Chronicles: Half a century ago, for some Granduc miners, a miracle
LIVING, Page 11
No surprises as Cowichan LMG advances in Jackson Cup playoffs
SPORTS,, Page g 22
WEDNESDAY
BRENTWOOD BRINGS SPOOKY ADDAMS CLAN TO LIFE/18
Serving the Cowichan Valley
www.cowichanvalleycitizen.com
Wednesday, February 24, 2016
We’ve gone pink! See our Pink Shirt Day section beginning on page 13.
Two men were hit by a slow-moving pickup truck as they crossed Jubilee Street in Duncan last Thursday. One of the men has since died of his injuries, while the other remains in hospital. Police are reminding pedestrians and drivers to make sure they are visible and aware of their surroundings. [KEVIN ROTHBAUER/CITIZEN]
Man killed after vehicle hits pedestrians KEVIN ROTHBAUER CITIZEN
A 55-year-old Duncan man has died of injuries sustained when he was hit by a truck on a downtown street last Thursday. Vincent Frances Samson was one of two men hit by the pickup in the early afternoon. He was airlifted to hospital in Victoria with a serious head injury shortly after the accident. Samson succumbed to his injur-
ies in hospital on Monday. “It’s not good. We’re all deaing with sadness,” Samson’s aunt, Dolly Sylvester, said, adding that her sister also died recently, leaving the family reeling from multiple tragedies. Samson left behind a wife and two sons, as well as his mother, three sisters and a brother. The incident happened shortly after noon last Thursday when two men who were walking
toward the Human Resources office in downtown Duncan were hit by a 2012 GMC pickup as they crossed Jubilee Street near the intersection with Evans Street. The other victim, a 53-year-old man, also from Duncan, remains in hospital and was last reported in critical condition. “The vehicle was travelling at a very low speed which may have minimized the extent of the injuries to the 53-year-old man,”
North Cowichan/Duncan RCMP spokesperson Krista Hobday said. Police are continuing to investigate the collision with help from the Integrated Collision Analyst and reconstruction experts from South Island Traffic Services. “The preliminary investigation has ruled out alcohol and mechanical error as contributing factors,” Hobday said. The driver of the pickup provided a statement to police at the
scene and has been cooperating with the investigation. Victim Services has been offering support to the families and those who assisted in caring for the injured on the roadside, Hobday added. “Police would like to remind both pedestrians and motorists to be visible and aware of their surroundings as they make their way to and from their destinations,” Hobday added.
Dental Care in the Valley for over 20 Years. Island Dental Health Centre Dr. Randy Koniuk Dr. Scott Stewart Monday – Friday 8:00 am – 5:00 pm • Wednesday 8:00 am – 6:30 pm
(250)748-6673 IDHC.ca
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Cowichan Valley Citizen | Wednesday, February 24, 2016
3
◆ NORTH COWICHAN
Permit granted, but muni controls road
istry outlining its concerns and opposition to the quarry, and are on record stating that Richards Trail is not capable of supporting industrial traffic. Dunkley said the permit limits the extraction of materials from the site to 25,000 tonnes per year during the expected lifespan of the project, which means approximately 11,000 truck loads will be moved from the site. “That would mean about
COWICHAN briefs
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The Cowichan Aquatic Centre and Fuller Lake Arena will soon see significant infrastructure investments. The Municipality of North Cowichan will spend approximately $392,000 on energy projects at the aquatic centre, council decided Wednesday. The projects include replacing the facility’s hot water system with a new more energy-efficient system that includes solar components. The funding will also pay for the completion of the centre’s LED lighting conversion program. As well, the Fuller Lake Arena will have its electrical transformer replaced, at a cost of $351,000. The projects are included in the municipality’s estimated 2.96 per cent budget increase for 2016.
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Margot Izard was honoured for her eight years of service to the City of Duncan at Monday’s council meeting. Izard has been in charge of operating the cameras at council meetings and is now retiring. Coun. Sharon Jackson thanked Izard for her camera expertise over the years. “Margot has been behind the scenes quietly recording council meetings for a long time,” Jackson said. “We want to thank her for her great and wonderful service over the years.”
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Duncan camera operator retiring after eight years behind lens
Robert Barron, Citizen
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proposed in 2014, has been controversial in the region. Richards Trail is a keystone in the area’s agri-tourism industry and is popular with cyclists, with hundreds using the rural road on a regular basis. The Catalyst mill waterline also goes under the road, and there are signs warning against moving heavy equipment on the route. The District of North Cowichan sent a letter to the min-
7427124
North Cowichan Mayor Jon Lefebure. [CITIZEN FILE]
of operations at the quarry, a baseline water sampling program will be completed with samples taken from the runoff coming from the site, Richard’s Creek, all wells on the Pastula property and the wells of two nearby properties. “I know a lot of people aren’t happy with this project,” Dunkley said. “But we’ll do the best we can to be on top of the work there and deal quickly with any complaints.” Donna Hickey, who lives close to the quarry, said she’s still not fully comfortable with all aspects of the quarry, even after the information session. “There’s a lot of complex issues to deal with here, and my main concerns is with the impacts this could have in the watershed,” she said. “But I feel that this process was good and I’ll feel a little more comfortable with this if the monitoring of the site will be as good as they say it will be.”
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The Municipality of North Cowichan has the right to limit the maximum loads of dump trucks on the access road leading to the Pastula open pit quarry. Mayor Jon Lefebure said staff has been instructed to prepare a report on truck traffic to the quarry site, which is expected to be tabled in March. An infor ma tion session Thursday on the controversial quarry was hosted by Jim Dunkley, a regional director for the Ministry of Energy and Mines. Dunkley was fulfilling a commitment to the community to outline the operating terms of the quarry prior to its operating permit being issued. “My understanding is that we can’t do anything to directly prevent the quarry’s operation once the province has granted the operating permit,” Lefebure said to the packed council chambers in North Cowichan. “But while we can’t control the site, we can regulate and control the roads that run to it. We’ve decided to move forward with a staff report now that we know the conditions of the permit.” The issue of the quarry, first
10 truck loads a day,” Dunkley calculated. Dunkley said the quarry’s operations will be limited to Monday to Friday, from 7:30 a.m. to 5 p.m., which he indicated should go a long way in dealing with impacts to recreation in the area, as most recreational activities usually take place on the weekends. He said the project was not required to undergo an environmental assessment as it’s considered too small. He said only quarry projects that extract more than 250,000 tonnes of material per year are required to undergo assessment. As for concerns around blasting, Dunkley said the blast contractor will be required to notify the ministry and residents within one kilometre of the centre of the quarry not less than 24 hours prior to each blasting. Dunkley said that prior to the start
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Wednesday, February 24, 2016
News
| Cowichan Valley Citizen
◆ COWICHAN VALLEY REGIONAL DISTRICT
◆ CONTAMINATED SOIL
Bike station offers free fix-it tools for cyclists The Cowichan Valley Regional District has installed a bike maintenance station at Island Savings Centre. The station offers cyclists basic tools for easy fixes. This includes a pump, wrenches, hex keys and other bike tools that can be used for simple adjustments and enjoyable riding. The station is available for use by the public and is located on the west side of the building next to the electric vehicle charge stations. “The bike maintenance station is a convenient option for simple bike fixes,” said CVRD chairperson Jon
[CITIZEN FILE]
Lefebure. “Ultimately, the station supports healthy living and environmental stewardship as we work towards active transpor tation in our communities.” This station is a pilot project. If it is successful, additional stations will be installed at priority cycling locations within the CVRD. Taxes have now been paid on the part of the South Island Aggregates site that had reverted briefly to the province. There is also work taking place to beef up the operation’s settling pond. [KEVIN ROTHBAUER/CITIZEN]
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The owners of the controversial soil dump near Shawnigan Lake have paid the back taxes owed to the province. A portion of the soil dump on Stebbings Road, which is owned by South Island Aggregates and Cobble Hill Holdings, reverted to the Crown last week after its owners failed to pay more than $22,000 in property taxes. Mike Kelly, president of Cobble Hill Holdings, said at the time that the failure to pay the taxes was “an oversight.” He said, now that the taxes have been paid, the province’s property taxation branch has sent a certificate to the Victoria Land Title office requesting the title be reinstated to the company. The government declined media inquiries on the issue, citing privacy issues. In related news, the judicial review of the project by the B.C. Supreme Court in Victoria is now in its second week. The review, which is expected to conclude this Friday, was instigated by the Shawnigan Residents Association. The SRA asked for the review as part of its efforts to have the court set aside the decision by the Environmental Appeal Board in March that dismissed appeals to stop the importation
of contaminated soil into the area. The project was previously given a permit by the province’s Ministry of Environment. But documents that came to light in July revealed a complex deal between the companies working to establish the soil facility, which the SRA alleges throws doubt on engineering firm Active Earth’s impartiality in the matter. The Ministry of Environment relied on information from Active Earth in making the decision on the permit. Calvin Cook, president of the SRA, has been attending the judicial review on most days since it began last week. He said that, considering the procedural errors and fraud allegations that have been raised since the permit was issued, the SRA hopes the court will decide to stop operations at the site as early as this Friday until a final decision is made. “We want to see the importation of contaminated soil to the area stopped as soon as possible,” Cook said. “We think we’ve presented an excellent case with tons of information, but it will be up to the judge to decide how to proceed.” Company representatives couldn’t be reached for comment by press time. Meanwhile, the soil dump site is undergoing phased improvements to its water-management program. Crews are currently working to reinforce the operation’s settling pond. When the work, which was recommended by the engineering firm Stantec, is complete, it’s expected it will greatly reduce the amount of solid materials leaving the site during heavy rain.
