Trail Daily Times, January 22, 2016

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Trail Legion set for haggisfilled Robbie Burns event SHERI REGNIER Trail Times

As local groups celebrate the life and work of Robbie Burns this week, a Scottish delicacy the bard found especially pleasing, will take centre stage before the Highland dancing and bagpiping begin. “Auld Scotland wants nae skinking ware that jaups in luggies: “But, if ye wish her gratefu prayer, Gie her a Haggis.” Robbie Burns has been six feet under for 220 years. But his written work titled “Address to a Haggis,” forever links the famous poet to his appreciation for haggis, a traditional Scottish fare. Widely regarded as the national poet of Scotland, Burns’ words translate to, “Old Scotland wants no watery stuff, that splashes in small wooden dishes. But if you wish her grateful prayer, give her (Scotland) a haggis!” Friends of the Bard of Ayrshire began gathering after his untimely death at age 37, reciting his ode before digging into the offal dish. Therein began the long held practice of reading the address before Robbie Burns commemoration affairs. The custom jumped continents as immigrants made their way to North America and became part of localized events - like the annual Robbie Burns dinner at the Trail Legion on Saturday. For 15 years the job of sourcing up to 100 pounds of haggis for community events has fallen to Trail bagpipe legend, Gordon Titsworth. “Sheeps and cows are the vessel and the contents are the things they (Scotsmen) would grow locally,” he said. “And being Scottish,they don’t waste a lot,” Titsworth chuckled. “There would be offal and a mixture of other things, sometimes mutton. But more what we’ve come to flavour ours with, is beef.” Depending upon who you ask, haggis is described as a savoury pudding or grand Scottish sausage, though Titsworth says it’s the latter. Tasting the meaty delicacy and choosing the final product is somewhat of an art. But for the Trail Pipe Band president, the practise is as sentimental as it is connoisseurial. “I remember when I was a kid the band held the Burns night at the Local 480 Hall,” he recalled. “There was always haggis from somewhere, though I don’t CONTINUED ON A3

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Local bagpiper Gordon Titsworth gives haggis the rightful respect the Scottish fare deserves before it’s plated up Saturday night to honour poet and lyricist Robbie Burns. Titsworth describes haggis as a grand Scottish sausage that’s been part of events honouring the Scottish bard, who was born Jan. 25, 1759 and died from pneumonia at age 37.

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Friday, January 22, 2016 Trail Times

LOCAL Today’s WeaTher Morning

Afternoon

Produce prices highly dependent upon weather, says local grocer SHERI REGNIER

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Plan ahead and make regular automatic contributions to your Retirement Savings Plan or Tax Free Savings Account. Call or drop by for more information 1577 Bay Avenue, Trail (250) 364-1515

BEAVER VALLEY LIONS BINGO Wednesdays @ 6pm Fruitvale Memorial Hall TRAIL HISTORICAL SOCIETY AGM January 28th @7:00 Colombo Lodge Games Room Guest speaker: Art Joyce “Laying the Children’s Ghosts to Rest: Canada’s Home Children in the West” Colombo Lodge Curling Classic Sorelle, Fratelli and Spouses Sunday, January 31, 2016 Sign-up by Wed. January 27th At the curling rink or Contact Pat Zanier 250-362-5825 Email: pzanier@shaw.ca

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Trail Times

One of the top stories trending in social media this week is the exorbitant price of cauliflower - in most North American grocery stores the cruciferous heads have skyrocketed to $5.99 each. In fact, at one point, five heads of cauliflower actually cost more than a barrel of oil here in the Great White North. Not so at a downtown grocery store - where the seasoned produce manager says it’s not about trends but more about a constant monitoring of weather conditions, related predictions and basing produce prices on a more even keel. “The bottom line is to get the best produce for the best price,” explained Danny Ferraro from Ferraro Foods. “And it’s all about the weather and timing.” When conditions, such as too much rain, slow the growth of a crop or too much sun ripens the product too quickly -that’s when consumers will notice shifting prices at the tills. Or the opposite, an optimal forecast can lead to bumper crops and bins overflowing with a certain vegetable or fruit that can be sold at bottom dollar. “When there is a problem

Val Rossi photo

Cauliflower prices have been trending in social media this week after crop failures bumped the price to as high as $5.99 per head. (like with cauliflower the past two weeks), they raise the price to slow people from buying,” said Ferraro. “That way everyone will have cauliflower until the next crop becomes available.”

Another example is when Florida’s citrus crops were hit with below freezing temperatures a few years ago, and fresh fruit took a hit. “The weather ruined the crops, and scarred the fruit,”

Ferraro explained. “But they made more juice, so consumers may have noticed the price of fruit juice dropped. That’s how it all works.” Each day, Ferraro continuously monitors updates on his computer and reads about weather conditions from Mexico, through California, Oregon and B.C. (depending on time of year) and notes predictions of when crops will mature or if weather will delay growth. “Why is produce the way it is?” he said. “Weather - it all comes down to the weather.” Where there’s a gap the price goes up to slow sales down, he added. Ferraro Foods is an independent store so the outlets can work with many different suppliers and prices don’t often fluctuate to the extreme. “Like celery, too much rain slows the growth,” said Ferraro, mentioning the product comes in washed, but lately it arrives with a build up of mud on the roots. “It needs water but also needs sun and heat, which reflects in the price,” he reiterated, checking his inbox for the most recent weather updates and forecasts. “My job is to make sure, using different suppliers, that we always can get the best quality and the best price. And it’s all based on weather.”

Students prepare to enter Junior Dragons’ Den CHELSEA NOVAK Castlegar News

Junior Dragons’ Den is returning to the West Kootenay. Put on by Community Futures Development Corporation since 2014, the competition is for youth from Grade 8 to post-secondary school and is based on the popular CBC show, Dragons’ Den. Asked what the idea behind the competition was, John Reed, junior initiatives coordinator for Community Futures of Greater Trail, said, “To create an opportunity for students to be creative,

inventive, learn leadership skills. We’re big advocates of financial literacy, so it’s a really nice, fun challenging way for students to either create a business or to expand an existing business, if they have one.” Youth submit applications pitching a business idea or a business improvement idea. Short listed applicants — five from each category, including Junior (Grades 8-10), Senior (Grades 11-12) and College/ University/Trades — are then assigned a mentor from the local business community who will help them refine

their business concept and turn it into a one-page business plan with financial statements. Those who make it this far will also have to create a video elevator pitch. Students will only have so long to prepare, because they’ll have to present their business plans at a regional competition in Trail on Thursday, April 21, in front of a live audience and a panel of local business leaders. The first, second and third place winners from each age category will be rewarded cash prizes and awards to go toward the start-up costs of

their business, or to expand their existing business. “The cash prizing portion needs to go toward business start-up and/or expansion, and it can also go toward continuing education or tuition,” says Reed. Winners of the regional competition will then advance to the Junior Dragons’ Den Championship 2016, also in Trail on Saturday, April 30, where they’ll face the winners from the other two regions. Interested students can apply at juniordragonsden. com; the deadline has been extended to Tuesday, March 1.


Trail Times Friday, January 22, 2016

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Haggis a staple of annual event CONTINUED FROM A1 know where it came from prefers the steaming methback then. Haggis is made od to lock the moisture in differently depending upon the casing. who’s making it - but it’s “I tend to like mine that always been a tradition.” way,” he added. Titsworth usually orders “At the Legion we serve his haggis from a producer extra gravy because a lot in Fife. Logistics forced him of people like to have the to find another local source flavour of the haggis mixed this year, though the end in.” result was just as pleasing Besides haggis, plates at - flavoursome haggis made the Trail Legion dinner are by a meat market in Kaslo. piled high with roast beef, “It will be part of the “neeps and tatties” (turnips main plate on Saturday and potatoes) and for some, night, and some people like a dram, otherwise known me, will take much more as a glass of Scotch whiskey. haggis than others,” he emThough servings are phasized. “But I really like usually polished off at it.” the Robbie Burns event, National dish aside, it’s Titsworth says haggis is not a stretch to say the key particularly tasty the folingredients of traditional lowing morning. haggis, being sheep’s pluck “If by any chance you (heart, liver and lungs), can find leftover haggis,” he minced onions, oatmeal shared. suet and spices all con“You put it in your frying tained in an animal’s stom- pan and then fry your eggs ach - may not immediately on top of it - it’s wonderful.” appeal to younger palates. For information about But some adventure- the Robbie Burns dinner some local youth recently and dance, presented Jan. had a taste, and Titsworth 23 by the Trail Legion and says a few of them even Trail Pipe Band, contact the came back for seconds. branch at 364.1422. Last fall, he was special Another little known guest for an after-school fact is that haggis has been program at the Trail and unavailable south of the District Public Library, border since 1971. The called “Passport to the ban was issued when the World.” USDA (U.S. Department of “They invite someone Agriculture) declared livefrom a different culture stock lungs could not be each week,” Titsworth ex- used as human food. plained. “So I cooked up The reasoning is not for some haggis and brought the squeamish - fluids from it down. the stomach, for example, “After I told the kids could make its way into the what it was, there were lungs of an animal during some who didn’t want to the slaughtering process. try it at all,” he chuckled. Because sheep lungs are “And some who came back a key ingredient in Scottishfor several plates.” made haggis, the product Haggis can be steamed cannot be imported to the or baked, though Titsworth States.

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More money requested for Civic Centre rink T YLER HARPER Nelson Star

Guy Bertrand photo

The dollar may be sinking and the price of food rising but nothing puts a smile on a person’s face more than seeing the price of gas go down. Thursday morning motorists were filling up on gas at 96.9 cents per litre in Trail, which was one of the lowest prices in the region according to bcgasprices.com. CASTLEGAR

SOWK MP opens constituency office CHELSEA NOVAK Castlegar News

MP Richard Cannings has a new constituency office in Castlegar. The office is located at 1695A Columbia Ave. in the

Century 21 building, with an entrance off Columbia Ave. Cannings’ schedule for visiting the office has yet to be finalized, as it needs to be planned around the House of Commons cal-

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Declining revenue from the Civic Centre’s ice arena is prompting questions about the historic building’s future. The Nelson Regional Sports Council, which manages the city-owned facility, has asked for a $20,000 increase in funding from council ahead of the 2016 budget to keep the venue afloat. The proposal, made to city council Monday, cites a $40,000 drop in ice rental revenue since 2010 as the primary reason for the request. Sports council chair Mari Plamondon downplayed suggestions the rink could close within a few years but said the annual decline in revenue is troubling. “I don’t have a crystal ball. I don’t know,” said Plamondon. “I know there are way more people who will fight to keep the Civic arena open and come up with creative ideas to do that than there are people who just want to close it. Unless there is a huge crash in ice use, I don’t anticipate that.” City council has not increased funding for the rink’s upkeep from $55,000 since 2006. That number, according to the proposal, should be $66,510 after an adjustment for inflation. Ice rental revenue peaked in 2010 at $140,000 but has steadily fallen since to $98,317 for the fiscal year ending March 2015, contributing to an overall $3,537 loss for the year.

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Friday, January 22, 2016 Trail Times

LOCAL

Crowe hosts New Year’s Debate Classic

SUBMIT TED Final results are in for the 7th annual JL Crowe Secondary Debate Tourney last Saturday. Teams participated from Nelson, Rossland, Castlegar and Trail. This year’s tournament consisted of two rounds of cross- examination in the morning and a round of impromptu style in the afternoon. The topics were: “Be it resolved that consumerism is responsible for climate change.” for the crossexamination rounds and the students had a choice of “Be it resolved that laughter is the best medicine or intelligence is enough.” for the impromptu round. In the impromptu style students were given the topic one half hour before presenting both the proposition and opposition cases. Local results for each of the schools and categories are as follows. In the novice competition, Chloe Zacharias and Bethany Worsnop of JL Crowe placed first, Dylan Gyr/Jack Ross and Suki Simmington of Wildflower School in

Nelson placed second and Jessica Smithies paired with Carter Erickson of Kinnaird Elementary of Castlegar third. Individually, Chloe Zacharias was first, Bethany Worsnop, second and Suki Simmington was third. For the debate portion of the competition the junior and senior categories were combined due to the number of teams registered in both divisions. The results for the junior category, Sophie Edney and Margaret Saville from LV Rogers Secondary came in first place, second place went to Justin Ma and Chris Mountain from JL Crowe and third place went to Hita Manhas and Jaden How from LV Rogers Secondary. Individually, Sophie Edney of LV Rogers placed first, Justin Ma of JL Crowe was second, and Hita Manhas of LV Rogers was third. Chris Mountain was fourth ((JLC), Margaret Saville (LVR) took 5thplace and Jaden How was 6th. In the senior category, the team of Maggie Chan and Hannah Flick

placed first and Shaurya Sharma and Liam Walters of JL Crowe Secondary placed second. Individually, Shaurya Sharma placed first, Maggie Chan second, Hannah Flick third and Liam Walters fourth. In the end, strong arguments were presented for the reasons behind climate change and the while the topic appeared one sided at the onset students realized the implications of time and how cyclical variations have played a role. “Intelligence is enough” brought forward interesting and fun discussion and lightened the course of the day. And yes, the negative team triumphed a number of times! Congratulations were extended to all participants and a very big thank you was given to the helpers, chairpersons/timers and the members of the community who contributed to the day’s events. The students now look forward to the last local novice tournament to be held in Castlegar and the junior and senior competition in Nelson at the end of January.

