sell the upper portion of the property to Tim Hortons. To think that we might today have our very own Burger King on Baker St. Sharing the cost of the land with local people who were ready to downsize and live downtown seemed like an appropriate way for the co-op to afford a state-of-the-art, energy efficient new store. And on what grounds does Mr. Rhodes conclude that the co-op on account of its successful growth and scale “is not true to the original precepts of co-ops”? He might have a look at Vancity and Mountain Equipment Co-op — two of the most successful co-ops in BC who continue to set the standard for corporate social responsibility and the spirit of co-operation even as they have grown and prospered. Russell Precious Project Manager Nelson Commons
Keep mammograpy equipment in Nelson
Shortsighted decision creates barriers
Re: “Aging mammography equipment to be retired,” Jan. 28 I am a breast cancer survivor and very concerned about the removal of the mammogram machine from Kootenay Lake Hospital in Nelson and having to go to Trail. This would be a hardship for women. Young women would have to take a day off from work. Elderly women may not have transportation and would opt not to go to Trail. The risk of breast cancer increases with age, so these are just a few problems that arise. Alice Strand Nelson
Losing the mammogram machine from our local hospital in Nelson will make it impossible for people of limited means to go to Trail if you need a follow up from the screening mammography program. I have been sent to my local hospital three times for irregularities on my mammogram. I am on a limited income and having to drive to Trail to get this done will mean that I probably can’t afford to go. Who will pay my wage for the day and the cost of gas to get there and back? The decision not to replace
EMAIL LETTERS TO: editor@nelsonstar.com DROP OFF/MAIL: 514 Hall Street, Nelson, BC V1L 1Z2 Phone 250-352-1890
the aging machine in Nelson is shortsighted and does not consider all the barriers that make it impossible for women of limited means and rural communities to access the machine in Trail. I think that some of the people who made this decision should go up to Argenta and see what it would take to get to Trail and back the same day. Not everyone drives and not everyone can afford to pay someone to drive them. If you have money, this is not a barrier. If you don’t, you get breast cancer and cost the health system more money. Dorothy Hatto Nelson
pring fever and associated activities have come early this year to Nelson. Flowers are blooming, friends are out in their greenhouses, my triathlon group is organizing rides, and citizens are submitting Slugs about the dust on the streets. Tennyson wrote, “In spring a young man’s fancy turn to thoughts of love.” But a city councillor’s thoughts turn to taxation. Until May 15, council’s focus will be on the property tax rate bylaw. So now is a perfect time to examine our property tax bills. For the majority of us, including myself, we open that bill with trepidation and then lament the city has raised our taxes again. But let’s take a closer look at what is included in that tax bill. We collect school tax on behalf of the provincial government. School property tax accounts for approximately 33 per cent of the provincial education budget. As property owners, we share the cost of providing education in BC even if we do not use the service. In Nelson, school tax accounts for 27 per cent of our property tax bill. In 1957 the home owner grant was introduced to reduce the education property tax. This grant has a current maximum of $770. If you are over 65 or have a disability, the maximum is $1,045. So depending on your assessment, we tax but you get it all back as a grant. It is time to review this taxation model for education funding — but to be clear, this is not the responsibility of city council. General municipal accounts for 50 per cent of the total property tax bill. This taxation pays for the variety of services the City of Nelson provides. Protection services (fire and police), public works (roads, sidewalks, snow removal,) parks, recreation and cultural services, library — the list is long. Approximately 69 per cent of this taxation is from residential properties, 25 per cent is commercial/ business and six per cent from boundary expansion. Twenty per cent of the property tax assessment is collected by the City of Nelson on behalf of the Regional District of Central Kootenay. We have a number of service agreements with our neighbours in the regional district. The largest is the co-funding of the Nelson and District Community Complex. We share the cost of this recreation facility with Area F and Area E (West). Other service agreements include waste
The Nelson Star 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 Will Johnson Reporter
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Janice Morrison Council Comments
management, regional park agreements and a portion of RDCK administrative costs. The last three per cent goes to the West Kootenay/Boundary Regional Hospital District. This money goes to paying for up to 40 per cent of capital upgrades/ new projects identified for our hospitals. This board is composed of representatives from both the rural areas of the RDCK and Regional District of Kootenay Boundary and the municipalities (Nelson, Trail, Castlegar, Salmo, etc.). This is another tax that should be reviewed. Calculating taxation based on property value (assessment) is often skewed. Those jurisdictions that have high assessments pay more than those with lower assessments but may not see equitable benefit. Perhaps a parcel tax where everyone in the region pays the same amount would be more appropriate. Taxation is often seen as a curse. However there are far more positives than negatives that flow as a result of the collection of common-wealth for the common good. Andre Carrel, the past CAO of Rossland, recently wrote “the common good of taxation is that the value we, citizens individually, receive for the taxes we pay is far greater that what we could hope to receive if we had to purchase every common good service provided by the municipality from suppliers in the private sector.” I hope to see many of you when we present the 2015 budget at the open house March 12 at the Nelson Public Library. Happy spring! Comments or questions? Please email jmorrison@nelson.ca. Janice Morrison shares this space weekly with her Nelson city council colleagues.
does not resolve your complaint about coverage or story treatment, you may contact the BC Press Council. Your written concern, with documentation, should be sent within 45 days to the BC Press Council, PO Box 1356, Ladysmith, 9G 1A9. For information, phone 1-888-687-2213 or go to bcpresscouncil.org
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Nelson Star Wednesday, March 4, 2015
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News
WHAT’S HAPPENING?
Kootenay Lake district considers reuniting with provincial body
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New Nelson trustee hopes board will rejoin BC School Trustees Association
WILL Johnson Nelson Star The Kootenay Lake school board will send a conciliatory letter to the British Columbia School Trustees Association after being one of two districts not to renew their membership last summer. Recently representatives from the provincial association travelled to the Kootenays to attempt to address the local board’s concerns. Chair Lenora Trenaman said the meeting was a productive step in the right direction. “We had a very interesting conversation. They want us back,” she said. “We heard explanations for processes they were involved in at the provincial level, and they tried to tell us why they took the stances and made some of the decisions they did.” However, they haven’t quite been wooed back yet. “We’re going to ask follow-up questions about the dialogue we had at the meeting two weeks ago. From that conversation we determined what questions we need to follow up on,” Trenaman said. One issue is the potential $40,000 cost that would come if they were forced to pay their 2014/15 fees to rejoin the association. Trenaman said that would be a significant financial hurdle to the reconciliation process. Association president Teresa Rezansoff, who chairs the Boundary school district, told the Star on Tuesday she wasn’t certain whether the board will be required to pay the fees. “I just received that clarifying question from the board last night,
Above: Kootenay Lake board chair Lenora Trenaman and Nelson trustee Curtis Bendig. Will Johnson photos and we’re looking into what the options and ramifications are for re-joining.” She said the association values the district, particularly because of its reputation for adding diversity to the educational conversation. “It’s back and forths like this that provide for a rich discussion. We also recognize every board in the province has autonomy and a right to their own views, and we respect that. We think it’s important.” Rezansoff said though the Kootenay Lake district has expressed concerns about the provincial association not fulfilling its advocacy role, they are committed to changing that perception. “We are 111 years old this year. We’ll never change that we advocate for what our members want.” She said the association’s influence is greater if they cultivate a respectful relationship with the government. In travelling to meet with the board, she believes the two groups have come together
in a meaningful way. “For both of us, we gained a better understanding of what’s happened over the past few years.” Meanwhile, newly elected trustee Curtis Bendig put forward a notice of motion for the next board meeting. He told the Star on Monday that he plans to urge the board to find a way to rejoin the provincial body. “I’m not speaking for the board, I’m speaking for myself in terms of where I stand on this issue. I think it’s very important that our board and the people we represent have a strong voice at the provincial level, and the association is a good way to have that voice.” Bendig said his intent is to “drive a conversation about our next steps regarding having our voice heard at the provincial level.” Both Trenaman and Bendig noted the previous board had legitimate concerns about the association’s leadership, but they were both optimistic that could change. Bendig said executive members including Rezansoff were accommodating and forthcoming. “There have been healthy conversations and some understanding gained. The members of their executive did come to our district to meet personally with our board. I feel like that was a significant outreach.” Trenaman said she’s heard concerns that other school districts may leave the association, which wasn’t their intention. “It was never our intent to see a domino effect of other school districts dropping off. But we know there are other boards concerned about their membership.”
Village races see wide spending range Many candidates spent nothing on their campaigns but were still elected
BILL METCALFE Nelson Star In Slocan and Salmo, the successful mayoral candidates in last fall’s municipal election also spent the most money to get elected, according to financial disclosures published last week by Elections BC. In Slocan, successful mayoral candidate Jessica Lunn spent $344 on her campaign, while Hillary Elliott spent $278. No Slocan council candidate declared any expenses. Kevin Millership was listed by Elections BC as one of 14 candidates province-wide who did not file an election disclosure statement. In Salmo, the biggest spender in the mayoral race was winning candidate Stephen White, who spent $485 while second place finisher Henry Huser spent $388. Dennis McLean, the third-place finisher, declared no expenses.
The successful council candidates in Salmo were among the most frugal: Ken Anderson spent $150 and Cathy Paton $25, while Steven Dimock and Dan Danforth spent nothing. Unsuccessful council candidate Diana Lockwood spent $410, Janine Haughton $900, and Bob Vliet $350. Candidates Merle Hanson, Jonathan Heatlie, Dan Isaacs, Curtis Richens, and Jim Mullaly all posted no expenses. In Kaslo, successful mayoral candidate Suzan Hewat spent $929. Second place finisher Patrick Mackle spent $459, while incumbent Greg Lay spent $1,300. Among the successful council candidates, Romella Glorioso spent $759, Rob Lang $360, Kellie Knoll $211, and Jim Holland $100. Of the other candidates, Lynda Beddow spent $114, Louise DePape $250, and Dustin East $28. John Addison and David Collier
declared no expenses. In the election of trustees in the Kootenay Lake school district, successful Nelson candidates Curtis Bendig and Bill Maslechko spent $1,560 and $46 respectively. Third place finisher Bob Abrahams spent $580. On the East Shore, successful candidate Lenora Trenaman spent $2,245, while the her opponent Raeanne Gow spent $350. Candidates are required to disclose the amount they raise and spend on their campaigns within 90 days of the election. Individual donations of $100 or more must also be listed. For the first time, Elections BC has posted online all of the financial information from the 2014 local government elections. The individual disclosure documents from all candidates can be viewed there, including the identities of their donors.
When you leave a gift to the Foundation in your will, your gift can benefit your family and your hospital.
To learn more about estate planning and planned giving, please visit www.klhf.org, and click on giving.