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Cowichan Valley Citizen
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Wednesday, February 24, 2016
5
New hospital site prompts plan ROBERT BARRON CITIZEN
The proposed site of the new hospital. [SUBMITTED] hood to deal with the density requirements of the new hospital,” Lefebure said. “There is municipal water in the area already, but we may to have to upgrade some of the water pipes. There will be ongoing consultations with the public as we develop this plan, and the public’s input and comments will be welcome.” The proposed hospital site is a short distance southeast of where Herd Road/Highway 18 intersects with the Trans Canada Highway. It’s in a residential area outside of the Agricultural Land Reserve within North Cowichan’s urban growth boundary. The site was selected from a crop of 34 potential sites iden-
tified through the combination of a public expression of interest process and a land consultant working on behalf of the CVRHD. The CVRHD is responsible for covering 40 per cent of the cost of the new hospital, with Island Health picking up the rest of the tab. The hospital district has put aside more than $21 million in a reserve fund for the project so far. “We’ve been putting aside about $7 million each year from taxes for the new hospital,” Lefebure said. “There’s still a lot of work ahead, and it may be about five years before construction begins if the project is finally approved.”
Steven Sharanowski Age: 31 Height: 5’ 9” Weight: 186 lbs Hair: Blonde Eyes: Blue Distinctive tattoos on his face Charges: resist arrest, breach of undertaking, breach of probation Warrants - unendorsed
Branden Mitchell Burns Age: 36 Height: 5’ 9” Weight: 181 lbs Hair: Brown Eyes: Brown Charge: Breach of recognizance, breach probation, breach undertaking (x 5) Warrant - unendorsed
Landis Frank Barnes Age: 28 Height: 6’ Weight: 177 lbs Hair: Brown Eyes: Hazel Charge: Fraud Warrant - unendorsed
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The Municipality of North Cowichan wants a neighbourhood plan developed for the Bell McKinnon Road area within the next five months. The area, which is zoned rural-residential, is being considered for the construction of the new, approximately $350-million Cowichan District Hospital. Three properties on Bell McKinnon Road were selected by the Cowichan Valley Regional Hospital District in August to potentially house the new hospital following two years of site scrutiny. The new facility would replace the more than 40-year-old hospital on Gibbins Road. Jon Lefebure, who is both mayor of the Municipality of North Cowichan and chairman of the CVRHD, said MNC staff have been instructed to develop a neighbourhood plan in conjunction with the rezoning application for the new hospital site. He said the intention is to determine the implications of the hospital project on the area, and then gather public input into the plan at a mandatory public hearing that will be held in either June or July. “We would have to bring sewer services into the neighbour-
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Wednesday, February 24, 2016 | Cowichan Valley Citizen
OUR VIEW
Laws starting to catch up to cyber bullies
T
he Internet is both a wonderful and a terrible invention. It allows us to be connected to one another like never before, and gives us access in seconds to huge quantities of information. But it is also being used as a tool by some to maliciously cause harm to others. We were surprised and dismayed to learn from the North Cowichan/Duncan RCMP that children only nine and 10 years old have taken to cyber bullying like a duck to water. We suppose we shouldn’t be shocked when we consider that
this young generation has been exposed to smart phones, iPads, laptops and all manner of other technologies their whole lives. But the age at which they have learned to use it to torment their peers is just depressing. Then again, there are certainly far too many adults who aren’t providing a good example for them to follow. Though his actions more closely resemble those of an abusive partner than an elementary school bully, the term cyber bullying immediately brought to mind the case of B.C. man Patrick Fox, who has created a web-
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site he explicitly states is aimed at destroying his ex-wife. This horrible individual has made any number of claims on the site, and perhaps most reprehensibly, has stuck the couple’s teenage son squarely in the middle by including him in every hate-filled exchange he has with the boy’s mother. So far, the legal system has not worked to stop him. The technology has run far ahead of the law. But that doesn’t mean he hasn’t done anything wrong and there won’t be consequences for his repugnant behaviour.
He certainly has, and there certainly will. And that’s what we hope our youths of today can learn from this case. So far, his victim hasn’t been able to afford an attorney to take him to civil court, but we imagine all the publicity may dig one out who’s willing to take the case on pro bono. He may find it tough to find a partner after this, given how he’s treating his previous one. Anyone who employs this individual likely isn’t thrilled about it right now. And we can only imagine his friends are uneasy about the acquaintance.
Kill economic development function
Cowichan Valley Citizen is a division of Black Press Limited, located at 251 Jubilee St., Duncan, B.C., V9L 1W8 Phone: 250-748-2666 Fax: 250-748-1552
tive areas in the vicinity of the airport; in fact, virtually all airports in Canada and the United States have such avoidance procedures. Pilots are not allowed to perform the types of manoeuvres mentioned by Ms. Ramsdin — “flying round and round over town, cutting their engine [and] starting up again,” diving and backfiring. Any aircraft doing that sort of thing, large or small, should be reported to the nearest air traffic control facility which, in Ms. Ramsdin’s case, is the Nanaimo Regional Airport. A commission operates the airport; she may call 250-245-2157 to complain.
Along with excessive pay rates for employees one of the biggest wastes of taxpayers’ money in the CVRD are the tens of millions of dollars squandered over the past decade by their Economic Development department and nothing to show for it. The CVRD always tries to solve its problems and issues by new spending and more taxes and there’s lots of evidence that is not a solution that ever works. More than a year ago, after another expensive consultant’s report, the CVRD board was reminded again how wasteful the EDF has been with its million dollar EDF budget each year. Yet the CVRD continues to throw our tax money at a function that has proven worthless in improving the local economy. Our CVRD taxes would be much lower if this and other wasteful spending stopped. Now we have the befuddled CVRD board members spending more time and resources trying to decide if EDF should have a $150,000 a year manager or a cheaper coordinator. Yet the CVRD board has never stated exactly what the EDF should accomplish, or identify why it should exist at all. Like most spending in the CVRD there are never any measures of success established other than shovelling our tax dollars out the door. That’s why they now spend more than $80 million a year and employ well over 200 employees. I vote for killing this million dollar a year CVRD waste of tax money. The most important economic development functions in the Cowichan Valley are lower taxes and less bureaucracy.
Manuel Erickson Mill Bay
W.E. (Bill) Dumont Cobble Hill
Publisher Shirley Skolos Editor Andrea Rondeau Advertising director Shirley Skolos Circulation manager Audette LePage Newsroom 250-748-2666, extension 235 editor@cowichanvalley citizen.com Advertising 250-748-2666, extensions 223, 227, 228, 229, 230 Classified ads 1-855- 310-3535 Copyright information This newspaper’s contents are protected by copyright and may be used only for personal, non-commercial purposes. All other rights are reserved. Commercial use is prohibited. Opinions expressed are not necessarily those of the newspaper. Complaint resolution The Cowichan Valley Citizen is a member of the National Newsmedia Council, which is an independent organization established to deal with acceptable journalistic practices and ethical behaviour. If you have concerns about editorial content, contact: editor@cowichanvalleycitizen. com or 250-748-2666. If you are not satisfied with the response and wish to file a formal complaint, visit the mediacouncil.ca or call toll-free 1-844877-1163 for additional information.
So we can only surmise that this man will eventually find himself alone, with only his hatred for company. Our laws are only now starting to catch up with our tech, but they are catching up. In many places now, for example, it’s illegal to post explicit photos of somebody without their consent. This has been a key component of previous notable cyber bullying cases like those of Rehtaeh Parsons and Amanda Todd . The change is a step forward at least in the fight.
Vancouver’s hot real estate market No pilot practises over built-up areas Re: the letter (Friday, Feb. 19) from Bernice Ramsdin of Chemainus: As a pilot of more than 35 years, presently holding a commercial licence and owner of one of the small planes that Ms. Ramsdin is so critical of, I can assure her that no pilot purposely practises aeronautical manoeuvres over any built-up area. That said, the Canadian Aeronautical Regulations state that, in an emergency, a pilot may land an aircraft anywhere. The pilot who safely landed on Highway 18 the other day has my personal congratulations for carrying out an engine-out landing so successfully. What would
Ms. Ramsdin have had the pilot do? Crash into a field full of holes or animals? Ms. Ramsdin should also know that pilots regularly practise emergencies of all sorts, from loss of electrical power to loss of engine power. They are tested on their emergency knowledge and the manner in which they carry out an emergency. Such practices are carried out AWAY from built-up areas. Knowledge of emergencies is a requirement of aircraft owners’ insurance. Furthermore, Nanaimo Regional Airport is located just northwest of Chemainus. Aircraft large and small use the only available runway for both landing and take-off. We are required to avoid noise-sensi-
Opinion
Cowichan Valley Citizen
|
Wednesday, February 24, 2016
7
A GOOD DEED
LETTERS to the editor Steelhead LNG committed to quality
“We understand that not everyone will be in favour of the proposed Malahat LNG project, and we respect the opinions of everyone involved. That said, we want to ensure that local communities are provided accurate and up-to-date information on the proposed Malahat LNG project, LNG itself and the LNG industry...”
