CASTLEGAR NEWS Thursday, April 9, 2015
Vol.12 • Issue 15
Breaking news at castlegarnews.com
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Castlegar News editor wins award
Kinnaird receives $25,000
Staples Canada awards school for their eco friendly efforts. See page 3
Castlegar News Editor Greg Nesteroff wins national history writing award. See page 9
Final flight before retirement Jazz pilot Captain Rob Gordon chooses Castlegar as his last career flight. See page 13
Easter in the park Kinnaird Park had 300 children hopping to it
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A big group of kids anxiously await the signal to begin the Easter egg hunt at Kinnaird Park.
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Thursday, April 9, 2015 Castlegar News
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300 kids scramble for candy and prizes at the Easter in the Park event on Sunday. Photos by Linda Swanson
Easter in the park
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More than 300 children and their families attended the Easter in the Park festivities at Kinnaird Park on Sunday. The annual event, sponsored and run by Simply Shoppers Pharmacy, was a huge success. “It was so amazing, we got so many people in the field plus the food donations. Amazing, great year. It was sunny the whole time,” said organizer Michele Dawson. Two lucky children won brand new bicycles while many others went home with Easter baskets. All the children were allowed to participate in the large egg hunt. The A&W Root Bear was on hand to cheer the children on. Other sponsors included Lordco, EZ Rock and Shoppers Pharmacy. Youth from the Castlegar Rotary interact club ran the concession in order to raise funds for a trip to Ecuador. , “The interact kids did an amazing job helping out. I’m pretty sure they did pretty good at concessions, it was packed all the time,” Dawson said.
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Twin brothers won one of the new bikes at Easter in the Park. Photos by Linda Swanson
A new feature at this year’s event was a food drive. Dawson explained why she came up with the idea. “Everyone coming through the door gets free stuff, so why not give back? It helps everybody have a good Easter,” she said.”
Castlegar News Thursday, April 9, 2015
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The gymnasium was filled with applause as Staples announced to the students they would be supplying the funds for much needed technological improvements. Photos by Chris Stedile
Kinnaird receives $25,000 for eco-friendly efforts Staples Canada presents Castlegar Elementary school with a hefty sum CHRIS STEDILE Castlegar News
Kinnaird Elementary has been rewarded for its environmental efforts with a $25,000 prize. In the Staples Canada’s Annual Superpower your School Contest, the students at Kinnaird went up against over 600 other schools across the country. Their task was to highlight what initiatives they have done in the past and are currently doing to save the planet. Ten other schools across the country also received $25,000. In collaboration with Earth Day Canada, the nationwide contest was held between Jan. 5 and Jan. 31, 2015. “We’re real excited here at Kinnaird Elementary,” said Principal Wayne Naka, “we applied for this grant earlier in the Spring and it was an initiative for schools across the country that had done anything environmentally. They were going to pick one school from Western Canada and we were the very fortunate recipients of the $25,000.” Early Tuesday morning, a surprise assembly was called for all but the youngest of children at the elementary school. Once the students had assembled and settled down, the Staples representative explained why they were awarding the Castlegar school and how amazed they were with all the projects they’ve completed in such a short time. “We have done a tonne of environmental stuff on our school grounds over the last five to six years,” Naka continued, “so it was an easy fill-out for us. We just weren’t sure
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how many other schools were doing it.” Six years ago, School District 20 cut down all of the mature trees on the grounds to build a parent parking lot. Pick-up and drop-off was made easier, but the grounds were left barren with only grass fields. One year later, Kinnaird established a schoolyard greening committee with students, staff and parents banding together to establish a five year plan to green the school grounds. Through successful grant applications and determination the group was able to accomplish a lot. Since then, 40 mature trees have been planted, five large shrub gardens were installed along with an enclosed vegetable garden. A statue was acquired to accompany the greenery. Additionally, indoor growlite stations were purchased, a school-wide composting and recycling program was put in place and funds were acquired to support curriculum writing for the gardens and pond. The awarded $25,000 will go a long way in outfitting Kinnaird with much needed upgrades. “We’re going to be able to use this mon-
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ey and further enhance technology in our school. We may invest in another set of laptops on a revolving cart that can go right into classrooms rather than them having to go to the lab.” Naka said the school has a maker-space where students do programming and construct various devices such as robots and some of this money may be put towards that as well. A new P.A. system is up for discussion as well as many other beneficial projects. The contest is now in its fifth year and has previously awarded 40 environmentally conscious schools the latest technology to empower students to learn and nurture their passion for the environment.
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News
City decides on 2015 budget plan
Public input is needed for the 2015-2019 Financial Plan CHRIS STEDILE Castlegar News
Castlegar Council is proposing a 2015 tax increase of an average of $56 per household, along with a two per cent commercial tax increase. The budget will be presented to the public at the Community forum on April 21 from 4:30 to 7:00 pm. Total consolidated revenue for the 2015 budget is $21,956,000 while the expenditures are valued at $22,766,000. This leaves a deficit of $810,000. The budget development process began with a strategic planning meeting late February with additional meetings held throughout the month of March. These sessions allowed council the opportunity to discuss work plans, projects and service levels and make certain they were in line with the city’s top priorities. Out of these meetings, council focused on three main points of interest: infrastructure management, economic development and quality of life initiatives. About $5,000,000 has been allocated to recently announced Columbia Avenue Redevelopment project, which includes the replacement of aging water main structures, sewer, pavement and new walkways and bicycle paths. The provincial and federal governments are expected to fund two thirds of
the project. A street tree program is also proposed. “[The program] is a key Official Community Plan implementation action step and is a core element to achieving many of the city’s environmental, transportation and aesthetic community objectives,” the budget plan states. Last year, $10,000 was allocated to this project and close to $32,000 will be used this year. Ninth Avenue storm system improvements will be receiving $160,000 and $1 million will be put towards a new fire engine ladder truck. The current truck is reaching its 30 year mandatory replacement milestone and a new truck is at least a 20 year investment. The new truck is expected to add an incentive to those looking to build large box or multi-level buildings due to its increased access range and mobility. In an attempt to eliminate the need for the use of caustic soda at the South Sewer Treatment Plant the city will allocate $375,000 to construct an anoxic zone. It is estimated that once completed, this project will save Castlegar up to $75,000 each year. Airport reliability is still high on council’s agenda and as a result, nearly $60,000 has been set aside for a new airport business case and strategic plan.
On the community side of things, council has money reserved for several projects and initiatives. An off-leash dog park at Millenium Park will receive $125,000 and an additional $15,000 will be allocated to initiatives such as Communities in Bloom and SculptureWalk. Council will allocate $19,427 to the Community Foundation of Castlegar. Lastly, council has decided to spend $50,000 to recruit more physicians. Regional areas I and J will be helping fund this search. “The 2015 budget also proposes to make a significant draw down of reserves,” the budget report reads. “It authorizes that $3.9 million from accumulated reserves be spent on general, water, sewer and airport fund projects and authorizes $1,133,000 in debt financing for the Columbia Avenue Redevelopment project.” The city is always looking for ways to get the most out of government funding and this will ensure they can take full advantage of that, in tandem with lower tax rates. Once a public meeting is held and council is comfortable with the budget, it will be made official. Out of the 161 communities in B.C. Castlegar is currently listed as 62nd lowest in terms of total residential taxation.
Coffee house alive and well at the Castle Theatre Submitted to the Castlegar News by Judy Smith It is wonderful to see the newly-renovated Castle Theatre being used for live performances. Many of us recall the “good old days” of fantastic concerts that hit the stage, featuring artists such as Ferron, The Pied Pumpkin, and a plethora of music festivals. Thanks to the work of the present owners of the Castle Theatre, to local theatre groups and to the United Church coffee house venue, maybe Castlegar will again become the Kootenay centre for entertainment. The coffee houses sponsored by Greg Powell, the new pastor at the United Church, have been well-received at the Castle Theatre, but this is not the first time that the United Church has sponsored a coffee house in Castlegar. In the summer of 1968, Barry Morris, then a theology intern, landed in Castlegar to
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Castle Theatre Marque. fill in for the existing United Church Minister for the summer holidays. Barry, a native of Vancouver, was attending the Chicago Theological Seminary, where he was influenced by Saul Alinsky, an American activist and founder of com-
Photo by Betsy Kline.
munity organizing. Shortly after arriving in Castlegar, Barry noticed that the major activity of the young people was to hang out at the Hi Lite Café. Could they be offered another alternative? Roger Cristofoli recalls the
day that Barry entered the café. “He simply sat down with us and started talking. ‘What are you doing with your life? What do you need? How can we create something together?’”
continued on page A5
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Castlegar News Thursday, April 9, 2015
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Kootenay Festival of the Arts takes centre stage April 8 SHERI REGNIER Castlegar News
The Kootenay Festival of the Arts has begun, bringing ten days of dance, voice, piano and strings. After a two year hiatus, the showcase of young talent promises new energy plus first time woodwind and string performances scheduled in three Trail venues. “We are very excited to be hosting the festival from the 8th to the 18th of April,” says Nicole Zimmer, the event’s co-chair. “People can expect a lovely mix of all ages performing, followed by workshops for encouragement and growth,” she said. The annual festival was shelved two years ago due to lack of volunteers. But Zimmer, herself a music teacher, and cochair Audrey Gerein were determined to revive the 81-year Greater Trail event.
With the help of past organizers Beth Lloyd and Shirley Mendoza, Zimmer and Gerein canvassed the region to bring back the opportunity to perform and be adjudicated by seasoned teachers and professionals.
There’s new things that we are really happy about, and I have volunteers — so it’s like a new lease on life. Nicole Zimmer
Once the call was put out that volunteers were needed to bring back the show, com-
munity members signed on and things fell into place. “We’ve done quite well as a start up,” said Lloyd, a Rossland piano teacher and 10-year festival organizer. “We have a lot of participants including strings and woodwinds, which we haven’t had in a very long time. There’s new things that we are really happy about, and I have volunteers — so it’s like a new lease on life.” Ballet, modern and stage dance are slated to run April 8 to April 11at the Charles Bailey Theatre. Certificates of merit will be awarded to piano players from April 13 to April 15 at the First Presbyterian Church. Vocal solos and choirs will perform at the Trail United Church April 13 and April 14. Woodwind players will perform at 1pm April 16, and strings at 9 am on April 17, all at the First Presbyterian Church. In addition, there will be a dance concert on April 11
at 7 pm at the Charles Bailey Theatre, and an all disciplines concert on April 18 at the First Presbyterian at 7 p.m. “Nicole and Audrey have headed this up and just done brilliantly,” said Lloyd. “It’s a really exciting program and it just feels so good to have younger people getting in there and taking over with such enthusiasm.” Except for a wartime break and a three-year interlude in the 1960s, the festival has alternated between Trail and Nelson every year since its inception in 1930 at the Nelson Opera House. The Kootenay Festival of the Arts offers students of artistic disciplines the opportunity to perform in a theatrical environment and receive constructive critique from highly skilled, established professionals, which in turn nurtures and enhances their artistic talent. The festival’s syllabus and details are available at kootenayfestivalofthearts.ca.
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Castle Theatre once again hosting live performances
continued from page A4 Rev. Greg Powell has a similar vision for In consultation with youth groups from the coffee house. Originally from Toronboth the United and Catholic churches, to, Greg arrived in September as an Intern Barry helped to organize a coffee house in and has subsequently replaced the longthe basement of the United Church, then standing United Church pastor, Rev. Ann located near the post office downtown. Ev- Pollock. Greg and his partner, parents of a ery evening, 25 to 60 people met to play small child, bring a breath of fresh, youthmusic, watch films, listen to speeches and ful air to the Castlegar scene. live performances, and talk. Topics for Times have changed since young peodiscussion ranged from a suicide in their ple hung out at the Hi Lite Cafe. Now, community to the civil rights movement Greg says, he would be happy to see people in Chicago to the newly-discovered music hanging out anywhere rather than staying of Leonard Cohen. In the days before com- home, pasted to their computers. While puters and printers, the group manually technology has allowed us the opportunity published their own newsletter, The Es- to “speak” to people all over the world, we tablishment. Vicki Obedkoff fondly recalls have become isolated from our own comusing “…the old gestetner as we covered munity. “How can we get more people inourselves in ink getting out our crucial volved in community events?” news!” The group also painted the entire “The world is too much with us,” comoutside of the church, with help from the plained William Wordsworth over 200 local trapper, Jim Salekin. years ago. Certainly, worldly concerns Rev. Barry Morris finished his degree in have increasingly weighed heavily on our theology and, following stints in Toronto lives. Faced with an out-of-control econand Winnipeg, returned to East Vancou- omy, unemployment and environmental ����������������������� ��������������������������������������� ver as pastor at First United Church and collapse, many of us have become desponlater at the Longhouse Council of Na- dent and cynical. According to a recent tive Ministry. He is fondly remembered poll, a whopping 60 per cent of Canadiby many of the youth of ’68 in Castlegar, ans no longer trust governments to solve some of whose lives might have taken an these massive problems. This is especially entirely different twist had it not been for true of the younger generation. In the last Barry’s insightful intervention. election, only 38 percent of people below
age 30 bothered to vote, as compared to 60 percent of the broader population. In Greg’s opinion, we need to do something — anything — to take back our personal power: “Something to do that’s not harmful to our bodies.” “How can we bring people together in a way that is not necessarily connected to the church?” he questions. You do what you know how to do. In high school and in university, Greg was adept at organizing coffee houses. He feels it important to “feature local artists without putting the onus on them to organize.” When he saw that the Castle Theatre was being revitalized, he thought that a coffee house venue might be one small step in the right direction. The first coffee house in March was held to a full house. There will be another one at the Castle Theatre on Friday, April 10 and again on May 8, beginning at 7 p.m.. Admission is by donation to help pay for expenses. Refreshments will be available. If you would like to play music, read poetry or tell a story there is a form to complete on the United Church’s website www.CastlegarUnited.ca, but I’m sure if you decide to participate at the last moment, space will be found for you. A sound system is available for use.