Kootenay Lake Hospital Foundation
3 View Street • Nelson • 250.354.2334 • www.klhf.org
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Nelson Star Wednesday, March 4, 2015
Calendar
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Want your event advertised here? Please email event details to: reporter3@nelsonstar.com. Submissions must be sent by Friday prior to the week you want it printed. Your listing may be edited for length.
this week Community Events
Mar 4th - Rah Rah - On Sale Soon! Mar 6th - Neon Steve - Bassbizniz 5 Year Anniversary w/ Kato Mar 7th - Libarian w/ Intersect Mar 13th - The Block Party - Locals For Locals Mar 14th - Delhi 2 Dublin Mar 20th - Spring Fever- w Wax Romeo, Lorne B, DJ Soup Mar 21st - Shred Kelly - w Brian Rosen & The WhatNow Mar 25th - Old Man Luedecke - On Sale Now! Mar 26th - YukYuks Comedy Night Mar 28th - Blackberry Wood w/ DJ Ole’ Fashion - On Sale Soon! Apr 1st - Rave of Thrones - Kristian Nairn aka Hodor Apr 3rd - 10 original Kootenay DJs - 2 rooms Apr 4th - Satin Jackets- w/ vanilladisco + Mark DeBlock Apr 5th - A-Skillz + Krafty Kuts - AreaOne Events Apr 10th - Humans Apr 17th - Selkirk College Year End Bash Apr 18th - Bass Coast Projext - On Sale Soon! Apr 24th - Stickybuds - On Sale Soon! Apr 30th - Ridley Bent May 8th - Moontricks May 15th - Mat The Alien w Shiny Things May 23rd - LongWalkShortDock w/Rim Visuals + more- On Sale Soon!
MIKE’S PLACE BAD ASS BINGO E V E RY T U E S DAY 8 : 3 0 P M FOOD DELIVERY: SUNDAY TO THURSDAY 9AM 11PM FRIDAY AND SATURDAY 9AM MIDNIGHT
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Tonight: Air cadets promotion and special medal presentation-Family of friends of the Nelson Air Cadets are welcome to see the cadets half-year parade night where promotions and a special award will be given to a well-deserving cadet. At the Eagle’s Hall from 7 to 8:30 p.m. Coffee and tea afterwards. Things Wished for or Desired: The Art and Meaning of Local Indigenous Pictographs. A talk by Eileen Delehanty Pearkes. on Thursday, March 5, 7 p.m. at Touchstones Nelson, 502 Vernon St. $5, free for members. Local author and historian Eileen Delehanty Pearkes will share her knowledge of many indigenous pictographs sites in the region and explore their cultural, historical and artistic significance. Join the EcoSociety for its annual Seedy Saturday on Saturday, March 7 at the Nelson United Church from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. Live music and gardening workshops. Admission is $5. If you want to be a vendor, email markets@ ecosociety.ca. For more info go to ecosociety.ca. Purim costume and dance party on March 7 at 7 p.m. at Bigby Place, 509 Front St, Nelson. Everyone is invited to celebrate Purim, a festive Jewish holiday that features costumes, performances, live music and dancing. Come with a vegetarian dish to share.
There will be prizes for best costume and oneminute performance. Meadow Creek wetland restoration project open house and community planting day on Saturday, March 7 from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. at 13215 Hwy 31 Meadow Creek. Call Claire at 250-777-2955. The Nelson Branch of the British Columbia Registered Music Teachers’ Association is presenting a showcase of Nelson’s young musicians on Sunday, March 8 from 7 p.m. to 9 p.m. at Nelson United Church, 602 Silica St. The concert showcases voice, strings, classical guitar, piano and various ensembles performing in genres from classical to swing and jazz. Admission by donation. Proceeds to support Nelson CARES’ Room to Live project. Top O’ The Morning Coffee Party at the Nelson United Church on Friday, March 13 from 10 a.m. to noon, come enjoy cinnamon buns and coffee for $4.
Weekly Meetings
The Nelson Knitting Co-op has an ongoing knitting group every Thursday from 12:30 to 3 p.m. at the Nelson and District Community Centre general purpose room ($2 drop-in). Top Spin Thursday as Savoy Lanes hosts a weekly ping pong night every Thursday from 6 to 10 p.m. Drop-in fee is $5. All levels are
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welcome. Paddles and balls are provided. For more information, email topspinthursday@gmail. com. Community Threads holds a fibre craftthemed project every Friday from 10 a.m. to 1 p.m. at the Nelson and District Women’s Centre, 420 Mill Street. Knit a sock, crochet a cap, sew a hem, spin some yarn, knit a scarf, hook a rug, and make a friend. For more information call Tira at 250-505-0698 or email tirab@uniserve. com. Join the Ymir Hotel’s country and bluegrass jam every Friday night. Things get started around 5 p.m. and wrap up around 9. Nelson Chess Club Saturdays, 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. Nelson Seniors Association (next to the Civic Centre), 717 Vernon Street. All ages and levels welcome and it’s free. Alcoholics Anonymous holds 14 one-hour meetings weekly in Nelson, at 717A Vernon Street (in the Cellar downstairs), including early morning, noon hour, and evening meetings on specific days. For a schedule please call 250-3523391 or pick up a complete meeting list at the Cellar. Al-Anon Family Group meets twice weekly. Wednesday noon to 1 p.m. at The Cellar, 717 Vernon Street and Friday 8 to 9 p.m. at 601 Front Street at the side basement. The only requirement for membership is that there may be a problem of alcoholism in a relative or friend. For
Tell us about your upcoming event, email: reporter3@nelsonstar.com
more information call Norma 250-352-3747 for Wednesday and Sharon 250-352-7333 for Friday.
Monthly meetings
The Nelson and Area Alzheimer’s Caregiver Support Group is meeting tonight at 7 p.m. Please call Gail at 250-352-7444 for more information. Nelson Dances of Universal Peace with live music; no experience necessary. We do dances and walks with singing, representing spiritual traditions from the world over. The Old Church Hall, Friday, March 13, from 7:30 to 9:30 p.m., and March 22, from 3 to 5 p.m. At Victoria and Kootenay St, 602 Kootenay. For information call Candace, 250-354-4288. The Nelson Chapter of the Council of Canadians will have its regular monthly meeting on Saturday, on March 14, 10 a.m. at 101 Baker St. (downstairs)All welcome. Info, call 250352-9871. La Leche League Nelson provides breastfeeding information and support to moms and soon-to-bemoms. Their next meeting is March 16. They meet at 1 p.m. on the third Monday of each month at The Family Place, 312 Silica St. More information: 352-3583.
Workshops
Free workshop every Saturday at the Ellison
Market cafe. Soil Blocking on March 6, from 10-11 a.m., presented by Bruce from the Eco-society. The best way to start seeds that will thrive in your garden. For more info contact Jessica at ellisonsmarket.com.
Fundraisers
Kootenays Support the Pipeline Blockade fundraising dinner, film and more on Saturday, March 7, from 6 p.m. to 9 p.m. at the Nelson United Church, 602 Silica. See the film Resist, about the Unist’ot’en camp near Smithers with the filmmakers. Bake sale, silent auction and songs with Cam Penner. Tickets $25 at Booksmyth and the door. Masquerade Party, Kootenay style at the Spirit Bar on Friday, March 27 for a SPCA fundraiser. Tickets available at the Hume Hotel and online at Ticketweb.ca. Early bird tickets are $10 and $15 thereafter.
Announcements
Nelson Learning in Retirement presents free information sessions for seniors: How to Keep Your Drivers License as long as possible on March 6, Selkirk College Silver King Campus (Rosemont), Room 16, 10 a.m. to noon and 1 p.m. to 2:30 p.m. All about the computerized DriveABLE test. All members of the public welcome.
This page is for community, charity or fundraising events that are free (or nearly free). Submissions will be run at the discretion of the editor. Dated events take priority. If you have previously posted an event and want it to run again, provide an upto-date version with contact details to reporter3@ nelsonstar.com. Please let us know if your notice has new information, or if your event has been cancelled. Thank you.
Exterior Wash!
Get four washes in the month of March and receive a fifth wash free! 250-352-0303 •
801F Front Street Nelson BC
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Wednesday, March 4, 2015 Nelson Star
Entertainment listings
PRESENTS 2015 EcoSociety Seedy Saturday
March 7
10:00 am to 3:00 pm Nelson United Church
Seeds, Garden workshops, Live Music and Fun! Entry $5
ecosociety.ca
special events Tonight the Civic Theatre presents Derby Crazy Love, a fundraiser screening for the Nelson Killjoys, at 7 p.m. The funds raised will go to helping buy uniforms and book practice spaces They plan to donate time to children’s sports organizations and other important causes in our community. Derby Crazy Love takes viewers inside the adrenaline-filled world of women’s roller derby. For more information visit civictheatre.ca. On Sunday, March 8, the Nelson branch of the British Columbia Registered Music Teachers’ Association is presenting a showcase of some of Nelson’s young musicians at the Nelson United Church at 602 Silica Street. The showcase is in support of Nelson CARES’ Room to Live project which focuses on securing affordable housing in Nelson by refurbishing residential units in Ward Street Place. Admission is by donation, and the concert with run from 7 to 9 p.m. Dandy Snow Lions events if bringing a Kootenay-style masquerade party to Spiritbar on Friday, March 27. Masks are mandatory. Music will consist of DJs Freddie J, Robbie C, Diligent, Marty Funkhauser and more. The event is a fundraiser for the Nelson SPCA. Tickets are $10 for early birds and $15 thereafter, available from the Hume Hotel or line at ticketweb.ca.
Steph Cameron will be playing guitar and mandolin on Saturday, March 7 from 1 to 3 p.m. as part of Ellison’s Cafe Acoustic Unplugged Sessions.
MUSIC Weaving Light, a concert of devotional songs from east and west, is a one-night special event at Touchstones Nelson on Friday, March 6 at 7 p.m. The night will include performances from Miriam Mason Martineau, Noemi Kiss, Kathleen Neudorf, Jeff Faragher, Adrian Wagner and Faye Mallet. Tickets are $20 and are available from Otter Books. For more information visit nextstepintegral.org or touchstonesnelson.ca. On Saturday, March 7 from 1 to 3 p.m., Ellison’s Cafe Acoustic Unplugged Sessions features two female folk singer songwriters. Megan Gerbrandt performs on accordion, banjo
literary arts Sean McGinnis will launch his comic mystery novel Stark Nakid at Booksmyth at 338 Baker Street at 5 p.m. on Friday, March 6. There will be a book signing and copies will be available for purchase. Best-selling author Tom Rand will speak about climate change solutions at 7 p.m. on March 16 at the Capitol Theatre. The first 100 people to arrive get free copy of his book Waking the Frog. Tickets are $10, free for students, and are available at the Capitol or by phone (250-352-6363)or online at www. capitoltheatre.bc.ca. Renowned Canadian poet Shane Koyczan will bring his act to the Kootenays on Saturday, March 21. Presented by On The Road Productions, the event will be held at the Capitol Theatre at 8 p.m. Tickets are $22 for adults and $16.75 for students and are available at capitoltheatre.bc.ca or by phone at 250-352-6363.
and mandolin followed by Steph Cameron on guitar and harmonica. Steph has recently opened for Buffy St. Marie and her album was named in the Top Ten Recordings of 2014 by Penguin Egg magazine’s Roddy Campbell. Kaslo Concert Society presents QuintEssence on Wednesday, March 25 at St. Andrew’s United Church at 7 p.m. Featuring internationally renowned vocalists Robyn Driedger-Klassen, Barb Towell, Frédérik
Robert and Peter Alexander, with celebrated pianist Tina Chang, the five members of QuintEssence offer a fresh and innovative concert experience for lovers of classical music of all styles. Tickets at $22 available at the door. School age children admitted free when accompanied by an adult patron. Further information 250-353-7600.
by Matthew Vaughn and starring Colin Firth, this action thriller features a spy organization that recruits an unrefined but promising street kid into the agency’s ultra-competitive training program just as a global threat emerges. For more information visit civictheatre.ca.