As the discussion about our proposed LNG project takes shape, we’re seeing a number of critics quoted in the media who continue to make inaccurate claims about the project and about LNG itself. All of us at Steelhead LNG believe in having a broad and energetic community conversation about our proposed project, and we’re certainly prepared to be challenged by those who have questions or concerns. However, we really hope it will be a discussion based on facts and science, and not on the myths and misconceptions. In the interest of getting it right, I’d like to provide some important details about our proposed Malahat LNG project on the shoreline of the Malahat Nation-owned Bamberton Industrial Lands. Together with the Malahat Nation, we are proposing to build a moderate-sized natural gas liquefaction and export facility. If the proposed Malahat LNG project moves forward, it would include floating liquefaction facilities moored to the shoreline and supporting land-based infrastructure. Currently, we’re working to submit a project description to regulators, which will initiate multi-year provincial and/or federal regulatory processes, including a rigorous environmental assessment for the proposed Malahat LNG project. Steelhead LNG is licensed to export LNG for 25 years. That’s a long-term commitment, and a big reason why we are working hard to build a project that’s right for the community, the region and the rest of British Columbia. Our proposed Malahat LNG project will contribute to
NIGEL KUZEMKO, Steelhead LNG CEO
the community, care for the environment, put safety first and deliver long-term economic benefits for the region and British Columbia. The proposed location is an active industrial site that was a cement factory for more than 100 years and is currently being used as a rock quarry, and for off-loading industrial equipment and materials. It has a deep water port and is located close to international shipping lanes, making it well suited for the proposed Malahat LNG project. We value the opportunity to work in collaboration with the Malahat Nation, who are exploring LNG as a way to realize their Nation-building goals, create important economic, employment and training opportunities for its members, and generate revenue to support important community programs. The proposed Malahat LNG project would create significant economic benefits for approximately 30 years, or the life of the proposed project, including revenue generation through taxation for regional, provincial and federal governments.
In addition, approximately 400 workers will be needed during peak construction, with approximately 200 well-paid, long term positions at home on Vancouver Island for operations, as well as hundreds of additional indirect jobs in a wide variety of sectors that will provide goods and services during construction and operation. At the same time, community engagement and consultation is as important to us as it is to the community. Announcing the proposed Malahat LNG project in advance of formally entering into any regulatory processes has allowed us to focus on initiating engagement with aboriginal groups, the public and stakeholders to begin learning about community interests, issues and concerns. By gathering feedback at this early stage, we can work to identify concerns and interests in our project description and the actual design of the facility. We understand that not everyone will be in favour of the proposed Malahat LNG project, and we respect the opinions of everyone involved. That said, we want to ensure that local communities are provided accurate and up-to-date information on the proposed Malahat LNG project, LNG itself and the LNG industry so that we can have frank and meaningful discussions over the coming months and years. Like the rest of our team, I look forwarding to working with local communities and stakeholders in the days ahead. Meanwhile, if anyone would like to receive updates and information on the proposed Malahat LNG Project, please email us at info@ malahatlng.com Nigel Kuzemko CEO Steelhead LNG
These good Samaritans went into the ditch and brought up the plastic container, Styrofoam and an old radio. These items, and more, were dumped and abandoned by someone along Thain Road, near the Cobble Hill quarry. These two carried it to their vehicle and will properly dumped it at Bing’s Creek Recycling Depot. [CHERYL TRUDELL PHOTO]
Time to unite against unfair gas pump prices I wrote about the gouging at the pumps Nov. 5, 2015. The prices slowly came down to about $.40 behind what the price of oil should reflect, to about $.92 per litre. Gas in Calgary was $.54 per litre at the same time, so we here in Duncan were paying $.38 more for the same gas. Now that the Arabs are putting a cap on oil production and the price of a barrel of oil went up to about $30 a barrel, up about $2 a barrel, which should only be a $.02 or $.03 rise at the pump, and our American-owned gas stations put the price back up to a greedy $.99.9 per litre, that’s $.09 which would be for $90 per barrel price, if the num-
bers don’t lie, so we are being gouged close to $.50 per litre today. I’m mad as hell at how we pensioners and disabled suffer when those in power put whatever price they want on gas and I guess they’ll get away with it if no one complains. Here is a forum in this newspaper to voice your complaints and see if something can’t be done to right this terrible wrong that our government wont do because the higher the price the more tax dollars we pay. I believe it’s time to start a movement called “Citizens Against Unfair Gas Prices and Price Fixing”. What do you think? Ross Calderwood Duncan
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Opinion
| Cowichan Valley Citizen
Wednesday, February 24, 2016
OPINION
An unexpected opportunity to return home Even my drive out of town on ravenous eating demands of my Monday was an endless series of teenage son. Second, newspapers flashbacks. of this size are the ones that will I went up Government Street. I continue to flourish and produce peered down at Centennial Park outstanding journalism that res(is it still called that?), and there I onates in smaller communities. Third, current publisher Shirley was, playing tennis with my giant, Skolos was one of my all-time old, green Prince tennis racquet. favourite co-workers, so I knew the Looked up the hill to where I gig would be fun. assume Khowhemun Elementary And finally, it’s a chance to get school still sits, and remembered reacquainted with the place I’ll how in one class, if our coats always consider home. weren’t hung up properly in the For the last week or so, it has felt cloakroom, you risked getting like Richard Dreyfuss is narrating your hands whipped with a yardmy own personal movie (everyone stick. Good times. read the next passage in their best Every street I drove by, it was like Dreyfuss voice...) “hey, I wonder if so-and-so’s par“Even though I hadn’t lived in ents still live there?” the Cowichan Valley for nearly “Sure seems odd without Bruce’s a quarter-century, the memories Grocery. A 7-Eleven, really? 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Wednesday, February 24, 2016
News
| Cowichan Valley Citizen
Big changes for Society to boost tourism ROBERT BARRON DAILY NEWS
The Cowichan Valley has a “huge potential” for a dynamic and growing tourism industry, Janet Docherty told Duncan’s city council Monday, Feb. 15. But Docherty, chairperson of the Cowichan Tourism Society, said much of that tourism potential is currently “just passing us by.” She said there are some big changes coming to the society that are intended, in part, to help consolidate the many tourism initiatives that are being carried out separately by various agencies in the valley. Docherty said the CTS has been successful in acquiring a $138,000 grant from Destination BC that should be in hand by April.
She said one of the first things the society will do with the new funding is to change its governance model. That includes increasing the number of directors on its board from seven to 13, as well as establishing committees for governance, finances and marketing. “We need expert help to achieve our goals, so we’ll be hiring a co-ordinator as well,” Docherty said. “We’ll be refreshing our brand and investing more money into a number of areas, including digital marketing, more advertising at events and festivals and more signage and research.” Docherty said the society will also begin focusing on having all tourist agencies in the region “pool our scarce resources” in ongoing efforts to increase tourism in Cowichan.
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She said the society wants to focus local initiatives on attracting more tourists from the Lower Mainland, Alberta and Washington state. “We need to all work together to create one brand for all the five regions in the valley,”Docherty said. “We’ll soon be holding stakeholder meetings in the valley to gather input and ideas.” Docherty said while the funding from Destination BC must be leveraged with funding from local agencies and stakeholders, she wasn’t asking the City of Duncan for any funding at this time. “What we’re requesting is that the city let us know what they are doing to attract more tourists here, and engage with us as we move forward with this process.”
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A proposed housing development at 6006 Lakes Rd. is one step closer to reality after a crowded public hearing Wednesday. The Municipality of North Cowichan gave the third Coun. Al Siebring reading to the controversial project, which would see a 16-lot subdivision built on 3.8 acres of property, after hearing from the proponent, Gordon McEwan, and many nearby residents to the property who raised a number of concerns. The concerns were mainly around increased density and traffic in the primarily residential neighbourhood, and drainage issues at the site. Dan Cramer, who said he moved to the neighbourhood just three months ago, said he decided to move there because it’s a “nice, quiet neighbourhood with nice lots.” “This project would change the feel of the neighbourhood, and it was not what I signed up for when I bought my house,” he said. McEwan assured that the drainage issues, which he said he feels is the main concern of the neighbours, and the issues around increased traffic on area roads, will be dealt with in the construction phase by professional engineers. He said fears of increased noise to the existing residents in the quiet neighbourhood related to the new development would be “irrelevant” due to the distance of the new lots from their homes. Coun. Al Siebring said change “is difficult” for neighbourhoods. “I understand that,” he said. “But I really believe that if the process is given some time, like 10 to 15 years after it’s completed, the new development would integrate nicely into the rest of the neighbourhood.” Scott Mark, the municipality’s director of development services, said staff support the application on the basis that it’s consistent with the objectives of North Cowichan’s Official Community Plan as it relates to growth and development within its urban containment boundaries. The date for the fourth, and final, reading of the application for the zoning change to develop the property will be considered by council at a later date. 7002013
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Cowichan Valley Citizen
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Friday, January 29, 2016
23
Mount Benson lies just inland from the City of Nanaimo. Many don’t Cowichan Valley Citizen | Wednesday, February 24, 2016 know that it got its name from a very colourful pioneer to British Columbia.