Submitted photos

Junior Division (from the left); Chris Mountain, Justin Ma, Margaret Saville, Sophie Edney, Hita Mahas, Jaden How

Novice Division (from the left); Brian Chan, Scarlet Guy, Jessica Smithies, Carter Erickson, Bethany Worsnop, Chloe Zacharias

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Remember someone special by making a donation to the Canadian Cancer Society, BC and Yukon in memory or in honour. Please let us know the name of the person you wish to remember, name and address of the next of kin, and we will send a card advising them of your gift, and your name and address to receive a tax receipt. To donate on-line: www.cancer.ca Please note our new office location – Greater Trail unit/Rossland unit c/o Canadian Cancer Society #15-835 Spokane Street, Suite 15 Trail, BC V1R 3W4 For more information, please call (250) 364-0403 or toll free at 1-888-413-9911 Email: trail@bc.cancer.ca

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Senior Division (from the left); Maggie Chan, Hannah Flick, Shaurya Sharma, Liam Walters

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Trail Times Friday, January 22, 2016

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PROVINCIAL The Kootenay Robusters Dragon Boat team is looking for new members.

B.C. economy to grow despite global turmoil Poll finds pessimistic residents hunkering down JEFF NAGEL Black Press

B.C.’s economy is forecast to grow at a healthy clip of three per cent this year despite growing global financial uncertainty that has seen stock markets plunge and the Canadian dollar swoon in tandem with the dive in oil prices. That prediction comes from Central 1 Credit Union senior economist Bryan Wu, who says the province will lead Canada in growth and should weather the global economic turmoil well, thanks to improved exports and tourism due to the weak loonie. “B.C. will continue to benefit from

low interest rates and a lower currency, despite challenges presented by a weak commodity sector,” Yu said. “Lifted by household demand and housing investment, economic growth will ease slightly from 2015 but remain moderate.” Yu also expects economic growth to average three per cent from 2017 on, with steady consumer activity and higher business investment tied to major project construction. His forecast assumes one large liquefied natural gas terminal will be built in B.C. and Yu cautioned growth would be slower at about 2.5 per cent and unemployment higher by 0.5 per cent if a new LNG plant fails to materialize. He predicts unemployment will edge up slightly in 2016 to 6.3 per cent before

declining in subsequent years. The forecast is in contrast to a new Insights West poll that shows B.C. residents have become considerably more pessimistic about the economy and many are adopting a frugal mindset as they hunker down for financial trouble. Two-in-five of those surveyed expect B.C.’s economy to decline and at least 40 per cent said they plan to slash spending on entertainment, new clothes or dining out to prepare for tougher times. The poll found 93 per cent expect to pay more for groceries over the next six months and 71 per cent expect higher real estate prices. Nearly half of respondents said they’ve worried frequently or occasionally about the value of their investments.

Smart meter system finishes under budget TOM FLETCHER Black Press

BC Hydro’s wireless grid system was officially complete at the end of 2015, with a total cost the Crown utility now projects to be $777 million. That’s $153 million below the original budget, said Greg Reimer, executive vice president, transmission, distribution and customer service for BC Hydro. It includes all the elements required by the B.C. government when it ordered the installation of the smart meter system as part of its Clean Energy Act in 2010. Reimer said in an interview the system has also exceeded the $70 million in savings projected for the first three years of operation. “We’ve realized about $100 million in benefits during that time, particularly from

operational savings,” Reimer said. “Customers are getting more accurate bills. We’ve reduced our manual meter reading reads and our bill estimates. Meter reading and billing is automated through the system.” The smart grid had its severest test at the end of August 2015 when a windstorm brought down thousands of drought-weakened trees, leaving 700,000 customers on southern Vancouver Island and the Lower Mainland without electricity. Power was restored to all areas in five days, which was half the time it took to recover from the December 2006 windstorm that flattened trees in Vancouver’s Stanley Park, Reimer said. The 2006 storm blacked out only half the number of homes of the 2015 event.

Reimer said the ability to test an entire power line after one break is repaired means the crew doesn’t have to drive the rest of the line, and can move to the next confirmed problem when repairing storm damage. BC Hydro has defended its power theft savings after NDP energy critic Adrian Dix questioned them. In a recent letter to BC Hydro CEO Jessica McDonald, Dix said the company’s estimate of power theft by marijuana growers was “magically” inflated by then-energy minister Rich Coleman in 2006, then increased again in the utility’s 2011 business case for the wireless system. Reimer said the business case projected a 75 per cent reduction in power theft, and the reduction for this fiscal year is projected at 80 per cent, as the smart grid de-

tects actual power consumption and compares it to billed amounts. While it’s officially complete, the smart grid requires ongoing maintenance and annual testing of meters to meet federal accuracy regulations. BC Hydro also plans to install more than 4,000 meters that use commercial cellular phone networks to send in readings. Those are for locations with concrete basement meter rooms that can’t reach the grid, or rural areas where it is too expensive to extend the BC Hydro wireless grid, Reimer said. There are still 1,320 BC Hydro customers who have refused to accept smart meters, opting to pay a monthly fee for manual meter reading of a mechanical meter or a wireless meter with the radio transmitter turned off.

Anyone who is interested & wants to learn more, please contact:

Kathy Hanson 250.362.9644 Debbie LeRose 250.364.0993 or Joy Andersen 250.365.3794 THE CITY OF TRAIL

NOTICE

DISPOSAL OF CHRISTMAS TREES 2016 The City of Trail in cooperation with the J. L. Crowe High School Grad Class will be conducting a pick-up of Christmas trees throughout Trail. On Saturday, January 23rd and Sunday, January 24th, students will pick up trees where you normally put your refuse out for collection and at designated drop off areas within each neighbourhood. Students will pass through your area only once, so please ensure your tree is placed in a convenient location prior to Saturday, January 23 so students do not have to walk on private property. If your tree is missed during our pick-up, you may dispose of it yourself at the McKelvey Creek Regional Landfill Site. Landfill fees may apply. NEIGHBOURHOOD DESIGNATED DROP OFF AREAS: Waneta Area ...... Waneta Village Park ...... Intersection Theatre Road & Hwy 22A Glenmerry ...... Glenmerry Underpass - Carnation Drive East Trail ...... Butler Park at Grandstand ...... & Gyro Park Parking Lot Sunningdale ...... Hillside Drive at the Y West Trail ...... Bocce Pits ...... Old Elks Parking Lot Tadanac ...... Stoney Creek Rd - old Pool Site ...... Parking Lot Public Works ...... Outside yard @ 3370 Highway Drive Miral Heights ...... Miral Heights Park Thank you, City of Trail Public Works Department

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Province aims to hire 1,600 more nurses by March TOM FLETCHER Black Press

The B.C. government is planning to catch up on its long-standing nursing shortage by hiring 1,643 full-time Registered Nurses by the end of March. Health Minister Terry Lake and B.C. Nurses’ Union president Gayle Duteil announced they have reached a staff increase agreement that has been the main obstacle to signing a new contract. The previous deal expired nearly two years ago, and the dispute over staffing was headed for arbitration. Duteil said the last BCNU contract in 2012 contained a commitment to fill these positions, but more than 1,600 have not been. “To the nurses working 16-hour shifts today, to the nurses working short in the emergency department and operating rooms across B.C., to community nurses with overwhelming caseloads, this agreement means relief is on the way,” Duteil said. Lake said the first priority is to offer full-time positions to some of the 7,000 casual nurses working in B.C. Nurses

“To the nurses working 16-hour shifts today, to the nurses working short in the emergency department and operating rooms across B.C., to community nurses with overwhelming caseloads, this agreement means relief is on the way.” GAYLE DUTEIL

from other provinces would be the next choice, and international recruiting would take place after that. “I think there will be a pool of nurses who may be moving back with their families to British Columbia, given the economic downturn in Alberta,” Lake said. By region, the plan targets recruiting of 400 nurses for Fraser Health, 300 for Interior Health, 290 for Island Health, 100 for Northern Health, 235 for Vancouver Coastal Health, 238 for the Provincial Health Authority and 80 for

Providence Health Care, which runs St. Paul’s Hospital in Vancouver. Fraser Health CEO Michael Marchbank said each nursing position costs the health authority about $100,000 a year, and the new positions can be accommodated from existing budgets. NDP health critic Judy Darcy questioned whether that many nurses can be hired in little more than two months, after the original 2012 promise to hire more than 2,000 nurses has only resulted in about 500 up to now. “We know that the long waits for hip replacement, knee replacement, you name it, has been due to shortages, including nursing shortages,” Darcy said. “We’ve been paying incredible overtime. Huge burnout, high injury rates, wait lists, hallway medicine, all of those things are a consequence not having met this promise.” Duteil said 16-hour shifts have become “the new normal” for many RNs, and the agreement is a relief. She urged casual nurses in B.C. to contact the union by email immediately at hireanurse@bcnu.org to express interest in the new positions.

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OPINION

Friday, January 22, 2016 Trail Times

Published by Black Press Tuesday to Friday, except statutory holidays SECOND CLASS MAIL REGISTRATION #0011

1163 CEDAR AVENUE TRAIL, B.C. V1R 4B8

OFFICE Ph: 250-368-8551 Fax: 866-897-0678 NEWSROOM 250-364-1242 SALES 250-364-1416 CIRCULATION 250-364-1413 editor@trailtimes.ca publisher@trailtimes.ca

All rights reserved. Contents copyright by the Trail Times. Any reproduction of material contained in this publication in whole or in part is forbidden without the expressed written consent of the publisher. It is agreed that the Trail Times will not be responsible for errors or omissions and is not liable for any amount exceeding the cost of the space used and then only such portion where the errors actually appeared. We reserve the right to edit or reject any submission or advertisement that is contrary to our publishing guidelines.

Guy Bertrand EDITOR

Valerie Rossi

Jim Bailey SPORTS

Sheri Regnier NEWS

Kevin Macintyre Shannon McIlmoyle PRODUCTION

Dave Dykstra

SALES

Jeanine Margoreeth CLASSIFIED ADS

Lonnie Hart

Michelle Bedford CIRCULATION

Chuck Bennett PUBLISHER

Should we care if the rich are getting richer?

S

o just 62 people own as much wealth as the bottom half of all humanity put together. That number decreases every year, but it’s like we’re waiting for the point where it’s only one person who is as rich as half of humanity before we’ll be impressed. Either we’re becoming jaded by constant reports of income inequality, or we’re not paying attention because we’re being asked to draw the wrong conclusions. Probably both. International charity Oxfam releases a report on global wealth inequality every January. This year’s report just happens to come right before the rich and powerful gather at Davos, Switzerland, for the World Economic Forum. Oxfam’s report is giving the politicians there a gold-plated opportunity to talk about the wrong things. It is true, the share of global wealth is concentrating in evergreater extent on the top percentile of people. In 2010, it took 388 people to amass as much wealth as the bottom 50 per cent of people in the the world, according to Oxfam. That dropped to 177 people in 2011, then 159 in 2012, plummeting to 92 in 2013, and in the global economic struggles beginning in 2014, a slight drop to 80. Now, it’s 62. But that’s not the information that should outrage us the most, or the item that decision-makers should concentrate on. The report

is just data. and it includes all the What should usual suspects. But outrage is how smack in the middle little this group of that list is Garrett gives back, conCamp, owner of the sidering their Canadian arm of Uber vastly disproporand a major web detionate wealth. veloper. Oxfam reAs fellow Troy Media ports that of the columnist Robert GREG fortunes of this McGarvey wrote, Uber group, about $7.6 doesn’t pay taxes. The trillion resides in drivers are expected Troy Media the accounts of to, but 20 per cent of tax havens. every Uber ride goes to a holding Are you weary of being asked to company in the Netherlands, which contribute, over and over again, to pays another holding company in alleviate the worst effects of pov- the Netherlands for the right to erty in Africa? Oxfam reports al- Uber’s intellectual property, which most a third of the total wealth is not taxed in that country. From of that continent is held offshore. there the money goes to an offshore Gabriel Zuchman of the University haven owned by the top holding of California Berkeley estimates company in San Franscisco. that $14 billion has been lost as The scheme is used by a lot of inrevenue for African countries to ternational companies whose payimprove their own economies and ments occur online and which don’t infrastructure for education and become real money until they’re health care. out of reach of the tax departments In my view, that’s more impor- of the countries where the paytant than the data of mere inequal- ments were made. ity. In fact, Oxfam says 188 of 201 But don’t think it’s just Africa leading global companies use offthat offends in this way. shore havens to avoid helping to A sidebar to the Oxfam report keep the infrastructure of the econtells us that five Canadians hold omies that generate their wealth in the equivalent wealth of the bottom good condition. 30 per cent of all Canadians. That’s Uber drivers use the road, they more than 11 million people. block the parking stalls and the Global News has the list posted, bike lanes of big cities - why doesn’t

NEIMAN

the parent company contribute like their licensed taxi competitors and everyone else? That’s where the anger should be focused. Canada’s former Conservative government refused to accept data offered to them listing the biggest Canadian tax cheats, who collectively owe hundreds of millions if not billions of dollars to the nation. Canada helped build their wealth, why shouldn’t they support our nation according to law? There’s plenty of criticism of Oxfam’s methodology and reporting. Yes, CEO salaries increased almost 1,000 per cent since 1982, while worker salaries increased a mere 10.9 per cent. But wealth is not a finite pie. In that time, the value of S&P 500 companies increased by more than 500 per cent. That’s a whole lot of new wealth, reflected in the value of millions of Canadians’ RSP accounts - at least those who invested and held through the numerous cycles over the years. I don’t like seeing the egregious wealth-taking the world talks about. But what I hate more is how we ignore the ability of the superrich to thumb their noses at taxpaying slobs like us who build the economy that makes them so rich. Greg Neiman is a freelance editor, columnist and blogger living in Red Deer, Alta.