Nelson violinist Nathasha Hall will play a show at the Capitol Theatre on March 14 at 8 p.m. The night is intended to take listeners on a musical journey of the western world over the past 300 years. She will be playing with Susanne Ruberg-Gordon. Tickets are available at capitoltheatre.bc.ca or by phone at 250-352-6363.
MOVIES
The Capitol Theatre presents the annual 18th Big Lip Sync Contest on Saturday, March 7 at 7:30 p.m. Hosted by Liam Long and Eli Geddis. There will be a fabulous line-up of youth, family and adult performers! Don’t miss this extraordinaire and absolute fun community event. Tickets $15 for adults, $10 for youth and $45 for a family of 4. Tickets are available at capitoltheatre. bc.ca or phone 250.352-6363.
Capitol Theatre Live Performance on Screen presents Macbeth tonight at 7 p.m. prerecorded live from the Globe Theatre in London. From its mesmerizing first moments to the last fulfillment of the witches’ prophesy, Shakespeare’s gripping account of the profoundest engagement with the forces of evil enthralls the imagination. Tickets are $15 for adults and $12 for students at capitoltheatre. bc.ca or by phone at 250-352-6363.
The Capitol Theatre presents Rick Miller performing BOOM! on Wednesday, March 11 at 8 p.m. In this award winning presentation Miller takes the audience through 25 turbulent years as he gives voice to over 100 influential politicians, activists and musicians. A mind-blowing multi-media experience for audiences of all generations. Tickets are available at capitoltheatre.bc.ca or by phone at 250-352-6363.
The Civic Theatre presents Still Alice on March 5 at 7:30 p.m. Julianne Moore won a Best Actress Oscar for her role as Alice Howland. Happily married with three grown children, Alice is a renowned linguistics professor who starts to forget words. When she receives a devastating diagnosis, Alice and her family find their bonds tested. For more information visit civictheatre.ca.
visual arts
The Kingsman will screen at the Nelson Civic Theatre on March 6, 7, 8 and 10 at 7:30 p.m. There will be a 4 p.m. screening on March 8. Directed
THEATRE
Touchstones Nelson presents Unlimited Edition, which will run until May 10. The showcase is a unique and powerful collection of Aboriginal and Inuit prints on loan from the Kamloops Art Gallery, Carleton University Art Gallery and Legacy Art Galleries. The exhibition is curated by Tania Willard (Secwepemc), Aboriginal Curator in Residence at the Kamloops Art Gallery.
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Wednesday, March 4, 2015 Nelson Star
Community
WHITEWATER Slopes for Hope Whitewater is a family friendly ski-a-thon in which participants attempt to ski or board the vertical height of Mount Everest in one day (29,029 feet). Participants can sign up as individuals for a personal challenge, or in teams and split the distance between team members. Come up with a team name, wear costumes, and challenge your friends, family or coworkers! There will be an après-event with prizes awarded at the end of the day. Register at www.Slopesforhope.ca
PRE-REGISTRATION
February 28, 9 am - Noon, Whitewater Ski Lodge We ask that participants fundraise in advance to support the Canadian Cancer Society. Contact Corporate and Private sponsorships Saturday, Yvonne Kilpatrick and March 7th David Brackett GeorgeK@lglandscaping.ca Committe chair George Kilpatrick GeorgeK@lglandscaping.ca
starts at 8:30 am
Harnessing their energy The Nelson Figure Skating Club had a plaque presentation last week to thank all the community sponsors who contributed to the installation of a new skating harness at the Civic Centre. The harness assists the skaters in completing their jumps, and coaches say it can help skating enthusiasts of all ages. Mayor Deb Kozak and other representatives from the community were in attendance to see the girls soar. See the full story on the new harness in Friday’s Star. Will Johnson photo
For all other help please contact: Bryan Reid Bryan.Reid@Shaw.ca
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planet they call home. Processed foods tend to be loaded with starches and preservatives, increasing consumers' risk of diabetes and being obese. In addition, many prepackaged foods are shipped from faraway processing plants, and vast amounts of fuel must be consumed for products to get from those plants to local grocery stores. But subtle shifts in dietary habits and trends can decrease mortality rates and reduce global greenhouse gas emissions resulting from food production. Adopting alternative diets that feature a higher ratio of fish, whole grains and locally grown produce can greatly reduce an individual's carbon footprint. The "New Nordic Diet" is one example of a growing dietary trend that has the potential to improve the health of humans and the environment. So says Henrik Saxe, an associate professor who specializes in sustainability
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at Copenhagen University. Researchers found a reduction in greenhouse gases of at least 6 percent with the New Nordic Diet, as compared to typical diets in Denmark. The following are a few ways average men and women can eat to promote their own health while simultaneously protecting the environment. · Adopt climate-friendly eating habits that rely on more domestic, in-season foods. · Cut down on meat consumption. · Eat organic foods as much as possible. · Avoid seafood harvested from fish farms which can negatively impact your own health and marine life. · Grow your own fruits and vegetables. · Shop at local markets that support nearby farms and farmer's markets. · Purchase products with the least amount of packaging.
Nelson Star Wednesday, March 4, 2015
nelsonstar.com 11
Community
Welcoming women interested in dragon boat paddling for our 2015 Dragon Boat season!
Kootenay Rhythm Dragons Membership Drive Saturday March 14th 10:00 - 12:00 Multi-Purpose Room @ NDCC
The boat is located across from Lakeside Park. Paddling is scheduled several times a week and there are different groups for all interest levels. Come and learn the basics of rhythmic paddling and be part of a great team who like to have fun! More info: (250) 551-3104 or (250) 505-4650
Check this out...
Our website gets over 100,000 unique visitors a month! Call Kiomi or Adam at 250-352-1890
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Whatever your business or service, the Nelson Star has you covered!!
Submitted photos
Finding Murray’s Oscar
F
Large Popcorn, Extra Butter
Eleanor Stacey is the executive director of the Nelson Civic Theatre Society.
SAVE THE DATE! Invites applications for
1. 2015 Community Grants Deadline March 31st
2. Arts Legacy Grant Applications (for music projects) Deadline March 31st Applicants require a CRA Charitable Registration Number
Investing in Community
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ollowing a few very busy weeks of Oscar celebration at the Civic Theatre, the next two weeks continue this trajectory of wonderful and varied films, with Derby Crazy Love, Still Alice (featuring Oscar Award winner Julianne Moore) and Kingsman, before launching into our screening of Awake: The Life of Yogananda, and Russian Best Foreign Language nominee Leviathan. So much fantastic film to choose from on our screen these days! And we are adding to it further: on Monday, we will kick off our weekly Babes in Arms intergenerational screenings with a second screening of Still Alice. These 11 a.m. films are for grown-ups, but welcome parents with small children, seniors, honourary aunties and uncles, and everyone else. The lights are low (but not dark) and no one bats an eye when a baby cries.
Abraham, Best Performance by an Actor in a Leading Role, Amadeus, 1984. So naturally the few of us who were there that day passed it around and made our acceptance speeches. I mean, how could we not? And then the question came of where to put the thing. I had never really realized before just how big they are. And heavy – not something to leave on a top shelf somewhere. And it hardly seemed right to leave it in a drawer, but I think that’s where it finally went, just to keep it safely hidden away. After all, at the time, there were only 73 of this particular award in existence. I’ve heard that Murray is quite playful with his award statue, and has been known to hide it on set, for a game of “Find Murray’s Oscar.” For something so rare and difficult to attain, it is wonderful that he feels the inclination to share it with fellow actors. We’re not going to hide his Oscar from you though — his performance is on display Monday, March 16 in all its glory, as we screen our Member Monday film, Amadeus, as an opulent and beautiful aperitivo before we bring the gorgeous arias and dramatic duets of Mozart’s opera Don Giovanni on March 18.
Ko
Eleanor Stacey
So let me tell you a little story: In 2003, I was the director of development for Classic Stage Company, a 180-seat off-Broadway classical theatre in Manhattan’s Lower East Side. It was a pretty fantastic place to see classics, first because the productions were just outstanding, but also because the space was small, so the experience was truly intimate. Classic Stage has made some big headlines a number of times more locally in New York with Obie and Drama Desk awards, but was applauded in 2010 for its production of Venus in Fur which became a Broadway hit. It’s a small company, but has seen many great actors. During my time there Mandy Patinkin, Kate Mulgrew, David Strathairn, Martha Plimpton, Cherry Jones, Tony Kushner, F. Murray Abraham, and many other formidable actors graced the stage in productions and staged readings. One day, Abraham dropped in. I remember a conversation that went something like this: Murray: “I was in the area getting my Oscar trophy cleaned, but I have some errands that I need to do still. Can I leave it here with you guys and come get it a little later this week?” All of us: (blank looks all around) “Uh, okay. No problem.” And then he left. Now in our hands, we had a closer look. His name was engraved on the front: Academy Award to F. Murray
Brooke Whitley
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12 nelsonstar.com
Wednesday, March 4, 2015 Nelson Star
Arts Actor Lucas Myers, dancer Slava Doval, and singer Bessie Wapp gave an hour of one-on-one mentorship to each artist who performed in the Oxygen Art Centre’s recent Youth Talent Slam. Bill Metcalfe photo
Local mentors ‘lucky and honoured’ to work with young performing artists BILL METCALFE Nelson Star or a small city, Nelson sends an unusual number of young performing artists off to post secondary schools to study dance, music, and theatre. One of the reasons, and one of the essential ingredients of any place that calls itself an arts town, is the large number of high quality mentors here. Nelson is home to many professional artists who regularly work with young people, both in and outside the school system. Mentorship was one of the central ideas behind in the Oxygen Art Centre’s Youth Talent Slam, held at the Capitol Theatre on Feb. 14. The project hired three professional artists— actor Lucas Myers, dancer Slava Doval, and singer Bessie Wapp— to audition the performers and give each an hour of oneon-one mentorship before the performance. All three have worked as artists in the Nelson area for years and all grew up here. The Youth Talent Slam defined youth as anyone under 30, but most of the 18 performers were high school students. Each person or
F
group performed one number in the concert. Following the performance, the Star sat down with the three mentors to talk about their experience. Nelson Star: What was the best part of this mentoring experience for you? Lucas: I felt really lucky to be able to intersect with them at this stage in their life. To be part of that experience was incredibly lovely. I remember how much fun it was then, and how much I would have loved to have a professional come and gave me some tips — that would have been fantastic. To be able to cross paths with them now, just on the cusp of beginning to think about whether to go into acting, just to be with them for that, it was awesome. Slava: lt’s like you are in this little creative bubble with them, helping to fine tune and create something. You are in an artistic zone with someone young and full of ideas, which is exciting. It was not teaching. I was asking the right questions and helping what was coming through them, and refining it, and that was really fun. Bessie: My heart bursts for them, such beautiful young people — every single one
of them is beautiful; a universe just blossoming. Lucas: I felt I had to treat them like peers because I am not a teacher. I was there more as a collaborator, and I think that was a unique experience for them. Some were nervous, and I said, “Don’t be nervous, I am not here to judge you. I am here to help you out. We are just going to work on something together.” Slava: I was also the stage manager of the performance. That was so fun, so great, because they know how to have fun, and they do what they are doing just for the joy of doing it. While the opening performer was on stage all the other performers, waiting backstage to go on, were singing his chorus with him because they heard the sound check. We were all singing along, all the singers and dancers. Another great moment was backstage when the funk band was on, everyone was dancing, and the tap dancers were tapping. Just to see how they bonded as performers of different ages and genres was really, really sweet. Nelson Star: Can you give an example of something specific that you worked on with some of the people you mentored? Bessie: I worked with four different singers,
and a band, and a cello player. I am not a cellist but there were a few things I suggested about musicality and pitch. And a singer had created his piece in a range a bit too high for him, so we dropped his piece down a few tones so it is more manageable. There was a singer where we worked with different moments in the song. Sometimes I like to ask them to think of the opposite, like if it is expansive and big, let’s think of it as small and fragile, or with different emotional starting places, and I left it with her to use them or not. We found a song we both knew and sang it together. With another we mostly talked about musical career choices. Lucas: A lot of young actors get excited and they think they should have energy so they tend to rush through stuff. Take your time with what you are saying. Don’t rush it. You belong up there, you are home, embrace it, enjoy it. Let the moment happen instead of jumping to the next one. Slava: Use the stage. It is larger than you think it is. Use the directions on the stage and be aware of using more of the space. Continued on Page 13
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Spring Leisure Guide
Wednesday March 4th, Noon at the Prestige Lakeside Inn
A light lunch is available to encourage attendance during lunch breaks. Pre registration is not required.