11
Half a century ago, for some Granduc miners, a miracle [SUBMITTED] [SUBMITTED]
“You’d see a boot sticking out of the snow... you had to check to see whether there was a leg in it. You’d find a glove and have to check for fingers. The place was just one general mess... like a bomb pit.”
of coal in search of a 26-yearold miner buried for a week. Then, on Feb. 24, all rescue personnel were hurriedly evacuated from the still-dangerous Granduc. It was snowing heavily again, precipitating small slides, more of which were expected imminently. Five hundred miles to the south, yet another avalanche sparked a search at the minROGER SCHMIDT, first rescuer on scene ing community of Bralorne for eight-year-old Leo Smythe who’d vanished while en route had to check to see whether there was a leg in it. You’d find to a Cub Scout meeting; it was feared that he’d been buried by a glove and have to check for snow sliding from buildings. fingers. The place was just one A week after the mountain general mess...like a bomb pit.” thundered down upon Ganduc, By this time the list of hope was abandoned for the known dead had risen to 16; 10 seven men still missing. men remained unaccounted In Ketchikan, doctors fought for. to save the frozen limbs of But the rescuers had been carpenter Myllyla, who lay inspired by the discovery in a special oxygen pressure of a carpenter — alive after tank which helped to rebuild having been entombed for 77 damaged tissues and to restore hours. Einar Myllyla, 38, was body functions. Although his uncovered by the blade of a fingertips would have to be bulldozer which was clearing amputated, he’d make a full a helicopter landing pad. He recovery from his ordeal. suffered from severe frostbite. Among the last to be injured But he was alive. had been the RCMP dog Prince Despite an improvement in who’d suffered a slashed foot the weather, which was now from metal debris while huntmild, the threat of new slides Pacific Timber Supply Area – Information Package continued. miles ing for bodies. Available Thousands for Review and of Comment Finally, in Vancouver, 175 distant, in Japan, hope was Members offor the the public33areminers invited to reviewpersons and provideattended memorial abandoned Timber Supply services for the 26 men who stillcomments trappedonattheYubari and,Review information package for the Pacific Timber Supply Area (TSA). The died at Granduc. in Coleman, Alberta, rescue Pacific TSA covers roughly 698,000 ha and is composed of Later, leader Lt.-Col. workers ripped through a wall 30 Blocks — ranging in size from 76 ha - 405,000 ha —rescue on
free when we found them.” Alex Knott, 21, told how he’d been clearing snow from the bunk house roof when the slide came. “I turned n the morning around and saw the of Feb. 18, 1965 a cook house coming right devastating avaCHRONICLES at me. I yelled, ‘Look lanche swept away the out, a slide!’ then it hit mining camp at GranT.W. Paterson me and I was buried. duc in northwestern It felt like I was being hit by wet B.C. Twenty-six men were killed, blankets — boom, boom. I was burmany of them buried alive as they ied. Then I felt a foot in my face. I slept in their bunkhouse, in the pushed up.” worst provincial mining disaster Historians remember Dr. A.R. Benson mcken’s place. wasofhis friend, Bill Rogers, who in was 35 years. for hisItrole returning officer in the naimo Benson’s next assignmy arms was pulling RCAF hangar in VancouJune“grabbed 1859 election to theand provincial t; he’dAn take his leave of the fur while heCapt. stood on my ribs”. the sawto heartrending scenes of legislature. John Swanson, panyver there, become the surgeon elected by had a majorhe Vancouver Co.were before The horrorwas of avalanche survivors Coal as they reunited only candidate, one — by Capt. Stuart, ning his own practice and investing but a fewC.E. hours afterthe a with families. Flown by charteredity offollowed registered voter. oal mine development. When he hard-onlysimilar slide buried the 26 inhabitaircraft from Alaska, “tough it was village, announced ed torock the Old Country in 1862 it ants this of a month tiny Chilean miners and construction men Earlier red that Cabrera. Mount Benson Park, as a highly respected and liked For theRegional poor South Amerfrom the northern wilderness onlyicans a portion of which actuallyitisbeing aimospilled resident. His friend, Capt. there’d be no rescue, unashamed tears...” mountaintop, is finally be of protected rge Richards, RN, hadwas complireported that not ato sign life was For some there no joy. logging bythe a conservation ted him by elated naming Mount Benson be found within three-mile While husbands and wives fromtofurther years acquisition 859. Benson Island Barkley sea of 10 ice, mudafter and its rock which had embraced, oneinwoman huddled covenant, nd and Benson Creek in Welling-softly. as parkland. swept over the village. Also, half a alone in a corner, weeping districtRadio also honour this eccentric world away, more than 40 Japanese operator Innis Kelly eer. described the killing slide: “It www.twpaterson.com miners were trapped when an explosion shattered the coal pit in was noiseless, not a sound. It was which they were working. like watching a huge white wave At Granduc, a small army of with bulldozers and cats and men TWIN CAPRICE CINEMA soldiers and bulldozers rolling on top ofwww.hollywood3.ca the crest. When it | An affiliate of Hollywood www.hollywood3.ca | An affiliate of Hollywood 3 3 Cinema Cinema grimly struggled on. Roger Schmidt, was over the men were justDuncan gone. 404 Street, Duncan been the first rescuer to Just gone, that’s all.” 24 HR Showlinewho’d 250-748-0678 reach the scene, described the Kelly had been at his makeSHOWTIMES difficult conditions encountered: shift radio for 16 hours. Initially, THE REVENANT 14A “The amount of debris in there unable to receive, he’d not even 6:20PM, 6:20PM, 9:25PM 9:25PM DAILY is DAILY beyond description. There are been sure that his frantic distress 3:00PM, 9:25 PM 3:00PM, 6:30PM, PM SAT SAT & & SUN SUN lengths of pipe; conduit, signals were being picked up. 6:30PM, 9:2540-foot KUNG FU PANDA 3 G torn up by2D the slide, is lying in Between calls, he helped look for9:30 PM DAILY 9:30 PM DAILY 200-foot-long strips. When I first missing friends. The night shift, 1:00 1:00 PM, PM, 9:30 9:30 PM PM SAT, SAT, SUN SUN arrived there he recounted, 35 men, “were KUNGsleepFU PANDA 3 G 3D I was working in 5:10 PM ing. They were buried alive. We 5:10 PM, PM, 7:15 7:15 powder PM DAILY DAILY snow up to my knees even 3:05 5:10 PM SUN 3:05 PM, PM, 5:10 PM, PM, 7:15 7:15 PM SAT, SAT, SUN with snowshoes on. The dog was got some of them out...they were H ALL and 2D SHOWS $6.50their BEFORE 6PM, $8.50 AFTER 6PMup AND ALLYou’d DAY $5.00 buried toTUESDAYS his neck... seeHa crying beating heads Sale on April 8of -the23 boot sticking out snow...you against the timbers trying to getAIR 7373732 FULLY CONDITIONED 7373732 (Conclusion) When it was over the men were just gone. Just gone, that’s all.”—radio operator Innis Kelly.
O
s than amused by Albert Benson
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Timber Supply Review
TE SALE
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www.twpaterson.com
The information package provides a general description and brief history of the TSA, and a draft of data that will be applied to the upcoming timber supply analysis. The timber supply analysis provides the province’s Chief Forester with information required to determine the allowable annual cut (AAC) — the maximum volume of timber to be harvested from the TSA — for the next 10 years.
Members
, 2016 • Members
Matthews, a veteran of the Port Alberni tidal wave disaster the previous year, recalled the week of frustration he’d experienced at Granduc. Firstly, snow and fog had prevented helicopters from landing at the site during the first crucial 24 hours, and crippled flying operations sporadically thereafter. Secondly, vital radio communications had suffered frequent interference and complete blackouts. Even the Alaskan ferry Taku, pressed into service as a hospital ship, instead of taking the direct 110-mile route to Chickamin River, had gone 180 miles out of the way, costing more previous time. But the worst blow had been the fact that two-thirds of the rescue army had been stranded in Stewart during the hours immediately after the slide when they had been most needed. Twenty-six men died at Granduc, Feb. 18, 1965; it was the worst provincial mining disaster in 35 years. It had been a bad winter for slides. Four persons died the previous January when 15 million cubic yards of rock and mud obliterated a two-mile stretch of the Trans-Pacific Highway near Hope. Seven more were buried at Ocean Falls, four days later.
Sale on April 8 - 23 Members
ULTIMATE SALE
The Chief Forester will consider public and First Nations input, and other information required under the Forest Act when a new AAC is determined.
! E C SPECIAL N IONS ULTIMATE SPECIAL A al FABRICS NOTIONSSALE H n o C i t i T S PURCHASE g Thread MOVING add PURCHASE n A SALE a L e ULTIMATE SALE v BUY 1 GET 1,2,3 FREE LL SPECIAL A ITEMS FABRICS NOTIONS F o sa t R On Now Till ITEMS End of Month U ! O PURCHASE N * O I % T C % 50 toWENOTIONS ULTIMATE SALE ULTIMATE SALE ITEMS% ARE MOVING! FABRICS COLLE Sale on Feb. 27-29th, 2016 • Members
Copies of the Pacific TSA information package are available online: http://www.for.gov.bc.ca/bcts/areas/tsg/tsg-tsr.htm or at the following Ministry of Forests, Lands and Natural Resource Operations District locations: (Please call ahead to arrange an appointment.)