Trail Times Friday, January 22, 2016

www.trailtimes.ca A7

LETTERS & OPINION

Missed an important notice? Visit www.trailtimes.ca

Economic ‘rebalancing’ sets us up for more pain

T

here’s nothing like an economic downturn to remind westerners why they resent some of the attitudes emanating from the smug, self-righteous elites of Ontario. Some of this clique - not all, but an annoying minority - are exhibiting signs of schadenfreude: you know, barely concealing the glee they feel at Alberta’s and Saskatchewan’s oil-glut driven reversal of fortunes. As thousands of westerners (and, by the way, Ontarians, East Coasters and others) lose their jobs and see their termination packages run out, there is talk in Ontario about how Canada DOUG should seize this opportunity to “rebalance the Troy economy.” Rebalancing is code talk: It means that with a low, low Canadian dollar (hovering a bit below 70 cents US), central Canada’s manufacturers have a chance of recovering. The theory goes that they would do this by cranking out products offered to the world at prices discounted by Canada’s sagging currency. Armed with these theoretical new fortunes, Canada can accelerate its shift away from being a commoditybased economy. A particular target for the economic revolution, not surprisingly, is the beleaguered oilsands industry. “Certainly, it makes no sense in climate-change terms to keep the Alberta oilsands,” writes Toronto Star columnist Thomas Walkom. “Increasingly, it makes less sense economically.” Let’s pause for a moment to consider those words. Underlying them is the assumption that: a) the “tar sands” are ethically wrong, b) that low commodity prices are somehow bringing about a good,

and c) central Canada’s manufacturing sector can recover enough to lead a recovery. It’s time to do a reality check on these assumptions: Evil oilsands: There is no question that the oilsands in Alberta and Saskatchewan have been high-emission sources of crude oil. The trend, however, has been steady progress in reducing those greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions over time. An industry group, the Canadian Oil Sands Industry Alliance, reports that member companies have shared 814 distinct technologies and innovations that are improving environmental performance. Between 1990 and 2011, oil sands GHG emissions per Media barrel were reduced by 26 per cent, according to Natural Resources Canada. Globally, the oilsands produce a tiny fraction of the world’s GHGs. In 2010, for example, GHG emissions from European electricity generation alone were more than 25 times greater than emissions from the oilsands. There is even greater growth in emissions from emerging economies. Around the world, GHG emissions grew by 40 per cent between 1990 and 2011. In the same time period, Canada’s share has been less than two per cent. Low commodity prices: Whether it’s B.C.’s softwood, Manitoba and Saskatchewan’s grain and pulses or Alberta’s oil, commodities have sustained Canada’s economy throughout much of its history. Low prices gut the economy and leave large portions of the country with no economic foundation. It forces the country to look to manufacturing as a go-to saviour, but . . . Manufacturing’s chances: It

FIRBY

is a misguided fantasy to think that manufacturing can achieve a sustained recovery. Take the auto industry in Ontario as a telling example. Canada’s share of North American auto output is at its lowest level since 1987. In 2014, global auto makers announced investments of US$7 billion in Mexico, including three new assembly plants. In the same year, the industry invested just more than one-tenth of that in Ontario, according to the Center for Automotive Research (CAR), an industry think tank in Ann Arbor, Mich. Will a low dollar turn things around? Not now, when Mexico’s wages are about US$8 an hour while Canadian autoworkers receive US $50 in wages and benefits. In addition, Mexico offers location and market access advantages. The aerospace industry is doing no better. Last year, aircraft (and train) manufacturer Bombardier needed a $1 billion bailout to keep the doors open. So, back to reality. Canada’s economic health still hinges on the export of commodities, and the largest portion of that has been oil and gas. Further, companies in Canada are developing technologies to deliver these products sustainably - technology that can be used by others around the world. There’s no going back to the myth of the good old days of a manufacturing-driven economy. We must recognize how the world has changed around us. Trade deals like the TransPacific Partnership will take our traditional markets (primarily the U.S.) away from us if we don’t rise to the competition. For the foreseeable future, there is no viable way to “rebalance” the economy. We have no choice but to get in the game. The revenue from robust commodity prices will get us there. Doug Firby is Editor-in-Chief and National Affairs columnist for Troy Media.

LETTERS TO THE EDITOR POLICY The Trail Times welcomes letters to the editor from our readers on topics of

interest to the community. Include a legible first and last name, a mailing address and a telephone number where the author can be reached. Only the author’s name and district will be published. Letters lacking names and a verifiable phone number will not be published. A guideline of 500 words is suggested for letter length. We do not publish “open” letters, letters directed to a third party, or poetry. We reserve the right to edit or refuse to publish letters. You may also e-mail your letters to editor@trailtimes.ca We look forward to receiving your opinions.

Archived information is available for your convenience.

NEW: Recreation Infrastructure Grants Grants available for projects that focus on the construction of new and/or upgrades to existing recreational infrastructure in the Basin. Eligible projects may include backcountry trail networks, swimming pools, ice rinks, curling arenas, sports fields and parks.

Deadline for first of two intakes is Monday, March 14.

Contact Rick Allen to discuss your project at 1.250.417.3665 or 1.800.505.8998. Learn more about this program at cbt.org/recreationapply. Connect with us

cbt.org/recreationapply

M����� Q���������

Stock quotes as of closing

01/21/16

S����� � ETF� VNP-T BCE-T BMO-T BNS-T CM-T CU-T CFP-T ECA-T ENB-T FTT-T FTS-T HSE-T

5N Plus ............................. 1.22 BCE Inc. .......................... 54.01 Bank of Montreal ............. 70.97 Bank of Nova Scotia......... 52.74 CIBC .............................. 84.56 Canadian Utilities ............ 31.79 Canfor Corporation ......... 13.66 EnCana Corp. ................... 5.45 Enbridge Inc. ................... 44.66 Finning International.......... 17.85 Fortis Inc. ........................ 37.35 Husky Energy .................. 13.83

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 ........... 28.65 Mercer International ........... 7.37 National Bank of Canada . 36.29 Onex Corporation ............ 81.27 Royal Bank of Canada...... 66.83 Sherritt International ............ 0.68 TD Bank .......................... 50.18 TELUS Corp...................... 36.79 Teck Resources ................... 5.35 TransCanada Corp ........... 44.84 iPath S&P 500 VIX ............ 27.29

M����� F���� CIG

Portfolio Series Balanced ... 28.09

CIG

Signature Dividend ........... 12.57

CIG

Portfolio Series Conservative 15.67

MMF

Manulife Monthly High ... 12.752

C����������, I������ � C��������� CADUSD Canadian / US Dollar ...... 0.701

CL-FT

Light Sweet Crude Oil ....... 29.70

Gold........................... 1,101.40

SI-FT

Silver ............................... 14.09

GC-FT

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.

The big picture. That’s what we see at Kootenay Savings MoneyWorks. Let us help you develop a financial plan that meets your long-term vision. Call us today.

Mutual funds and securities related financial planning services are offered through Qtrade Asset Management Inc., Member MFDA.

John Merlo, CFP

1945B Main Street, Fruitvale 250.367.4712 1.877.691.5769


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Friday, January 22, 2016 Trail Times

KELOWNA

2153 Springfield Road (250) 860-2600

VERNON

200-3107 - 48th Ave. (250) 542-3000

PENTICTON

745 Notre Dame Drive (250) 851-8700

CASTLEGAR

1881 Harvey Avenue (250) 860-1975

ANDRES WIRELESS

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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

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VERNON

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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


Trail Times Friday, January 22, 2016 1507 Columbia Ave Castlegar 250-365-2955 1995 Columbia Ave Trail 250-364-1208

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STEWART’S COLLISION CENTER ICBC & Private 250.364.9991 2865A Highway Drive Insurance Claims

Trail-Nelson rink captures Kootenay playdowns JIM BAILEY

Times Sports Editor

The Senior Womens Kootenay Playdowns came down to a thrilling finish on the weekend at the Grand Forks Curling Club, with Marnie Matthews’ Trail-Nelson rink taking top spot. The BC senior women’s qualifiers are a new rink that combines skip Marnie Matthews and third Rose Beauchamp from Trail and Nelson curlers Carol Bennett as second and Cathy McLeod lead. Matthews and Beauchamp play in the Kootenay Savings Super League together, and teamed up with Bennett and McLeod for the playdowns. “We put this team together just a few months ago, and went to the competition and won it,” said Beauchamp. The Matthews rink completed a stunning eighth end comeback in the final, Sunday, to beat the Heather Nichol rink from Castlegar, 7-5, and win the Kootenay playdowns and a berth to the Senior Womens BC Curling championship next month. Down 4-0 after two ends, Matthews counted

2S 0E 1A 5 /S 1O 6N

Saints find road success JIM BAILEY Times Sports Editor

submitted photo

From left: Skip Marnie McLeod, third Rose Beauchamp, second Carol Bennett, and lead Cathy McLeod won the Senior Womens Kootenay Playdowns on Sunday and will go on to play in the provincials in Richmond next month. one in the third end, and practice or play many three in the seventh for bye into the final,” said stole in the fourth. games but we were able the victory. Beauchamp. Nichol made it 5-2 in to pull it off in the end.” However, Nichol In the semifinal, the fifth, but Matthews The Matthews rink went on to beat Baker Nichol beat Baker 8-2 made an unbeliev- stumbled out of the in her second match by to advance to the final able run scoring one in gate dropping its first scoring three in the final against Matthews. the sixth, and stealing match against Creston’s end to steal a 9-8 victory, The Matthews rink a single in the seventh Cherie Baker rink, be- and leave all three teams will have a little more to make it 5-4 heading fore rebounding with tied with identical 1-1 time to practice before into the eighth and final a convincing 11-3 vic- records. traveling to Richmond end. With Nichol hold- tory over the Nichol “All three teams Feb. 15-21 for the B.C. ing hammer, the Trail- rink. Matthews broke ended up with one win Senior Womens Curling Nelson foursome stole open a tight 3-3 game, so they did the draw to championship. for a third time, scoring by counting three in the the button to see who “We’re hoping to do three for the 7-5 victory. fifth, then stole two in got the bye into the as best we can,” added “We didn’t have much the sixth and another final, and we got the Beauchamp. RETIREES CURLING

Retiree skips take rare day off

TIMES CONTRIBUTOR The Mens Retiree Curling Club gave their skips a day off on the five-man teams and on four-man teams the skips played lead, often poorly. Such was the case with the Tom Hall rink, playing the Ernie Brown foursome. The turning point early in the game, was skip John Dyer’s draw to the top

BCIHL

four foot buried. A steal of one for the Hall team against possible four or five for Brown. Make the final Hall 7, Brown 6. Skip Murray Walsh, playing lead set up the first few ends perfectly against team Kevin Oliver. (Kevin also playing lead.) Sergio Peloso playing second for Walsh was deadly accurate cleaning house for skip Cliff Tyson. Make the final 10 – 2

NEXT

GAME!

Trail Retirees Club Standings Third DRAW Pt W L T HALL 8 4 0 0 WALSH 6 3 1 0 CARON 5 2 1 1 SHADBOLT 5 2 1 1 BURKE 4 2 2 0 OLIVER 4 2 2 0 SECCO 4 2 2 0 RAKUSON 4 2 2 0 DRINNAN 4 2 2 0 HANDLEY 4 2 2 0 PASQUALI 3 1 2 1 HORAN 2 1 3 0 BROWN 2 1 3 0 COLEMAN 1 3 1

for Walsh Team Brett Rakuson

got off to a strong start against team Primo Secco, leading four nothing after three ends. The turning point for the Secco rink was the sixth end when they scored a duce. Then stealing two in seven and three in eight sealed the deal. Make the final 8–5 for Secco. Team Forrest Drinnan made a tough draw for one in the first end against team Dan Horan. It proved to be

an insurmountable lead, as they stole the next five ends. Handshakes after six ends. The Harvey Handley foursome one’d team Serge Pasquali into submission. Up 4-0 after four Handley gave up three in the fifth to make it close. Harvey followed up with one in six and one in seven. Team Pasquali could only manage a deuce in eight to come up one short.