Online: www.rdck.ca Register: Mon Mar 9 www.rdck.ca
w w w. n e l s o n s t a r. c o m
Nelson Star Wednesday, March 4, 2015
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nelsonstar.com 13
Arts Continued from Page 12 And slow down. Lucas: Be specific about that moment happening, let it fill, don’t be blurry, be clear. I was working with these two young girls on just going and sitting down on a couch. Don’t just kind of wander over and plop down. You have to walk clearly, sit down clearly, with all your intentions clean, so the audience can see it unfolding, because if it gets blurry it is harder to see. Slava: One of the dancers had a movement that went all the way out to her hand. Some movements happen quickly and the extension of the movement is all the way to the fingertips and then just about six inches past that. So take the time to enjoy that and fully live it, and physically that means knowing that our bodies extend further than the tip of the limb. And I gave theatrical ideas to tie things together, talked about the logistics of lighting onstage, ideas for costuming. Nelson Star: Why is Nelson a good place to do this? Bessie: It is not just chance that the three of us all grew up here. There were mentors in the community already, and those people are here, and this community values the arts and comes to shows, and that keeps it going, and those skills are passed down. Lucas: And they see it as viable. It is not a crazy thing to become
an actor when you grow up. Bessie: Deluded as they are! (laughter all round) Lucas: It is not this completely impossible thing. It is almost normal. To me that was what was exciting, these kids are so excited about theatre and they have the opportunity to pursue it. Like with the summer youth theatre. The schools are great for that too, but there are so many opportunities beyond the schools here.
THE FOUNDATION of my community starts with you and me . . .
I have a dance student who is going to teach younger ones. It is an opportunity. Wouldn’t it be great if there was a festival for those kids 18-19, that have so many skills, so educated already, full of new ideas, how to give them work with the younger ones? It is so validating when you are 18 or 19 to be getting money for something like that. Lucas: After the performances there was a backstage lounge that
RECREATION EDUCATION ENVIRONMENT ARTS SOCIAL SERVICES
COMMUNITY MAKES YOU. YOU MAKE YOUR COMMUNITY.
Bill Metcalfe photo
Bessie: As much as the schools are able, given the budget cuts they are experiencing. I had great teachers at school. They were really instrumental. What I would have benefitted from would have been some professionals spending oneon-one time coaching me. It would have been amazing. Slava: Kids that have been mentored maybe slowly become teachers themselves. You are are gaining experience and then you start thinking of how to teach it.
went amazingly. Thirty people, open mic, discussion, jamming, drawing. That kind of inter-artist mingling is really important. We could have more workshops with professional artists involved in the event, having young people talk with a professional artist about their experience, what they need to do to get into the business. Slava: I felt honoured to have this opportunity. Bessie: Yes, that’s a good word for how I felt too. Honoured.
Mental illness is an issue that affects us all – even here in Nelson. When Clara Hughes rode through town last spring raising awareness, local mental health champions were inspired to establish a new Mental Wellness Fund with Osprey. It will provide grants for ongoing mental health awareness and education.
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14 nelsonstar.com
Wednesday, March 4, 2015 Nelson Star
News
Kootenay
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Kamala Melzack photo
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Nelson Star Staff A combination of mild temperatures, significant rain early in the month, and roughly half of the average amount of snowfall has allowed the NelsonCastlegar area to be virtually snow-free for most of the month. Normally the area has at least 10 cm of snow on the ground to the end of February. According to a monthly roundup of weather statistics from the Southeast Fire Centre, February’s 12.6 cm of snow contrasts sharply with the average of 25.7 cm. Rainfall of 50.9 mm was twice the
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28.1 mm average. This month’s highest temperature (12.2 degrees on February 20) was slightly lower than the record February high of 14.3 degrees set in 2010. The lowest temperature (minus-7.3 on February 23) was considerably warmer than the record of minus-21.5 set last year. Over at Whitewater Ski Resort, February saw a total of 115 cm of new snow accumulated on the mountain, with 77 cm falling in the three-day period of February 6 to 8. But for 15 days of the month there was no new snow on the mountain.
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WEST KOOTENAY
Nelson Star Wednesday, March 4, 2015
nelsonstar.com 15
Community
Public invited to wetland restoration open house Halleran family hosting community day in Meadow Creek with BC Wildlife Federation’s help
An open house at a Meadow Creek wetland restoration project is taking place at the Halleran property on Saturday. The project aims to increase habitat for a variety of animal species, including grizzly sows and cubs looking for valley-bottom foraging in the spring. Photos courtesy of the Hallerans TAMARA HYND Nelson Star A Meadow Creek wetland restoration project is holding an open house and community planting day on Saturday, with help from the BC Wildlife Federation’s wetlands education program. “It’s a good chance for people to learn about wetland values and how private landowners can make a difference for our ever-threatened wetland habitats,” said consultant and environmental scientist Claire
de la Salle. The project is unique as it aims to improve habitat for amphibians, birds, ungulates, and for sow grizzlies and cubs in need of early spring forage in valley bottoms. The project is taking place on four acres of private land owned by Terry and Michele Halleran, who have forged a partnership the BC Wildlife Federation. “It’s a real opportunity for private owners to see what private land stewardship can be,” said de la Salle.
The land was once home to a meandering creek. Recreating wetlands from cleared fields is more than planting trees. De la Salle explained an excavator has been used to create five large ponds that will provide wetland habitat. Saskatoon bushes will be planted to provide berries and cover for grizzlies, which are a blue-listed species at risk in BC. “Meadow Creek is an important link for grizzly bears between the Purcells and Selkirks [mountain
ranges],” de la Salle said. De la Salle said she couldn’t share the project costs, which also includes consultation with the Fish and Wildlife Compensation Program. “Wetland is one of the most productive habitats on the planet,” she said. “When you’re targeting restoration, you get a lot of value for money spent because it provides so much habitat for so many species.” Organizers are looking for volunteers who have the option to
participate in a variety of activities like plant a tree, tour the site, spread some seeds, and even help install a nesting box. Volunteers and observers are welcome to the Halleran property (13215 Highway 31, Meadow Creek) on Saturday from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. Snacks and refreshments will be provided, but bring work gloves, shovel and wetland (mud) boots. For more information, contact Claire de la Salle 250-777-2955 or email delasalle.claire@gmail.com.
West Kootenay Transit
Service Changes Effective March 16, 2015 Castlegar: local Saturday service,
routes 31, 32, 33, 34
RDCK 2015 Financial Plan
Regional Saturday service: 98 Columbia Connector, Castlegar to Trail 99 Kootenay Connector, Castlegar to Nelson
Have your say!
Nelson: 10 North Shore, one additional Saturday trip
Salmo and Area G
to Balfour
Budget Meeting Village of Salmo Council Chambers 423 Davies Ave, Salmo, B.C. Monday, March 9th, 2015 6:00 p.m. (local time)
Nelson and Castlegar: minor changes to
weekday service
20 Slocan Valley, one additional Saturday trip
Regional District of Kootenay Boundary Regional District of Central Kootenay City of Nelson
Heather Smith, Chief Financial Officer
5016
Staff and elected officials will be present to answer questions.
Transit Info 1∙855∙993∙3100 • www.bctransit.com
16 nelsonstar.com
Wednesday, March 4, 2015 Nelson Star
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Community
Paddling season begins for Rhythm Dragons Submitted to the Nelson Star Paddling season is almost here and there are many dragons preparing to get on the waters of Kootenay Lake. The paddling season stretches from April to September, with three teams. There are two competitive teams which practice at 5:30 to 7 p.m. — one team practices Monday and Wednesday, the other team Tuesday and Thursday. These teams attend two festivals a year in BC and Alberta. The Kootenay Rhythm Dragons have a Saturday morning recreational team which begins at 8 a.m. with warm up and paddling from 8:30 to 9:30 a.m. and then morning coffee. The Rhythm Dragons are
Ask the
PROFESSIONALS
costs can go up quite ous amount, you may hen you want to reertakings wisely. Ask
The Graze Buck C
CHRISTINE PEARSON
Sales Associate
Q A
What is Caveat Emptor?