Sale on April 8 - 23 Members
Sale on Feb. 27-29th, 2016 • Members
Sale on on April April 8 8 -- 23 23 Sale Members Members Sale on April 8 - 23 Members Sale on Feb. 27-29th, 2016 •SALE Members UL Sale onTIMATE Jan. 13th-Feb. 4th, 2016 • Sale Members on April 8 - 23 Including Sale on Feb. 27-29th, Thread 2016 • Members
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If you have any questions or would like further information, contact Planning Forester, Erin Boelk, RPF. CAMPBELL •Exclusions: HOMEWOOD RD • 250-286-3600 Exclusions: special purchase RIVER items, yarn, knitting books & Red Barn products. *refers Fabricland special purchase items, yarn, to knitting booksSewing & Red Club Barn Members. products. *refers to Fabricland Sewing Club Members. ~ Locally Owned & Operated ~ Ph: 250 286-9300 / Email: Erin.Boelk@gov.bc.ca. Exclusions: special purchase items, yarn, knitting books Barn products. to Sewing Members. Exclusions: special purchase& items, yarn,Fabricland knitting books & & Red Red Barn products. *refers *refers to Fabricland Fabricland Sewing Club Club Members. Barn products. *refers to Sewing Club Monday to Thursday Saturday 9:30-5:30, Friday 9:30-7, Sunday and Members. Holidays 11-5 Exclusions: special purchase items, yarn, knitting books & Red Barn products. *refers to Fabricland Sewing Club Members.
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12
Wednesday, February 24, 2016
Living
| Cowichan Valley Citizen
CANADIAN OUTLAW
DRIVESMART
Beware morning after TIM SCHEWE SPECIAL TO THE CITIZEN
P
Corb Lund and his band, the Hurtin’ Albertans, played the Cowichan Performing Arts Centre on Jan. 28, taking a packed house on a journey through his long career as an outlaw country music star, from his 2002 breakthrough, Five Dollar Bill to last year’s Things That Can’t Be Undone. [KEVIN ROTHBAUER/CITIZEN]
arty hearty! Some people would seem to make a contest about how much alcohol they can drink and still function. Early in my policing career it was not uncommon to find a drunk driver with a blood alcohol level between .30 and .36. These people were truly drunk and not just impaired as most of us would start to be at the .05 level. Time to head for home and sleep it off because some of us have to be at work in the morning. Fast forward to mid morning of the next day and I stop a loaded logging truck in a school zone whose driver smelled of stale liquor. Yes, he had been out partying the night before but he thought that he should be good to go now. A quick test with an approved screening device at the roadside showed that this driver just squeaked in under the .05 limit. I could not impose any driving sanctions against him but I strongly suspect that he was not at his peak of safe driving performance just then. Since we don’t really have any accurate idea of our maximum blood alcohol concentration after having a few drinks it can be difficult to know if we can
legally drive or not. An online BAC calculator for a 180 pound male drinking that mickey evenly spaced from 9 p.m. to midnight indicates it should be about .14 at 4 a.m., the probable time of our highest BAC. We are now a 14-hour wait away from zero, and could still be at about .06 by lunchtime the next day. That’s enough to become involved in the Immediate Roadside Prohibition program if you are found driving. Does that mean you should not have a glass of wine with dinner at a restaurant? Probably not, but as with all things, it depends on many factors. That single glass of wine does impair your ability to drive to some extent. If you are tired, feeling poorly, using medication, traffic is heavy, the weather is bad, it’s night time and the unexpected happens that glass might just be the tipping point between becoming involved in a collision and avoiding one. You can choose to drink or not to drink before driving and your fellow road users are relying on your good judgment. Tim Schewe is a retired constable with many years of traffic law enforcement experience. To comment or learn more, please visit drivesmartbc.ca.
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Pink Shirt Day
Cowichan Valley Citizen | Wednesday, February 24, 2016
13
SPIRIT OF COMPASSION WEEK
Cowichan Secondary School’s Leadership Class took part in School Spirit Day Feb. 22 by wearing school colours. School Spirit Day is part of Compassion Week from Feb. 22-26, a week dedicated to inclusivity and treating others with respect. [PAUL BRIAN/CITIZEN]
Local teams address both bully and victim KEVIN ROTHBAUER CITIZEN
The issue of bullying in sports came to the forefront on Vancouver Island recently when the Oak Bay High School junior boys basketball team cancelled the remainder of its season after a serious incident involving the team, which was ranked No. 1 in Victoria at the time. A photograph described as “highly inappropriate” by the
Greater Victoria schools superintendent was taken of one of the players and posted on social media by a teammate, leading to further harassment and abuse from some individuals. Although only a handful of players on the team were involved in the incident, the majority of them were award of what happened, and the decision was made by school administrators to cancel the season.
Schools in the Cowichan Valley don’t think they are immune to similar situations, and have tried to be proactive about both preventing and addressing bullying within their sports teams. Some of that involves dealing with bullying the same way one would in any school situation. “I think a few things come to mind,” said Lucky Walia, athletic director and senior boys head coach at Cowichan Sec-
ondary School. “First, when you notice, or hear about bullying, you want to make sure that the person being bullied is safe: feels heard, respected, and cared for. You also want to check in on the person involved with the bullying actions: what is going on with them, what is the context, how can you help manage their behaviour? “Next, can you help mend the relationship? What was the root
of the problem? We do have a district policy with respect to reporting, investigating, corrective actions, and addressing adverse symptoms — you would try to make use of available resources to support students.” Duncan Christian School has a similar approach that weaves in the school’s faith-based programs. See BULLYING, Page 17
We support the Àght against Bullying! Phone 310-0001 • www.panago.com Duncan Village, 180 Central Rd.
14
Wednesday, February 24, 2016
| Cowichan Valley Citizen
Wednesday, February 24, 2016
For #PinkShirtDay, Iâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;m helping to stop bullying by turning the Internet into a positive place. I #PinkItForward to <Robert Barron> for <his fine writing skills>. Your turn!
Brighten up the Internet with #PinkItForward W
e know the Internet can be a pretty negative place, and that this negativity can lower self-esteem and create bullying behaviour. During the next few days, in lead-up to Pink Shirt Day, CKNW Orphansâ&#x20AC;&#x2122; Fund wants to change that! CKNW Orphansâ&#x20AC;&#x2122; Fund is teaming up with Coast Capital Savings to turn the Internet positive and help stop bullying. Will you help #PinkitForward? How can you get involved? Itâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s simple: 1. From now until Pink Shirt Day (Feb. 24), post a photo of someone special on Facebook, Instagram or Twitter. It could be a friend, teammate, colleague, family member, classmate or even someone you just met. 2. Tell us what you appreciate about them or what makes them so special and include the hashtag #PinkItForward Twitter: For #PinkShirtDay, I appreciate <Name of friend> because <reason why theyâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;re awesome>. Now itâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s your turn to #PinkItForward Instagram or Facebook: For #PinkShirtDay, Iâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;m helping to stop bullying by turning the Internet into a positive place. I #PinkItForward to <Name of friend> for <reason why theyâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;re awesome>. Now itâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s your turn! 3. Remember to tag that person so they can also #PinkItForward. Itâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s that easy! And remember, each time someone spreads the kindness by using #PinkItForward, Coast Capital Savings will donate $1 to Pink Shirt Day â&#x20AC;&#x201D; up to $45,000.
JOIN THE MOVEMENT AGAINST BULLYING ON FEBRUARY 24 false names, allowing them to covertly engage in bullying behavior. As a result, tracking down bullies can be challenging. Although cyberbullying is on the rise, there are some things that parents and children can do to help put a stop to such unfortunate instances. * Parents who feel their child is not emotionally ready for the responsibility of a digital device can hold back on purchasing a smartphone or choose one with very limited features. Some schools set strict limits on phone usage at school, and children who go only from school to home and vice versa may not have the need for an â&#x20AC;&#x153;emergency phoneâ&#x20AC;? that can open up a window for trouble. * Adolescents and teens should feel comfortable talking with their parents without the fear of reprimand. Otherwise, they may hide instances of cyberbullying or not know how to broach sensitive topics like bullying. Parents can engage in conversation with their children often and stress that the doors of communication are always open. * Teens should be made aware that cyberbullying is a very real occurrence and is not just other kids â&#x20AC;&#x153;having funâ&#x20AC;?
or â&#x20AC;&#x153;joking.â&#x20AC;? If behavior is repetitive and hurtful, it should be made public and addressed. * Parents can monitor and limit their childrenâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s personal accounts. Some smartphone and tablet applications can be mirrored on the main account, enabling parents to see incoming text or video messages. * A laptop or desktop computer should be placed in a shared space so that usage can be monitored. Parents can restrict tablet or smartphone usage to public areas. * When online, children should be advised not to share personal information. Social media sites may be used by bullies to gather sensitive information about a person that can be used against them at a later time. Children should be urged to keep passwords secret and to never give information such as birthdays, phone numbers and addresses to people who arenâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;t close friends. Friend lists should be restricted to only those people students interact with frequently to minimize the chance for bullying or other inappropriate behavior. * Teens who have been bullied can keep evidence of the bullying and may benefit from talking with a counselor. Cyberbullying is a growing concern ass for educators and parents and has etti et ting ngg far-reaching implications. Getting on ca an he helpp smart about this phenomenon can ullllying yiingg. staunch new cases of online bbu bullying.