The Selkirk College Saints received a decent grade on the weekend as the BC Intercollegiate Hockey League team crammed three games into three days on the road The Saints took 5-of-6 points on the coastal road trip, beating Trinity Western Spartans 2-1 in Langley Friday, before losing 4-3 in a shootout to Simon Fraser University (SFU) Saturday, and bouncing back with a 4-3 victory over the University of Victoria Vikings in the B.C. capital on Sunday. Matt Martin and Trail native Dallas Calvin scored in the final three minutes to overcome a 3-2 deficit against the Vikes and win their 10th game of the season. Calvin netted the winner with 42 seconds to play, converting a nice setup from Ryan Edwards and Jamie Vlanich for the win, as James Prigione stopped 27 shots in goal for Selkirk. Dane Feeney and Tyler Branzsen scored the other goals for the Saints, while former Trail Smoke Eaters Cody Bardock and Ryan Edwards each had two CODY BARDOCK assists. Bardock is a new addition to the Saints, coming from Lethbridge, the 22-year-old six-foot-four, 220-pound defenceman has three assists in his first three games. Bardock played in 11 games for the Smoke Eaters in 2013-14, scoring a goal and adding four assists. The victory puts the Saints within one point of the league-leading 11-4-0 SFU. Simon Fraser’s Mathew Berry-Lamontagna scored in a shoot out, while goalie Jordan Liem denied all three Selkirk shooters in a match against the BCIHL’s top two teams. Jono Ceci scored twice to put SFU up 2-0, but two goals from Vlanich and one from Edwards gave the Saints a 3-2 lead early in the third period. However, Ceci set up Tyler Basham with 8:30 remaining to tie it and send the game to OT. Liem stopped 42 shots for SFU, while Brett Huber made 21 in net for the Saints. On Friday, Ashton McLeod broke a 1-1 tie, scoring the winner on the power play with 8:37 to play for the 2-1 victory over TWU. Feeney scored the other Saints goal to tie it at 4:45 of the first, as Prigione stopped 24 shots in net for the win, while Silas Matthys stopped 32 for the Spartans. The Saints are on the road this weekend in a match in Eastern Washinton University, before returning home Jan. 29 for a tilt versus Trinity Western.

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A10 www.trailtimes.ca

Friday, January 22, 2016 Trail Times

updates of the

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OVER

will be printed weekly 0 0 0 1 $ RIZES! in the Trail Times P IN

Trail Minor Baseball - Ages 5 to 12 -

Annual General Meeting Tuesday, January 26 7pm EZ Rock - 1560 2nd Avenue, Trail

For more info contact Lea Maniago 250.364.3989

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January 28th-January 31th

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Smokies in must-win territory

D

idn’t take empty net clincher at l o n g . the death. Less than An utter collapse, two minagainst a team playing utes, actually. its third road game The Smoke in less than 48 hours Eaters went from a - and with it perhaps DAVE team looking like a the collapse of our strong contender for hopes for BCHL playan Interior Division off action at Cominco Sports ‘n’ Things playoff spot to a Arena for the first likely also-ran in time in quite a while. just that limited time. Vernon is here tomorrow (last Playing without three of their night’s game happened between top seven scorers, Trail carried a the writing and publishing of this two-goal lead very late into the piece) and a win in that game third period Sunday, with what would keep playoff hopes alive. looked like a good chance to It will be a tough slog, even for stay tied with Vernon for fourth a healthy roster, regardless of last place, the final playoff berth, in night’s score, however, because their division. A minute and all but two of the remaining 12 43 seconds later, they were los- games on the Smoke Eater scheding by a goal - they gave up an ule are against the top teams in

THOMPSON

the division, including three, beginning with a home-and- home set next weekend, against the number one junior A team in Canada, the Penticton Vees. It was deflating for the spectators Sunday and had to be crushing for the players who had handled roster adversity fairly well for almost 55 minutes. Reality is, however, real, and the team that buoyed our expectations through December with strong results will have to be even better the rest of the way to stay in touch with playoff contention. The games are still very entertaining, exciting even, and I will continue to support the team by showing up at games. I will, however, arrive at the rink with my optimism tempered unless the circumstance improves.

NFL: final-four indicators

THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The NFL has its final four, and the oddsmakers are forecasting tight games. Considering that the divisional matchups all finished with onepossession results, this weekend’s championship games should be just as close, right? Well, maybe not in one case. The 17th and possibly final installment of the Peyton ManningTom Brady saga appropriately takes place in a conference title game. This one is in Denver, where Brady is 2-6, including a loss this season when Manning was injured and Brock Osweiler was taking snaps. So yes, there are some raised eyebrows when the betting line is placed at New England favoured by 2 1-2 points in the Mile High City. But there are also these elements to consider: -Of the four winners last weekend, New England looked the strongest. -Brady’s post-season pedigree is better than Manning’s overall. He is 22-8 in the playoffs, including 4-2 in Super Bowls. Manning is 12-13, 1-2 in Super Bowls.

-Brady also is 10-6 overall facing Manning, but the record is 2-2 in the playoffs. Of course, the Patriots quarterback is in his 10th AFC championship game, fifth in a row, and has gone 6-3. Denver’s QB is in his fifth and is 3-1, including 2-1 against Brady. That offsets the indicators favouring New England just a bit. -Health. Brady has a nagging ankle problem, but he didn’t seem affected against Kansas City, and he’s certainly closer to peak form than Manning. -Broncos coach Gary Kubiak has never been in charge of a Super Bowl team. Bill Belichick has made a habit of it. No quarterback has won five Lombardi Trophies, and Brady has that in his sights, too. It seems as if much of America dreads another trip to the big game by Belichick’s team. Time to swallow hard and ... BEST BET: PATRIOTS, 24-13 Arizona (plus 3) at Carolina Both clubs left their fans, neutral observers and probably themselves shaking their heads last weekend. The Panthers, who had the

league’s best record at 15-1, pummeled two-time defending NFC champion Seattle 31-0 in the first half. Carolina’s defence got consistent pressure on Russell Wilson and shut down the ground game. Cam Newton, Jonathan Stewart and Greg Olsen were dominant on offence. Then it all soured, the Seahawks scored the next 24 points and probably were an onside kick recovery away from forcing overtime. Newton admitted his team needs more killer instinct. Arizona displayed that trait in overtime against Green Bay, sparked by Larry Fitzgerald’s weaving 75-yard catch and run. But the Cardinals never should have needed the extra work, allowing a 60-yard completion on fourth down, then a 41-yard desperation TD pass on the final play of regulation. Each team has an outstanding defence, but the feeling here is lots of points will be had in Sunday’s late game. The majority of those points will be scored by the hosts, who have won 12 in a row at home. PANTHERS, 33-28

Some Events Include • Thursday night NDCU Variety Show • Winer Carnival Parade, downtown 6:30 pm Friday • Olaus Ice Palace live music No Excuse Friday • Olaus Ice Palace live music John Lee’s Hooker and The Wet Secrets Saturday • Pyro4ya! LED Light Show Extravaganza with hoop, staff, juggling at Olaus’ Ice Palace - Queen & Columbia • "The Game’, Rail Jam Competition, downtown 10:00 am Saturday • Sonny Samuelson Bobsled Race on Spokane Street 9:30 am Saturday

January 21, 2016 For the benefit of Kootenay Lake area residents, the following lake levels are provided by FortisBC as a public service. Queen’s Bay:

Present level: 1743.28 ft. 7 day forecast: Down 0 to 2 inches. 2015 peak:1747.14 ft. / 2014 peak:1750.37 ft.

Nelson:

Present level: 1743.12 ft. 7 day forecast: Down 0 to 2 inches.

• Family Fun Night with free night skiing at Red Mountain Resort Saturday • Fat Bike events at Red Mountain Resort For all events information - rosslandwintercarnival.com

For complete list of events please see

www.rosslandwintercarnival.com

Levels can change unexpectedly due to weather or other conditions. For more information or to sign-up for unusual lake levels notifications by phone or email, visit www.fortisbc.com or call 1-866-436-7847.


Trail Times Friday, January 22, 2016

www.trailtimes.ca A11

RELIGION Holy Trinity CWL members challenged to ‘Pay it Forward’ Following the Jan. 16 evening Mass at Holy Trinity Church, President Marjorie Nutini welcomed members to the Annual General Meeting of the CWL. Committee chairs presented highlights of the year’s work which included spiritual enrichment, educational speakers, community outreach and fundraising projects.Nutini appreciated the inspirational value of the three day Diocesan Convention hosted by Holy Trinity in May, and thanked members for their continuing dedication and collaborative efforts. Organization chair Sandra Stajduhar reported that new members will be installed at the February meeting. Spiritual advisor, Fr. Bart van Roijen, invited parishioners to attend an afternoon Lenten Reflection, Feb. 7 at Holy Trinity Church, with Parish Potluck Dinner to follow. There will be a Deanery-wide Year of Mercy Retreat on Sun. Feb. 28, at St. Rita’s Church in Castlegar, featuring guest presenters Sister Nancy Hurren, Bother Gerry Craig and Sister Phyllis Giroux. To register, contact Elizabeth at the parish office by Feb. 21. Parish activities co-chairs Linda Zol and Lorna Perri will organize the Lenten Soup and Bun lunches, with proceeds going to Development and Peace. Resolutions and Legislation chair Mary Billingsley updated members on the physician assisted suicide concern.The Supreme Court has granted the federal government a four month extension to craft new legislation.Billingsley noted that only 30% of dying people in B.C. have access to good palliative care. She encouraged members to sign the online declaration on euthanasia sponsored by the Canadian Council of Catholic Bishops and the Evangelical Fellowship of Canada at www. ethanasiadeclaration.ca During the Jubilee Year of Mercy declared by Pope Francis, CWL councils across Canada will focus on palliative care projects that express mercy towards our brothers and sisters as they reach the end of their lives. As an extension of the mercy theme, Nutini further challenged members to “pay it forward” in the month ahead by performing random acts of kindness towards fellow citizens. Spiritual chair Marlise Gattafoni led the group in a closing prayer, remembering sick members with the refrain from the Year of Mercy song, “Give us new hearts, oh Lord.” The next CWL general meeting will be Feb. 16.Parish intern Bonnie Fanaiye will speak on his “Journey to the Seminary.”

Pope changes rule for gender friendly pre-Easter rite

THE ASSOCIATED PRESS VATICAN CITY – Pope Francis has changed church regulations to correspond to his rulebreaking celebration of the Easter Week ritual of washing the feet of men and women, Christians and not, in a sign of universal service. Vatican rules for the Holy Thursday rite had long called for only men to participate, and popes past and many priests traditionally performed the ritual on 12 Catholic men, recalling Jesus’ 12 apostles. Shortly after he was elected, Francis raised conservative eyebrows by performing the rite on men and women, Christians as well as Muslims, at a Roman juvenile detention facility in Rome. On Thursday, the Vatican published a decree from the Vatican’s liturgy office. The decree said the rite can now be performed on anyone ``chosen from among the people of God.’’ It specifies that the group can include ``men and women, and hopefully young and old, healthy and sick, clerical, consecrated and lay.’’