It is Latin for: “Let the Buyer Beware” And perhaps somewhere way back there in your memory from High School Consumer Ed. Class, you may remember hearing this phrase. This phrase is incredibly powerful when applied to the rather large investment of Real Property. In order for a Buyer to receive compensation from the Seller for a Latent Defect; the Buyer must prove that the Seller intentionally concealed it; therefore proving Fraud. A “Latent Defect” is a fault in the property that could not have been discovered by a reasonably thorough inspection before the sale. There was such a case in the Ontario Superior Court of Justice back in 2010 (Matz v. Copley) where the Buyer claimed that the Seller had deliberately covered up a significant structural defect. There was moisture and mould discovered in the basement behind drywall. There’s a little too much information about this case to write in this little column, however, the long and short of it was: The Seller was able to prove that the drywall existed when they had purchased the property, therefore there was no fraud. Even though the seller had replaced the drywall during the course of ownership in order to access some plumbing behind it that needed work. The judge felt they had a legitimate cause to remove and replace the drywall. It was ruled that: “ A vendor of Real Property does not have an obligation to inform the purchaser about Latent Defects, so long as there is no fraudulent step taken to conceal a defect that would otherwise be visible. Citation: Matz v. Copley, Can Lll-2010 ONSC 5565 Can Lll Richard Hayles, BA, JD • Use all of your senses when looking at a property, pay attention to your nose. If you have suspicions about something, check it out. I would even recommend taking a video of the inspection.
ROSLING REAL ESTATE Each office individually owned and operated
593 Baker Street, Nelson, BC 250-505-8015 christine@christinepearson.ca www.christinepearson.ca
Q A
Q A
Hellman Canoes & Kayaks & S.U.P. RCABC Master Instructor, Paddle Canoe S.U.P. Advance Instructor.
IS IT SAFE TO PADDLE THIS TIME OF YEAR?
It can be safe with proper equipment and a bit of knowledge. Wearing a proper fitting PFD (personal flotation device) is required. Paddling close to shore is also a safe idea. Most people think they are good swimmers therefore do not need a PFD because they are only 10 feet from shore. However, it is cold water shock that can kill you. A PFD combine with a dry suit is the safest. The dry suit keeps you dry and comfortable. A neoprene wetsuit will keep some body heat next to your skin, but is not as effective as a dry suit. Neoprene gloves and boots will contribute to comfort as well. Some other safety equipment required by law are, a throw rope (15meters of heaving line), a bailing device and a whistle . A light is also required if paddling after dark. Other items we recommend are paddle leashes, so you do not lose your paddle. A paddle float, to assist getting back into your boat, and a board leash for stand up paddle boarders. Other things you can do to be safe are check weather conditions, and paddle with a partner or tell friends and family where you are going and when you are returning. It is wonderful to get on the water this time of year and with these few pointers you can be very safe. HAPPY PADDLING.
Dr.Matthew Kathryn Stanley Bibby BDS,
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Dr. Michael Brennan
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Yes!a website? For from
patients
are gaggers, the Thwho e internet is overflowing with plans and of prefabhaving models thought for just about any kind of impressions (moulds) can put house you can imagine. Some off wanting toatstraighten ofthem these houses look great first glance, and the teeth. ease of Fortunately, online shoppingwe canare be their seductive to home buyers. HOWEVER, nowis aable Invisalign there signifito cant offer difference between antreatment online product designed for goopy “anyone without ANY anywhere” and a home that is designed being We formoulds you and your property. done. Any successful and beautiful piece ofa high-tech architecture recently acquired meticulously considers its physical and 3D iTero tooth which natural contexts. This scanner includes: (1) how theelectronically house is integrated with records existing scans and landscape features such as rocks, water, the shape of your teeth. Within trees and slopes, (2) how it is oriented to minutes afterseasons, the scan thea few sun during all four (3) we the arrangement interior can showofyou howspaces your toward teeth specific views, (4) positioning windows could when(5) straightened! and deckslook for privacy, is the the size and shapescan of the is house compatible The then sent with to the street, sidewalk, and neighbours can plannearby the (6)Invisalign, how a rooflso ine we compliments geometries and sight lines, (7) are the most appropriate movements materials and colours of the house for your teeth. as being harmonized with Asthewellsurrounding visual landscape. The list of site-specifi c, more comfortable for the contextual factors that make a home patient, this technology is faster beautiful goes on and on. Importantly, andaremore accurate - meaning these all things you sacrifi ce when buying online. The that pre-designed we can gethomes you the smile home you build on your property could have always wanted, beyou there for more than 100 years. Do you want it to be a ‘product’ from the internet? sooner. Or, a ‘home’ that was designed for you, your family and your property? 250-354-4354 Nelson is fortunate to have several skilled Architects and professional Building Designers who can work with you to design your new home.
& S.U.P. 2645 Highway 3A, Nelson.
School gym, with the plan for the final session to be on the water. In 2014 the teams learned a new Canadian national stroke which yielded great success with first and second place finishes in races at Okanagan festivals. Teams are planning for festivals this year in Lethbridge, Vernon, Salmon Arm and Penticton. Kootenay Rhythm Dragons is looking for new paddlers for both the competitive and recreational teams. If you are interested a fun, exciting, rhythmic, team water sport, please attend the registration session or call Sarah Quayle at 250505-4650 or Dorothy Hatto at 250551-3104.
If you are interested in participating in our next edition of Ask the Professionals contact Kiomi or Adam at 250-352-1890
Bob Hellman
President NNP
What is the problem with Pop Art? The problem with Pop Art is that it is too easy to reproduce! Unlike “real art” which relies on actual skill and technique, Pop Art relies mainly on the idea which is noncopyrightable. So when I discovered my R2D2 Campbell’s Soup Can was being reproduced in Bali, Indonesia and being sold by the hundreds to thousands for million$, I was justifiably furious. The ease with which most POP ART can be reproduced belies the very nature of the art form and leaves the artist wide open to not only an irritating ongoing comparison to Andy Warhol but ironically reproducible by anyone with a digital camera and a silk screen machine… Be it my Mayor McCheese, my Ewok series, my Bill Murray’s, my Leonard Nimoy’s or my Nelson Noodle Soup Cans, my work is constantly being ripped off… help stop the skullduggery! Report copyright theft of my work! In Bali or in Nelson. If it doesn’t say Buck C… it ain’t me. live free! Or tye dye!
an inclusive club and welcome all women wishing to enjoy the physical exercise and social camaraderie of being part of a team. Team members range in age from 31 to 86. The 2015 paddling season begins with registration day Saturday, March 14 from 10 a.m. to noon at the Nelson and District Community Complex’s multi-purpose room. Registration for the season costs $125 for two sessions a week and $60 for the Saturday sessions. During April there will be dry land training, which is an introduction to the paddling technique presented by Rhythm Dragon coaches. This will take place Thursdays at 5:45 p.m. at the Central
www.drbibby.com
B.Sc., D.C.
Q A
Can stress cause my back pain?
Absolutely, in fact stress is a significant contributor to spinal pain for the majority of people. Your body experiences a cascade of physiological responses during chronic stress that set the stage for injury. The limbic system of your brain responds to stressful situations regardless of type or degree of stress. Increased stress will lead to the release of cortisol and adrenaline which can lead to increased levels of inflammation in the body. Prolonged inflammation can reduce your body’s ability to heal itself. Hormones released during stressful periods can lead to muscle tension, increased heart rate, shortness of breath, sweating and joint stiffness. Shortness of breath can lead to tension in the neck and upper back. This can result in poorer posture, spinal pain and headaches. The proper way to breath involves using your diaphragm first and your lungs second. In my next article I will discuss how to breathe in order to help manage stress.
384 Baker Street Nelson, BC V1L4H5 (250) 352-5135 www.activebalancechiro.ca
Satellite clinics in New Denver & Nakusp
Nelson Star Wednesday, March 4, 2015
nelsonstar.com 17
Briefly
Touchstones issues call for submissions
Salmo Valley swimming pool/Facebook
Salmo pool receives $5,000
Nelson Star Staff The Salmo Valley public swimming pool has been selected to receive a $5,000 infrastructure grant from the Western Communities Foundation. This grant will contribute to repairs and improvements for the pool and enhance recreation options in Salmo. It’s one of 40 grants provided by Western Financial Group is donation through its charitable arm, the Western Communities Foundation, for a total of $200,000 donated back to communities
where Western operates. The grants are to encourage healthy living, learning and to strengthen communities. “We are so proud to give back to the Salmo community,” said Salmo branch manager Joyce Verburg. “We are glad that we can contribute to recreation in our community by donating these funds to help with upgrades to the Salmo public swimming pool.” The pool operates during the summer.
Submitted to the Nelson Star Touchstones Nelson Museum of Art and History is seeking proposals from artists and curators working in all media for the 2016/17 exhibition season. The facility houses two temporary exhibition spaces as well as a
permanent historical exhibit. The galleries feature solo and group exhibitions by regional, national and international artists. For more detailed information, including floor plans and submission guidelines, visit touchstonesnelson.ca/exhibitions. Please
review the submission guidelines carefully, as incomplete submissions will not be considered. The deadline for receipt of submissions is March 31 at 5 p.m. Email submissions are preferred. For information call 250-3529813.
Registration deadline March 14th
Ask the
PROFESSIONALS If you are interested in participating in our next edition of Ask the Professionals contact Kiomi or Adam @ 250.352.1890
Derek Diener
COLETTE VENIER
Mortgage Broker
Q A
Spring cleaning your debt could save you thousands!
Wouldn’t spring cleaning be so much more gratifying if – somewhere under dusty barbecue parts and outgrown hockey skates – you found an envelope with, say, $5,000 in cash? Wouldn’t that make spring cleaning worthwhile? Of course it would! Well, you may not uncover a financial windfall when you’re cleaning the garage this spring, but a little time and attention to the task of spring cleaning your financial house can be very rewarding. This spring, dust away the cobwebs and take a hard look at your debt servicing costs. Are you continuously carrying a large monthly balance on your credit cards, line of credits and car loans? Take some comfort in knowing that you’re not alone. However, this particular kind of financial clutter – ongoing, unsecured consumer debt – is both confusing and costly. Guess what? It’s time to spring clean your debt! Begin by making a quick list of the interest you are being charged on your loans, credit cards or other unsecured debts. Do you have tax bills piling up? Don’t forget to include that debt in your spring cleaning project as well. With today’s historically low mortgage rates there is an opportunity to have a professional like myself analyze your situation to see if rolling all of your debt into one payment will make financial sense. Even with a prepayment penalty in many cases I can show you how we can improve cash flow and pay off your mortgage sooner. Regardless of where you are in the life of your mortgage, if you have equity in your home and your cash flow has slowed to a trickle because of your debt, I can analyze your situation and outline your spring cleaning options. So as you polish the windows, shake out the carpets and clear out the garage, don’t forget the most rewarding task of all: spring cleaning your debt. Your financial house will enjoy the fresh beginning too!
Office (250) 229-5711 Cell (250) 505-5850 Fax (888) 628-2867 derek@derekdiener.com
www.derekdiener.com
Registered Massage Therapist
Q A
What is Visceral Manipulation?
Visceral Manipulation is a gentle manipulation of the fascia surrounding the internal organs (viscera) of the body. Adhesions can build up in this tissue from falls and accidents, illnesses and surgeries, lifting injuries and from giving birth. Because the visceral fascia hangs off the inner surface of the muscular skeletal system, these adhesions translate into a restricted movement due to muscle tension and pain. Through a precise and gentle manipulation of the visceral fascia the body is able to release these adhesions. This allows for greater function of the organ, decreased pain and greater alignment, strength and flexibility of the body. Clients report an increase of vitality of their whole being. The treatments, in conjunction with therapeutic massage and cranio-sacral therapy, are deeply relaxing and restorative.