For #PinkShirtDay, I appreciate <Kevin Rothbauer> because <he takes awesome photos>. Now itâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s your turn to #PinkItForward
JOIN THE MOVEMENT AGAINST BULLYING ON FEBRUARY 24 Learn the early warning signs of bullyingâ&#x20AC;Ś
Recognizing cyberbullying Before social media became so prevalent, instances of bullying were somewhat easy to recognize. However, with a good majority of children now engaged in digital networking and social media, bullying may not end with the ringing of the school bell, and evidence of bullying may not be so readily apparent. According to Cyberbullying statistics from the i-SAFE foundation, more than half of adolescents and teens have been bullied online, and about the same number have engaged in cyberbullying. More than 80 percent of teens use a mobile phone regularly, making it the most popular form of technology and a common medium for repeated cyberbullying. Cyberbullying takes place through electronic technology and differs from traditional forms of bullying. Cyberbullying can occur via text messaging, blogging, updates to social media sites and/or phone conversations. What makes cyberbullying more difficult to detect and remedy than traditional bullying is that sometimes this type of bullying is veiled in secrecy. Those who engage in cyberbullying can create aliases and accounts under
| Cowichan Valley Citizen 15
Adults should remain diligent in monitoring what kids are doing online. Bullying can take place through digital devices, such as mobile phones.
Pink Shirt Day is Wednesday Feb 24th
Children grow and develop their personalities in various ways. While many youngsters are teased or receive some good-natured ribbing at some point in their school careers, some teasing can eventually turn into bullying. The National Education Association estimates that 160,000 children miss school every day due to fear of attack or intimidation by other students. Furthermore, more than 70 percent of students report incidents of bullying at their schools. Although children in lower grades have reported being in more fights than those in higher grades, there is a higher rate of violent crimes in middle and high schools than in elementary schools. According to the association Make Beats Not Beat Downs, harassment and bullying have been linked to 75 percent of school shooting incidents. Bullying can take many forms, and learning the warning signs as a parent can help prevent harassment and
potentially dangerous situations. Verbal: If your child reports being called names, being the recipient of racist, sexist or homophobic jokes, or being spoken to in an offensive or suggestive way, this can be a form of verbal bullying. Cyber: Social media, email and text messaging has become a way for bullies to spread malicious messages or photos. In the era of digital media, this type of bullying has increased considerably. Physical: Some bullies engage in physical attacks, including hitting, kicking, spitting, or other forms of physical confrontation. Destroying personal property also is considered physical bullying. Indirect: Gossiping and spreading nasty rumours about a person is another form of bullying. This type of bullying may go hand-in-hand with cyber bullying. Signs your child is being bullied Parents can recognize certain signs
that their child is being bullied at school. Bullied children frequently make excuses to avoid going to school. While the desire to stay home is something many children may express, those who are bullied may do so much more frequently. Bullied children tend to avoid certain places and may be sad, angry, withdrawn, or depressed. They may have trouble sleeping or experience changes in appetite, and bullied youngstersâ&#x20AC;&#x2122; academic performance may suffer. Also, parents may notice that children return from school missing some of their belongings.
Signs your child is the bully Parents may not want to imagine their children bullying other students, but bullies do exist. Children who bully other kids have strong needs for power and negative dominance. They may find satisfaction in causing suffering to others. Some signs that your child may be a bully include: â&#x20AC;˘ easily becoming violent with others
â&#x20AC;˘ having friends who bully others â&#x20AC;˘ blaming others quickly â&#x20AC;˘ comes home with belongings that do not belong to him or her â&#x20AC;˘ getting in trouble with teachers or school administrators â&#x20AC;˘ picking on siblings â&#x20AC;˘ not accepting responsibility for actions There are ways parents can teach their children to act properly when faced with a bully. First, parents should explain that bullying is not the childâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s fault and he or she does not deserve to be picked on. Next, parents can let children know that
being assertive but not violent with bullies may diffuse the situation, as some bullies thrive on the fear of their victims. If the bullying behaviour continues, the student should speak to an adult or authority figure. Parents of bullies may need to be especially mindful of their childrenâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s behaviour. Counselling could be necessary to determine what is compelling kids to bully other students. ts. s
Pink Shirt Day is Wednesday Feb 24th
SCOTTâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;S TOYS & HOBBIES
We all agree )<33@05. can have =,9@ :,906<: *65:,8<,5*,:
Please support this important day -LIY\HY`
Wearing 7052 is a great way to
:/6> @6<9 :<7769; 1855 Renfrew Rd. Shawnigan Lake
WORDS ARE POWERFUL. Use Yours to Help Stop Bullying.
letâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s eradicate bullying
250-743-9897
AUTO GLASS & UPHOLSTERY
s 250-748-4466 â&#x20AC;&#x2122; d o R #2 - 2986 Boys Road, Duncan
For more information call Ramona
a home away from home... for your best friend
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250-748-2443
www.happytails-dog-daycare.com email: info@happytails-dog-daycare.com
All of us at Leeâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Chicken
FULLY SUPPORT ANTI-BULLYING Wear pink on Wednesday, Feb. 24
Duncan Mall, by Tim Hortonâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s | 250-748-4424
14
Wednesday, February 24, 2016
| Cowichan Valley Citizen
Wednesday, February 24, 2016
For #PinkShirtDay, Iâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;m helping to stop bullying by turning the Internet into a positive place. I #PinkItForward to <Robert Barron> for <his fine writing skills>. Your turn!
Brighten up the Internet with #PinkItForward W
e know the Internet can be a pretty negative place, and that this negativity can lower self-esteem and create bullying behaviour. During the next few days, in lead-up to Pink Shirt Day, CKNW Orphansâ&#x20AC;&#x2122; Fund wants to change that! CKNW Orphansâ&#x20AC;&#x2122; Fund is teaming up with Coast Capital Savings to turn the Internet positive and help stop bullying. Will you help #PinkitForward? How can you get involved? Itâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s simple: 1. From now until Pink Shirt Day (Feb. 24), post a photo of someone special on Facebook, Instagram or Twitter. It could be a friend, teammate, colleague, family member, classmate or even someone you just met. 2. Tell us what you appreciate about them or what makes them so special and include the hashtag #PinkItForward Twitter: For #PinkShirtDay, I appreciate <Name of friend> because <reason why theyâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;re awesome>. Now itâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s your turn to #PinkItForward Instagram or Facebook: For #PinkShirtDay, Iâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;m helping to stop bullying by turning the Internet into a positive place. I #PinkItForward to <Name of friend> for <reason why theyâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;re awesome>. Now itâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s your turn! 3. Remember to tag that person so they can also #PinkItForward. Itâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s that easy! And remember, each time someone spreads the kindness by using #PinkItForward, Coast Capital Savings will donate $1 to Pink Shirt Day â&#x20AC;&#x201D; up to $45,000.
JOIN THE MOVEMENT AGAINST BULLYING ON FEBRUARY 24 false names, allowing them to covertly engage in bullying behavior. As a result, tracking down bullies can be challenging. Although cyberbullying is on the rise, there are some things that parents and children can do to help put a stop to such unfortunate instances. * Parents who feel their child is not emotionally ready for the responsibility of a digital device can hold back on purchasing a smartphone or choose one with very limited features. Some schools set strict limits on phone usage at school, and children who go only from school to home and vice versa may not have the need for an â&#x20AC;&#x153;emergency phoneâ&#x20AC;? that can open up a window for trouble. * Adolescents and teens should feel comfortable talking with their parents without the fear of reprimand. Otherwise, they may hide instances of cyberbullying or not know how to broach sensitive topics like bullying. Parents can engage in conversation with their children often and stress that the doors of communication are always open. * Teens should be made aware that cyberbullying is a very real occurrence and is not just other kids â&#x20AC;&#x153;having funâ&#x20AC;?
or â&#x20AC;&#x153;joking.â&#x20AC;? If behavior is repetitive and hurtful, it should be made public and addressed. * Parents can monitor and limit their childrenâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s personal accounts. Some smartphone and tablet applications can be mirrored on the main account, enabling parents to see incoming text or video messages. * A laptop or desktop computer should be placed in a shared space so that usage can be monitored. Parents can restrict tablet or smartphone usage to public areas. * When online, children should be advised not to share personal information. Social media sites may be used by bullies to gather sensitive information about a person that can be used against them at a later time. Children should be urged to keep passwords secret and to never give information such as birthdays, phone numbers and addresses to people who arenâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;t close friends. Friend lists should be restricted to only those people students interact with frequently to minimize the chance for bullying or other inappropriate behavior. * Teens who have been bullied can keep evidence of the bullying and may benefit from talking with a counselor. Cyberbullying is a growing concern ass for educators and parents and has etti et ting ngg far-reaching implications. Getting on ca an he helpp smart about this phenomenon can ullllying yiingg. staunch new cases of online bbu bullying.