Trail & District Churches

Jubilee Year of Mercy Pope Francis has called for a Jubilee Year of Mercy, a year in which the Church contemplates the fullness of the Father’s mercy in the person of Jesus Christ and is transformed by him. In his own reflection on Scripture, the Pope rejoices in the patient and merciful love of God, who reveals himself to a particular people and enters into intimate relationship with them. Despite their sin and their failure to remain true to him and to one another, God never gives up, but renews his commitment day by day and reveals his almighty power, not in anger or judgment, but through his infinite mercy and willingness to forgive. “Jesus Christ is the face of the Father’s mercy.” (#1). It is, by his words, his actions and his entire person the Jesus brings to fulfilment the mercy of God. At times our response may be lukewarm. We’ve been deeply hurt. We’ve witnessed the indignities that humans suffer at the

THE UNITED CHURCH OF CANADA Communities in Faith Pastoral Charge Trail United Church 1300 Pine Avenue, Trail Worship at 11am St. Andrew’s United Church 2110 1st Ave, Rossland Worship at 9am Beaver Valley United Church 1917 Columbia Gardens Rd, Fruitvale Worship at 11am Salmo United Church 304 Main St, Salmo Worship at 9am

For Information Phone 250-368-3225 or visit: www.cifpc.ca

10am Sunday Service 8320 Highway 3B Trail, opposite Walmart

250-364-1201 www.gatewayclc.com Affiliated with the PAOC Bus pickup is available.

hands of their brothers and sisters. We are overwhelmed by our own sin and the sin of the world. We want to show mercy, but the moment is not opportune. We hold back that which has been shown us. We hesitate because we are afraid to risk it - afraid to pay the price. In his Pastoral Letter, Pope Francis urges us: “The time has come for the Church to take up the joyful call to mercy once more. It is time to return to the basics and to bear the weaknesses and struggles of our brothers and sisters. Mercy is the force that reawakens us to a new life and instills in us the courage to look to the future with hope.” (#10). The world needs a credible witness to mercy, people who are willing to go beyond prejudice or a strict application of law, in order to fulfill our roles as stewards of creation, our brothers’/sisters’ keepers and witnesses to God’s mercy in our willingness to comfort, to be THE patient, to forgive SALVATION ARMY and be attentive to the genuine needs Sunday Services 10:30 am of others. ®

2030-2nd Avenue,Trail 250-368-3515

Fr. Bart van Roijen Holy Trinity Parish Trail, BC

E-mail: sarmytrl@shaw.ca Everyone Welcome

CATHOLIC CHURCH

Holy Trinity Parish Church 2012 3rd Avenue, Trail 250-368-6677 Mass Times Saturday Evening 7:00pm Sunday Morning 8:30am and 10:30am Confessions: Thursdays 9:30 - 10:00am Saturdays 4:00 - 5:00pm Pastor: Fr. Bart vanRoijen holytrinitytrail@shaw.ca www.holytrinityparish.vpweb.ca

Trail Seventh Day Adventist Church

3365 Laburnum Drive Trail, BC V1R 2S8 Ph: (250) 368-9516 trail_alliance@shaw.ca www.trailalliance.ca

1471 Columbia Avenue Pastor Leo Macaraig 250-687-1777

Sunday worship service 10:30am

Saturday Service Sabbath School 9:30-10:45am Church 11:00-12:00 Vegetarian potluck - Everyone Welcome -

Prayer first at 10:00am

St. Andrew’s Anglican Church 1347 Pine Avenue, Trail

250-368-5581

Sunday, January 24 8 a.m. Traditional Eucharist 10 a.m. Informal Family Eucharist (with children’s program) th

Contact Canon Neil Elliot

www.standrewstrail.ca

Sponsored by the Churches of Trail and area and

1139 Pine Avenue www.firstpctrail.ca

(250) 368-6066 firstpc@telus.net

Sunday, January 24 Sunday Worship and Sunday School 10AM th

Come & See

Stay & Learn

Go & Serve

Denotes Wheelchair Accessible

The opinions expressed in this advertising space are provided by Greater Trail Area Churches on a rotational basis.


A12 www.trailtimes.ca

Friday, January 22, 2016 Trail Times

LEISURE

Find out if hubbie’s complaints are genuine ANNIE’S MAILBOX

It cannot all be about the husband’s peccadilloes, even though he certainly is undermining his wife’s trust and needs to stop. But you cannot neglect your spouse, regardless of the reason, and expect things to be just fine. It doesn’t matter which one of them is more to blame. The point

TODAY’S SUDOKU 5

7

By Dave Green

1

8

HAGAR

MOTHER GOOSE & GRIMM

SALLY FORTH

6

1

3

4 6 9 4 2 1 5 8 6 4 8 2 7 5 2 1 6 4 8 5 6 3

9 7 1

Difficulty Level

TUNDRA

TODAY’S CROSSWORD

is to repair the damage and make the marriage stronger, and that will take effort from both of them. Annie’s Mailbox is written by Kathy Mitchell and Marcy Sugar, longtime editors of the Ann Landers column. Please email your questions to anniesmailbox@creators.com.

5 Urban peoplemovers 6 Karate level 7 Clutch 8 See eye-to-eye 9 Omega rival 44 Pumice feature ACROSS 10 Barrette 45 Modeling media 1 Gets stuck 11 Livy’s “Lo!” 5 -- Rice Burroughs 47 Evade, as work 12 Dwarf buffalo 49 1040 pro 10 Time can do it 13 Give temporarily 50 Contract provisos 21 Thank you, in 14 La senorita 15 At a slow tempo 51 At the same time Kyoto 53 Natural elevs. 16 Teen bane 23 Dewdrop 56 Pamplona runner 25 -- E. Coyote 17 Willowy 57 Dehydrates (2 18 Show teeth 26 Fizzy drinks wds.) 19 Desktop picture 28 Cockpit button 61 Elizabethan collars 29 High-born 20 Golfer Sam -22 Pollen and honey 65 Monthly expense 30 Blackball 66 Pet pleas (2 wds.) 31 Vampire’s shift 24 Loud arguments 69 Role for Liz 33 Tennyson’s -70 Omnia vincit -27 Business VIP Arden 71 Dwight opponent 34 -- diem 28 Keats wrote a poem about him 72 Loaf end 35 Harvest wool 73 Broadway trophy 38 George who was 32 Waugh and 74 Caribou and elk Baldwin a she 75 Padlock brand 36 Average guy 41 Balance 37 Vintage tune 43 Hence DOWN 39 Ms. Washington of 1 Boeing products 46 Mach 1 breakers blues 48 Golden State 2 Arkin or Alda 40 Recedes coach 3 Marseilles Ms. 42 Two under par 52 Quick to take 4 Earnings

2/22

Sudoku is a number-placing puzzle based on a 9x9 grid with several given numbers. The object is to place the numbers 1 to 9 in the empty squares so that each row, each column and each 3x3 box contains the same number only once. SOLUTION FOR PREVIOUS SUDOKU

7 2 4 1 3 8 9 5 6

3 5 9 7 4 6 8 1 2

Difficulty Level

offense 54 Tent dweller 55 Type of jacket 57 Confound it! 58 San -- (Riviera resort) 59 Privy to (2 wds.)

8 6 1 9 2 5 4 7 3

2 4 6 5 8 3 1 9 7

5 1 7 4 6 9 3 2 8

9 3 8 2 7 1 5 6 4

6 7 5 8 1 4 2 3 9

4 9 2 3 5 7 6 8 1

1 8 3 6 9 2 7 4 5

2016 Conceptis Puzzles, Dist. by King Features Syndicate, Inc.

tion? If I tell him how I feel about it, build up his strength.) If you do this I know it will hurt his feelings. On with sincerity and concern every the other hand, if I do nothing, I am time he complains, he will become eventually going to snap more aware of it and less and bark at him. Any likely to continue. suggestions? -- Married Dear Annie: I need to to a Kvetch address your response to Marcy Sugar Dear Married: The “Wary Wife,” whose hus& Kathy Mitchell first thing you need to do band used to go to strip is make sure his constant clubs and she doesn’t aches and pains are not, in fact, trust that he’s not looking to meet masking something worse. So the strippers. next time he grumbles, insist that he This woman works two jobs and make an appointment with his doc- they have three children. Telling her tor and go with him. If he says it’s to be more attentive to her husband “nothing to worry about,” tell him, is shocking. Why isn’t her husband “No. You’ve been complaining about there for her and for their kids? this for a long time, and I want to Why has he money to go out while be sure there is nothing seriously his wife has to work? wrong.” I think there are serious quesIf the doctor’s examination shows tions that need to be answered here. nothing beyond normal wear-and- Please reconsider your response. -tear, encourage your husband to A. get a massage, see a chiropractor or Dear A.: We appreciate that the acupuncturist, or change his work- wife is working hard, but she says in out, which could be aggravating her letter, “I will admit that I haven’t something. (If he’s not working out, been the most attentive wife,” so we suggest that he start, as it could help think she needs to work on that, too.

2016 Conceptis Puzzles, Dist. by King Features Syndicate, Inc.

Dear Annie: Please help me before I pull my hair out. I am 40 and have been married for the last eight years to a man I love more than I thought possible. We have a good relationship. We are open and talk often. My dilemma is that he complains all the time about aches and pains. Not a day goes by that there isn’t some ailment bothering him. I have tried to think back to earlier in our relationship, and I don’t recall whether he’s always done this and I had blinders on, or if his complaints have become more frequent. Granted, he has had his share of minor health problems, but so have I and many other people. I don’t want to overlook anything serious, nor do I think he is a hypochondriac, but I have found myself becoming more and more callus and dismissive of his complaints and have even caught myself rolling my eyes. This is not in my nature and I don’t like responding this way. How should I handle this situa-

1/21

60 Decorated tinware 62 Kind of collar 63 Have a hunch 64 One-and-only 67 Armed conflict 68 Lisa, to Bart

PREVIOUS PUZZLE SOLVED


Trail Times Friday, January 22, 2016

www.trailtimes.ca A13

To advertise in print:

Browse more at:

Call: 250.368.8551 Email: nationals@trailtimes.ca Self-serve: blackpressused.ca Career ads: localworkbc.ca

A division of

INDEX IN BRIEF FAMILY ANNOUNCEMENTS COMMUNITY ANNOUNCEMENTS TRAVEL EMPLOYMENT BUSINESS SERVICES PETS & LIVESTOCK MERCHANDISE FOR SALE REAL ESTATE

Announcements

Announcements

Announcements

Real Estate

Real Estate

Real Estate

In Memoriam

Information

Personals

Houses For Sale

Houses For Sale

Houses For Sale

In Loving Memory of

Serafina Naccarato January 23,2011

RENTALS ADULT ENTERTAINMENT

For information please go to the Press Council website at www.bcpresscouncil.org, write to PO Box 1356, Ladysmith, B.C. V9G 1A9 or telephone (toll free) 1-888-687-2213.

LEGAL NOTICES

AGREEMENT

Used.ca cannot be responsible for errors after the first day of publication of any advertisement. Notice of errors on the first day should immediately be called to the attention of the Classified Department to be corrected for the following edition. Used.ca reserves the right to revise, edit, classify or reject any advertisement and to retain any answers directed to the Used.ca Box Reply Service and to repay the customer the sum paid for the advertisement and box rental.

DISCRIMINATORY LEGISLATION

Advertisers are reminded that Provincial legislation forbids the publication of any advertisement which discriminates against any person because of race, religion, sex, color, nationality, ancestry or place of origin, or age, unless the condition is justified by a bona fide requirement for the work involved.

FOR INFORMATION, education, accommodation and support for battered women and their children call WINS Transition House 250-364-1543

Complaints must be filed within a 45 day time limit.

AUTOMOTIVE

It is agreed by any display or Classified Advertiser requesting space that the liability of the paper in the event of failure to publish an advertisement shall be limited to the amount paid by the advertiser for that portion of the advertising space occupied by the incorrect item only, and that there shall be no liability in any event beyond the amount paid for such advertisement. The publisher shall not be liable for slight changes or typographical errors that do not lessen the value of an advertisement.

ALCOHOLICS ANONYMOUS 250-368-5651 AL ANON 250-368-7737

The Trail Times is a member of the British Columbia Press Council. The Press Council serves as a forum for unsatisfied reader complaints against member newspapers.

Employment Drivers/Courier/ Trucking Class 1 Driver

Mamma, la canzone mia piu bella sei tu

Always in our thoughts and in our hearts forever We love you Antonio, Brenda, Maria, Mark, Lidia, Jannie, Nicole, Luke, David, Grant,Joanna, Glen, James, Sofia, Cooper, Tanner and Oliver

Sutco Seeks US Qualified Class 1 driver for Castlegar based chip hauls. Rotating shift work, extended health benefits, matched contribution pension plan, e-logs and direct deposit pay. Apply at www.sutco.ca, fax resume & abstract to 778-754-4025 call 1 888 357 2612 Ext.130

Births

ON THE WEB:

WWW .H OME T EAM . CA fect e Per y Hom l i Fam

Elliot Jeremy Aydin Plaa Kathleen Plaa and Steve Plaa are pleased to announce the birth of their grandson,

Elliot Jeremy Aydin Plaa

Impressive Home with Beautiful 2.25 Acre Property 3 Bedroom, 3 Bath, Showcase Kitchen Custom Finishing Throughout

489,000

$

Proud parents are Nathan and Jessica Plaa of Vancouver, BC.

Coming Events

Help Wanted

Help Wanted

Help Wanted

e Pric ot Newding L l Bui

g

istin wL

Ne

3397 Laurel Cres, Trail

3 Bedroom, 1 ½ Bath, Many Upgrades!

New

ce Pri

496 Buckna St, Trail

y

Apply at cbt.org/careers 1.800.505.8998

! See

7958 Birchwood, Trail

3 Bedroom, 3 Bath, Incredible Layout

74,900

mil t Fa e a e Gr Hom

Permanent, full-time in our Cranbrook office. Apply before January 27, 2016, noon PT.

49,000

$

st Mu

$

MANAGER, COMMUNITY RELATIONSHIPS

Time to Plan Your Dream House!

149,500

2 Bed, 1 Bath, Upgraded Floors, Windows & Furnace

CAREER OPPORTUNITY

1894 Mountain St, Fruitvale

$

born December 8, 2015.