#5-205 Victoria st. Nelson, BC 250-551-0416
Sign up today www.juniordragonsden.ca Thanks to our sponsors: Area ‘A’ and Electoral Area ‘B’/Lower Columbia-Old Glory
18 nelsonstar.com
Wednesday, March 4, 2015 Nelson Star
Pet of the Week
Community
Farm, Food, Fork 2015 is Raising the Steaks
Koda was rescued by KAAP in October from a shelter in Terrace, B.C. We adopted her on Dec 2. She is going to be nine years old this year. Not much was known about her past, but she gives us a little bit more of herself every day. She likes to keep an eye on us always. Favorite pastimes are fetching sticks, bird and squirrel watching, walks in the woods and long naps and visits to Grandma’s. Thank you KAAP for saving this gentle soul and trusting us to be her guardians.
Koda
Pet Of The Week Sponsor
2124 Ymir Rd, Nelson 250-352-7861 Want your pet to be Pet of the Week? Email your digital image and 70 word write up to sales@nelsonstar.com
Submitted to the Star Following the success of its 2014 conference, where over 400 people attended over two days to celebrate and discuss the challenges with our local food system, the West Kootenay Permaculture Co-op is putting on a one day event this month focused solely on the issue of sustainable local meat production (the two day conference will return in 2016). This was an issue raised as being of key importance in the Kootenays during the 2014 conference, and this focused event will allow greater exploration of the issues and challenges that the subject of local meat production and consumption presents. The goal is to create a diverse, strong food future for the Kootenays that includes a resilient livestock community. The event is being run by Shauna Teare, chair of the co-op, Damon Chouinard, vice chair of the co-op, and Steph Wetherell. Farm Food Fork (F3): Raising the Steaks will be held at the Spirit Bar at the Hume Hotel in Nelson on March 27.
2015 Getfit Challenge
The STEAKholders daytime event invites anyone involved in food or the local economy to attend, including farmers, economists, policy makers, funders, chefs, butchers and activists. The aim is to dig deeper into the issues we face in our region and identify solutions and actions that will enable our local meat production and economy to grow in a sustainable way. Key issues to be addressed include the local abattoir debate, capacity building, capital investment and feed sourcing. The day will feature several expert speakers from the local region and further afield, including the keynote presenter, Felix Schellenberg, who will be sharing his family’s experiences of building an onfarm abattoir, selling direct to consumers through the Vancouver-based Pasture to Plate butchers shop, and incorporating rotational grazing and biodynamic principles in the farm practice. There will also be facilitated panel discussions, solutions-based discussion groups, and the opportunity to meet and
network with other stakeholders in the area. The evening event will invite STEAKeaters to indulge in an offal feast, enjoy a live butchery session and cooking demos. Attendees will learn about the challenges of sustainable local meat production through keynote presentations, short grassFED Talks and films. Producing more local meat will offer significant economic benefits to the region and increase employment opportunities for farmers, as well as provide fresh, healthy and low food-mile meat to consumers and local businesses. As a platform for understanding the various challenges the region faces, as well as focusing on identifying some potential solutions to these issues, Farm Food Fork can provide a significant contribution to moving our region forward in a more effective and cohesive way. This is a great opportunity to gather as a community to look at how we can produce more of our own meat and strive towards better food security.
U pdates
Joanne Caldecott is working with Brittanya Beddington at Wild Woods Yoga & Wellness Joanne: This week I learned that breath is the most powerful tool for stress reduction. We had a family emergency unfold this week
and the circumstances were so challenging; I only made it to yoga once. The great part was – it was Yin Yoga and I really loved it. The focused breathing I have been practising lately really helped keep the stress levels down before they could grab hold of me. Do you know how much good breathing affects your mental and physical state? Our heart rate, blood pressure, and even body temperature can be affected by how we breathe. By supplying our bodies with a constant and plentiful source of oxygen and consciously exhaling more fully, our bodies are able to get rid of dangerous toxins. It’s amazing how this helps stay calm though it does take practise! Focused relaxation breathing is a complete replacement for the short shallow breathing that keeps us from experiencing relaxation and an anxiety-free life. So make time to relax and breathe deeply! Lastly, thanks to Endless Harvest for the wonderful fruit hamper which added much needed sunshine and vitamins to my week too! Onwards and upwards we go … Brittanya: Life seems to provide so many opportunities to learn and apply that learning, and Jo got to do just that this week. Unforseen circumstances kept her from physically practicing yoga much, but it opened up some opportunities to apply some of the techniques learned in yoga that you can take off the mat. I think this will bring fresh energy to her practice in the final stretch and will help integrate some of the things yoga has to offer for her daily life! It has been lovely to watch her journey and I feel honoured that we have been able to offer her some of our yoga learning to support her!
Armando Porco is working with trainer Ali Popoff at Power by You Armando: Last week (week 4) we went from 3 to 4 workouts. It felt
GET FIT! Join our Facebook community for great recipes and food ideas: facebook.com/endlessharvest
pretty good overall. Ali has been concentrating on my knee and shoulder mobility well as the usual workout. After last weeks and this Mondays workout of week 5, both my knee and shoulder are a bit sore and stiff but not hurting and I feel the strength and mobility getting much better. Looking forward to the next 3 workouts this week. Also would like to thank Endless Harvest for their second vegetable and fruit basket. Very nice.
Laurie Langille will be working with trainer Jesse Piniero at the Nelson Boxing Club: Laurie: I’ve had another great week at the Nelson Boxing Club. Jesse and Peter are great coaches and I really appreciate their patience, as well as the constructive feedback they give. Boxing is hard! But I feel encouraged by them to meet the challenges presented at each class. We’ve gone over most of the basic punches and defense skills and are now applying them to more complicated combinations. I usually leave class with as much of a mental workout as a physical one, and that is what I have been liking most about this challenge.
PHONE: 1-866-825-4646 www.endlessharvest.com
I received my second box of fruit and vegetables from Endless Harvest this week. Everything was so tasty. It’s great to have such beautiful citrus at this time of year. I’ve found a lot more ways to incorporate those dark leafy greens into my cooking and am happy to take some of my tried and true recipes outside the box a little.
Nelson Star Wednesday, March 4, 2015
nelsonstar.com 19
Sports
Tell us how your team is doing, email: editor@nelsonstar.com
10
$
Exterior Wash! Nelson Leafs goalie Jason Mailhoit fends off a Beaver Valley attack Thursday. The Leafs went on to lose 4-3 in double overtime. Jim Bailey photo
Get four washes in March and receive a fifth wash free! 250-352-0303 801F Front Street Nelson BC
KIJHL
Playoff Series
Kootenay Conference Neil Murdoch Division
Nitehawks oust Leafs in overtime
JIM BAILEY Trail Times with Nelson Star Staff Heartbreaker is an understatement. The Nelson Leafs blew a 2-0 third period lead and then lost 4-3 in double overtime to the Beaver Valley Nitehawks on Thursday to drop their Neil Murdoch division semi-final series four games to one. In front of a packed house in Fruitvale, Nitehawks forward Spencer McLean took a pass from Mitch Foyle, skated over the blue line and wired a shot from the circle top corner on Leafs goalie Jason Mailhoit at the 8:52 mark of the second extra period to send the Hawks to the division final. The OT winner was McLean’s second goal of the game, after scoring to put the Hawks up 3-2 in the third. Nelson tied it with just 25 seconds remaining in regulation. With their goalie on the bench, Leafs blueliner Robson Cramer blasted a point shot through a screen to force overtime. The game ended a physical series in which the Leafs, despite a rash of injuries, pushed the Nitehawks to the limit in almost
every game, adding another chapter to a bitter rivalry. “For not having very many guys, [Nelson] really worked hard,” said Nitehawks coach Terry Jones. “They have some great hockey players, and in some respects I just hate shaking the kids’ hands, because it’s their last game, and knowing those guys just gave it all they had out there.” Nelson opened the scoring 7:28 into the first. St. Pierre took a pass from Rayce Miller at the blueline and wristed a shot through traffic. With time winding down in the first, Michael Crawford jumped on a rebound in front of the net and fired it top corner to give the Leafs a 2-0 lead. It remained that way until the third, when David Nemes snagged a loose puck to make it 2-1 at 3:26. Six minutes later, Tyler Hartman fired the puck under a diving Mailhoit to tie the game at two. Then Ross Armour sent a pass across the slot to McLean who wired it from the left side low on Mailhoit to give the Hawks their first lead.
It was the fourth straight game the Nitehawks came from behind: they trailed by two in the third period of Game 2 but tied it before losing in triple overtime. They also found themselves behind in Games 3 and 4 before rallying for victories. LEAFLETS: During the Leafs’ annual banquet Sunday, Robson Cramer was named Nelson’s top defenceman and regular season most valuable player. He had already been named the KIJHL’s best defenceman. Rayce Miller was named the playoff MVP. Darnel St. Pierre was named Most Spirited Player and also won the Coaches’ Award. Sam Webber was Most Popular Player and Dylan Williamson was top rookie. Captain Aaron Dunlap received the Unsung Hero award, while Timothy Nicholls was named both Most Sportsmanlike Player and Most Improved Player. Brenden Chow was recognized for his commitment to both hockey and academics … The Nitehawks advanced to play Castlegar in the Murdoch division final. The opener Monday saw Beaver Valley win 3-2 in overtime.
ROUND 1 Beaver Valley vs. Nelson Game 1: Nelson 0 Beaver Valley 5 Game 2: Nelson 5 Beaver Valley 4 (3OT) Game 3: Beaver Valley 5 Nelson 2 Game 4: Beaver Valley 3 at Nelson 2 Game 5: Nelson 3 at Beaver Valley 4 (2OT) Beaver Valley wins 4-1 Castlegar vs. Spokane Game 1: Spokane 3 Castlegar 4 Game 2: Spokane 6 Castlegar 3 Game 3: Castlegar 2 Spokane 1 Game 4: Castlegar 0 at Spokane 6 Game 5: Spokane 2 at Castlegar 5 Game 6: Castlegar 4 at Spokane 2 Castlegar wins 4-2 ROUND 2 Castlegar vs. Beaver Valley Game 1: Castlegar 2 at Beaver Valley 3 (OT) Game 2: Castlegar at Beaver Valley, late Tuesday Game 3: Beaver Valley at Castlegar, Thursday, 7 p.m. Game 4: Beaver Valley at Castlegar, Friday, TBA Game 5: Castlegar at Beaver Valley, Sunday, 7 p.m.* Game 6: Beaver Valley at Castlegar, Monday, 7 p.m.* Game 7: Castlegar at Beaver Valley, Tuesday, 7 p.m.* * If necessary Eddie Mountain Division ROUND 1 Fernie vs. Golden Game 1: Golden 1 Fernie 7 Game 2: Fernie 6 Golden 2 Game 3: Golden 1 Fernie 4 Game 4: Fernie 4 Golden 6 Game 5: Golden 2 Fernie 4 Fernie wins 4-1
PHOTO CORRECTION
This photo of the Nelson bantam house team that won the West Kootenay championship appeared Friday with some players’ names missing, so here it is again. The full line-up is as follows: from left, Jim O’Meara, assistant coach Cody St. Thomas, Aiden Mushumanski, Cale O’Meara, Blair Sookro, alternate captain Alex Laing, Jaden Dyck, Mike Zarikoff, captain Tyler Lakeman, Ben Price, Keanu Tromans, Charles Curiston, Noah Whiffen, Noah Marsh, Max Spielman (in front), Bradey Sookero, Josh Schacher, Kylan Palm, alternate captain Ava Young, and head coach Dave Zarikoff.