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Thursday, April 9, 2015 Castlegar News
Editorial
Editor: Greg Nesteroff Unit A - 1810 8th Avenue, Castlegar, BC V1N 2Y4 Publication Mail Agreement Number 40012905
OUR VIEW
Chocolate treats obscure holiday origins With Easter now come and gone and the regular work week continuing it leaves many to wonder what the meaning of our holidays have become. Are they just that now, days off ? The society we live in has turned every event, holiday and outing into something that can be bought, gift wrapped and given away as a token of our appreciation and generosity. Many children today seem to have no idea what Easter truly represents. When asked, most will say it’s no school and free candy. While these are things children would value over Easter’s true meaning in most cases, it’s important that some semblance of the holiday’s original spirit be kept in tact. As it stands now, it’s more a celebration of consumerism and chocolate bunnies. The original story of Easter is to do with Christ’s death on the cross and subsequent resurrection several days later. It is a story about hope and perseverance through hardship. Surely even those of no faith can see value in a tale such as this and it can be much more beneficial to youth, rather than a handful of sweets. Where did the Easter bunny even come from, and why does everyone celebrate this historically religious holiday, no matter their beliefs? According to several sources, the Easter bunny first arrived in America in the 1700s with German immigrants who settled in Pennsylvania and transported their tradition of an egg-laying hare called “Osterhase” or “Oschter Haws.” Their children made nests in which this creature could lay its coloured eggs. Other origin stories state the Easter Hare originally played the role of a judge, evaluating whether children were good or disobedient in behaviour at the start of the season of Eastertide. No matter which story, they all differ greatly from today’s meaningless giving of chocolates. This is the fate of all holidays — Christmas, Easter, Halloween, etc. have all lost meaning and have been boiled down to material goods and excess foods.
Perceptions: Adrift on the River of Life
Time Windows Walter Volovsek A river is a living thing. It moves. It shapes our topography. It teems with life. A river is a metaphor. For constancy. For change. For a life span. Living on the shore of the Columbia, I often contemplate its endless flow and liken it to the flow of life--that flow within each of us, to some distant sea, with unknown rapids out of sight as a test of our vitality. I think of ghosts which can be conjured up from its jade-green waves. Well known passers-by like Thompson, Simpson, De Smet, Edison, and Kane mingle with ghosts of voyageurs and miners unknown. Two ghosts that hold a particular fascination for me are those of two travellers who – like all of us – journeyed to meet their destiny, passing by my window to a very tragic journey’s end. David Douglas commenced his botanical explorations in April 1825 at the mouth of the Columbia and spent the next two years exploring its lower watershed. On many of these journeys his only companion was his faithful dog Billy. He learned to endure many privations and to make sacrifices for his extensive collections of flora and fauna. Depriving himself of normal comforts, pushing himself beyond endurance, Douglas almost seemed to be at war with himself. Or was it that? He was very observant of his surroundings, savouring all that nature threw at him, blending in with his environment. Perhaps what we perceive to be physical deprivations were really accommodations to his Pam Malekow Office Manager
surroundings, a mystical union of sorts to that vast flow of living force that populated his universe. In 1827 he joined the Hudson’s Bay spring Express from Fort Vancouver to Hudson’s Bay. On April 20 the party passed our setting, having camped in the vicinity of the Dumont Subdivision the night before. He complains of ‘being molested out of my life by the men singing their boat-songs’, which interferes with his attempts to learn Chinook. At Boat Encampment he does a reckoning of his wanderings and concludes that in a little over two years he has travelled 7,032 miles, most of it on foot. Another 2,000 still lie ahead. The brigade reaches York Factory on August 28, where Douglas laments the loss of a live eagle he had been carrying on the journey. He did not deserve his ending. He returned twice to the lower Columbia; on his last trip he planned to walk home via Alaska and Siberia. At Fort St. James he was forced to turn back and in running the Fraser, lost all his collections and nearly drowned. In 1834 he was in Hawaii, when he stumbled into a pit trap that had been prepared to catch wild bulls. There he met his Minotaur, which had fallen in earlier. The beast showed him no mercy and mangled his body beyond recognition. Our other traveller passed by 66 years later and saw a different valley. Archduke Franz Ferdinand was on a world tour, having embarked at Trieste nine months earlier and worked his way eastward. Heir to the throne
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of Austria Hungary, he travelled incognito – if that were possible with a retinue of companions and servants and eyepopping trains of baggage. He was used to the best, of course, and found much to criticize. His one attempt to get close to nature was in the pursuit of his hobby, big game hunting, west of Penticton. On September 18, 1893 the entourage embarked on the SS Columbia at Revelstoke and most likely spent the night aboard at either Robson or Trail Landing. The Archduke describes fairly accurately the nascent town of Nakusp (without naming it), and the CPR railway being built to the silver mines around Sandon. Most of his observations are critical: the cabin partitions exhibit cracks, the passengers are gun-totting ruffians or illiterate farmers, the spittoons are offensive, and the gentlemen cannot find the privacy they desire. The landscape itself is wild and uncultivated and the alpine terrain he visited previously lacks the meadows and wildflower beds of his native Austria. His life journey ended on June 28, 1914, with an assassin’s bullet, on the outskirts of the AustroHungarian Empire. The deed set off a war that
Sandy Leonard Creative Director
Katelyn Hurley Creative
Jaime Tarasoff Creative
David Douglas (left) looks distracted in this portrait, whereas Franz Ferdinand looks full of confidence. Yet his legacy is associated with unforgettable bloodshed, while Douglas lives on in his botanical discoveries, notably the false fir named after him. (Images courtesy of Wikipedia). The assassin’s footprints are preserved at the assassination site in Sarajevo, overlooked by an inscription praising the deed as a blow for independence and freedom. (Kodachrome by Walter Volovsek). saw his empire die and a flock of new nations created from it and other colonial leftovers. The fact that some of these new entities were unnatural assemblages of diverse Betsy Kline Reporter
Chris Stedile Reporter
Is a subsidiary of Unit A - 1810 8th Avenue, Castlegar, British Columbia Phone (250) 365-6397 newsroom@castlegarnews.com production@castlegarnews.com
Your Community News Team
ethnic groups was to be brutally resolved 75 years later, putting the spotlight once again on the city that tolled the bells of history twice in the last century – Sarajevo. Greg Nesteroff Editor
Chuck Bennett Publisher
Castlegar News Thursday, April 9, 2015
Opinion / News
LIVE
Let’s talk about the healthcare in our province, shall we?
Off the Line Karen Haviland
As many of you are likely aware, I have had cause since Dec. of last year to travel to Trail Hospital at least three times a week due to a health issue. I also go there other times for various tests and appointments. My condition, kidney failure, requires close monitoring. Very close monitoring. For all of my life I have been extremely healthy and so I haven’t had the front line experience of provincial health care. That has now changed. After living in the States years ago, and having to pay for my own health care, I truly appreciate our social health system. Right now I have to take about $800 of medicine a month, and that’s if I don’t run into other peripheral complications. I have dialysis three times a week and soon, I will start dialysis at home. That means more medical supplies. There are referrals to Kelowna and other unexpected costs. Luckily for me, through the efforts of the Kidney Foundation of Canada and our health system, very little of those costs have come out of pocket. If they had, I can tell you I would be hard pressed to get the kind of expert and meticulous care I receive. When I start home dialysis, a truck load (literally, a truck load) of supplies will be brought to my home and unloaded on a regular basis, all at no cost to me. If I want to holiday, even if it is in Timbuktu, all I have to do is make arrangements with the company that delivers my supplies and the supplies will be waiting for me when I arrive — without any cost. It’s said that each dialysis patient costs the government about $50,000 a year for dialysis alone. Multiply that by the number of people on dialysis and one can begin to appreciate the cost of keeping people like me healthy and alive. Our regional dialysis unit is something to behold in itself. I believe that one of the dialysis machines costs from $40,000 to $45,000. In our dialysis unit alone there are eight units. In our province alone there are kidney services for dialysis patients at 14 hospitals and 27 community dialysis centres. I have no clue how many dialysis machines are in each of the centres, but one can only begin to imagine the staggering cost of those machines alone. On first glance when I first began dialysis, I could only imagine the strangling fear that many first-time
dialysis patients face. I was lucky in that I used to be an LPN and so the renal unit is not new or frightening to me. It boggles my mind, the specialized equipment in that one unit. While I could likely break down the cost and thus the great value of the facilities and the equipment, I would be hard-pressed to put any economic value on the care given in that unit. All of the staff, without exception, is highly trained, more than adequate and far beyond meticulous. Their very demeanor and composure is a reassuring balm to an already battered psyche. What comes through loud and clear is that each and every one is there for the right reason. There is no doubt in my mind that each of them is an advocate for me and all the others on dialysis. There is no us and them. To them it is truly about us. No ulterior motives, no false smiles, and best of all, no pity. I couldn’t stand pity. That’s not to say their hearts don’t hold compassion, for I knew their hearts are bursting with compassion. It’s just that they cloak us in the warmth of our own retained dignity. That is what keeps us warm during dialysis and not only the warmed blanket offered to each and every one of us without fail. Now that I have truly but unintentionally tested our health care system there is much I can say about it. I could complain about the wait lists for things such as MRIs. I could complain about our miserly government which puts special interests above health care, education and the elderly and I could talk about the Castlegar vs. Trail fight for a regional hospital. But I won’t. There is a time for that, and for me that time is not now. For now, it is a time to honour all of the caregivers in the trenches. Imagine fighting a war without all the proper ammunition. That is what these selfless angels do on a regular basis. The next time I am tempted to complain about our health care system, I know I will think twice. I could be in the States and bankrupt from paying bills where healthcare is a business. Our system is not perfect, but I will attest that those who work within the system are. The ironic thing is I go to the dialysis unit because of my kidneys and they go because of their heart. Thanks to all of you out there who care so diligently and kindly for people like me.
Council Briefs: Chris Stedile Castlegar News
Millennium Park Bike Park project update: President of Castlegar Parks and Trails Society, Mark Jennings was accompanied by Eileen Senyk and Adam Pomeroy to give council an update on the bike park project. The bike park was first identified in the Millennium Park master plan and three acres of land have been set aside for the biking area. Jennings said, when fully completed, it will be one of the biggest mountain bike parks in the West Kootenays for sure. A series of 3d images showed off various ramps, jumps and other terrain to be included in the bike park. The city is quite enthusiastic about the project. Pomeroy, who is the construction design coordinator for the project said he is working out the details with the insurance for the building of the park and the city will then be responsible for insur-
Update on Millennium Bike Park project
ance once the park is completed and in use. The timeline presented to council stated that in an ideal environment the site would be prepared by the end of April and the design should also be completed by the end of May. “That’s what we’re shooting for,” said Pomeroy. More updates are to be expected after these phases are completed. The bike park is intended for all ages and skill levels. Additionally, a great load should be taken off Jennings, as he was the one in charge of writing grants, but at the meeting councillor Sue Heaton-Sherstobitoff said she had found someone to do that for them now. Pitch-in Week: From April 20 - 26 — during Pitch-in Week Canada — a bin will be set up just outside the Community Complex. Here you can dump your own waste or that which you find around the city in an effort to further beautify Castlegar. Sign
up at www.pitch-in.ca. Climate change program grant application: Council agreed to apply for $250,000 in grant funding for an initiative to integrate climate change into the city’s asset and infrastructure master planning process. Director of Transportation and Civic Works Chris Barlow said, “This is an exciting program the city is looking at doing. It’s a large project and it’s a cutting edge project as far as looking at the impacts of climate change on asset management which are both near and dear to the city’s heart. Particularly for our city, we are going to look at storm water infrastructure.” Barlow continued to say that once this project is completed it can be used as a pilot project for other municipalities and other initiatives within the city. The city is requesting 100 per cent funding as a result of the programs projected uses.
www.castlegarnews.com A7
WELL
WITH
PHARMASAVE C apsule C omments
Kevin Ralloff
When you visit your doctor about a problem (like pain), be a good reporter. Plan how you will give your doctor information. The better reporter you are, the better the chance your doctor can help. If it is pain, use descriptive words like “stabbing”, “sharp”, “dull”, achy”. It is sometimes helpful to write down your comments so you don’t miss anything and it saves time as well. Pharmacists put a “shake well” label on some liquid prescriptions. It’s important to heed that label. Some liquids are suspensions and the medication may settle to the bottom of the bottle. Shaking will distribute the medication evenly and ensure you receive the right dose. Children’s liquid antibiotics are a good example. “More is better” is something that doesn’t always apply to drugs. Drugs often reach a peak level of effectiveness at a certain dose and taking more will often not give better results. But side effects can occur at higher doses. Follow your doctor’s orders regarding how much medication to take. Protect your teeth by keeping certain foods to a minimum. Even soft drinks and sports drinks contain acids that can corrode tooth enamel. Dried fruit can stick to teeth surfaces. Some contain extra sugar, too. Even yummy potato chips get into tooth crevices and stay. It’s hard to avoid some of these foods and drinks but brushing soon after eating them will avoid tooth decay and other problems. Want a pharmacy to feel good about? Give us a try!
Customer Appreciation Day 15% OFF*
Last Wednesday of every Month *Discounts apply to regular priced merchandise only and excludes sale items, prescriptions, tobacco, stamps, lottery, phone & gift cards.
55+ Days Everyday
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*Some exceptions may apply - See in-store for details
Phone: 365-7813 or visit us at 1128 3rd St. Castlegar
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MBT-T MERC-Q NA-T OCX-T RY-T S-T TD-T T-T TCK.B-T TRP-T VXX-N
Manitoba Telecom ........... 24.73 Mercer International ......... 14.71 National Bank of Canada . 46.93 Onex Corporation ............ 74.10 Royal Bank of Canada...... 77.81 Sherritt International ............ 2.24 TD Bank .......................... 54.54 TELUS Corp...................... 42.58 Teck Resources ................. 17.38 TransCanada Corp ........... 54.60 iPath S&P 500 VIX ............ 24.45
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The information contained herein has been obtained from sources which we believe to be reliable but we cannot guarantee its accuracy or completeness. This report is not, and under no circumstances is to be construed as, an offer to sell or the solicitation of an offer to buy any securities. This report is furnished on the basis and understanding that Qtrade Asset Management Inc. and Kootenay Savings MoneyWorks are to be under no responsibility or liability whatsoever in respect thereof.
Let’s talk money. Thinking about investing? Retiring? Estate planning? The professionals at Kootenay Savings MoneyWorks are people you can trust for the answers you need. Talk to us today.
Mutual funds and securities related financial planning services are offered through Qtrade Asset Management Inc., Member MFDA.
Craig McFadden, CFP
100 – 605 20th Street, Castlegar 250.365.9953 1.877.691.5769
A8 www.castlegarnews.com
Thursday, April 9, 2015 Castlegar News
COMMUNITY CALENDAR FEB
2015
This page is for community, charity or fundraising events that are free or (nearly so) 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 up-to-date version with contact details to newsroom@ castlegarnews.com, drop off at our office at Unit 2 - 1810 8th Ave in Castlegar or give us a call at 250-365-6397. Thank you.