TRAIL FOE Auxiliary #2838 Meeting Monday, Jan.22nd, 7:30pm

1884 Galloway Rd, Fruitvale

Births

COPYRIGHT

Copyright and/or properties subsist in all advertisements and in all other material appearing in this edition of Used.ca. Permission to reproduce wholly or in part and in any form whatsoever, particularly by a photographic or offset process in a publication must be obtained in writing from the publisher. Any unauthorized reproduction will be subject to recourse in law.

Ron Darlene 250.368.1162 250.231.0527 ron@hometeam.ca darlene@hometeam.ca

428,000

$

ont erfr rty v i R ope Pr

1309 Henderson Ave, Salmo 4 Bedroom, 4 Bath, Spacious Living and Entertaining

$

279,000

419 3rd Ave, Trail

3 Bedroom, 2 Bath, Walk-out Basement

349,500

$

Let Our Experience Move You.


A14 www.trailtimes.ca

Friday, January 22, 2016 Trail Times

CLASSIFIEDS

Employment

Employment

Employment

Services

Services

Merchandise for Sale

Rentals

Education/Trade Schools

Help Wanted

Help Wanted

Financial Services

Personal Care

Food Products

Apt/Condo for Rent

DAY PREP/ LINE COOK REQUIRED - medical & dental Send resume to Box 568 C/O Trail Times, 1163 Cedar Avenue, Trail, BC V1R 4B8

**WANTED** NEWSPAPER CARRIERS TRAIL TIMES Excellent Exercise Fun for All Ages Call Today Start Earning Money Tomorrow Circulation Department 250-364-1413 Ext. 206 For more Information

LARGE FUND Borrowers Wanted Start saving hundreds of dollars today! We can easily approve you by phone. 1st, 2nd or 3rd mortgage money is available right now. Rates start at Prime. Equity counts. We don’t rely on credit, age or income. Call Anytime 1-800-639-2274 or 604-430-1498. Apply online www.capitaldirect.ca

“We care about your hair loss�

BC INSPECTED

Bella Vista, Shavers Bench Townhomes. N/S, N/P. 2-3 bdrms. Phone 250-364-1822

INTERIOR HEAVY EQUIPMENT SCHOOL. Hands-On Tasks. Start Weekly. GPS Training! Funding & Housing Avail! Job Aid! Already a HEO? Get certiďŹ cation proof. Call 1-866-399-3853 or go to: iheschool.com

Help Wanted

SUTCO seeks US Qualified Class 1 Drivers for Castlegar based chip hauling. Rotating shifts, extended health benefits, matched contribution pension plan,e-logs, and direct deposit pay. Apply at www.sutco.ca, fax resume and abstract to 778-754-4025 or call 1-888-3572612 Ext.130

Help Wanted

JOB POSTING Employment Services Lead

TRY A CLASSIFIED AD

Services

Thinning hair or hair Loss Dandruff, dry or oily scalp Psoriasis & Eczema Chemotherapy/radiation therapy Wigs & hair systems for men & women 3019 Hwy 3

CRESTON, BC

250-428-0354 www.hairandscalpcentre.ca

Household Services

Financial Services GET BACK ON TRACK! Bad credit? Bills? Unemployed? Need Money? We Lend! If you own your own home - you qualify. Pioneer Acceptance Corp. Member BBB. 1-877-987-1420 www.pioneerwest.com

Capilia Hair & Scalp Centre

A-1 FURNACE & Air Duct Cleaning. Complete Furnace/Air Duct Systems cleaned & sterilized. Locally owned & operated. 1-800-5650355 (Free estimates) KOOTENAY DUCT CLEANERS Locally owned & operated. Affordable, professional, & insured Duct Cleaning Services & System Sterilizations. Toll free 1.844.428.0522 FREE Estimates

www.spca.bc.ca

Help Wanted

Help Wanted

(Maternity Leave Replacement) The Skills Centre/Inside Job Consulting Ltd. The Greater Trail Community Skills Centre is seeking an individual to lead the Employment Services team in the delivery of the Employment Program of BC (EPBC).

Affordable Steel Shipping Containers for sale/rent 20’ & 40’ Kootenay Containers Castlegar 250-365-3014

Help Wanted

NEW LISTING

1576 Pine Avenue, Trail

3390 Lilac Crescent, Trail

TRAIL, 1BDRM. Glenmerry. N/P. Utilities included. 250368-1312. TRAIL, 1bd. Ross. Ave., w/d/f/s. ns/np. $600./mo. utilities inc. 250-368-1361 TRAIL, spacious 1&2bdrm. apt. Adult building, perfect for seniors/ professionals. Cozy, clean, quiet, comfortable. Nicely renovated. Must See. 250-368-1312, 250-364-0352 WARFIELD 2bd condo totally renovated 250-362-7716 W.TRAIL, 1bd. plus, semi-enclosed balcony. 1Blk. to Downtown, $575./mo. 250-368-6076

Commercial/ Industrial

A Commercial/Residential General Contractor in the West Kootenays is looking for experienced Journeyman Carpenters and Apprentices. Experience in Commercial and Residential work is required. Benefits package available. Please forward Resume to: info@djmcontracting.com or drop off in person At 2096 Second Ave in Rossland. No phone calls please.

NEW LISTING

Glenmerry, 2bd. apt. Friendly, quiet secure bldg. Heat incl.n/p,n/s.250-368-5287

)HWFK D 'RJ )URP WKH 6KHOWHU

Submit your resume by January 29, 2016: Employment Services Contract Manager The Skills Centre #123-1290 Esplanade Trail, B.C. V1R 4T2 jobs@communityskillscentre.com

Houses For Sale

Francesco Estates, Glenmerry,spacious 1-3bdrms. Adults only (45+). Secure building w/elevator. N/S, N/P. Ph. 250368-6761

TRAIL, Central Downtown. Approx. 1200sq.ft. Private entrance, suitable for offices, hobby shops, dance studio, etc. For info: 250-368-8872

For a more detailed job description and an overview of the organization’s strategic priorities, contact jobs@ communityskillscentre.com. For more information about The Skills Centre, go to our website at www.communityskillscentre.com and for more information about the community as whole, go to www.workwestkootenay.ca.

$139,000

Misc. for Sale

Help Wanted

Preferred qualifications: Demonstrated knowledge of employment services delivery, an undergraduate degree in a relevant field such as Human Services or Education and/or an equivalent combination of education, training and experience.

Houses For Sale

E.Trail. Parkside Apartments. Spacious, quiet, clean, secure, senior oriented, large 1bdrm., Call 250-368-7897.

A-Steel Shipping Storage Containers. Used 20’40’45’53’ insulated containers. All sizes in stock. Prices starting under $2,000. Modifications possible doors, windows, walls etc., as office or living workshop etc., Ph Toll free 24 hours 1-866528-7108 or 1-778-298-3192 8am-5pm. Delivery BC and AB www.rtccontainer.com

Coin Collector Looking to Buy Collections, Olympic Gold & Silver Coins, Loose, Sets, etc Chad: 1-250-499-0251 Local

Principal responsibilities: Key responsibilities include staff training and supervision, management of systems supporting service delivery, case load, quality insurance and key performance measures as well as input on other complementary employment services that are or could be delivered by the Skills Centre or its subsidiary, Inside Job Consulting.

Ermalinda Estates, Glenmerry, spacious 1-2bdrms. Adults only. Secure building w/elevator. N/S, N/P. Ph.250-3641922

Heavy Duty Machinery

Misc. Wanted

This full time, temporary position offers the opportunity to work with a team-oriented organization, to live and work in a friendly community with great lifestyle opportunities and a competitive wage and benefit package.

Well preserved heritage home close to town and beautifully renovated!

GRADED AA OR BETTER LOCALLY GROWN NATURAL BEEF Hormone Free Grass Fed/Grain Finished Freezer Packages Available Quarters/Halves $4.90/lb Hanging Weight Extra Lean Ground Beef Available TARZWELL FARMS 250-428-4316 Creston

Houses For Sale

Houses For Sale

Houses For Sale

Houses For Sale

NEW LISTING

NEW LISTING

NEW PRICE

NEW PRICE

490 Austad Lane, Trail

109-4320 Red Mountain Rd, Rossland

2148 Monte Christo Street, Rossland

$159,000

Excellent value in this 3 bdrm, 2 bath home.

#

$129,000

Columbia Heights Duplex with lots of parking.

$329,000

Ground level 3 bdrm condo in Slalom Creek building.

$169,000

Cute and well kept Rossland home.

44 Haig Street, Warfield

4HE "#30#! CARES FOR THOUSANDS OF ORPHANED ABAN DONED AND ABUSED DOGS EACH YEAR )F YOU CAN GIVE A HOMELESS DOG A SECOND CHANCE AT HAPPINESS PLEASE VISIT YOUR LOCAL SHELTER TODAY

"#30#!

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Houses For Sale

$127,900

1615 Nevada Street, Rossland

3bdrm, 2 bath home on a private 0.27 acre lot! This one is packed with value.

Updated and efficient 3 bdrm Rossland home.

$197,000

Mark Terry Tonnie Mary Richard Mary Bill Deanne Art Christine Dave Dan Powell Jody Christina Lake Wilson Alton Stewart Martin Daoust Amantea Craig Slessor Forrest Albo Thoss Audia 250-231-5591 250-231-1101 250-365-9665 250-231-0264 250-368-7897 250-521-0525 250-231-2710 250-231-0153 250-368-8818 250-512-7653 250-231-4522 250-442-6413 250-364-3977 mark.wilson@ century21.ca

terryalton@ shaw.ca

tonniestewart@ shaw.ca

mary.martin@ century21.ca

richard.daoust@ century21.ca

mamantea@ telus.net

bill.craig@ century21.ca

deanneslessor@ gmail.com

c21art@ telus.net

christine.albo@ century21.ca

dave.thoss@ century21.ca

1358 Cedar Avenue, Trail • 250.368.8818

Kootenay Homes Inc.

www.kootenayhomes.com

www.century21.ca

Check us out on Facebook! facebook.com/KootenayHomes

powelldanielk@ gmail.com

jody.audia@ century21.ca


Trail Times Friday, January 22, 2016

MONEY Canadians’ vulnerability to debt set to climb in coming years: budget office

THE C ANADIAN PRESS OTTAWA - The federal budget watchdog says in the coming years increasingly indebted households are poised to become the most financially vulnerable Canadians in decades. The parliamentary budget office released a report Tuesday predicting the ratio of debt payments - including principal and interest payments - relative to disposable income will creep upwards over the next five years as interest rates rise. The office projects that by the end of 2020, this ratio will increase to 15.9 per cent of disposable income from its late 2015 level of 14.1 per cent. “Household debt-servicing capacity will become stretched further as interest rates rise to ‘normal’ levels over the next five years,” the report said. “Based on PBO’s projection, the financial vulnerability of the average household would rise to levels beyond historical experience.” The increase would mean households would be even more vulnerable to negative shocks to their income or to interest rates, which could also have an adverse effect on financial institutions. The budget office said the ratio’s highest level over the past 25 years was 14.9 per cent - a mark reached in late 2007. Since 1991, the report said the total

financial obligations of households has broken down, on average, in the following way: mortgage debt has represented 63 per cent of all debt, consumer credit 29 per cent and other loans eight per cent. Over that period, household debt has increased each quarter, on average, by almost seven per cent on a yearover-year basis, the document said. The budget office also noted that indebtedness has continued to edge higher in Canada, which has seen the largest increase in household debt relative to income of any G7 country since 2000. Household debt loads have climbed during an era of low interest rates. The budget office said the effective household borrowing rate - which the Bank of Canada describes as a weighted average of interest rates on various mortgage and consumer loans - declined to 3.1 per cent in December from 6.7 per cent in January 1999. The Bank of Canada has pointed to the potential hazards linked to high household debt - particularly if the country were hit by a severe recession or a prolonged period of increasing unemployment. But the central bank has argued that the likelihood of household debt levels becoming a serious problem remains low and the situation is likely to improve once the economy starts to

recover. The bank has said there’s been little evidence of significant increases in delinquency rates. Still, the Bank of Canada has described the country’s mounting household debt level as the most important vulnerability in the financial system’s armour - and this susceptibility has continued to grow. Governor Stephen Poloz has said the weak spot is concentrated among 720,000 households that could struggle to make debt payments in a significant economic downturn. The bank has found that the proportion of households holding debt higher than 350 per cent of their gross income - a high-risk category - has doubled to about eight per cent since the 2008 financial crisis. People in this situation tend to be younger Canadians under 45 years old who usually earn less money. Poloz has said they are part of “emerging pockets of concern.” On Tuesday, the budget office highlighted findings from 2012 Bank of Canada research that revealed that households headed by an individual aged 31 to 35 years old held the highest levels of debt. That research also found that debt levels decreased steadily as the age of the person heading the household increased.

www.trailtimes.ca A15

Savings at the pump not offsetting soaring produce

THE C ANADIAN PRESS TORONTO - Canadians may be pocketing a little extra change at the gas pump and on their heating bills thanks to the plummeting price of crude, but experts say soaring food prices are more than offsetting those savings. “The percentage of our budget that goes to transportation is much smaller than the percentage of our budget that is consumed in food,” said Ian Lee, an economics professor at Carleton University’s Sprott School of Business. “Yes, we’re saving at the pump, but the savings are more than offset by what we’re paying in the food stores.” The Bank of Canada’s efforts to stimulate the economy last year by slashing its overnight lending rate has been one factor in the loonie’s slide, in turn nudging the cost of fresh produce - which is predominantly imported - higher. The price of fruits and vegetables climbed between 9.1 and 10.1 per cent last year and that is expected to continue rising. “So much of what we buy as a consumer is imported,” says Perry Sadorsky, associate professor of economics at the Schulich School of Business at York University. “A lower dollar just makes the cost of importing more expensive.” Meanwhile, gasoline prices have not fallen as dramatically as the price of crude, which is down roughly 75 per cent from its peak in June 2014. “When you hear about lower oil prices, it does not necessarily translate into lower gasoline prices,” Sadorsky says. “The integrated oil companies have a tendency to keep the price at the pump higher in order to compensate for some of the lost profits they’re incurring on the production side.”