For #PinkShirtDay, I appreciate <Kevin Rothbauer> because <he takes awesome photos>. Now itâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s your turn to #PinkItForward
JOIN THE MOVEMENT AGAINST BULLYING ON FEBRUARY 24 Learn the early warning signs of bullyingâ&#x20AC;Ś
Recognizing cyberbullying Before social media became so prevalent, instances of bullying were somewhat easy to recognize. However, with a good majority of children now engaged in digital networking and social media, bullying may not end with the ringing of the school bell, and evidence of bullying may not be so readily apparent. According to Cyberbullying statistics from the i-SAFE foundation, more than half of adolescents and teens have been bullied online, and about the same number have engaged in cyberbullying. More than 80 percent of teens use a mobile phone regularly, making it the most popular form of technology and a common medium for repeated cyberbullying. Cyberbullying takes place through electronic technology and differs from traditional forms of bullying. Cyberbullying can occur via text messaging, blogging, updates to social media sites and/or phone conversations. What makes cyberbullying more difficult to detect and remedy than traditional bullying is that sometimes this type of bullying is veiled in secrecy. Those who engage in cyberbullying can create aliases and accounts under
| Cowichan Valley Citizen 15
Adults should remain diligent in monitoring what kids are doing online. Bullying can take place through digital devices, such as mobile phones.
Pink Shirt Day is Wednesday Feb 24th
Children grow and develop their personalities in various ways. While many youngsters are teased or receive some good-natured ribbing at some point in their school careers, some teasing can eventually turn into bullying. The National Education Association estimates that 160,000 children miss school every day due to fear of attack or intimidation by other students. Furthermore, more than 70 percent of students report incidents of bullying at their schools. Although children in lower grades have reported being in more fights than those in higher grades, there is a higher rate of violent crimes in middle and high schools than in elementary schools. According to the association Make Beats Not Beat Downs, harassment and bullying have been linked to 75 percent of school shooting incidents. Bullying can take many forms, and learning the warning signs as a parent can help prevent harassment and
potentially dangerous situations. Verbal: If your child reports being called names, being the recipient of racist, sexist or homophobic jokes, or being spoken to in an offensive or suggestive way, this can be a form of verbal bullying. Cyber: Social media, email and text messaging has become a way for bullies to spread malicious messages or photos. In the era of digital media, this type of bullying has increased considerably. Physical: Some bullies engage in physical attacks, including hitting, kicking, spitting, or other forms of physical confrontation. Destroying personal property also is considered physical bullying. Indirect: Gossiping and spreading nasty rumours about a person is another form of bullying. This type of bullying may go hand-in-hand with cyber bullying. Signs your child is being bullied Parents can recognize certain signs
that their child is being bullied at school. Bullied children frequently make excuses to avoid going to school. While the desire to stay home is something many children may express, those who are bullied may do so much more frequently. Bullied children tend to avoid certain places and may be sad, angry, withdrawn, or depressed. They may have trouble sleeping or experience changes in appetite, and bullied youngstersâ&#x20AC;&#x2122; academic performance may suffer. Also, parents may notice that children return from school missing some of their belongings.
Signs your child is the bully Parents may not want to imagine their children bullying other students, but bullies do exist. Children who bully other kids have strong needs for power and negative dominance. They may find satisfaction in causing suffering to others. Some signs that your child may be a bully include: â&#x20AC;˘ easily becoming violent with others
â&#x20AC;˘ having friends who bully others â&#x20AC;˘ blaming others quickly â&#x20AC;˘ comes home with belongings that do not belong to him or her â&#x20AC;˘ getting in trouble with teachers or school administrators â&#x20AC;˘ picking on siblings â&#x20AC;˘ not accepting responsibility for actions There are ways parents can teach their children to act properly when faced with a bully. First, parents should explain that bullying is not the childâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s fault and he or she does not deserve to be picked on. Next, parents can let children know that
being assertive but not violent with bullies may diffuse the situation, as some bullies thrive on the fear of their victims. If the bullying behaviour continues, the student should speak to an adult or authority figure. Parents of bullies may need to be especially mindful of their childrenâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s behaviour. Counselling could be necessary to determine what is compelling kids to bully other students. ts. s
Pink Shirt Day is Wednesday Feb 24th
SCOTTâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;S TOYS & HOBBIES
We all agree )<33@05. can have =,9@ :,906<: *65:,8<,5*,:
Please support this important day -LIY\HY`
Wearing 7052 is a great way to
:/6> @6<9 :<7769; 1855 Renfrew Rd. Shawnigan Lake
WORDS ARE POWERFUL. Use Yours to Help Stop Bullying.
letâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s eradicate bullying
250-743-9897
AUTO GLASS & UPHOLSTERY
s 250-748-4466 â&#x20AC;&#x2122; d o R #2 - 2986 Boys Road, Duncan
For more information call Ramona
a home away from home... for your best friend
#68 Station St., Downtown Duncan
250-748-2443
www.happytails-dog-daycare.com email: info@happytails-dog-daycare.com
All of us at Leeâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Chicken
FULLY SUPPORT ANTI-BULLYING Wear pink on Wednesday, Feb. 24
Duncan Mall, by Tim Hortonâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s | 250-748-4424
16
Wednesday, February 24, 2016
Pink Shirt Day
| Cowichan Valley Citizen
Cyber bullying big for ages 9, 10 PAUL BRIAN CITIZEN
Cyber bullying is big among kids many may assume are too young to think up online harassment. [CITIZEN FILE]
Mentoring prevents bullying
We Support Anti-Bullying
Law enforcement is standing up against bullies. North Cowichan/Duncan RCMP are showing their support for Anti-Bullying Day as both Const. Joe Power of the Crime Prevention Unit and Cpl. Cari Lougheed will be wearing pink uniform shirts as they teach Drug Abuse Resistance Education classes at local schools focused on putting a stop to bullying. “One trend that seems to be on the rise is cyber bullying among the younger children. Nine- and 10-year-old children are using the Internet for social media and therefore opening themselves up to cyber bullying,” said North Cowichan/Duncan RCMP Cpl. Krista Hobday.
“There are age restrictions on most social media sites but they are difficult to enforce, therefore it is left up to the parents to ensure they know what their children are doing online. When such young children are online they become susceptible to child luring and other online predators as well,” Hobday added. For that reason Hobday advises parents to be very aware of what their children are doing online. “A message we would like to put out there is, if your child is using the Internet for anything; gaming, Facebook, Twitter, Instagram, it is incumbent upon you to know what they are accessing and who they are speaking to,” Hobday said. “It isn’t easy to monitor your children’s online use but it is absolutely necessary.”
We Support The Fight Against Bullying
Start Something and mentor today, one hour a week makes a difference!
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Did you know? Pink Shirt Day, which is now recognized in countries around the world, started in Berwick, Nova Scotia, in 2007. It was originated by students.
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PINK SHIRT DAY I Thursday, February 25th Wear a Pink Shirt & say NO to bullying Drop by and join us Without a Net entertaining at Sherwood House! :H DOO GHVHUYH WR IHHO 6DIH DQG 5HVSHFWHG Ideal location: A short walk from your front door to Duncan’s shops, services and entertainment! Delicious chef prepared meals for your enjoyment 24 hour emergency response for peace of mind Daily activities to make friends and stay connected House keeping & fresh linens, you deserve it! Join us for your complementary lunch & tour to see our beautiful display suite Call today to book your reservation!
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Help Build People Up, Don·t Try To Break Them Down!
Pink Shirt Day
Wednesday, February 24, 2016
| Cowichan Valley Citizen 17
‘Bullying destroys relationships and breaks down community’ LOCAL TEAMS, From Page 13 “At DCS, we emphasize that each person is uniquely and beautifully created, and as such, all people ought to be valued and respected,” athletic director Tom Veenstra said. “Coaches and school staff set the tone for how students on a team treat one another. We want our students to understand the importance of treating one another with love and respect, and coaches are vital in helping guide student athletes to put this into practice. “Bullying is absolutely contrary to what we value as a school. Bullying destroys relationships and breaks down community — the opposite of what we’re all about. We believe that we are created to live in community with one another and our interactions on and off the court need to nurture positive, healthy relationships.” As with Cowichan Secondary, early steps involve seeing if the relationship between the victim and bully can be repaired. “When bullying occurs and is confirmed, we want to take action promptly to stop the destructive behaviour of the bully and work with all involved to provide healing and a restoration of damaged relationships,” Veenstra said. “In general, as a smaller school we tend to find out about incidents of bullying fairly quickly and the strong relationships we work to develop with student athletes helps us work through these issues with them.”