Upcoming Ongoing
APRIL CASTLEGAR SR. ACTIVITIES @ COMPLEX Mon 10:00 Darts 1:00 Whist Tues 9:30 Floor Curling/Carpet Bowling 10:00 Rummoli 1:30 Line Dancing 1:00 Crafts 7:00 Pool Wed 9:30 Floor Curling 10:00 Coffee Talk 1, 8, 22, 29th 10:00 Raspberry Hi Coffee 15th 1:00 Bingo only on 1st. Thurs 9:30 Floor Curling 1:00 Bingo, not on 2nd 2:00 General Meeting 2nd 2;00 Tea Dance 23rd 7:00 Rummoli Fri 10:00 Qi Gong 1:00 Crib Coffee Talk has different speakers.
THE ROYAL CANADIAN LEGION The Spring tea and Bake Sale will be held on April 11 at the legion
Castlegar Community Complex. Vendors welcome! Contact Darlene Kalawsky 250-365-1653 or see castlegargardenfest.com. BLUEBERRY BOTTLE DRIVE: The Blueberry Community School Hub has a pressing need for major work to its youth room. Please drop off refundable bottles and cans to the Blueberry School. SPRING FLING 2015: Needs volunteers to assist with the organization of street hockey, vendors, kids games, musicians and car show. Without new volunteers stepping forward to assist, this year’s event may need to be cancelled. Please show your support for this community event. Call Peter at 250-365-5655. THE NEW LIFE CHURCH (behind the Castlegar Primary School) will be serving hot nutritious meals for
www.integratire.com 1507 Columbia Ave, Castlegar 250-365-2955
SCRABBLE CLUB: Come out and play Scrabble on the second Tuesday of the month at the Castlegar Public Library from 6:30 to 8 pm. All levels are welcome! For more info call 250-365-3834. LEGION MEAT DRAW: At the Castlegar-Robson Legion, Branch 170 every Saturday, 4 to 6 p.m. Everyone welcome. Guests must be signed in. MYRA DUFF WILL BE HOSTING SUPPORT GROUP MEETINGS: For information about the Heart Support Group please call Myra at 250-365-6369.
1995 Columbia Ave Trail 250-364-1208
for Sale. Also there will be a selection of FREE Winter clothing available to shoppers. Our stock includes clothing,shoes,bedding. linen,books & household items. Clean donations are appreciated and accepted during working hours. Thank you. SELKIRK WEAVERS AND SPINNERS GUILD meets the third Wednesday of each month, 10 to noon followed by bag lunch and show and tell. At the Doukhobor Discovery Centre.
COMMUNITY LEARNING PLACE: drop in to get free help with basic computers, reading and writing, Test preparation, and skills upgrading at the Castlegar and District Public Library on Tuesdays from 12 to 3 p.m.
COMMUNITY HARVEST FOOD BANK & DROP-IN CENTRE: Monday Food Bank 11 a.m. to 1:30 Wednesday Drop In Center 10 to 1:30 (free). Lunch served 11 to 1:30 Friday Drop In Center 10 to 1:30 (free). Lunch served 11 to 1:30. Food donations can be dropped off on any of these days at St. David’s Church. Call 250-608-2227.
BILLETS: Castlegar Rebels looking for billets families for their
THE KINNAIRD CHURCH OF GOD: Located at 2404 Columbia Ave.
Thursday at 8 p.m. (Jim at 250365-6216) and Saturday at 8 p.m (Len at 250-365-7805). AL-ANON MEETS EVERY MONDAY NIGHT for people whose lives have been affected by someone’s drinking. Mondays 8 to 9 p.m. at 2224 6th Ave. (Kootenay Society for Community Living building.) Info: Sydney 250-608-1867. FRIDAY YOUTH PROGRAM at Blueberry Creek Community School. Fun, safe night for a movie, games/ sports/hanging out. Grades K to 5, 6:30 to 8 p.m. and Grades 6 up, 8 to 10 p.m. See BCCS Facebook page for more info or phone 250365-7201. USCC CULTURAL INTERPRETIVE SOCIETY: Volunteers meet Mondays and Wed., 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. at the interpretive and training Centre, 820 Markova Rd. FREE AND CONFIDENTIAL COUNSELLING for problem gambling; Castlegar Community Services
This Community Calendar brought to you by ‘Your Hometown Realtors’ Our dedicated and highly skilled Agents specialize in offering an array of resources to help you with all your real estate needs.
Hall from 12:30 - 2:30. Everyone is welcome is welcome.
CASTLEGAR & DISTRICT PUBLIC LIBRARY April 17 @ 7pm CBC’s Mark Forsythe and Greg Dickson discuss their new book From the West Coast to the Western Front All are welcome at this free event!
SECOND ANNUAL SPRING FARM & GARDEN FAIR - May 2nd at Pass Creek Exhibition Grounds 11 - 5 p.m. Poultry & Small Farm Animal Sale & Swap: Wanted farmers, farming businesses & artisan vendors For more information and pre-register log onto passcreekfair. com ATM & concession on site Bunny petting zoo & horse drawn buggy rides. Community Event Promoting an Educational Environment on Farming & Sustain-ability
CASTLEGAR GARDEN & NATUREFEST: Saturday, May 23, 10 a.m. to 3 p.m.
Simon Laurie 250-365-1585
Val Koochin 250-365-1846
Matt McCarthy 250-304-4831
Carmen Harris 250-365-1520
toll free: 877.365.2169 | 250.365.2166 |
people in the community every Thursday. The doors open at 3:45 and the meal will be served at 4:30 p.m.. Please use the basement entrance at the back of the church. For info phone 250-365-7500. DIANA DRAPER OF BACK IN BALANCE is putting on a monthly lecture series every second Tuesday of the month. The topic for March is weight loss and spring cleanses. Learn how to do them properly! Location is at Back in Balance 2325 6th Ave., Castlegar on March 10 at 7 p.m. ROBSON FLEA MARKET is open every Sunday except Easter. Call Kathy to book a table 250-3653796. CASTLEGAR GARDEN CLUB meets the third Wednesday of the month, 7 to 9 p.m. at the Castlegar Community Complex. Discover the Castlegar Garden Club and be dazzled and inspired by our monthly speakers. New members always welcome. Information: Wendy Eggleton 250-365-0150 or wendy.eggleton@icloud.com
Phil Poznekoff 250-365-4679
Charissa Hackett 250-304-4373
Chad Williams 250-304-5241
Pat Klohn 250-365-1731
Larry Peitzsche 250-608-3017
Tammy Peitzsche 250-365-9640
sales@castlegarrealty.ca | 1761 Columbia Avenue Castlegar |
players (16 to 20). Please contact Mel Rinas 250-365-5596. GRACE COMMUNITY INTERNATIONAL CHURCH: Meets Sunday mornings at 11 a.m. at the Resker Hall in Robson (next door to the Robson Community Church) on Waldie Ave. Phone 250-3656405 for more information. CASTLEGAR HOSPITAL AUXILIARY TREASURE SHOP: Open Mondays thru Thursdays and Saturdays 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Fridays 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. Donations accepted Wednesdays and Saturdays only. Telephone 250-365-7317/250365-6587 or see castlegarhospitalauxiliary.org Visit our Facebook page Castlegar & District Hospital Auxiliary Society. ST. DAVID’S & UNITED CHURCH THRIFT SHOP: Located at 605 Columbia Ave. Back to Regular hours Tues. to Thurs.10 a.m. to 4 p.m.; Fri & Sat. 10 a.m. to 1 p.m.. We now have our Spring/Summer Clothing out
Services on Sundays (10 a.m. and 6 p.m.) at the Castlegar Christian Fellowship Building, 1821 Connors Road until further notice. FREE HOT MEAL AT THE SHARING DINNER POT at Cadet Hall, 8th Ave, Castlegar (two blocks from library) Tuesday at noon. ALL ABOUT BREASTFEEDING: Informative support group for breastfeeding moms. Neighbourhood House in Castlegar, Tuesday 10:30 to noon. More info: 250365-3662, or see kootenayfamilyplace.org TOPS GROUP MEETS EVERY WEDNESDAY 8:30 to 10 a.m. Kinnaird Hall, 2320 Columbia Ave. Round table discussion. Get motivated to eat healthy, lose weight. Monthly fee $10. More info call 250-365-7956. CASTLEGAR A.A. MEETINGS AT THE PIONEER ARENA Sunday. at 10 a.m.; Tuesday at 7 p.m. (Dennis 250-365-2738); Wednesday at 7 p.m., (Fay at 250-687-0484.
Connor McCarthy 250-304-4781
Marnie Pettit 250-304-3564
www.castlegarrealty.ca
Call 250-608-2254. W.K. YOGA FOR MS SUPPORT GROUP: Mondays, 1:30 to 3 p.m., Castlegar Public Library, lower level. Free. Sponsored by West Kootenay MS Society for its members/care providers. Call Lonnie Facchina 1-866-352-3997 or email info@westkootenay@ mssociety.ca or Janice Ferraro, at 250-365-5428, email janice@ underthesunyoga.ca ENGLISH AS A SECOND LANGUAGE PROGRAMS: Classes for adults, Conversation Club, Family Drop-in for families with young children, one-onone tutoring. Free. More info call Corinne at 250-687-4714. THE ROYAL CANADIAN LEGION L.A. #170 have their monthly meeting on the 3rd Monday of the month from September till the end of June.
Please send items to
newsroom@castlegarnews.com
www.castlegarnews.com A9
Castlegar News Thursday, April 9, 2015
Community
Castlegar News Editor Greg Nesteroff wins national history writing award Eight-year-old Florence Barbour clung ferociously to Robert Crellin’s neck as they fought to stay afloat in the St. Lawrence River. Minutes earlier they had been passengers aboard the Empress of Ireland, which collided in the night with the SS Storstad. That’s the first paragraph of Greg Nesteroff ’s article, “1914 Silverton Shipwreck Survivors Surface.” It has just won first place in the best historical article category for newspapers with circulation 4,000 to 12,500 at the Canadian Community Newspaper Awards. Nesteroff has been the editor of the Castlegar News and the Nelson Star for two months, but before that was a reporter at the Nelson Star for five years. His prize-winning story tells of a local connection to a heroic rescue during a major disaster in which more than a thousand people died, and the poignant tale of the later lives of the young girl and her rescuer. Nesteroff first learned of the story in a Vancouver Sun article about the centennial of the sinking of the Empress of Ireland. That piqued his interest and he dug deeper to discover Florence Barbour’s diary at the Canadian Museum of History, and a Smithsonian photo (the one shown here) online. “It blew me away that I had never heard this story and I don’t think anyone in Silverton had heard it either,” Nesteroff says. “It was gratifying to write it, because here is a guy who was apparently well loved in New Denver—when he died his obituary was adulatory—but nobody remembered he had saved this little girl.” The other reason Nesteroff was attracted to the story, he says, is its poignancy.
Certain messages need to be repeated several times
April 19-May 2, 2015 BE A SUPERHERO IN YOUR COMMUNITY! BE A SUPERHERO IN YOUR COMMUNITY!
2015 is the 48th annual PITCH-IN CANADA2,WEEK. April 19-May 2015 The program is the larg environmental improvement campaign Canada. 2, It is2015 a partnership between governmen April in19-May the media, industry and the public.
2015 is the 48th annual PITCH-IN CANADA WEEK. The program is the largest 2015 is the 48th annual PITCH-INin Canada. CANADAIt WEEK. The program is governments, the largest environmental improvement campaign is a partnership between environmental improvement campaign in Canada. It is a partnership between governments, media, industry and the public. This the campaign involves millions of Canadians, young and old, in local projects which cle the media, industry and the public.
up, restore and/or preserve the environment, thereby promoting environmen sustainability and involves involving bothofyoung and young ‘older’and people in local partnerships This campaign millions Canadians, old, in local projects which clean-wh This campaign involves millions of Canadians, young and old, in local projects which cleanbenefit enhance theirpreserve communities. up,and restore and/or the environment, thereby promoting environmental up, restore and/or preserve the environment, thereby promoting environmental
sustainability and in local local partnerships partnershipswhich which sustainability andinvolving involvingboth bothyoung young and and ‘older’ ‘older’ people people in benefit andand enhance their communities. benefit enhance their communities.
Everyone is invited to participate by helping to clean up our community – you could things such as clean up garbage from streets or riverbanks, plant flowers with Communit Everyone is is invited to toparticipate by to our community–in –you you could Everyone invited participate byhelping helping to clean clean up up our community dodo i in Bloom or anything that would enhance our community. Participating thecould program things such as as clean upup garbage plant flowers flowerswith withCommunities Communities things such clean garbagefrom fromstreets streetsor or riverbanks, riverbanks, plant greatinway of showing your civic pride. Waste Management will be donating a dumpster Bloom or or anything that Participatingininththe theprogram programisthis in Bloom anything thatwould wouldenhance enhanceour our community. community. Participating aa April 28 forfor this event. Itway will available at the Community Complex from April 17 to great way of showing your pride. Waste will be be donating dumpster great ofbe showing yourcivic civic pride. Waste Management Management will donating aadumpster th th event. It will availableatatthe theCommunity Community Complex Complex from April2828 thisthis event. It will bebe available from April April17 17ththtotoApril
The City of Castlegar, Communities in Bloom Committee and the City’s Adopt-a-Ro City of Castlegar,Communities Communities Bloom Committee the TheThe City ofbe Castlegar, inin Bloom Committee and the City’s City’sAdopt-a-Road Adopt-a-Road volunteers will involved in a coordinated clean-up effortand during Pitch-In Week, clean volunteers involvedinina acoordinated coordinated clean-up clean-up effort effort during Barbour,up garbage volunteers willwill bebe involved during Pitch-In Pitch-InWeek, Week,cleaning cleaning from City streets & boulevards. up garbage from City streets & boulevards.
Robert Crellin of Silverton with Florence up garbage from City streets & boulevards. whom he rescued from the sinking of the Empress of Ireland on the St. Lawrence River on May 29, If you would like more informationononthe the program, program, please visitvisit www.pitch-in.ca. If you If y If you you would like more information please www.pitch-in.ca. would like more information on the program, please visit www.pitch-in.ca. If you 1914. Greg Nesteroff’s story tells of the adventurouswouldIf like would to volunteer with Communitiesin in Bloom Bloom ororour program, please plea to like volunteer with ourAdopt-a-Road Adopt-a-Road program, would like to volunteer withCommunities Communities in Bloom or our Adopt-a-Road program, please visit http://www.castlegar.ca/city_communitiesinbloom.php or or contact the City at 250-365story and the surprising aftermath. visit visit http://www.castlegar.ca/city_communitiesinbloom.php contact at 250-36 thethe CityCity at 250-365http://www.castlegar.ca/city_communitiesinbloom.php or contact 5979 or civicworks@castlegar.ca .