Visit the NEW Hawaii.com Enter To Win a Waikiki Beach Getaway for Two*

Roundtrip Airfare aboard Alaska Airlines, Five Nights at the Aston Waikiki Beach Hotel and Dinner at Tiki’s Grill & Bar

Experience Hawaii like you live here…on-line. Choose an Island that’s right for you, find the resort of your dreams then explore all the activities, shopping and dining that await you in paradise! And right now, you could win airfare from any Alaska Airlines gateway across North America, enjoy the fun Aston Waikiki Beach Hotel and dine in true island-style at Tiki’s!

For more information and to register, visit hawaii.com *Must be 18 years of age or older to enter. No purchase necessary. Winner chosen by random draw. Odds determined by number of entries. Travel valid from any Alaska Airlines gateway in North America. Winner travel dates, times and package components subject to change & availability. Restrictions apply. Contest ends on January 31, 2016 at 11:59 p.m. HST. See website for complete details.

Your complete source for island travel.


A16 www.trailtimes.ca

Friday, January 22, 2016 Trail Times

LOCAL SUNSHINE AND FRESH POWDER Guy Bertrand photo

Wednesday’s weather dealt some sunshine and 18 centimetres of fresh snow for the skiers and boarders at Red Mountain. More snow is expected over the weekend for the resort, which is enjoying an abundance of the white stuff this season.

for sale

HIGH FRAME RATE 3D

DOLBY 7.1 SURROUND SOUND

Jan 22 - 28

The Revenant Fri-Thurs 7pm Sat/Sun 2pm

MLS®

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25

-

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www.nelsonbchomes.com tad@kootenayproperties.com

3309 Lilac Crescent - Trail

Jan 29 - Feb 4 – 3 movies!

$149,900 Hateful 8

Spotlight

Room

Fri-Sun, Tues 7pm

Sat/Sun 2pm, Mon 7pm

Wed/Thurs 7pm

Great opportunity to purchase this 4 bedroom 2 bathroom home on a good sized lot in Glenmerry area of Trail. The home is located in a great neighbourhood close to down town, convenience stores, parks and schools. Ideal for those looking to improve value with home improvements.

Coming Soon Kung Fu Panada 3 Feb 5 How To Be Single

1597 Bay Ave, Trail 24 Hour: 250-364-2114 www.royaltheatretrail.com

www.allprorealty.ca All Pro Realty Ltd. 1148 Bay Ave, Trail 250.368.5000 www.facebook.com/allprorealtyltdtrailbc

OPEN HOUSE

Saturday, Jan. 23 • 10am - 12noon

205 10TH AVE, MONTROSE

$189,900

MLS#2408968

REDUCED

OPEN HOUSE

Saturday, Jan. 23 • 1pm - 3pm

3388 LAUREL CRES, GLENMERRY

$179,000

MLS#2409372

SENIOR SPECIAL

GLENMERRY

$259,900

MLS#2409379

REAL GOOD VALUE

$39,500

FRUITVALE MLS#2398238

$325,000plus GST

MUST SEE

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$99,000

$179,900

Mario Berno cell: 250-368-1027

Tom Gawryletz cell: 250-368-5000

COLUMBIA HEIGHTS

$218,000

BUILD YOUR DREAM HOME

TRAIL

$109,900

MLS#2409558

WARFIELD MLS#2409200

RENOVATED

3 BED, 2 BATH

Thea Hanson cell: 250-231-1661

GLENMERRY

NEW LISTING

$188,800

2 HOUSES ON ONE LOT

TRAIL MLS#2405349

$199,900

MLS#2409792

WARFIELD MLS#2405262

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Contact Our Wayne DeWitt cell: 250-368-1617

MOVE-IN-READY

FRUITVALE MLS#2407988

GLENMERRY MLS#2404769

ANNABLE MLS#2406082

BRAND NEW CONSTRUCTION

$179,900

EAST TRAIL

$222,500

MLS#2409916

NEW LISTING

ROSS SPUR MLS#2409877

$385,000

Realtors Keith DeWitt cell: 250-231-8187

Denise Marchi cell: 250-368-1112

Joy DeMelo cell: 250-368-1960


salute to

MINOR HOCKEY

OR

EY

GR

IL

MI

N

A

TER TR A E

HOC

K

R E T A

GRE

SCHEDULE COMINCO ARENA 8-9:30 Atom B Jamboree 9:45-12:00 Sr. Novice Jamboree 9:45-10:10 Storm vs. Nitehawks 10:10-10:35 Warriors vs Snipers 10:35-11:00 Storm vs Crush 11:05-11:30 Nitehawks vs Warriors 11:30-11:55 Crush vs Snipers 12:15-2:30 Jr. Novice Jamboree

L I A TR

6 1 0 2 , 3 2 y ar u n a J , y a d r Satu

Y E K C O

H R O N I M

12:15-12:40 12:40-1:05 1:05-1:30 1:35-2:00 2:00-2:25 2:45-4:15 4:30-6:30

Hawks vs Lightning Canadiens vs Flyers Raptors vs Lightning Hawks vs Flyers Canadiens vs Raptors Bantam House 1 vs Bantam House 2 PWT4 vs. Kimberley

PANCAKE BREAKFAST 8:15-11:30...please have all teams meet (preferably as a group) and attend. Even teams who are playing later in the day in BV or the PWH tournament are encouraged to attend.

KIDS RINK 10:00-11:00 11:15-12:15

Y A D

SN Shootouts Bantam T2 3 on 3

SMOKIES GAME VS. VERNON 7:30- All kids wearing jerseys and coaches get in free. SENIOR NOVICE SHOOTOUT FINAL will take place in between periods of the Smokies game. 5 shooters, 2 goalies will compete to be our MH Day shootout winner.


B2 www.trailtimes.ca

Friday, January 22, 2016 Trail Times

The Kootenay

Sport Experts

Supporting Youth Sports in the Kootenays for Over 30 Years!

JR. NOVICE CANADIENS

930 Rossland Avenue 250-364-1661

JR. NOVICE LIGHTNING

Back row (left to right): Coach Heather Simm, Neely Robinson, Grayson Anderson, Alyssa Dickson, Lucas Simm, Luke McNabb, Assistant Coach Dan Eheler Front row (left to right): Daniel Conradie, Aftyn Hill, Danika Eheler, Charles Clarke, Tommaso Gelber Missing: Evan Plamondon, Mason O’Handley, Ava Prough

Back row (left to right): Safety Rhet Lyall, Head Coach Trevor Thirsk, Assistant Coach Brian Youngson Middle Row (left to right): Jayce Beauchamp, Grayson Carey, Kennedy Lyall, Ethan Caputo, Alex Youngson Front row (left to right): Lilah Parrilla, Nolan Morch, Easton Fowler, Magnus Baker, Aydin Fayant, Luke Karn, Ben Thompson Missing: Erika Miller​

JR. NOVICE HAWKS

JR. NOVICE FLYERS

Coaches (left to right): Head Coach Mike Morissette, Assistant Coach Shane Drake Back row (left to right): Noah Fontes, Mya Morissette, Treyton McKenzie, Corbin Flux, Logan Speer Front row (left to right): Chelsea Drake, Holden Nelson, Kade Waterstreet, Rawley Ortman, Tristan Hill, Isaiah May, Chase Feddersen Missing: Teagan Ortman

Back row (left to right): Assistant Coach Gord Aiken, Nathan Rudnitski, Fischer Christensen, Noah Rudnitski, Nash Hurl, Ryder Cain, Head Coach Sean Rudnitski Front row (left to right): Bailie Jones, Micah Conci, John Aiken, Hugh Robinson, Porter Morris, Mason Dobie, Eli Fricke Missing: Cooper Bolen


Trail Times Friday, January 22, 2016

www.trailtimes.ca B3

PROUD SUPPORTERS

A Proud Supporter of Minor Hockey!

Have Fun ! & Play Safe

of Greater Trail Minor Hockey 250-364-1816

250-368-5000 1148 Bay Ave, Trail

1476 Cedar Avenue, Trail

www.allprorealty.ca

JR. NOVICE RAPTORS

Locally owned and operated by Woody’s Auto Ltd. www.integratire.com 1995 Columbia Ave, Trail 1507 Columbia Ave, Castlegar

SR. NOVICE WARRIORS

Coaches (left to right): Coach Trevor Fennell, Assistant Coach Andre Gagnon and Coach Mike Walker Back row (left to right): Carter Langman, Zach Nichol, Grayden Fennel, Rylie Parker, Austin Parker Front row (left to right): Jaxon Peet, Riley Gagnon, Nolan Salvador, Zach Hayton, Jake Davis, Levi Walker, Rylan Rieberger Missing: Niko David

Coaches (left to right): Darren Williams. Terry Hartford, Mike Williams Back row (left to right): Nate Johnston, Ben Guthrie, Maddox Gandha, Chayse Johnson, Aiden Wallace, Raiden Dobie Front row (left to right): Connor Robertson, Griffen Wallace, Jace Williams, Ryder Williams, Roman Zanussi, Tristan Belleperche

SR. NOVICE SNIPERS

SR. NOVICE NIGHTHAWKS

Coaches (left to right): Dale Smyth, Trevor Thirsk, Jim Maniago Back row (left to right): Tate Robinson, Nolan Smyth, Darick Khadikin, Cohen Derksen, Mya Griffiths Front row (left to right): Emily Maniago, Noah Thirsk, Molly Makway, Seth Watmough, Evan Parrilla, Hudson Makway, Jordana Jones Missing: William O’Handley, Mike Makway (coach)

Coaches (left to right): Nathan Ehman, Shane Drake Back row (left to right): Cole Kopp, Lincoln Kelly, Felicia Girardo, Rowan Morris, Griffin Ehman, Deegan Kyle Front row (left to right): Avery MacAuley, Connor Drake, Mack Karn, Charlie O’Hearn-Stone, Wade Gallamore, Thane Joyce, Karis Siddall Missing: Corbin Karn (coaches: Glen Gallamore, Ken Siddall)

Thank You Minor Hockey! The City of Trail would like to thank all the coaches, volunteers and players who make minor hockey fun. www.trail.ca

Have a great hockey season!


B4 www.trailtimes.ca

Friday, January 22, 2016 Trail Times

McLean’s idea becomes a national celebration GUY BERTR AND Trail Times

It’s only fitting that the man who got Minor Hockey Week started epitomized everything the celebration stands for.

Charlie McLean was a young, industrious man who never tired of helping minor hockey’s growth. “He always had an idea,” said the late Jake McLeod in an interview with the Trail Times in 2007. “He

was an excellent worker with anything he got involved in.” Art Misisco was a member of the Trail minor hockey executive back in the 1940s and 50s and he remembers McLean as an

eager worker who put everything he had into his endeavors. “He was definitely the guy that started it all.” It began quite innocently enough. Members of the Trail hockey community already had a long and storied history of involvement at the regional and provincial level.