Creston Valley vs. Kimberley Game 1: Creston Valley 2 Kimberley 1 (OT) Game 2: Creston Valley 0 Kimberley 2 Game 3: Kimberley 1 Creston Valley 0 Game 4: Kimberley 3 Creston Valley 1 Game 5: Creston Valley 1 Kimberley 2 Kimberley wins 4-1 ROUND 2 Kimberley vs. Fernie Game 1: Kimberley 5 Fernie 2 Game 2: Kimberley 2 Fernie 5 Game 3: Fernie at Kimberley, Wednesday, 6 p.m. PST Game 4: Fernie at Kimberley, Friday, 6 p.m. PST Game 5: Kimberley at Fernie, Saturday, 6:30 p.m. PST Game 6: Fernie at Kimberley, Monday, 6 p.m. PST* Game 7: Kimberley at Fernie, Tuesday, 6:30 p.m. PST* * If necessary
Submitted photo
Check this out....
13.3% of NELSON STAR READERS plan to use a LANDSCAPER this year and their annual average spend will be
$438
**According to a Pulse Research survey conducted in 2014
8.9% of NELSON STAR READERS plan to buy FENCING or FENCING MATERIAL this year and their annual average spend will be
$1146
Call Kiomi or Adam at 250-352-1890
Best way to reach them?
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Wednesday, March 4, 2015 Nelson Star
Sports U16 Girls Nelson Selects Soccer Team
HOT DOG SALE Saturday, March 7, 11 am - 3 pm at Safeway
Obituaries & Memorials John Angus McLaren
Alec Saviskoff
March 25, 1932 - March 4, 2013 Two years has passed since that sad day. Remembering you is easy, we do it everyday. Missing you is the heartache, that never goes away. Olga and Family
Russell Vernon Browell Born March 19, 1929 Passed February 25, 2015
Russ passed away peacefully at Kootenay Lake Hospital on Wednesday February 25, 2015 after a brief illness. He was born and raised in Canyon BC. He began his career as a heavy equipment operator for the Department of Highways in 1947. He met his wife Barb in Watrous Saskatchewan in 1955 and after their second meeting in 1956 they snuck away and eloped at the “Hitching Post”, in Coeur d’Alene, Idaho, and embarked on 56 years of a loving marriage. Russ was an avid hunter for many years and was a member of the Creston revolver club. Russ and Barb were involved in square dancing for over 25 years in both Creston and Nelson. Camping was also a regular summer activity at both Kootenay Lake and “The Pend d’Oreille” by Sandpoint Idaho. In 1972, Russ and his family moved to Nelson for him to become a low bed truck driver. After the kids were old enough Barb always enjoyed going with Russ on many trips all around the province and got to be known as Russ’s co-pilot. Someone even made a step to help Barb get up into the “Big Rig”. He resided here for the remainder of his life. Russ was predeceased by his wife Barbara, father LeRoy, mother Maude, brothers and sisters Helen, June, Budd, Earl, Leona, Guy, twin sister Betty, and niece Lavonne. He leaves behind his sister Sharon Knoll, daughter Lori Bagshaw, grandchildren Kirstie (Jeremy) Tjader and Lindsey (Murray) Plante, great grandchildren Mackenzie and Brady, son Ross Browell, son Ty (Tonia) Browell, grandchildren Cody and Kale and several nieces and nephews. You could always see Russ at the mall having coffee, laughing with his buddies. He did security for many years for the Nelson Maple Leafs hockey team and was a regular blood donor for almost 40 years. The family would like to thank Dr. Noiles who goes above and beyond, the ambulance and emergency room staff and the many nurses that cared for him. Cremation has taken place and at Russ’ request there will be no service. However the family is planning to hold a tea in April to celebrate the lives of both Russ and Barb Browell. Arrangements are under the direction of Thompson Funeral Service Ltd. Thank you Megan for all your compassion. Online condolences may be expressed at www.thompsonfs.ca
John Angus McLaren born December 26, 1952 in Victoria BC passed away in Leduc AB on February 21, 2015. He will always be lovingly remembered by his children Marla, Jessica, Jordan (Laura), Morgan and Megan; his grandchildren Zoe, Lola, Zaya and Colton. We love you Dad, Grandad. Rest Peacefully and Ride Easy. You’re in Gods Hands Now.
Julia Kovac-Nemedi
September 30th 1988 – February 13th 2015
Born in Calgary, Alberta to parents Karlo Kovac-Nemedi and Zsuzsa Kovac-Nemedi. In 2010 Julia moved to Nelson, BC to join her sister and best friend, Aliz Kovac. Both were passionate about being outdoors and loved having adventures in the mountains. Together they were an unstoppable pair. Whether they were snowboarding, mountain biking or rock climbing, they were always smiling, always having fun and always up for anything. All would agree that Julia was an incredible woman. She was beautiful, adventurous and her smile could light up a room. Her love for travelling and adventure took her all over the world to Central America, South East Asia, Europe and Australia. Even though her life was short, she lived every moment to the fullest up until her very last. Her life has touched the lives of many and she will never be forgotten. A gathering will be held on Saturday, March 7th, at 4pm at the Rod and Gun Club in Nelson, BC. A party will follow. Please join us to celebrate Julia’s incredible life.
WITT- Gordon Richard
The BC Nordic men’s ski team, including Nelson’s Julian Locke, earned three medals, a gold and two bronze, at the Canada Winter Games. Bogetti-Smith photo
BC Nordic team wins relay bronze Nelson’s Julien Locke shares in medal haul
TAMARA HYND Nelson Star The BC Nordic team won a bronze medal in the men’s relay Saturday at the Canada Winter Games in Prince George. Nelson’s Julien Locke, Colin Ferrie of Kimberley, and David Palmer and Geoffrey Richard of Rossland each skied five kilometres for a collective
time of 49:50.10. All four of the BC relay skiers train with the Black Jack ski team in Rossland. The Ontario and Quebec teams took first and second place respectively in 48:14.90 and 48:58.40. It was the third and last medal of the games for the BC team, on top of Ferrie’s gold in the classic 1.5 sprint and Palmer’s bronze in the 15 km.
RDCK 2015 Financial Plan Have your say! Nelson & Areas E and F
Gordon born in Waldeck, Saskatchewan on December 17, 1926 and passed away in Nelson on February 26, 2015. He is survived by his loving wife of 64 years, Dorla, and their three sons; Lewis (Sharon), Daniel (Cindy) and Brian (Melba); several grandchildren and a large extended family. He is also survived by his brothers; Gene, Cal, Bert and Ken as well as his sisters; Norma, Shirley and Kit. At Gordon’s request, there will not be a formal service. His funeral arrangements have been entrusted to Gwen Ziprick of Alternatives Funeral and Cremation Services. You are invited to leave a personal message of condolence by visiting the family’s online register at www. myalternatives.ca
Budget Meeting RDCK Boardroom 202 Lakeside Drive, Nelson, BC Wednesday, March 11th, 2015 6:00 p.m. (local time) Staff and elected officials will be present to answer questions. Heather Smith, Chief Financial Officer
Nelson Star Wednesday, March 4, 2015
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Kootenay Career Development Society Seeks an Executive Director Job Description: Lead â&#x20AC;&#x201C; Manage â&#x20AC;&#x201C; Innovate Kootenay Career Development Society is seeking a creative and action-oriented Executive Director whose personal values are aligned with the organizationâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s mission statement to lead, manage and oversee a medium sized non-proďŹ t agency in Nelson & Castlegar, BC. Kootenay Career Development Society is a dynamic, diverse and change-responsive centre of excellence that empowers individuals, employers and communities economically and socially through career development, employment counselling, and human resource planning. The Executive Director reports to the KCDS Board of Directors and is accountable for: operational oversight and strategic planning, grant and proposal writing, human resource management through building effective employee/employer relationships, ďŹ nancial oversight, marketing, networking, communications, developing and maintaining external relationships with clients, key funders and community stakeholders, and supporting community and economic development. The Executive Director understands the ďŹ&#x201A;uidity and complexity of the career development/ labour market sector, has the ability to identify, analyze and evaluate situations and issues of importance to the Society and applies strategic systems theory thinking and innovative change management techniques to guide adaption to internal and external change.
Help Wanted
Help Wanted
Help Wanted
QualiďŹ cations â&#x20AC;˘ Undergraduate degree in career development or related ďŹ elds â&#x20AC;&#x201C; required â&#x20AC;˘ Demonstrated success in senior leadership/management position â&#x20AC;&#x201C; 3 years or more â&#x20AC;˘ Demonstrated current knowledge of the needs of job seekers, employers, the current labour market and local, regional, provincial and federal political systems â&#x20AC;&#x201C; required â&#x20AC;˘ Demonstrated strength and leadership skills in three or more of the following: change management, client service, staff and board development, strategic planning, career development, proposal/grant writing, community and economic development, ďŹ scal management and project management- required â&#x20AC;˘ Masterâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Degree in Leadership and/or Management â&#x20AC;&#x201C; preferred â&#x20AC;˘ Knowledge of and experience in delivering the Employment Program of BC â&#x20AC;&#x201C; preferred â&#x20AC;˘ Demonstrated knowledge of board governance and experience working with boards- preferred
Compensation â&#x20AC;˘ Full-time position â&#x20AC;&#x201C; dependent on current and future contracts â&#x20AC;˘ Tentative Start Date between April 20, 2015 and May 4, 2015 â&#x20AC;˘ Competitive Wage and BeneďŹ t Package
How to Apply: A full job description can be obtained through an email to the Executive Director, Jan Wright at jan.wright@kcds.ca . Please submit your resume and cover letter as a single PDF document to Sue Adam, KCDS Board Chair via email at sue.adam@kcds.ca Closing Date: Friday March 6, 2015 @ 4:00 PM
Position Title: Executive Director for Nelson/Castlegar British Columbia Position Reports to: The Kootenay Career Development Society Board of Directors
Kootenay Career Development thanks all the applicants for their interest, however only shortlisted candidates will be contacted.