“It is a sad story. She loses her parents, loses her sister, and she badly wants to be adopted by this guy who saved her, and it never happens. The diary is chilling. “I have still not been to Robert Crellin’s grave in New Denver. I would like to do that—it is marked but not well looked after and it would be nice to add a new stone that talks about what he did. “In the past month I heard from a Crellin relative in England, and not only did they not know about his connection to the Empress of Ireland disaster, they didn’t know what happened to him at all.” continued on page A10
59795979 or civicworks@castlegar.ca or civicworks@castlegar.ca. .
Thank you for helping to keep our community beautiful!
Thank you forhelping helping to to keep keep our beautiful! Thank you for ourcommunity community beautiful!
Building a Healthy Community Castlegar Recreation Complex 2101 - 6th Avenue, Castlegar, BC 250-365-3386
Membership Has It’s Benefits at the CDCC! Purchase a one, three or annual membership: • • • •
Getting Active is easy with a Membership: Over 25 drop in fitness classes each week Aquatic Centre includes hot tub, steam room, leisure tot pool and 6 lane pool Regular Physical Activity will help you enhance your quality of life
Talk to our CSR or Fitness Techs for all the details! See you at the Rec Centre!
Now Arrived Trees, Shrubs, Perennials, Fruit bushes, Clematis, Heathers Also Flower Bulbs, Seed Potatoes & Onion sets
“Sit”
BE A SUPERHERO IN YOUR COMMUNITY!
Upcoming Programs
Saturday Red Cross Swim Lessons: start April 11th (some classes still have openings) Pickle Ball Clinic Wed May 13 10am or 5:30pm $5 (pre registration necessary) Free Zumba Class with Jodie Saturday April 11th 1:00-2:00pm Fitness Studio (come check out this class)
“Sit”
Community Events
Aquanauts Summer Swim Registration – Monday Apr 13 4:30-7pm West Kootenay Trade Show April 17- 5-8pm; April 18- 10-5pm; April 19 – 10-3pm. Castlegar Community Complex
“Good dog!”
The more often a consumer sees your advertising message, the better your chances are that they will remember you when they’re ready to buy!
Dig Tip Don’t forget to check your garden shed to see if you need to purchase any bone meal for planting your new shrubs.
OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK
with extended hours Monday to Saturday 9-6 & Sunday 10-4 2811 Popoff Road beside the Credit Union at the Junction
250-359-5926
Check out all our classes by going to the online Spring Leisure Guide at www.rdck.ca Notice to all Community Groups and Organizations.
If you would like your event mentioned in this event calendar please e-mail the information to Castlegar Recreation Department at casrec@rdck.bc.ca or call 365-3386 ext 0.
A10 www.castlegarnews.com
Thursday, April 9, 2015 Castlegar News
Community
It’s time to place your ad!
Greg Nesteroff wins national history writing award continued from page A9
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Nesteroff ’s story reminds us that not so long ago there were uncertain records of people’s whereabouts and their fates. “People could just disappear into the ether.” This fuels his curiosity and motivates his special kind of detective work. Even now, almost a year after he wrote the story, he’s still thinking about it. “There apparently are some Crellin relatives living around Kamloops,” he says, “but I was not able to get hold of them before this story. But there might be more to be gleaned from talking to them.” Nesteroff estimates that he has written more Advertise your business to thousands than 400 articles about local history for the Nelwith the Castlegar News. With a paper son Star. circulation of 6,731 you’ll get noticed. “It’s my thing,” he says matter-of-factly, as Contact Christine at 250-365-6397 or though no more complex explanation is needed. “I am a history buff and it is what interests me and sales@castlegarnews.com. what keeps me going. I never run out of stories.” Nesteroff says his love of history started with he was a child, with family trips to Sandon and Ainsworth. While a student at Mount Sentinel, he wrote a history of the school. That got him started reading local history. He says he discovered that contrary to his early beliefs, museum curators and historians don’t always know everything, and “there are all sorts of stories to find and mysteries to solve, The folks with Communities in Bloom are BLACK and that is thePRESS fun of it.” – CASTLEGAR NEWS at it again. These beautiful flowers were ¼Nesteroff Page won second place in the same comrecently planted down by the Station Muy isThe offering a curbside yard waste collection program in April and May. Yard petition inx 2012 his story “Nelson’s Stanley Cityisisoffering offeringa acurbside curbside yard waste collection program in April The City yard waste collection program in April andand May.May. Yard 4.333” 7” orwith 11.01cm x 17.78cm seum in Castlegar. Photo by Darlene Kalawsky eaves, grass clippings, branches, tree or hedge trimmings, flowers, plants and Yard (leaves, waste grass (leaves, grass branches, clippings,tree branches, tree or hedge trimmings, Cup Challenge.” waste clippings, or hedge trimmings, flowers, plants and ganics) will be collected at the curb and then transported to the City’s yard flowers, plants and other organics) will be collected at the curb and then other organics) will be collected at the curb and then transported to the City’s yard waste compost transported the City’s yard waste compost site. ompost site. tosite.
Christine is selling this advertising spot
250.365.6397
YARD WASTE COLLECTION
Spring blooming
YARD COLLECTION YARDWASTE WASTE COLLECTION
April 14th and May 12, 2015 - NORTH Castlegar
(north ofplaced Highway 3 including Area) 14th and May 12, 2015 - NORTH Castlegar April 14th and May 12, -Woodland NORTH Castlegar YardApril and garden waste at the curb 2015 will the be collected onPark the following dates:
(north of Highway 3including including the Park Area)Area) (north of Highway theWoodland Woodland Park April 15th and3May 13, 2015SOUTH Castlegar April 14th and May 12, - NORTH Castlegar (south of 2015 Highway 3) AprilApril 15th and May 13, 2015SOUTH Castlegar (north of Highway 3 including the Woodland Park Area) 15th and May 13, 2015SOUTH Castlegar Place your yard waste at the curb just prior to 7:00 a.m. on your collection (south of Highway 3) (south of Highway 3) date. April 15th and May 13, 2015- SOUTH Castlegar To participate: (south of Highway 3) our yard waste at curb just prior to 7:00 a.m. your does collection Place your waste the curbof just to Castlegar. 7:00 a.m. on your collection date.not ! Youyard must be the aatresident the prior City of (Theon program Place yourapply yardtowaste at the businesses curb just prior to 7:00 a.m. on your collection commercial or outlying areas)
RURAL CASTLEGAR PLANNING OFFICE HOURS
date. To participate: cipate: To participate: !must CRIMP compostable (100% biodegradable) yard waste bags are available You! be abe resident ofofofthe City Castlegar. (The program You must resident the City ofof Castlegar. (The program does not does not You must be aa from resident the City of Castlegar. (The program does free of charge City Hall at 460 Columbia Avenue. Bags must be tied apply to commercial businesses or outlying areas) apply to commercial businesses or outlying areas) not to commercial businesses or outlying areas) off, apply if twine is used it must be compostable. It is recommended that you !
double CRIMP bags to ensure yard waste will be contained. CRIMP compostable (100% biodegradable) yard waste bags are available
CRIMP compostable (100% biodegradable) yard yard waste bags bags are available CRIMP compostable free of charge from(100% City Hallbiodegradable) 460 Columbia Avenue.waste Bags must be are tied RDCK Building Inspection Office available free ofmay charge fromatas City Hallasat the 460containers Columbia Avenue. Bags Garbage cans used long are identified as off, if twine is used itbemust be compostable. It is recommended that must you free!of must charge from City Hall at 460 Columbia Avenue. Bags be tied be tied off, if twine is used it must be compostable. It is having yard waste in the container. Containers must have lids. The Castlegar Recreation Complex, 2101 6th Av. Castlegar double is CRIMP bags to ensure waste will be contained. off, if twine it you must beyard It is recommended maximum used weight per container iscompostable. 23kg (501bs). recommended that double CRIMP bags to ensure yard waste will that you doublebe CRIMP bags to ensure yard waste will be contained. contained.
! Garbage cans may be used as long as the containers are identified as ! having Tree pruning waste inshall bundled with compostable Commencing on April 21st, 2015, the Regional District of yard waste the be container. Containers must twine. have Individual lids. The bundles cans shall be no longer 1.0 as metre feet) in length with bundles Garbage may be used than as long the (3 containers are identified as maximum weight per container is 23kg (501bs). Garbage cans may bediameter used as long as(1.5 thefeet). containers are identifiedCentral as Kootenay’s Planning Department will be holding having a maximum of 0.5 metre Maximum allowable having yard waste in the container. Containers must have lids. The having maximum yard diameter waste the Containers must have lids. The branch 50mm (2container. in). is 23kg (501bs). weightisin per container office hours on the 3rd Tuesday of each month at the RDCK ! Tree pruning waste shall be bundled with compostable twine. Individual maximum weight per container is 23kg (501bs). bundles shall be no longer than 1.0 metre (3 feet) in length with bundles ! Building Inspection Office within the Castlegar and District Gather your yard andshall garden waste place at your the dates Tree pruning waste be bundled with compostable twine.on Individual having a maximum diameter of 0.5and metre (1.5 feet).curbside Maximum allowable above according to your location in North or South Castlegar. bundles shall be no longer than 1.0 metre (3 feet) in length with branch diameter is 50mm (2 in). Community Complex. Planning staff will be available to Tree pruning wastea shall be diameter bundled with compostable twine. Individual bundles having maximum 0.5 metre (1.5 feet).located Maximum Alternatively, the City of Castlegar's Yard Wasteof Composting Facility at the bundles be nodiameter than 1.0 metre (3atfeet) length with answer questions relating to zoning, subdivision, agricultural branch 50mm (2 in). !end allowable north of shall the your Castlegar &longer District Recreation Complex 2101 in Sixth is bundles Gather yard and gardeniswaste and place at your curbside on Avenue the dates having a maximum diameter of 0.5 metre (1.5Castlegar. feet). Maximum allowable open to receive yard and garden wastes during the year. above - according to your location in North or South land reserve applications and other planning related issues. Yard and waste is 50mm accepted includes the following garden Gather your is yard and garden waste and place at biodegradable your curbsidewaste: on the branch diameter (2and in). Alternatively, the City of Castlegar's Yard Waste Composting Facility located at the If you wish to arrange to meet with planning staff please dates above - according to your location in North or South Castlegar. north ! end BIN of the District Recreation Complex at 2101 Sixth Avenue is 1 Castlegar Grass. &lawn and hedge clippings, flowers, weeds, leaves, and book an appointment through the RDCK Nelson office at open to receive yard andand garden wasteswaste during the year. vegetable stalks Gather yourthe yard garden place at yourFacility curbside on the dates Alternatively, City Castlegar's Yard and Waste Composting located Yard and garden waste is of accepted and includes the following biodegradable waste: (250) 352-8165. above - according to your location in North or SouthComplex Castlegar. at the north end of the Castlegar & District Recreation at 2101 ! BIN 2 Shrubs, shrub and tree branches less than 75 mm (3 inches) in Sixth Avenue is open to receive yard and garden wastes during the year. ! BIN 1 Grass. lawn and hedge clippings, flowers, weeds, leaves, and diameter ively, City ofwaste Castlegar's Yard Facility located at the Yardthe andvegetable garden is accepted and Waste includes Composting the following biodegradable stalks nd waste: of theIf Castlegar & District Recreation Complex at 2101 Sixth Avenue is your yard waste is in plastic bags, please remove the bag and tree branches less than 75 mm (3 inches) in ! yard BIN 2and Shrubs, receive gardenshrub wastes during the year. Please that program for yard and garden waste only (rocks,leaves, dirt, stumps, diameter note BIN 1 this Grass. lawnisand hedge clippings, flowers, weeds, and d sod, garden waste is accepted and includes the products following biodegradable construction demolition or other related wood including painted or waste: vegetable stalks treated wood, pots, isanimal waste, garbage including kitchen If yourflower yard waste in plastic bags,household please remove the bag waste or recyclables, Styrofoam, or other such materials will not be accepted). BIN 1 Grass. lawn and hedge clippings, flowers, leaves, and note BINthat 2 this Shrubs, shrub less than 75 mmweeds, (3 inches) Please program is forand yardtree andbranches garden waste only (rocks, dirt, stumps, vegetable stalks For more information please contact the City of Castlegar at sod, construction demolition or other related wood products including painted or in diameter (250) 365-7227 or Waste Management at (250) 365-6372 treated wood, flower / (250) pots, 365-5979 animal waste, household garbage including kitchen waste other such materials will not be If your yard Styrofoam, waste is inor plastic bags, please remove theaccepted). bag BIN or 2 recyclables, Shrubs, shrub and tree branches less than 75 mm (3 inches) in
THIRD TUESDAY OF EACH MONTH (APRIL TO OCTOBER) BETWEEN 9 AM AND 11 AM
For more information please contact the City of Castlegar at diameter
Please that this program is for garden waste only365-6372 (rocks, dirt, (250)note 365-7227 / (250) 365-5979 or yard Wasteand Management at (250)
CASTLEGAR CASTLEGAR NEWS NEWS
The City is offering a curbside yard waste collection program in April and May. Yard waste (leaves, grass clippings, branches, tree or trimmings, flowers, dates: plants and Yard garden waste placed at theatcurb will behedge collected on the following Yardand and garden waste placed thewill curb be collected on the followingdates: d other garden waste at the bewill collected on the following organics) willplaced be collected at curb the curb and then transported to the City’s yard dates: waste compost site.