“He was definitely the guy that started it all.” ART MISISCO

SR. NOVICE ORANGE CRUSH Back row (left to right): Robyn Tremblay, Rick Miller, Jeff Bruce, Darren McCarthy, Devin Bilenki, Mark Heslop Middle row (left to right): Blaine Nelson, Brayden Tremblay, Connor Bruce, Jaden Stuart, Kentyn Moncrief, Nolan Zanussi Front row (left to right): Wade Haessel, Owen McCarthy, Silas Jones, Aidan Bilenki, Olli D’Amour, Kolton Miller

George Murray of Trail was part of the 1921 B.C. Amateur Hockey Association executive and J. C. Urquhart of Rossland, in 1929, became the first local resident to be elected as the president of the BCAHA. Trail men like Gus Macdonald, in 1935, and Gerry Thompson in 1949, assumed the provincial leadership role as the sport began to grow in B.C. But at the local level, men like Charlie McLean

SR. NOVICE STORM Back row (left to right): Assistant Coach Dan Eheler, Noah Price, Kabir Gurm, Sawyer Bell, Head Coach Justin Adrain Middle row (left to right): Brady Walker, Ty Walker, Joffre Fraser, Max Munn Front row (left to right): Dayton Graf, Cohen Fowler, Marshal Eheler, Lane Peet, Graden Adrain Missing: Ayden Summers, Jordan Walker

wanted to do more for the kids and get parents involved. That’s when he proposed setting aside one week a year to celebrate the sport. “We thought it was a real good idea,” said McLeod. “We had all the kids into the rink with different games all day and the parents had no excuse not to go and watch their child play.” A year later, 1953, the Kids’ Rink at the Trail Memorial Centre was opened for a place where youngster could rule the ice while the older groups held their games on the Cominco Arena ice surface. Trail’s Ed Benson, an engineer at Cominco, was the BCAHA’s vice president that year and McLean was the West Kootenay representative. At the BCAHA’s annual general meeting that summer they brought forth a resolution from the Trail Minor Hockey Association that the first week in February in 1954 be declared Minor Hockey Week in B.C. The BCAHA accepted the resolution and even advertised the announcement in the Vancouver Sun and

Vancouver Province newspapers. “It gathered from there just like a snowball,” said McLeod. At the Canadian Amateur Hockey Association’s annual meeting in Montreal, the BCAHA’s secretary, Leo Atwell of Nelson, and Benson, now the BCAHA president, presented the resolution to the sport’s national governing body. It passed and Minor Hockey Week became a nation-wide celebration. Some of the latest minor hockey figures show over two million young Canadians are registered to play and nearly five million Canadians are involved in minor hockey at some level. Meanwhile back in Trail in 1956, the announcement that an idea born in a small meeting room in town had mushroomed into a national event had people beaming. “It was exciting,” said Misisco. “Sure as heck there was a lot of pride in town,” said McLeod. “You’re proud to see stuff like that happen and it all started in Trail.”

ATOM GIANTS Back row (left to right): Will Conradie, Zack Cure, Jordy Stroud, Michael Ciardullo Middle Row (left to right): Coach Bob Bradford, Coach Kyrstan Grunerud, Aiden Ripplinger, Ben Mason, Isabella Conci, Dawson Griffiths, Coach Rob Stroud, Goalie Coach Mallory Weins Front row (left to right): Zaccari Piccolo, Max Harmsma, Matthew Johnson, Chase Hollis, Olivia Johnson, Nicholas Marcos, Mason Speers

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Trail Times Friday, January 22, 2016

www.trailtimes.ca B5

Good luck players & thank you parents & volunteers as we celebrate Minor Hockey!

Katrine Conroy, MLA

Kootenay West 250-304-2783 Katrine.conroy.mla@leg.bc.ca www.katrineconroy.ca

ATOM WARRIORS

ATOM A SMOKIES Coaches (left to right): Tim Bourchier, Jody Bradford, Darcy Martini, Mike Williams Back row (left to right): Calvin Morrison, Josie Dunham, Logan Bradford, Brody Martini, Sam Chartres, Willem Terwoord, Rhys Williams Front row (left to right): Jonas Bourchier, Mason Dixon, Oliver Clement, Landan Uzeloc, Asher Makway, Trevor Knight, Owen Dickson, Nathan Simm

Back row (left to right): Mark Brooks, Brett McLaren, Scott McLAren, Ashlyn DeWitt, Corbin Karn, Aaron Weishaupt Middle row (left to right): Esteban Peregoodoff, Parker Weishaupt, Matthew Clark, Damien Servatius, Chesney Flux, Carson McInnes Front row (left to right): Esteban Peregoodoff, Parker Weishaupt, Matthew Clark, Damien Servatius, Chesney Flux, Carson McInnes

ATOM WINGS

PEEWEE TIER 4 SMOKIES

Coaches (left to right): Glen Gallamore Ken Koshey Back row (left to right): Nick Taylor, Brynn Gallamore, Colten Podmorow, Davis Marino, Ethan Brunton, Bailey McNeil, Keegan Cromarty, Natalee Barbe Front row (left to right): Anson Bell, Callum Baxter, Damon Parsons, Jesse Graves, Tommy Buckley, Gavin Anderson Missing: Jason Graves, Aeden Boutin, Julia Macasso

Back row (left to right): Brett Mclaren (coach), Jim Maniago (coach), Nathan Dominici, Jake Maniago, Sam Mclaren, Jaxon Kuchar, Rhet Lyall (trainer) Middle Row (left to right): Brayden Dewitt, Lachlan McNeil, Eamon Miserak, Mitchell Daines, Marci Brooks Front row (left to right): Huddy Lyall, Samuel Owatz, Nick Scully, Connor Hardman, Andrew Sheets, David Pengelly

For all your Smokies and Nitehawks coverage, turn to Jim Bailey News • Sports • Leisure Count on us.


B6 www.trailtimes.ca

2S 0E 1A 5 /S 1O 6N

Friday, January 22, 2016 Trail Times

NEXT

GAME!

YOU WIN - WE WIN!

vs

50/50 DRAW VERNON VIPERS

Saturday, January 23 ......... 7:30pm

Your chance to win $18,880

(based on number of tickets sold) Tickets $20 each BC Lottery #79563

Game day tickets available at Ferraro Foods Trail & Rossland, Safeway, Performance Fitness

PEEWEE TIER 2 SMOKIES

PEEWEE SMOKIES

Back row (left to right): Coach Leroy Huestis, Isaac Knight, Jacob Smith, Tristan Meakes, Zachary Johnson, Assistant Coach Dale Smyth, Assistant Coach Gary Gill Middle row (left to right): Nathan Dann, Judah Makway,Cooper Ross, Spencer Dixon- Reusz, Dallas Maximick Front row (left to right): Christian Gould, Joel Smyth, Josh Mason, Austin McKenzie,Dylan Smyth,Ethan Smyth,Logan Profili, Harmon Laser-Hume

Back row: (left to right): Morgan Speers, Cohan Charette, Braeden Caputo, Trenton Winters Middle row (left to right): Coach Brian Moroney, Ass’t Coach Albert Benson, Charlotte Munn, Tyler Girardo, Alexx Stone, Abby Epp, Ass’t Coach Alastair Berglund, Safety Manager Keith Wallace Front row (left to right): Jackson Kurulok, Hudson Den Biesen, Matthew Derosa, Neil Murdoch, Aiden McKay, Carter Sedgwick, Payton Johnson Missing: Noel Morrison

BANTAM SMOKIES

BANTAM TRAIL TEAM 1

Back row (left to right): Reid Dunham, Nathaniel Riemer, Seth Sloan Middle row (left to right): Ian Finke, Greg Armstrong, Camryn Haines, Jesse Cochrane, Zion Miller, Sam Finke, Scott Huffels, Brian Riemer, Frank Lavigne Front row (left to right): Ben Scully, Logan Armstrong, Sam Miller, Mason Morrisette, Justice Lavigne

Back row (left to right): Jace DePellgrin, Ryan Swanson, Dawson Valliere, Alex Lloyd. Middle row (left to right): Head Coach Lee DePellegrin, Aiden Hoffschild, Jordan Cherrington, Austyn Doherty, Kayden Sedgwick, (Coaches Jim Swanson, Curt Ross) Front row (left to right): Dayne Bignell, Brady Ross, Kai Tichauer, Lachlan Paulsen, Riley Jones

A Proud Community Supporter

Good Luck to All Teams!

Stop by Maglio’s for all your building supply needs!

8274 Hwy 22A, Trail

(250) 368-6466

YOU CAN DO ANYTHING. THE LUMBER PEOPLE WHO CARE.


Trail Times Friday, January 22, 2016

www.trailtimes.ca B7

Best of Luck Minor Hockey Players & Coaches

Congratulations to all minor hockey teams!

Supporting 59 Years of Minor Hockey

TRAIL

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Q

8130 Old Waneta Road, Trail

250-364-1311 We’ve Got Your Lumber

Trail 368-9533

&

A BANTAM TRAIL TEAM 3

with

Ross Armour

JIM BAILEY Times Sports Editor

Trail Smoke Eaters forward Ross Armour has been one of Trail’s best players this season, scoring nine goals and adding 21 assists to help the Smokies vie for a playoff spot in the tough Interior division. The Rossland native and minor hockey product took some time to answer questions for Minor Hockey Day in Trail. Q: Where did you play your minor hockey, and how has it helped you? A: Growing up I played in the Rossland-Trail Minor Hockey Association. Playing minor hockey helped me achieve some of my goals by instilling a good work ethic and a good attitude.

Q: What does it mean to you to play in the BCHL and for the Smoke Eaters? A: Playing Junior A for the Trail Smoke Eaters is a dream come true for me, I was always looking up to the Smoke Eaters and now to finally be one is a pretty special feeling. Q: What are your goals for the future? A: My future goal is to hopefully get a scholarship in hockey then later go on to play pro. I would love to follow in the footsteps of my cousin Jake (Lucchini) by pursing an education while playing hockey.

Q: What is your fondest memory of playing minor hockey? A: One of my best memories was in first year Bantam Rep when we hosted the Provincials and made it to the semi finals. Q: Did you have any particular influences whether it be a coach or player when you were younger? A: Who influenced me the most while I was growing up playing hockey were my older cousins they taught me a lot.

Back row (left to right): Lucas Livingston, Melanie Simister, Griffin Byres, Tessy Brandt Middle row (left to right): Griffin Hogarth, Derick Ferraro, Josh Epp, Cameron Cosbey, Adam Doskoch, David Ferraro(coach), Shawn Brandt (coach) Front row (left to right): Paul Marrandino (coach), Kai Birks, Samuel Knight, Jayden Bowcock, Samuel Elwood, Hayden Livingston Missing: Derek Steep (coach)

BANTAM TIER 2 SMOKIES Back row (left to right): Jaxson Waterstreet, Lucas Anselmo, Jesse Ihas, Zach Park Middle Row (left to right): Frenchie Boisvert (coach), Michel Hjelkrem, Nolan Martini, Austin Cox, Garrit Ciardullo, Jarred Macasso, Mike Boisvert (coach) Front row (left to right): Kevin Engman, Jordan Sheets, Anthony Williams, Ethan Jang, Nate Ingram, Marty Ingram, Max Profili, Alexander Forshaw Armour with R-T Bantam Reps

Trail Times file photo

Proud supporters of Minor Hockey for 35 years! Furniture & Appliances

8080 Old Waneta Rd, Trail sales@apfurniture.ca

250.368.3332

Serving the Kootenays for over 35 years!


B8 www.trailtimes.ca

Friday, January 22, 2016 Trail Times

GREATER TRAIL

MINOR HOCKEY DAY

Saturday, January 23, 2016

MIDGET GREATER TRAIL 1

MIDGET GREATER TRAIL 2

Back row (left to right): Martin Vickers, Kyle Bartsoff, Tyler Theobald, Kelton Byres Middle row (left to right): Andy Thiemann (Assistant Coach), Dylan Gray, Dylan Page, Kevin Nutini, Noah George, Matthew Dominici, Shane Patterson (Coach) Front row (left to right): Brendon Gustafson, Nicolas Doskoch, Ryen Patterson, Adam MacKay, Freddy Mayer, Brett Watson Missing: Max Nutini, Cooper Tedesco

Back row (left to right): Brayden Swanson, Brenner Devos and Peter Grant Middle row (left to right): (coach)Austin Koerber, Kiaer Van Den Akker, Dawson Koerber, Colin Rotschy, Kian Johnston, Chase Witt, Cole Gallo(assistant Coach), Kirby Epp (coach) Front row (left to right): Jordan Allan, Dallas Cox, Colton Epp, Nolan Piche, Ryan Profili, Bodie Gallo Missing: Braeden Cherrington

MIDGET GREATER TRAIL 3

MIDGET TIER 2 SMOKE EATERS

Back row (left to right): Ross St. Jean, Owen Negrey, Aidan Crockett Middle row (left to right): Dean den Biesen (Asst Coach), Callum O’Shea, Lucas Billingsley, Matthew McConnachie, Liam Crockett, John Ferguson, Gary Gill (Head Coach) Front row (left to right): Adam Derosa, Kayla Miller, Mike Irsernia, Jordan Zilkie, Dawson den Biesen Missing: Landon Gill, Jonathan Ballarin, Nicholas Fantin

Back row (left to right): Cooper Tedesco, Dylan Stadjuhar, Aiden Browell Middle row (left to right): Walker Sidoni- asst coach, Braden McKay, Nick Colbachini, Nathan McKay, Nick Bedin, Brian Youngson-head coach, Thomas Abenante-asst coach Front row (left to right): Josh Ballarin, Christian Macasso, Blake Haines, Ty Atkinson, Derek Green, Brandon Youngson Missing: Owen Titus, Keenan Crossman, Dawson Den Biesen, Kody Stewart

Proud Supporter of

! y e k c o H r o in M il ra T r te a re G

We have the largest inventory of GM cars, trucks and SUVs in the West Kootenay! “Where everyone is a winner!” Trail BC

Service Department open Monday to Saturday 6:30am - 5:30pm

2880 Highway Drive, Trail

250-368-9134

DL#30251


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