A22 www.nelsonstar.com
Wednesday, March 4, 2015 Nelson Star
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Services
Health Products RESTLESS LEG Syndrome & leg cramps? Fast relief in one hour. Sleep at night. Proven for over 32 years. Online: www.allcalm.com Mon-Fri 8-4 EST, call 1-800-765-8660.
Career 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 1-855768-3362 to start training for your work-at-home career today!
Help Wanted Chatters Salon is looking for a full-time & part-time hair stylist with at least 2 yrs experience. We offer benefits including medical, dental & year round paid education. Apply in person to Julie or Ros or email resume to: chahko@chatters.ca West Kootenay EcoSociety seeks P/T Field Organizer. Visit www.ecosociey.ca/jobs
Financial Services GET BACK ON TRACK! Bad credit? Bills? Unemployed? Need Money? We Lend! If you own your own home - you qualify. Pioneer Acceptance Corp. Member BBB. 1-877-987-1420 www.pioneerwest.com IF YOU own a home or real estate, Alpine Credits can lend you money: Itâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s That Simple. Your Credit / Age / Income is not an issue. 1.800.587.2161. LARGE FUND Borrowers Wanted Start saving hundreds of dollars today! We can easily approve you by phone. 1st, 2nd or 3rd mortgage money is available right now. Rates start at Prime. Equity counts. We donâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;t rely on credit, age or income. Call Anytime 1-800-639-2274 or 604-430-1498. Apply online www.capitaldirect.ca
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Misc. for Sale SAWMILLS FROM only $4,397 - Make money & save money with your own bandmill - Cut lumber any dimension. In stock ready to ship. Free info & DVD: www.NorwoodSaw mills.com/400OT or call 1-800566-6899 Ext:400OT. STEEL BUILDINGS/metal buildings 60% off! 20x28, 30x40, 40x62, 45x90, 50x120, 60x150, 80x100 sell for balance owed! Call 1-800-4572206 or visit us online: www.crownsteelbuildings.ca. STEEL BUILDINGS. â&#x20AC;&#x153;Really big sale!â&#x20AC;? All steel building models and sizes. Plus extra savings. Buy now and we will store until spring. Pioneer Steel 1-800-668-5422 or visit us online www.pioneersteel.ca
Misc. Wanted Private Collector Looking to Buy Coin Collections, Silver, Antiques, Native Art, Estates + Chad: 250-499-0251 Local
! * & *& " *& * % ! % % ( & ! */ #!$!% * ) /&+( '!* # !%) * . % !) * )* !%, )*$ %* !% * % ( +) &+( &$$!*$ %* - * , ( !*) )!0 -!## #' $ " % ( !)*&(/ % ! % % ( & ! */ +% ) * $&)* ( ) ( )+''&(*) * $&)* ' &'# % ! *) *& '( , %* ## */' ) & % ( # ) &%* * .* &( $ !# *)* +%*&% % ( --- % (
PUZ Z LE C ROS S
WORDS WORDS
Rentals Want to Rent Casual employee, 29 yr old male req affordable housing in Nelson. Willing to share, or rent on own. Up to $500600/m. Quiet non-partier, clean & sober. Ref avail. Andy @ 352-9876 Family of mature adults, N/P req 3-4 bdrm home within 7 km of Nelson. Up to $1500/m all incl. Good ref avail LM for Doug 352-6602 Male, 40 seeks affordable housing in Nelson, preferably ground level access. $600/m all incl or negotiate rent for work on property. Good ref avail. Jordan @ 352-9876 Nelson mature man seeks affordable rental in town or transit access. All options considered: self contained unit or shared situation up to $425/m. Ref avail. LM Ken 352-6200 or 352-9876 Retired mechanical design engineer req affordable housing in SE Nelson. up to $600/m preferably on own or will share. Clean, responsible, personable. Ref avail. Vukashin @ 250 352-9876
Transportation
Cars - Domestic 1988 & 1992 Honda Civic LX, 4dr sedan, one is automatic and one is 5 speed standard. Power windows, power mirrors, power locks, both in exceptionally clean condition, very well maintained, 180k & 235k, $1,800. & $2,800. New radiator and timing belt and ball joints. 250-442-0122 / 250-493-1807
CLUES ACROSS 1. Printing speed measurement 4. Fed 7. A domed or vaulted recess 11. Macaws 12. Neck garment 14. A billionth of an ohm 15. Local area network 16. Cleve. basketball hero 18. Wounded & disfigured 20. Civil Rights group 21. Master of ceremonies 22. Smallest artery branches 26. Ref 27. Exist 28. Diagram of earthâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s surface 29. SE Asian sarsaparilla soft drink 31. Fire remains 35. 3rd tone 36. Before 37. It breaks down lactose 39. A waterproof raincoat 40. Atomic #18 41. NW Canadian territory 42. Hindquarters 44. Follows sigma 46. Rural delivery 47. Point that is one point N of due E 48. Excels 53. Berkus and Silver 56. Famous for fables 57. Philippine capital 58. Meg Ryanâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s ex-husband 62. Doleful 63. Arugula genus 64. Nursery verse 65. The 7th Greek letter 66. Container for shipping 67. Charge for services 68. Immature onion plant
CLUES DOWN 1. Swedish statesman Olaf 2. Baltic flat-bottomed boat (alt. sp.) 3. Fingernail treatment 4. Breezed through 5. Check 6. Stray 7. Ancient computing devices 8. Something cheerleaders wave 9. The woman 10. Ambulance rescue initials 12. In a drowsy manner 13. A set of type of one style 14. Not completely closed 17. No (Scottish) 19. Microelectromechanical system 22. Having the wind against the forward side 23. Reestablish 24. Khloe Kâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s former husband 25.Verse forms 29. Places to sit 30. Chilean pianist Claudio 32. Rounds of poker 33. Spanish be 34. Sing and play for somebody 38. Chemical symbol for gold 39. Praying insects 43. Israeli politician Abba 45. 7th planet from the sun 49. Br. plural of a penny 50. Largest continent 51. Distress signal 52. Senate and People of Rome 54. Fill with high spirits 55. Egyptian statesman Anwar 57. Non-verbal entertainer 58. 12th calendar month (abbr.) 59. A major division of geological time 60. Ultrahigh frequency 61. Yes vote
ANSWERS
Nelson Star Wednesday, March 4, 2015
nelsonstar.com 23
Arts
SAVE THE DATE!
‘People can bathe in the music’ April 30 Night of devotional works features six Kootenay musicians
Find your Divine
Check this out...
Our website gets over 100,000 unique visitors a month! Call Kiomi or Adam at 250-352-1890
Kootenay musicians (L-R) Jeff Faragher, Kathleen Neudorf, Noemi Kiss, Miriam Mason Martineau, Adrian Wagner, and Faye Mallet (inset) will play their twoevening showcase of devotional compositions, Weaving Light, at Touchstones. WILL JOHNSON Nelson Star There’s a particular quote from Scottish philosopher Thomas Carlyle that local singer Miriam Mason Martineau has always held close to her heart. In the passage Carlyle asserts that music “leads us to the edge of the infinite.” And that’s exactly where she wants to be. “What I’ve been trying to do is something I’m been curious about for a really long time, which is how can music in a concert setting include what it often does — entertaining and delighting people — but also use music, in the most blunt way of speaking, as prayer,” Mason Martineau told the Star. Together with five fellow Kootenay musicians, she will host two nights of devotional music from a variety of spiritual traditions at
Touchstones Nelson on March 6 and 12. The rest of the lineup includes Noemi Kiss, Kathleen Neudorf, Jeff Faragher, Adrian Wagner and Faye Mallet, all who contributed collaboratively to creating the set list. She said they all had one theme in mind as they selected compositions. “My question is how can it express what can’t be expressed but what also can’t remain silent?” Mason Martineau said the concert’s title, Weaving Light, was chosen carefully. She considers the evening an over-lapping of various spiritual traditions, including compositions from Buddhist and Sufi lineage. “Music really does cross language and cultural barriers and it can express this yearning for something beyond that can re-
ally connect us with each other.” Mason Martineau is particularly pleased to be playing at Touchstones, because she said the setting creates cathedral-type acoustics. “I grew up in Switzerland and spent a lot of time in churches and chapels. You get incredible sounds in those stone buildings. I’ve lived here for 20 years and I was looking for a space with a similar acoustic resonance.” She walked into the Touchstones space, sang a few lines, and knew she had the place. “I was like ‘that’s it.’ It’s like you’re bathing in sound. People can bathe in the music.” Tickets for the first show on Friday are now sold out, but a second performance has been scheduled on Thursday, March 12 at 7:30 p.m. Tickets are on sale at Otter Books and online at nextstepintegral.org
Open House
INVESTING IN COMMUNITY
Have Your Say!
2015 Budget & Five Year Financial Plan
THANKS, SANTA
Jana Cook from the Live in the Koots team with Fair Realty dropped by with a cheque from the ‘Breakfast with Santa’ event. Donations were raised for Osprey’s Nelson Real Estate Fund as well as the Nelson Food Cupboard. Thanks to the many volunteers and community donors who contributed to this event! The Real Estate Fund, like our other endowed funds, generates income that flows back to local charities. It’s a way local people can give back to the community. For ever. Ho ho.
www.ospreycommunityfoundation.ca 250-352-3643
The City of Nelson is hosting an Open House to present the 2015 Budget and Five Year Financial Plan. Please join us: Thursday, March 12, 2015 TWO separate sessions will be held: 1 - 4 pm & 6 - 8 pm A formal presentation of the 2015 Budget & Five Year Financial Plan will be held at 7:00 pm. Nelson Public Library 602 Stanley Street, Nelson, BC **refreshments will be provided at the evening session** Questions? e: budget@nelson.ca f: 250.352.2131 101 - 310 Ward St
24 nelsonstar.com
KELOWNA
2153 Springfield Road (250) 860-2600
VERNON
200-3107 - 48th Ave. (250) 542-3000
PENTICTON
745 Notre Dame Drive (250) 851-8700
CASTLEGAR
1881 Harvey Avenue (250) 860-1975
ANDRES WIRELESS
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VERNON
WEST KELOWNA
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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
101-2601 Skaha Lake Rd. (250) 493-3800
KAMLOOPS
ANDRES CAR AUDIO WEST KELOWNA
ANDRES WIRELESS Cherry Lane Mall (250) 493-4566
KELOWNA
Wednesday, March 4, 2015 Nelson Star
#200 - 2180 Elk Rd. (250) 707-2600
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
ANDRES WIRELESS ANDRES WIRELESS ANDRES B USINESS ANDRES CAR AUDIO Aberdeen Mall (250) 377-8880
CRANBROOK
215 - 450 Lansdowne Mall (250) 377-8007
200-1965 Columbia Ave. 101 Kootenay St. North (250) 365-6455 (250) 426-8927
TELUS KIOSK
NELSON
Chahko Mika Mall (250) 352-7258
300 St. Paul Str. (250) 377-3773
KELOWNA
2153 Springfield Road (250) 860-2600
154 Victoria Str (250) 314-9944
WEST KELOWNA #200 - 2180 Elk Rd. (250) 707-2600