JOIN US ON FACEBOOK
YARD WASTE COLLECTION
Castlegar News Thursday, April 9, 2015
www.castlegarnews.com A11
Dr. Diana Draper Naturopathic Physician
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Dr. Diana Draper Naturopathic Physician Services Offered Include:
Acupuncture, IV Therapy, B12 Shots, Lifestyle Counseling, Nutritional Counseling Common Conditions Treated Include: • Depression and Anxiety • Ulcerative Colitis and Crohns Disease • Osteoarthritis • Rheumatoid Arthritis • Digestive Complaints • Insomnia • Addiction • Pain
I would like to take this opportunity to formally introduce myself to the community. I am a Naturopathic Doctor. I have eight years of post-secondary education under my belt, six years of clinical experience, and a license which allows me to provide primary health care to anyone who seeks it. As a Naturopath, I walk that fine line between evidence-based medicine and spirituality. I offer non-surgical and non-drug options whenever possible – and can offer conventional options when needed – though in truth, I prefer to use the natural route most of the time. I use a variety of treatment tools including: Acupuncture and Chinese medicine which heal the body by balancing yin and yang through the use of very thin needles and Chinese herbs that stimulate blood flow and clear blockages to relieve pain, relax muscles and restore balance; Botanical Medicine which uses concentrated medical ingredients from plants to help restore normal body functions; Nutritional Counselling providing dietary guidance to promote healthy digestive function and reduce inflammation; Lifestyle Counselling addressing the mental and emotional obstacles to health through identifying what triggers could be causing unnecessary harm; Homeopathy which is a form of medicine that uses very diluted doses to promote healing at a cellular level; IV therapy placing high dose nutrients directly into the blood stream bypassing the digest track to ensure maximum nutrient absorption; and Prolotherapy which cause regeneration of tissues and cartilage to heal joint and tendon issues. The relationship you develop with your Naturopath is unlike any other you will ever have. They treat the person not the symptom. On a daily basis I see a variety of patients seeking care. I may treat someone with a chronic condition like hypothyroidism and someone suffering from anxiety. I may run a blood test for food allergies and give acupuncture for fertility. A Naturopathic Doctor is your health educator, health motivator, and health advocate. I am committed to the ongoing success of my patients and their goals, and I’m excited to be providing Naturopathic Medicine to the Kootenay Boundary Region. If you would like to meet me come see me at Back in Balance, or attend one of my free monthly lectures. And, if you want to learn more about how Naturopathic Medicine can help you go to my website at www.drdianadraper.com Yours in Health, Dr. Diana Draper, ND
Now accepting new patients! Operating 5 days a week at Back in Balance
Naturopathic Medicine is covered under www.facebook.com/drdrapernd www.backinbalance.ca most extended health 2325 6th Ave. Castlegar, BC benefits. 250.304.4401
Acupuncture - Massage Therapy - Laser Therapy - Orthotics
Dr. David Bzdel DC
Chris Mansbridge, Reg. Acupuncturist
&
Anna McCullagh, Reg. Massage Therapist
1020 Columbia Ave. Castlegar, BC | 250.365.3365 | www.castlegarchiropractic.com
CLEAN BETWEEN
Independent Dental Hygiene Clinic 2709A Columbia Ave. Castlegar • 250-365-8024 www.cleanbetweencastlegar.com cleanbetween@gmail.com
flour·ish (flûrĭsh, flŭr-) v. flour·ished, flour·ish·ing, flour·ish·es v.intr. 1. To grow well or luxuriantly; thrive: 2. To do or fare well; prosper 3. To be in a period of highest productivity, excellence, or influence 4. To make bold, sweeping movements
A12 www.castlegarnews.com
Thursday, April 9, 2015 Castlegar News
Community
Stanley Humphries grad publishes book
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Apply in store or online at
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Castlegar native Joshua Kuffert has published his first novel, Secrets of Wintersleep. The work of fiction is the first installment in the Dividing Fire series. The book is an adventure story for young adults, but Kuffert says, “The broader story will reach out to a bigger audience.” Kuffert was born in Castlegar and is a 1999 Stanley Humphries grad. The story for his new book began to take shape many years ago while he was living in Nelson, exploring his creative side. He then moved to Vancouver to attend the screenwriting program at the Vancouver Film School. Secrets of Wintersleep is self published through Amazon and was released on March 3. It is available for purchase through Amazon and is also available in Kindle and Kobo formats. “In a lot of ways home (the Kootenays) was a bit of an inspiration for this part of the story,” Kuffert said. “The theme of the story is family and home and what that means. The main character goes through what a lot of kids go through in a small town. You want to go out into the broader world and see bigger horizons. By the end of the story she realizes there is a lot of value and identity to be found in her hometown.” “I’ve tried to carry that with me with home too. Castlegar, Nelson Trail, I grew up there. So much of my life was there, it
Author Joshua Kuffert (right). Cover Art for Secrets of Wintersleep(left). is a lot of who I am. I take a lot of pride in telling people I am from Castlegar”. “This story has been the driving force behind my wanting to write. I have been working on it for ten years. Building the world, building the characters, carrying them around with me.” Kuffert has been influenced and encouraged by his family and friends in his quest to become an author. “I can attribute a lot of my writing and
my passion to Ash Maddocks, a (Castlegar) musician and really talented lyricist. His lyrics were an inspiration to me to sort of play with words. I really need to pay him a lot of respect for pointing me to where I am now.” Kuffert hopes that the second installment in the series will be ready by the end of 2015. You can keep track of the status of the series on the The Dividing Fire Facebook page.
BRITISH COLUMBIA ELECTORAL BOUNDARIES COMMISSION
Tell us your views on our Preliminary Report before May 26, 2015.
Now is the time to have your say and shape your province.
In a Preliminary Report to the Legislative Assembly, the British Columbia Electoral Boundaries Commission is proposing changes to the area, boundaries and names of electoral districts in B.C.
WEBSITE:
Read the Preliminary Report at www.bc-ebc.ca/reports.
EMAIL:
Tell the commission your views on the Preliminary Report online at www.bc-ebc.ca, at a public hearing during April and May, or by email at info@bc-ebc.ca. All submissions and presentations to the commission must be made before 11:59 p.m. on Tuesday, May 26, 2015. For a schedule of public hearing locations and dates, and more information, visit www.bc-ebc.ca
www.bc-ebc.ca info@bc-ebc.ca PHONE:
1-800-661-8683
www.castlegarnews.com A13
Castlegar News Thursday, April 9, 2015
Community
Jazz pilot chooses Castlegar as final flight
News at your...
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BETSY KLINE Castlegar News
Air Canada Jazz pilot Captain Rob Gordon chose to make the last flight of his career one that would land in Castlegar. After 27 years of service, Gordon is retiring. Fire Chief Gerry Rempel explained it was a sentimental choice. “He chose Castlegar as his last run as he thoroughly enjoyed the approach into our airport and this is where he first met his wife, also an airline employee at the time.” Gordon had his family onboard and they were met with appropriate fanfare. After landing, he taxied the plane through a water arch provided by the Castlegar Fire Department. Local Air Canada Jazz employees and airport employees held a reception in his honour. Mayor Lawrence Chernoff was on hand to present a gift from the city and Pie in the Sky supplied a cake for all to enjoy.
Castlegar Aquanauts Summer Swim Club
Registration is Monday, April 13th from
4:30 to 7:00 pm at the Complex Come join this fun, family oriented club! Our certified coaches will teach you how to develop proper swimming skills and stroke technique. As a bonus, you will build fitness and endurance—an excellent way to cross train for other sports! Summer swim program runs from May 4th to early August. Please bring a separate fundraising cheque and your care card
For more information contact Paulette at 365-7053 or visit our website. www.castlegaraquanauts.ca @KOAquanauts
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A14 www.castlegarnews.com
Thursday, April 9, 2015 Castlegar News
presents
An Evening with
Tamara Taggart
The Castlegar News is thrilled to have Tamara Taggart speak at our first annual women’s event. The evening will involve a relaxed, fun environment with wine, appetizers and dessert where women can visit a wide array of booths related to women’s interests as well as listen to Tamara speak.
Save the Date
Tickets now available!
WHEN: WEDNESDAY, APRIL 29 6:30 - 10:00 PM
$35 / ticket
Available at the Castlegar News, Fashion Foundations and The Gift Box
WHERE: SANDMAN HOTEL CASTLEGAR
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Castlegar News Thursday, April 9, 2015
Community
www.castlegarnews.com A15
Tues. April 21st 6:30pm Annual Sculpturewalk office G e n e r a l #1, 425 Columbia Ave. Meeting (around
2015
corner from subway)
LOSE WEIGHT Forever!
“My $69 professional group hypnosis: a jump-start and a long-term solution.” — Charles Borden
Selkirk College Instructor Takaia Larsen at the Mir Centre for Peace on the Castlegar Campus where Peace 216: The Doukhobors will be offered from April 27 to May 1. Selkirk College photo
ttend this two-hour hypnosis seminar and start losing weight-A for good. Charles has practiced professionally for 32 years, has helped 650,000
A deeper exploration of the Doukhobor connection to peace
octor recommended, safe and proven effective. D Register at the door for this life-changing seminar.
Submitted to the Castlegar News Selkirk College is cracking open the door to one of the most influential cultures in our region with a new Mir Centre for Peace Summer Institute offering starting at the end of April. An intensive five-day course, Peace 216: The Doukhobors offers a study of the Doukhobors and their connection to issues of peace and conflict. Open to everyone, the course will explore the beginnings in Russia to the current realities. Doukhobor history and culture will be examined with attention to themes of peace, pacifism, violence and non-violence, community, and utopia. “We want people to feel like they have had a genuine experience in being immersed in the Doukhobor culture of our region, both historical and contemporary,” says the course instructor Takaia Larsen. The design of the course will enable those with roots in the culture to learn alongside those curious to gain a better understanding. “Even people that grew up in the community feel they don’t have a full understanding of their family’s experiences in terms of the 19th Century context in Russia,” says Larsen. “The course will trace all of that and it’s going to have a heavy focus on their experiences in the role of creating the modern world, creating an alternative life within the growth of nationalism and the modern state.” A foundation of West Kootenay culture Larsen grew up in Castlegar and though not born into the Doukhobor culture, has been heavily influenced
through a life spent with good friends who welcomed her into gaining a deeper understanding. “I have genuine envy for the food and the culture,” she says with a smile. “Their emphasis on food and singing and community is very soothing and very comforting. I feel lucky to have grown up with the influence of this culture.” After high school, Larsen started her post-secondary career at Selkirk College in the School of University Arts & Sciences. She moved onto Okanagan University College where she earned a Bachelor of Arts in History and English. Larsen’s Master of Arts in History was completed at the University of Victoria. Learning through the lives of the people An important element of the Peace 216 course will be the guest speakers and field trips. The classroom component of the course will take place in the mornings at the historic Mir Centre for Peace on the Castlegar Campus. In the afternoons, students will have the opportunity to visit important cultural locations and hear from knowledgeable guest speakers. The Peace 216 course will require students to complete an on-line component prior to the week-long session which runs from April 27 to May 1. A final assignment will then be undertaken to successfully complete the class. Participants are not required to be a current Selkirk College student, but Peace 216 is available as a University Arts & Sciences transfer course for three credits. The fee for the course is $300 plus GST and registration for the course closes on April 13.
people in his U.S. clinics and seminars worldwide. Charles’ program was inspired by research at University of California. During your seminar Borden’s powerful hypnosis will be like “flipping a switch in your mind” to turn off food cravings. It will cause you to eat healthy foods, so you will begin losing weight immediately. The focus: increasing your desire for natural exercise, eliminating desire for large portions, sugar, night snacking, salty snacks, emotional eating … and more!
©2015 Charles Borden, Carlsbad, California. Presented by Middle Way Ltd. dba The Borden Method.
Direct from U.S.A. Live!
www.bordenmethod.com FAQ, testimonials, more …
Register at door 20 min early. Fee only $69 – cash, credit card or cheque – $ 10 discount per person for groups of 3 or more. Free Parking. NELSON
•
THURS, APRIL 23
1pm to 3pm
or
7pm to 9pm
Best Western Plus Baker Street Inn
•
153 Baker St.
CASTLEGAR • FRI, ApRIL 24
7pm to 9pm Super 8 Hotel • 651 18th St.
Bring ad for Charles’ Free e-book, 4 Ingredients to Make You Thin
ATTENTION TO Those Impacted by the recent landslides and overland flooding Those impacted by the recent landslides and overland flooding event may be eligible for financial support under British Columbia’s Disaster Financial Assistance Program. Assistance is available to qualifying homeowners, residential tenants (renters), small business owners, farm owners, charitable organizations and local government bodies that incurred more than $1,000 of uninsurable damage during the period February 5-9, 2015, and that are situated within the geographic boundaries of: • Regional District of Central Kootenay (Electoral Areas A, D, F, H, I, J, K) Insurable damages, such as sewer or sump pit back-up, and water entry from above ground including roofs, windows or other areas of the building that are not at ground level, are not eligible for DFA. Eroded or damaged land is not eligible for DFA. Assistance is limited to providing 80 percent of allowable items that are considered essential to a home, livelihood or charitable service, for the portion of the claim that exceeds $1,000 to a maximum claim of $300,000. To apply for financial assistance, individuals must complete and return an Application for Disaster Financial Assistance. Application forms are available from the Emergency Management BC web site at: http://www.embc.gov.bc.ca/em/dfa_claims/dfa.html, http://www.embc.gov.bc.ca/em/dfa_claims/dfa.html, Government Agent offices, http://www.embc.gov.bc.ca/em/dfa_claims/dfa.html most local government offices, Emergency Management BC regional offices, or by e-mailing the EMBC Recovery Office in Victoria at DFA@gov.bc.ca or calling toll-free at 1-888-257-4777. 1-888-257-4777 Applications should be submitted as soon as possible but no later than JUNE 1, 2015 by e-mail (DFA@gov.bc.ca), by fax (250-952-5542), or by mail: Ministry of Justice, Emergency Management BC, PO Box 9201 Stn Prov Govt, Victoria, B.C. V8W 9J1.
CN
A16 www.castlegarnews.com
? h t r o W s d r o W e r a t a Wh hey mean - what t e. s g n i y a s r a Popul came to b y e h t w o h and
Origin: Heavy freight was moved along the Mississippi
in large barges pushed by steamboats. These were hard to control and would sometimes swing into piers or other boats. People would say they “barged in”.
Ask the
PROFESSIONALS If you are interested in participating in our next edition of Ask the Professionals contact Christine at 250-365-6390
A
Christine Esovoloff,
Alternative Training Solutions
Advertising Sales
Q
How do I let people know of my services and answer frequently asked questions?
A
Short answer: By
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The Selkirk College Carpentry Program shop has become a safer place to learn with the addition of three top end table saws that employ the latest flesh-saving technology. Using an elk sausage, Carpentry Instructor Dan Brazeau held a demonstration of the new industrial SawStop table saw that uses an electrical signal to stop the blade in less than five milliseconds when flesh is detected. “A school should be the safest spot possible, so it’s important to have the latest technology,” said Brazeau. As more than 50 students and instructors from all of the Silver King Campus trades programs looked on, Brazeau demonstrated how the technology can prevent nasty accidents. He first ran the sausage through the blade without the safety system activated and it didn’t turn out well for the elk meat. Then using the monitoring system, the blade dramatically stopped without leaving a mark in the sausage. “The idea is to limit flesh cutting,” said Brazeau. “If you did have an accident, you get a nick instead of a cut.” SawStop is one of the leading suppliers of table saws in the United States and across the world. Located just south of Portland, Oregon, the technology was invented in 1999 and in 2004 the first SawStop table saw was sold. SawStop claims that there is a table saw accident every nine minutes in the United States and 10 amputations every day. Ten times faster than a car’s airbag, the SawStop braking system, uses flesh as a sensor to activate a brake cartridge that takes the saw from 4,000 rpms to zero in the blink of an eye. If activated, the brake cartridge and saw blade need to be replaced (total cost of around $150), but the saw itself is not damaged. Most importantly, the user of the equipment gets away without injury. The old table saws at the Selkirk College carpentry shop had aftermarket safety features incorporated, but the new equipment is the best in the busi-
Selkirk College Carpentry Instructor Dan Brazeau runs an elk sausage through the new SawStop table saw to demonstrate the safety features which enable the blade to stop without cutting flesh. Selkirk College photo ness. Each saw cost $5,000 and was made possible through recently released provincial government funding aimed at in-demand trades. “We would not have been able to afford this without the provincial government funding,” said Brazeau. The demonstration sacrificed one of his prized elk sausages, but Brazeau said the focus on safety was well worth it. “It’s not something we ever want to use again,” said Brazeau. Find out more about the Selkirk College carpentry program at: selkirk.ca/program/carpentryfoundation. www.spca.bc.ca
interrupting someone in a rude way
When looking for work you should seek as many opportunities as are available – and you should apply to all that you would like to have and you’re qualified for. If you’re qualified, and you’d like to have it, then you should put the time and effort into preparing an application that really gives you the best shot at actually landing the job. The most common mistake that we see job seekers make: mass applying to a myriad of jobs using one generic resume. The internet has made it easy to search and apply to many openings. Sending out more applications doesn’t increase your chances of getting hired. Sending out better applications does. Employers have told us that as many as 75% of applicants for a position aren’t actually qualified and 98% of job seekers are eliminated at the resume screening. For help with your customized resume and cover letter contact Alternative Training Solutions.
Selkirk College carpentry program purchases finger-saving table saws
NOTICE TO RESIDENTS Yard Waste Facility Closure – April 16-19th The City’s yard waste facility at the Castlegar Community Complex will be closed from Thursday, April 16 th to Sunday, April 19 th, 2015 to facilitate the West Kootenay Trade Show. If you have yard waste to dispose of during this time, the following alternatives are available to you: the Ootischenia Landfill the City’s twice annual curbside yard waste collection (being held April 14-15th & May 12-13th this year). backyard composting – there are many great websites that provide excellent advice including http://www.ext.colostate.edu/pubs/garden/07212.html Burning of this material is prohibited
Alternative Training Solutions 250.365.0966 1410 Columbia Avenue Castlegar, BC V1N 2Z7 www.alternativetrainings.com
The yard waste facility will re-open Monday, April 20 th, 2015 for the remainder of the season.
Email: sales@castlegarnews.com Website: castlegarnews.com
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The City apologizes for any inconvenience and appreciates your cooperation. If you have any questions, please call (250) 365-7227 or (250) 365-5979.
What do SPCA dogs dream about? Your loving home.
Meaning: To enter a room suddenly and noisily, usually
Q
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How important is a Resume in landing a job?
Thursday, April 9, 2015 Castlegar News
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Castlegar News Thursday, April 9, 2015
Sports
Castlegar & District Hospital Auxiliary Society
Selkirk College Saints bolster defensive corps with pair of recruits
News Thursday, April 16th, 2015 at 10 a.m. at your... Education Room, AnnuAl GenerAl MeetinG
Submitted to the Castlegar News
With playing commitments from a pair of topnotch defencemen, the three-time defending British Columbia Intercollegiate Hockey League (BCIHL) champion Selkirk College Saints have started to rebuild a key component to continued success. With the majority of the 2014-2015 Saints blueline contingent graduating this spring, the team is pleased to announce the addition of tier II junior veteran Ashton McLeod and junior B champion Nathan Browne. “Ashton will be a very smart, capable player in our league,” says Saints head coach Alex Evin. “We are looking to replace a lot of veteran championship winning defensemen next season and we couldn’t be happier adding a player like Ashton.” McLeod is a 6-foot, 200-pound defenseman who recently completed his final season with the Humbolt Broncos in the Saskatchewan Junior Hockey League. A product of Lethbridge Minor Hockey, McLeod previously spent two seasons playing for the Canmore Eagles in the Alberta Junior Hockey League. In three seasons of tier II hockey, McLeod played 147 games scoring three goals and 25 assists. McLeod plans to take the Electrical Foundation Program at Nelson’s Silver King Campus and hopes to one day run his own company. “I would just like to thank Selkirk College and the Saints hockey team for giving me an amazing opportunity to pursue my hockey career as well as education, I’m extremely honoured,” says McLeod.
A Proven Winner on the Blueline Browne is a 6-foot-2, 195-pound defenseman who recently won a Vancouver Island Junior Hockey League Championship with the Campbell River Storm. He contributed three goals and three assists in 10 playoff contests. The Storm competed in the Cyclone Taylor Cup which took place this past weekend in Mission, B.C.. With the ability to skate and move the puck, Browne will play a significant role with the Saints as they rebuild their defence corps. Browne began his junior hockey career with the North Okanagan Knights of the Kootenay International Junior Hockey League after graduating from the Okanagan Rockets Major Midget program. After a run to the KIJHL championship finals with the Knights in
Castlegar Health Center
Fingert
Free to Good Home!
Top: Ashton McLeod recently completed his final season with the Humbolt Broncos in the Saskatchewan Junior Hockey League. A solid defenceman in his own zone, McLeod also has the ability to move the puck and will be an asset to the Selkirk College Saints blueline corps in the upcoming season. Below: Nathan Browne will provide an imposing presence on the Selkirk College Saints blueline in the 2015-2016 season and is a proven junior hockey champion. Selkirk College photo 2013, Browne signed on with the Trail Smoke Eaters of the British Columbia Hockey League and spent time in junior A in Ontario before landing with the Storm. “Coach Lee [Stone] gave me every opportunity to perform at my best in Campbell River and I am very thankful to him and the entire Storm organization,” says Browne. “I’m excited to join Selkirk College because they have established themselves as a winning program and that is something I value and want to contribute to.” “Adding another player with championship experience is valuable to our hockey program,” says Evin. “Nathan is a quality person and athlete who we believe will be very successful in academics and athletics.” Browne plans to study in the School of Environment & Geomatics at Selkirk College.
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Thursday, April 9, 2015 Castlegar News
Community
Obituaries and Memorials Vera C. Voykin It is with great sadness that we announce that Vera Voykin passed away unexpectedly at the Castlegar Emergency Care Centre on Friday, March 13, 2015. A traditional Doukhobor funeral service was held at the Brilliant Cultural Centre on Thursday, March 19th, followed by a meal prepared by the Ootischenia ladies. She was interred in the Ootischenia cemetery. Vera Voykin , née Kanigan, was born October 26, 1936 in Ootischenia, BC to Cecil and Polly Kanigan. She grew up the youngest of the siblings first at the Bellii Dom, and then when it was removed to make room for airport construction, Vera’s family moved to a private home in central Ootischenia. Vera met and married her husband, Harry Voykin, in 1955 and they lived in Pass Creek, where they had 4 children. The family moved to Ootischenia in 1960 where Vera and Harry resided until they moved into care in 2009. Vera spent the last few years of her life being cared for by her good friends at Castlewood Village. Vera enjoyed cooking and baking, gardening with her husband and sharing the fruits of their labors with family and friends. She avidly knitted and crocheted, leaving many of us with treasured pieces for our homes. Vera and Harry also enjoyed their 10 years of operating the Doukhobor Restaurant at the Doukhobor museum site. She was predeceased by her parents, her brother Walter C. Kanigan and his wife Nellie, her brother Cecil Kanigan and his wife Polly and her sister Nellie Voikin and her husband Alec; her daughter Vera, and her grandson Alixander Fominoff. She is survived by her son Lawrence (Ev) Voykin and daughters Holly, (John)Strilaeff, Pam (Fred) Fominoff, Wendy (Nick Plotnikoff) Voykin, 5 grandchildren, 2 great grandchildren, and many nieces and nephews. We would like to thank all staff at the Castlegar Emergency Care Centre for their care of our mother during her final moments, theKootenay Psalmists, Ootischenia Cooking group and gravediggers, the staff at the Castlegar Funeral Chapel, our relatives, friends, and neighbours for their kind expressions of sympathy, phone calls, cards, donations, food and visits. Thank you to John Verigin Jr. and Laura Verigin and family for your kind and comforting words. Thank you to Peter Zaytsoff for officiating at the service. In lieu of flowers mourners are requested to make a donation in Vera’s name to the John J. Verigin Memorial Fund.
Natasha Zelina Soukoroff Sadly the family of Natasha Soukoroff, of Pass Creek, wishes to announce her passing at her home, on Saturday, March 28, 2015 blessed with 90 years of life.
Snow Busters awarded Castlegar’s Snow Busters were given an award just before the council meeting on Tuesday. Not all Snow Busters were in attendance but their work is appreciated no less. The City of Castlegar’s Snow Buster program is about acknowledging individuals that help out in the community by clearing snow without being asked or expecting thanks. Most residents live within steps of a senior or a neighbour with a disability, and in many cases someone is already providing a helping hand. Photos by Nel Vandergaag
Natasha was born in Crescent Valley on May 3, 1924 to parents Anuta and Zahar Barisoff and was the only daughter with three older and one younger brother. In 1944, she married Sam Soukoroff and they raised three children. She was predeceased by her husband Sam, her daughter Kathy, her grandson Robert and her brothers Mike , Freddie, Pete and Alex. Left to mourn Natasha’s loss is her daughter Irene (Brian) Bebelman and son Dan (Liza), both of Pass Creek, her grandsons Kyle and Aaron Bebelman and Clayton Moll, her granddaughters Kendra and Aleah Soukoroff and great-grandson Randy Moll. Arrangements were in care of Castlegar Funeral Chapel. Funeral Services were officiated by Ernie Verigin at the Brilliant Cultural Centre on Thursday, April 2, 2015 followed by interment in Pass Creek Cemetery. “MAY SHE REST IN PEACE IN GOD’S HEAVENLY KINGDOM”
NOTICE OF PUBLIC MEETING 2015 BUDGET and the 2015-2019 FIVE YEAR FINANCIAL PLAN The City of Castlegar is undertaking a public consultation process in preparing the City’s 2015 Budget and Five Year Financial Plan. The City’s Financial Plan includes decisions about General Operations, Water Utility, Sewer Utility, and Airport Operations. It includes determinations regarding taxation, utility rates, and service levels provided to the community as well as information on the City’s proposed capital improvement program for the years to come. The City seeks your input and your submissions at a public, open house, meeting on:
A PLACE TO REMEMBER LOVED ONES
Tuesday, April 21, 2015 From 4:30 pm to 7:00 p.m. (Presentation at 5:30 pm) in the Community Forum 445 13th Avenue, Castlegar, BC
To honor your loved one in the Castlegar News, please contact us at 250-365-6397 or by email: classifieds@castlegarnews.com
If you as an individual, or your organization, would like to make budget submissions to City Council, or if you wish to receive further information, please contact the City of Castlegar at (250) 365-7227 or by e-mail at awbuss@castlegar.ca
www.castlegarnews.com A19
Castlegar News Thursday, April 9, 2015
Community The Kootenay Library Federation presents authors Mark Forsythe and Greg Dickson bia—the highest per capita rate of enlistment in the country. Of that contingent, 6,225 died in battle, a critical loss to a fledgling province of barely 400,000. Compiling stories, artifacts and photos sent in by BC Almanac listeners from across the province, this volume tells of submarine smuggling, bagpipes lost on the battlefield and of the ongoing struggles by soldiers who made it home. It tells of battles that set records for mass death amid conditions of unequalled squalor, but also of the heroism of front-line nurses and soldiers like George Maclean, a First Nations man from the Okanagan, who won the Distinguished Conduct Medal. By turns devastating, harrowing, insightful and miraculous, these stories reveal much about the spirit and resilience of a people who survived one of history’s greatest disasters to build the province we have today. Mark Forsythe was the longstanding host of CBC Radio One’s BC Almanac. Raised in Toronto, Forsythe moved to BC in the mid-seventies and has come to know the province well through broadcasting assignments in Smithers, Prince George, Prince Rupert, the Okanagan and Van-
Submitted to the Castlegar News Author and broadcaster Mark Forsythe and journalist Greg Dickson will be in Grand Forks giving a presentation about their most recent book, From the West Coast to the Western Front: British Columbians and the Great War (Harbour Publishing, $26.95). Come down to the Castlegar & District Public Library (1005 3rd Street) on Friday, April 17 at 7:00pm. It has often been observed that the First World War jolted Canada into nationhood, and as Mark Forsythe and Greg Dickson show in this compelling book, no province participated more eagerly in that transformation or felt the aftershock more harshly than British Columbia. In From the West Coast to the Western Front, Forsythe, host of CBC Radio’s mid-day show BC Almanac, marks the 100th anniversary of World War I by teaming with historian Greg Dickson and the ever resourceful BC Almanac audience to compile a sweeping portrayal of that crucial chapter of BC history. Of the 611,000 Canadians who fought for King and Country, 55,570 were from British Colum-
From The West Coast to the Western Front: British Columbia and The Great War
couver. Greg Dickson was a journalist and producer at CBC radio and television for over 20 years. He also taught journalism at the British Columbia Institute of Technology. Mark Forsythe and Greg Dickson’s other books include The BC Almanac Book of Greatest British Columbians and The Trail of 185, both from Harbour Publishing. This free event is made possible with the assistance of the Canada Council for the Arts. For more information about the book or the event, go to www. harbourpublishing.com.
CASTLEGAR SUNRISE 2000 ROTARY'S 16TH ANNUAL
WINE FESTIVAL
CELEBRATING BC WINES & WINERIES
The Castlegar Sunrise 2000 Rotary Club THANKS the following businesses for their generous support of the 16th Annual Wine Festival: Champagne Sponsors
99.3 the Goat/Juice 103.5 FM Castlegar News Super 8 (Castlegar, Kelowna) Sandman Hotel (Castlegar, Vancouver) WL D-synz Interior Design & Decor Specialist The Element Club/Bar/Grill Zellstoff Celgar Pacific Coastal Airlines Joey’s Restaurants Kalawsky Chevrolet Buick GMC Heritage Credit Union Bon Appetito Catering Oglow’s DIG Garden Centre
Cabernet Sponsors
Big Grizzly Enterprises (Gordon Malcolm) Bubblees Liquor Store Plus Castlegar Toyota Chances Castlegar Glacier Honda Helena Margareta Jennifers Chocolates (Nakusp) Kel Print Lon Middleton, Coeur d’Alene NuFloors Oliver Rotary Club OxyHealth Canada (Debbie Justus) Silver Sage Winery Spokane Valley Sunrise Rotary Teck Trail Operations Ted Allen’s Jewellery The Brick USCC Kootenay Men’s Group Van Houtte Coffee Services (Kelowna)
Winemates & More Inc. Heather’s on Fourth Images by Leslie Marnie’s Hair & Nails, Studio UNO Hair by Maria
Chardonnay Sponsors
A & W Restaurant (Castlegar) Anna McCullagh, RMT Ainsworth Hot Springs Resort Arby’s Au Soleil Levant French Bakery (Nelson) Bagels & Brew Bee Glade Farms Benedict’s Steakhouse and Tunnel Neighbourhood Pub BC Wine Guys (Nelson) Birchbank Golf Black Rooster Classic Bar & Grill Brandt Tractor Ltd. Café Books Café Michael (Trail) Canada Safeway (Castlegar) Canadian Tire Cartwrights Pub & Liquor Store Castlegar & District Recreation and Aquatic Centre Castlegar Chamber of Commerce Castlegar Communities in Bloom Committee Castlegar Golf Club and RV Park Castlegar Massage Therapy Clinic Chameleon Restaurant Chopsticks Chinese and Japanese Cuisine City Furniture City of Castlegar
Coeur D’Alene Casino (Worley) Columbia Power Corporation Common Grounds Cottonwood Kitchens (Nelson) Corix Utilities Dardesign Handwovens Discover Wines (Kelowna) Dr. Christi Hartman, BSc,ND (Nelson) Dr. Diana Draper, BA,ND Dr. Don Ellis Earth Lab Cosmetics Enso Hair Design Fashion Foundations Gabriella’s Restaurants Ltd. (Rossland) Gift Box Georama Growers Jacquie Hamilton Hall Printing (Trail) Hedy Oleski Ho Jo Designs Judy Dallas JJ’s Fashions Kanigan Wood Design Karen Cook (Post Falls, Idaho) Keshia Clancy, RMT (Nelson) Kootenai River Inn, Casino and Spa (Bonner’s Ferry) Kootenay Country Store Cooperative (Nelson) Kootenay Floral & Gift Boutique Kootenay Market Kootenay Savings Credit Union Kootenay Smokehouse Wood Fired Pizza Kootenay Valley Water and Spas Kutenai Clothing Company Ltd. (Nelson)
Lemon Creek Lodge Lynn Gourndry – Treasure Shop Lions Head Smoke and Brew Pub Little Bear Clubhouse Lordco Parts Ltd. Mallard’s Source for Sports Martech Electrical Marwest Industries Ltd. Mountain Baby (Nelson) Natasha Palov, BSc., D.O. Osteopath (Nelson) Ncompass Arts (Wilma Hughes) Nel Rodenberg Nelson Brewing Co. Ltd. No Frills Oso Negro (Nelson) Otter Books (Nelson) Party Lites (Diane Sherbinin) Pennywise Pharmasave (Castlegar) Plaza Bakery & Gelato Bar Sage Tapas & Wine Bar (Nelson) Saputo Foods (Nelson) Scottie School of Highland Dance Selkirk Massage Therapy Shoes for the Soul (Nelson) Shoppers Drug Mart Silvs Consulting Sound West Sales & Service (Trail) Tea Garden Salon & Spa (Nelson) The Grand Liquor Store (Nelson) The Greek Oven Through the Looking Glass (Nelson) Thrums Market Tim Hortons Totem Travel (Trail) Trowelex Rental and Sales United Rentals (Castlegar) Uptown Liquor Store
Uptown Subway (Castlegar) Villagers Inn Hotel and Pub (Fruitvale) Warfield Liquor Store Whitewater Ski Resort Woodworkingal—Shelly LeBeau
Cellar Sponsors
Arrow Lake Veterinary Hospital Avenues Hairdesign Ltd. Canadian Tire Castlegar Veterinary Hospital Ltd. Crumbs Bakery Cafe Ernie’s Used Auto Parts Golder Associates Ltd. Ferraro Foods H Sporte (Van Hellemond) Hil-Tech Contracting Limited IRS Independent Respiratory Services Inc. JMK Kitchens & Custom Woodworking Ltd. Kalawsky Chevrolet Buick GMC KFS Krueckl Financial Services Ltd. Kootenay Smile Studio Markin Childs Professional Accountants Martech McEwan and Company Law Morrison Insulation Ltd. RHC Insurance Brokers Ltd. Scotties Marina Ltd. Sun Life Financial Thompson, LeRose & Brown Trowelex Rental and Sales Wee Green Bean West Kootenay Mechanical Yule Anderson
A20 www.castlegarnews.com
Thursday, April 9, 2015 Castlegar News
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Information CANADA BENEFIT Group Do you or someone you know suffer from a disability? Get up to $40,000 from the Canadian Government. Toll-free 1-888511-2250 or www.canada benefit.ca/free-assessment
FIND EVERYTHING YOU NEED IN THE CLASSIFIEDS
Employment Business Opportunities HIGH CASH producing vending machines. $1.00 vend = .70 profit. All on location in your area. Selling due to illness. Call 1-866-668-6629 for details.
Drivers/Courier/ Trucking
Employment Business Opportunities HIP OR knee Replacement? Problems walking or getting dressed? The disability tax credit $1,500 yearly tax credit. $15,000 lump sum refund (on avg). For assistance call: 1844-453-5372.
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HAIR STYLIST REQUIRED with min 1 year experience Drop off resume at 2327 - 6th Ave Castlegar Ph 250-304-6933
DRIVERS WANTED
AZ, DZ, 5, 3 or 1 w/ Airbrake • Guaranteed 40hr. Work Week & Overtime • Paid Travel & Lodging • Meal Allowance • 4 Weeks Vacation • Excellent Benefits Package Must be able to have extended stays away from home. Up to 6 months. Must have valid AZ, DZ, 5, 3 or 1 with airbrake license and have previous commercial driving experience. Apply at:www.sperryrail.com, careers & then choose the FastTRACK Application.
Education/Trade Schools INTERIOR HEAVY EQUIPMENT OPERATOR SCHOOL. NO Simulators. In-the-seat training. Real world tasks. Weekly start dates. Job board! Funding options. SignUp online! iheschool.com 1-866-399-3853
Medical/Dental MEDICAL TRANSCRIPTION! In-demand career! Employers have work-at-home positions available. Get online training you need from an employertrusted program. Visit: www.CareerStep.ca/MT or 1855-768-3362 to start training for your work-at-home career today!
Trades, Technical Commercial Transport/ Heavy-Duty Mechanic International & or Cummins engine exp. would be an asset. CVIP endorsement pref. Check us out at: www.wilsonandproctor.com Email or fax, 250-385-1741 mike@wilsonandproctor.com
GPRC, FAIRVIEW Campus, Alberta urgently requires a Heavy Equipment Technician Instructor to commence immediately. Visit our website at: www.gprc.ab.ca/careers.
Help Wanted
Help Wanted
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Classifieds Get Results! ARE YOU EXPERIENCING FINANCIAL DISTRESS? Relief is only a call away! Call Shelley Cameron Estate Administrator at 877-797-4357 today, to set up your FREE consultation in Nelson. Donna Mihalcheon CA, CIRP 33 years experience BDO Canada Limited Trustee in Bankruptcy 200-1628 Dickson Avenue, Kelowna, BC V1Y 9X1
Garden & Lawn Rototilling Call Dana 250-365-0110
Weekly pay, Full benefits, LTD, Group Life, and RRSP matching If you have interest in this position and meet the stated requirements, please submit your resume and drivers abstract in confidence to Liam at liam @ keehumanresources.com Please include “Grand Forks” in the subject line of your email or call 1-877-670-3426
Reference Number 1503 Reporting to the Director Finance, the Finance Administrative Assistant provides a range of administrative support services to the Director of Finance, the Controller, and the Manager of Financial Reporting. The Administrative Assistant will be an integral part of the Finance team that produces a high volume of work, will keep departmental projects and commitments on track, serves as the liaison between the Director and other members of the Executive Leadership Team, and is the primary communication contact for the Director. The ideal candidate will be a secondary school graduate with certification in an area such as Business Administration or Professional Administrative Leadership; possess advanced to expert level proficiency in MS Office applications, a good working knowledge of VISIO and Adobe; be self-motivated, flexible, and communicate effectively. Qualified applicants interested in joining a dynamic team are encouraged to visit the Careers section of columbiapower.org for the detailed job description. Closing date for this position is April 22,, 2015. Please refer to reference #1503 when submitting your application.
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What we need from you: • 1 years Class 1 experience • Clean abstract • Clean criminal record • Copy of resume
Administrative Assistant, Finance
Help Wanted
Class 1 Drivers We are looking for drivers to do runs from Grand Forks BC to Spokane WA. We will have a night shift starting around 8pm. The driver’s will work 10-12 hour shifts paid at $25/ hr in a dedicated new Freightliner day cab.
career opportunity
The Castlegar & District Community Complex (CDRD) is currently inviting applications to apply for the position of Recreation Leader for our summer camp programs beginning June 22nd and ending August 19, 2015. This posting, along with a detailed job description, can be found on our website at www.rdck.ca under Administration, Jobs. If you have any questions about this opportunity please email Human Resources at the email address below. Submit all applications in the form of a resume and cover letter to RDCK Human Resources by email, or traditional mail by noon April 24, 2015 – 4:00 pm to be considered for this opportunity.
Keep your child safe in the car. Learn how to teach your child car safety. Call 1-877-247-5551 or visit ChildSeatInfo.ca
Human Resources, Regional District of Central Kootenay Box 590, 202 Lakeside Drive, Nelson, BC V1L 5R4 E-mail: humanresources@rdck.bc.ca Phone: (250) 352-8193 Thank you for your interest in working with the Regional District of Central Kootenay. All submissions will be acknowledged although only those individuals shortlisted to participate in the interview process will be contacted again.
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Castlegar News Thursday, April 9, 2015
Merchandise for Sale
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Misc. for Sale Affordable Steel Shipping Containers for sale/rent 20’ & 40’ Kootenay Containers Castlegar 250-365-3014 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 1-800-5666899 Ext:400OT. STEEL BUILDINGS. “Spring sales with hot savings!” All steel building models and sizes are now on sale. Get your building deal while it’s hot. Pioneer Steel 1-800-668-5422 www.pioneersteel.ca
Topsoil, Sand, Road Gravel Fill with delivery call for prices 250.359.7188 c:250.304.8158 Rubber Tire Backhoe, Mini Excavator & dump truck service
Misc. Wanted Private Collector Looking to Buy Coin Collections, Silver, Antique Native Art, Estates + Chad: 250-499-0251 in town.
Real Estate For Sale By Owner For Sale: Two rentals on large lot in Brilliant or live in one and the other should pay for the mortgage. $165,000 Phone 250.365.0020
Rentals Mobile Homes & Pads Mobile Home in Thrums 2 Bdrms, addition, deck F/S, W/D, very small pets ok 250-304-9273
Homes for Rent Brilliant, 4 Bdrm, 1.5 bath F/S, DW, W/D, N/P, N/S, lrg yard, covered deck, hot tub $1200/mth + utilities, reference required, 403-402-9817 Avail April 16th Central Castlegar, 3 Bdrm. 1-1/2 bath, N/S, No dogs Walkout Basement & garage Avail Immed, 250-365-4823 Trail 2 BDRM, full Basement, nice view, off street parking, F/S, W/D, N/S, N/P $850 month Call 250.365.5003
Office/Retail For Rent or Lease 1500 square feet of prime space in downtown Castlegar. Avail. May 1st 2015 Phone 250.365.7500
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Transportation
Auto Financing YOU’RE APPROVED • YOU’RE APPROVED
• BANKRUPTCY • NO CREDIT • • BAD CREDIT • FIRST TIME BUYER • • CREDIT CARD CONSOLIDATION • • QUICK APPROVALS • • YOU WORK - YOU DRIVE! •
YOU’RE APPROVED 1-800-961-0202 for Pre-Approval www.amford.com
• YOU’RE APPROVED • YOU’RE APPROVED • YOU’RE APPROVED •
A-CHEAP, LOWEST PRICES STEEL SHIPPING Dry Storage Containers Used 20’40’45’53’ and insulated containers all sizes in stock. 40’ containers as low as $2,200. Also JD 544 & 644 wheel Loaders & 20,000 lb CAT forklift. Ph Toll free 24 hours 1866-528-7108 1-778-298-3192 8am-5pm. Delivery BC and AB www.rtccontainer.com
PUZ Z LE
Cascade Cove RV Park @Christina Lake will have some fully serviced R.V. sites available for rent on a seasonable basis this spring. For info please call 250-447-9510 or 250-666-0186.
• YOU’RE APPROVED • YOU’RE APPROVED • YOU’RE APPROVED •
One Day Only Garage Sale April 11th, 9 - 2pm - Moving Household items/ Misc 2521 9th Ave, Castlegar
www.castlegarnews.com A21
YOU’RE APPROVED • YOU’RE APPROVED
Cars - Domestic 1992 Honda Civic LX, 4dr sedan, 5 speed standard. Power windows, power mirrors, power locks, in exceptionally clean condition, very well maintained, 235k, $2,800 also Volks Wagon Jetta diesel, 5 spd. 250-442-0122 / 250-4931807 1998 TOYOTA CAMRY 105,000km. Immac Cond. Well maintained. Asking $4500 - 250.365.2464 The KBR Line is seeking empathetic individuals with good listening skills to participate in our spring Volunteer Training. For applications and to learn more about this valuable training opportunity please contact us at 250-364-0274 or email: crisisline@trailfair.ca
Fight Back. Volunteer your time, energy and skills today.
CLUES DOWN 1. Grippe 2. Scientific workplace 3. Afflict 4. Construction of parts off-site 5. Cut back shrubs 6. Road furrow 7. The Nazarene author 8. Fire residues 9. 3rd tone 10. Excessive fluid accumulation 11. Fellow plotter 13. Inability to use or understand language 15. 12th calendar month 17. Greek capital 18. Communist China 21. Philadelphia sandwich 23. Neverland’s Peter 24. Medical man 27. Domesticates 29. Murdered in his bathtub 32. Dreaming sleep state 34. Drunkard 35. Double 36. Of one 39. Allow 40. Sorrowful 43. Dining hall furniture 44. Partition between 2 cavities 46. Reduce in amount 47. Where passengers ride 49. Sacred fig tree (alt. sp.) 51. Poet Edgar Allan 54. Sea eagle of Europe 59. An awkward stupid person 60. Black tropical American cuckoo 61. Whisky 62. Electrically charged atom 64. Atomic #89
CLUES ACROSS 1. Piece attached on one side 5. Flat-bottomed boat 10. Oblong cream puff 12. Czar nation 14. Jump rope fast 16. Ma’s partner 18. Ink writing implement 19. Wet spongy ground 20. “Gunga Din” screenwriter 22. Root mean square (abbr.) 23. Strode 25. Former ruler of Iran 26. Provide with a top 27. Chit 28. Actor DeLuise 30. Point midway between E and SE 31. S.E. Asian nation 33. Protein basis of cheese 35. 1976 Music Pulitzer Ned 37. Belonging to Mrs. Parks 38. Tooth covering 40. Satisfy fully 41. Animal companion 42. Fix conclusively 44. 7th day (abbr.) 45. Pouch 48. Employee stock ownership plan 50. Fastened with adhesive or masking 52. Don’t know when yet 53. Eagle’s nest 55. Early modern jazz 56. Auricle 57. Atomic #81 58. Social class of manual laborers 63. Groups of regional animals 65. Release draft animals 66. Musical notations 67. Bearing or manner
Don’t take your muscles for granted. Over 50,000 Canadians with muscular dystrophy take them very seriously.
ANSWERS
Learn more at muscle.ca
A22 www.castlegarnews.com
Thursday, April 9, 2015 Castlegar News
BUSINESS DIRECTORY Your Business Could
BE FEATURED HERE Call Christine Today! 250.365.6397
DALE’S PAINTING
• Interior, Exterior, Commercial, Residential • Texturing, Patch in Texture • Re-paint stippled ceilings • Complete wood finishing and refinishing • Airless Spraying • Free Reasonable Estimates We Appreciate Our Customers.
250.365.2725
BY
NEW LOCATION
Kootenay Society for Community Living 2224 6th Ave. Castlegar
Tuesday & Thursdays classes WDrop Ins March 24- April 23 & April 28 -May 28 • 6pm-7pm
elcome
!
250-365-6369 | email kmduff@telus.net
light housekeeping and meal preparation laundry and errands transportation to and from appointments
HAIR CARE FOR THE ENTIRE FAMILY! We carry a selection of AG & Pravana products.
fully licenced, insured and bondable
Book an appointment with Lanette, Alexa,Colleen or Christine Evenings by appointment.
Walk-Ins Monday 9:30am - 2pm | Tues - Sat 9:30am - 5pm Welcome! 2327 6th Ave. | 250-304-6933
Gwen Chernenkoff
pet walking
Genelle Travel Travel Professionals International Full Service Travel Agency at more than Online Competitive Pricing personal travel stylist 327 - 15th Avenue, Genelle, B.C. V0G 1G0 CPBC Licence no. 65928 Gordon Soukoreff, TA CC OA Call Toll free + 1 877 693-2189 or 250 693-2189 local calls
Dr. Brandy Grantham & Associates Phone: 250-304-4401
www.backinbalance.ca SECURE SELF STORAGE
Kootenay Containers
Get those those dirty Get dirty carpets carpets cleaned today! cleaned today!
SALES • RENTALS • DELIVERY 10’ 20’ 40’ 48’ Units Available
Ph: 250.365.3014
SALES DISCOUNTS AVAILABLE
Certified Groomer
JULIE’S
rd Free scotchga rch! a M for month of
SELF STORAGE • RESIDENTIAL & INDUSTRIAL
1875 Robson Access Rd. (Brilliant) Castlegar, BC kootenaycontainers@shaw.ca
Julie Gilmore
1.800.747.8253
Proudly serving the South and Central Kootenays since 1987
New Location! 1279 Columbia Rd Ootischenia
DOG HOUSE
250.365.0881
www.centralcarpetDoctor.ca
1.800.747.8253 www.centralcarpetDoctor.ca Proudly serving the South and Central Kootenays since 1987
Juans Flooring Hardwood Floors Wholesale GIT ‘ER GROUND!
3Z STUMP GRINDING Robin Zurwick and Sons 250-304-5763
rzurwick@gmail.com
100% Canadian - Maple & R Oak 2 1/4 x 3/4 pref Bistro $4.39/SF North Plank 3 1/4 x 3/4 $5.39/SF Import Eng H/S (Smooth) from $3.99/SF Cork click or glue down from $2.49/SF Bamboo - Slate
At Juan’s, 1503 Hwy 3A Thrums (Castlegar) B.C. Mon to Sat 8:30 am to 5:00 pm (250)399-6377
DISCOVER CHEVROLET
THE MOST AWARDED CAR COMPANY IN NORTH AMERICA FOR 2014
ELIGIBLE CUSTOMERS $ RECEIVE UP TO
1,500 IN OWNER CASH
LTZ MODEL SHOWN
STARTING FROM
$17,995
FEATURES:
ALL 2015’s COME WITH CHEVROLET COMPLETE CARE:
2 ‡
10 STANDARD AIR BAGS > POWER WINDOWS, LOCKS, MIRRORS
+
LTZ AWD MODEL SHOWN
YEARS/40,000 KM COMPLIMENTARY OIL CHANGES **
5
YEARS/160,000 KM POWERTRAIN WARRANTY ^^
5
YEARS/160,000 KM ROADSIDE ASSISTANCE ^^
GET A NEW CHEVROLET CAR OR CROSSOVER EVERY
††
NOW WITH ONSTAR AND XM WITH OUR 24 MONTH LEASES!
NO CHARGE
2 YEARS 2015 CRUZE LS
LEASE $90 BI-WEEKLY, THAT’S LIKE:
$45 @0% FOR24 $0 WEEKLY
¥
AUTOMATIC TRANSMISSION AIR CONDITIONING
MONTHS
STARTING FROM
POWER WINDOWS, LOCKS, MIRRORS REMOTE KEYLESS ENTRY
BLUETOOTH 4G LTE WI-FI ~
DOWN
BASED ON A LEASE PRICE OF $16,004 . INCLUDES $500 OWNER CASH FOR ELIGIBLE CUSTOMERS††, INCLUDES $1,000 LEASE CASH, FREIGHT & PDI.
2015 TRAX LS +
THIS OFFER IS ON FWD AND INCLUDES $500 OWNER CASH FOR ELIGIBLE CUSTOMERS††, $2,300 CASH CREDITS, FREIGHT & PDI.
REMOTE KEYLESS ENTRY ONSTAR 4G LTE WI-FI ~ LTZ MODEL SHOWN
2015 EQUINOX LS
THIS OFFER IS ON FWD AND INCLUDES $750 OWNER CASH FOR ELIGIBLE CUSTOMERS††, $4,200 CASH CREDITS, FREIGHT & PDI.
$22,995
‡‡
FULLY LOADED WITH THE FEATURES YOU WANT:
17" ALUMINUM WHEELS SIRIUS XM SATELLITE RADIO
CHEVROLET.CA
OFFERS END APRIL 30TH
Call Kalawsky Chevrolet Buick GMC at 250-365-2155, or visit us at 1700 Columbia Avenue, Castlegar. [License #8917] ^^^
GET FREE OIL CHANGES FOR 2 YEARS**
ON NOW AT YOUR BC CHEVROLET DEALERS. Chevrolet.ca 1-800-GM-DRIVE. Chevrolet is a brand of General Motors of Canada. Offers apply to the purchase of a 2015 Chevrolet Cruze LS (1SA), Trax LS FWD, and of an Equinox LS FWD. Freight ($1,600, $1,650, $1,650) and PDI included. License, insurance, registration, administration fees, dealer fees, PPSA and applicable taxes not included. Dealers are free to set individual prices. Limited time offers which may not be combined with other offers, and are subject to change without notice. Offers apply to qualified retail customers in BC Chevrolet Dealer Marketing Association area only. Dealer order or trade may be required. ¥ Lease based on a purchase price of $16,004 (including $1,000 lease cash and a $446 Owner Cash) for a 2015 Cruze LS (1SA). Bi-weekly payment is $90 for 24 months at 0.0% APR and includes Freight and Air Tax, on approved credit to qualified retail customers by GM Financial. Annual kilometers limit of 20,000 km, $0.16 per excess kilometer. $0 down payment required. Payment may vary depending on down payment trade. Total obligation is $4,692, plus applicable taxes. Option to purchase at lease end is $11,312.Price and total obligation excludes license, insurance, registration, taxes, dealer fees, optional equipment. Other lease options are available. Dealers are free to set individual prices. Limited time offer which may not be combined with other offers. See your dealer for conditions and details. General Motors of Canada Limited reserves the right to amend or terminate this offer, in whole or in part, at any time without prior notice. †† Offer applies to eligible current owners or lessees of any model year 1999 or newer car that has been registered and insured in Canada in the customer’s name for the previous consecutive six (6) months. Credit valid towards the retail purchase or lease of one eligible 2015 model year Chevrolet car, SUV, crossover and pickup models delivered in Canada between April 1st and April 30th, 2015. Credit is a manufacturer to consumer incentive (tax inclusive) and credit value depends on model purchased: $500 credit available on Chevrolet Spark, Sonic, Cruze, Volt, Trax, Malibu (expect LS). $750 credit available on others Chevrolet vehicles (except Colorado 2SA, Camaro Z28, Malibu LS, Silverado Light Duty and Heavy Duty). Offer applies to eligible current owners or lessees of any Pontiac/Saturn/SAAB/Hummer/Oldsmobile model year 1999 or newer car or Chevrolet Cobalt or HHR that has been registered and insured in Canada in the customer’s name for the previous consecutive six (6) months. Credit valid towards the retail purchase or lease of one eligible 2015 model year Chevrolet car, SUV, crossover and pickups models delivered in Canada between April 1st – April 30th 2015. Credit is a manufacturer to consumer incentive (tax inclusive): $1,000 credit available on Chevrolet Spark, Sonic, Cruze, Volt, Trax, Malibu (expect LS) ; $1,500 credit available on other eligible Chevrolet vehicles (except Chevrolet Colorado 2SA, Camaro Z28 and Malibu LS). Offer is transferable to a family member living within the same household (proof of address required). As part of the transaction, dealer may request documentation and contact General Motors of Canada Limited (GMCL) to verify eligibility. This offer may not be redeemed for cash and may not be combined with certain other consumer incentives. Certain limitations or conditions apply. Void where prohibited. See your GMCL dealer for details. GMCL reserves the right to amend or terminate offers for any reason in whole or in part at any time without prior notice. ~Visit onstar.ca for coverage maps, details and system limitations. Services and connectivity may vary by model and conditions. OnStar with 4G LTE connectivity is available on select vehicle models and in select markets. Customers will be able to access OnStar services only if they accept the OnStar User Terms and Privacy Statement (including software terms). OnStar acts as a link to existing emergency service providers. After the trial period (if applicable), an active OnStar service plan is required. † Based on GM Testing in accordance with approved Transport Canada test methods. Your actual fuel consumption may vary. > Based on WardsAuto.com 2012 Upper Small segment, excluding Hybrid and Diesel powertrains. Standard 10 airbags, ABS, traction control and StabiliTrak. ^*Government 5-Star Safety Ratings are part of the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration’s (NHTSA’s) New Car Assessment Program (www.SaferCar.gov). + Insurance Institute for Highway Safety awarded 2015 Trax and Equinox the 2015 Top Safety Pick Plus Award when equipped with available forward collision alert. ‡ Purchase prices include a cash credit of $2,300 and $446 Owner Cash and apply to new 2015 Chevrolet Trax LS FWD models at participating dealers in Canada. Purchase prices of $17,995 (LS FWD) include Freight, Air Tax but exclude license, insurance, registration, dealer fees and taxes. Dealer may sell for less. Offer may not be combined with certain other consumer incentives. GMCL may modify, extend or terminate this offer, in whole or in part, at any time without notice. See dealer for details. ‡‡ Purchase price includes a cash credit of $4,200 and $670 Owner Cash and apply to new 2015 Chevrolet Equinox LS FWD models at participating dealers in Canada. Purchase prices of $22,995 (LS FWD) includes Freight, Air Tax but excludes license, insurance, registration, dealer fees and taxes. Dealer may sell for less. Offer may not be combined with certain other consumer incentives. GMCL may modify, extend or terminate this offer, in whole or in part, at any time without notice. **The 2-Year Scheduled Lube-Oil-Filter Maintenance Program provides eligible customers in Canada, who have purchased or leased a new eligible 2015 MY Chevrolet (excluding Spark EV), with an ACDelco® oil and filter change, in accordance with the oil life monitoring system and the Owner’s Manual, for 2 years or 40,000 km, whichever occurs first, with a limit of four (4) Lube-Oil-Filter services in total, performed at participating GM dealers. Fluid top offs, inspections, tire rotations, wheel alignments and balancing, etc. are not covered. This offer may not be redeemed for cash and may not be combined with certain other consumer incentives available on GM vehicles. General Motors of Canada Limited reserves the right to amend or terminate this offer, in whole or in part, at any time without prior notice. Additional conditions and limitations apply. See dealer for details. See dealer for details. ^^^ 2 years no charge OnStar Guidance Plan and 2 years no charge XM Select package valid from April 1st through April 30th, 2015. Offer valid on a 24-month lease for a Chevrolet Spark, Sonic, Cruze, Malibu, Impala, Camaro, Corvette, Trax, Equinox & Traverse. Visit onstar.ca for coverage map, details and system limitations. Services vary by model and conditions. OnStar acts as a link to existing emergency service providers. Not all vehicles may transmit all crash data. Mobile app available on select iOS, Android,™ BlackBerry® and Windows® devices. Services vary by device, vehicle and conditions. Requires active OnStar subscription. OnStar Hands-Free Calling requires an existing OnStar service contract and available minutes. Not available in certain markets. Visit onstar.ca for coverage map, details and system limitations. Available 4G LTE Wi-Fi requires compatible mobile device, active OnStar subscription and data plan. Required a factory-installed SiriusXM system. Programming subject to change. See details at siriusxm.ca. ¥¥ Comparison based on 2013 Polk segmentation: Compact SUV and latest competitive data available and based on the maximum legroom available. Excludes other GM brands. ^^Whichever comes first. See dealer for details.
Castlegar News Thursday, April 9, 2015
www.castlegarnews.com A23
Community
Grand donation
The Kootenay Robusters donated $5,000 to the KBRH Health Foundation’s Urology Campaign. Funds were raised through Robuster calendar sales. Debbie Martin (far left) and Lisa Pasin (far right) representing the KBRH Health Foundation accepted this wonderful donation. Thank you to everyone who purchased calendars and support the Robusters. Photo submitted
A24 www.castlegarnews.com
Thursday, April 9, 2015 Castlegar News
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
PENTICTON
VERNON
WEST KELOWNA
KAMLOOPS
101-2601 Skaha Lake Rd. 200-3107 - 48th Ave. (250) 493-3800 (250) 542-3000
#200 - 2180 Elk Rd. (250) 707-2600
KELOWNA
2153 Springfield Road (250) 860-2600
Villiage Green Mall (250) 542-1496
101-2601 Skaha Lake Rd. (250) 493-3800
KAMLOOPS
ANDRES CAR AUDIO WEST KELOWNA
ANDRES WIRELESS Cherry Lane Mall (250) 493-4566
KELOWNA
#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