Bullying situations within teams need to be addressed in similar ways to any others, according to Walia. “With respect to a team, group, classroom, you try to develop a place that encourages healthy relationship skills: having empathy, and being socially responsible,” he said. “If you can model those skills with students, and they see you handling yourself that way with others, hopefully, that’s what they adopt as their way of interacting with people in their lives. To the best that you can, you’d like to create a place where bullying is prevented, rather than trying to manage it after the fact. “For adults and students, managing emotions, and making good decisions is an important life skill. athletics provide an opportunity to learn how to work with other people, respect each other’s differences, acknowledge shortcomings, and see development and learning as a lifelong process,” Walia said. Sports teams are expected to be a microcosm
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of the larger school environment at DCS, Veenstra related. “Student athletes that demonstrate destructive behaviours such as bullying will have a one-to-one conversation with the coach, often followed by a time to think while sitting on the bench. Depending on the situation, parents and other school personnel may become involved,” he said. “It’s really important student athletes understand the impact their behaviour has on the rest of the team. If parents or other students notice a situation of bullying,
they are encouraged to speak with a coach, myself, or another teacher about the situation. This is not ratting out another student, but simply an effort to keep their fellow students safe. Again, the emphasis on showing love to one another is the key. Of course, we all make mistakes but together with students we do our best to walk this path of love and respect at DCS.” Duncan Christian has also attempted to help students work positively with new technology, like cell phones and social media.
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Wednesday, February 24, 2016 | Cowichan Valley Citizen
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Brentwood brings spooky clan to life in ‘Addams Family’ PAUL BRIAN CITIZEN
Kyle van Wiltenburg, right, must choose between supporting his daughter or his wife. [PAUL BRIAN/CITIZEN] 7369654
Ken & Kelli Janicki Anderson We put your Best Interest First
Spookily we go, laughing all the way. Brentwood College School is presenting The Addams Family – A New Musical Comedy March 1 to 5 at the T. Gil Bunch Centre for Performing Arts, a humorous take on a macabre, death-obsessed clan introduced to audiences through television and films over the last several decades. The musical takes a look at what happens when daughter Wednesday falls in love with a normal young man. “Why can’t we be an average family?” Wednesday sings as she rues parental pressure to stay true to their family’s ghastly roots. Wednesday wants to break free to be with Lucas, her well-adjusted and normal fiancé, but her father Gomez and mother Morticia, not to mention the rest of the freaky family, make every step a laugh-out-loud challenge. It all comes to a (witch’s) boil at a dinner where Lucas and his family are invited over to meet the Addams family. “Wednesday is fascinating. She goes through character changes and is very dynamic. She starts out traditional Addams family, spooky and one-sided, but she has fallen in love and it changes everything,” explained Grade 11 student Holly Collis Handford, who plays Wednesday. Auditions were held in September followed by frequent rehearsals ahead of next Tuesday’s opening
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Brentwood College School’s production of ‘The Addams Family – A New Musical Comedy’ tells the hilarious and spooky story of what happens when falling in love divides the family in unexpected ways. [PAUL BRIAN/CITIZEN]
night performance. “It is honestly an absolute joy,” said Kyle van Wiltenburg, who stars as Gomez, a possessive father caught between taking his wife or daughter’s side as the new romance divides the family. Van Wiltenburg auditioned by singing a song for a general role, only to be approached later by Director Edna Widenmaier with a surprising offer. “I didn’t know what I wanted to be or anything, I was just like ‘you can put me where you see fit.’ But
then one dinner I was eating with my friends and Mrs. Widenmaier pulled me aside and said ‘How would you feel about being the lead in the play?’” van Wiltenburg recalled. Accepting the role has been a great decision, he said, adding that it has required really working on straightening his posture and perfecting Gomez’s Latin accent. “He’s definitely a very upright, very proper man...It’s supposed to be Latin, Spanish or Latin but it kind of went off in its own direction,” van Wiltenburg said. “He’s a very charismatic person, very passionate, very animated in a sense. There are two things he loves in this world the most, his wife and his daughter and the whole point of the show is that it’s the first time ever where he has to choose whether he supports his daughter or his wife and because of that things just kind of go out of control,” he added.
The South Cowichan Parks Commission and CVRD Parks & Trails Division are hosting the Public Open Your Way Home House #2 to invite public input on the Bright Angel Park Recreation Rejuvenation Project. The CVRD has received rant funding from the Province of BC to rejuvenate pecific park facilities at Bright Angel Park#2which must Public Open House CVRD Water Systems Flushing Notice BRIGHT ANGEL PARK RECREATION REJUVENATION Public Open House #2 Open House #2 e completed by March 31, 2015. BRIGHT ANGEL PARK RECREATION REJUVENATION PROJECT & PARK MANAGEMENT PLAN BRIGHT ANGEL PARK RECREATION REJUVENATION The Cowichan Valley Regional District (CVRD) will be carrying TM
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Queen Margaret’s School’s presentation of ‘Alice: Tales of a Curious Girl’ told the amazing adventures of Alice with a big cast of colourful characters. [PAUL BRIAN/CITIZEN]
Iconic characters shine in excellent staging of ‘Alice’ PAUL BRIAN CITIZEN
One step forward, two miles down the rabbit hole. Queen Margaret’s School’s presentation of Alice: Tales of a Curious Girl was a brilliant compilation of Lewis Carroll’s classics Alice in Wonderland and Alice Through the Looking Glass, pivoting from laugh-outloud comedy of the absurd to compelling messages about life and growing up. “You are a very little girl,” Alice is told by numerous characters, as she slowly builds up confidence, switches size between small and big and finds that nobody in Wonderland really has all the answers. “What if we’re all mad?” Alice asks. The play by Karen Hartman weaves a narrative about female empowerment and finding one’s destiny with a roller coaster ride through the upsidedown world of Wonderland and its cast of colourful characters and creatures. An outstanding performance from Alyssa Andress as Alice anchored the show, including great singing, while her companion the Cheshire Cat was played paw-fectly by Maiya Modeste. “If you walk long enough you’ll go a long way,” Cheshire Cat tells Alice, also advising her that her preconceptions of what’s real and valid are mistaken, and getting her to try a cigar, which doesn’t work out so well. The imperious Red Queen played by Sydney McCrae cuts an imposing figure, who at one point leads the court in its judgment of Alice for forgetting her lessons and breaking other increasingly random rules. Later the queen softens
The Cheshire Cat, played by Maiya Modeste has some words of wisdom for Alice. [PAUL BRIAN/CITIZEN]
to Alice, giving her some cynical advice. “Life is a big game of chess and you are a pawn…In this world it takes all you have just to stay put,” she tells Alice, later adding “I don’t apologize for my former tiny size, I learned to strategize like all girls do.” The White Queen played by Arrington Bricker spun Alice’s head around with her take on living backwards and defying the ordinary. “When I was your age I practiced six impossible things before breakfast,” she tells Alice. “Don’t cry, consider, consider what a big girl you are.” A host of other characters from a pair of clowns to the White Knight and the Jabberwocky kept the audience careening through each crazy twist and turn until near the end Alice encounters a nemesis who deals a blow to her expectations. As she gets to square six of the chessboard of her jangled journey, Alice is met by Hump-
ty Dumpty, given a brilliantly hilarious treatment by Rohin Arun, who had the audience doubling over with laughter as he lectured Alice, went berserk over the idea his own fate was foreknown, and criticized the play itself and its entire concept as he perched on his small wall. The whole tale must be discounted “upon consideration of the biographical impulses behind the wishful thinking” of its author, Humpty claims, silencing Alice’s protests that she is not a fiction. “You’re an egg,” she yells at him. “And you are just another story,” he responds, before Alice gets angry and he falls from the wall. Finally when she has to leave Wonderland and grows up, Alice is filled with nostalgia and wisdom, crying for “all the ways she had changed” and for all those who want to stay where they are on the chessboard of life, but must move by necessity. With students from Grade 5 to 12, the cast of 35 featured spot-on performances with characters sporting colourful and creative costumes, as well as numerous other students helping as designers, producers, light technicians and choreographers for the production. Lighting was used imaginatively and boldly to create moments of drama and illumination, and even a sparkling, flowing river at the end. Sound was also used to great effect to highlight moments of tension, humour and the unexpected. The set was very well done, with a wonky off-kilter chessboard floor, a castle done with construction paper and a giant rainbow creating the backdrop for Alice’s amazing adventure.
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| Cowichan Valley Citizen ◆ COMING UP IN THE ARTS
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Songstress Sue Newman plays Sunday, Feb. 29 at the Crofton Pub at 1534 Joan Ave. Backed by a talented quartet Newman and the Jazzmen — saxophonist Monik Nordine, guitarist Peter Taschuk, bassist Ian Van Wyck and drummer Laurent Boucher, all Saltspring Islanders — will explore jazz standards and Broadway favourites. Newman, who hails from Saltspring Island, has studied with jazz singers Jay Clayton and Sheila Jordan and performed with such artists as Hugh Fraser, Karel Roessingh, Joey Smith and Valdy. The weekly jazz series runs every Sunday from 2 to 5 p.m. at the pub. Admission is $10. For information, call 250-324-2245 or
Casting call: ‘Steel Magnolias’ The Mercury Players will be holding auditions for their upcoming production of Steel Magnolias by Robert Harling. The play centres around a young beautician who arrives in a small town in Louisiana and becomes friends with a tight-knit group of local women. Performance dates will be May 25 to June 4 (eight shows). Auditions for Steel Magnolias will be held Feb. 25 at 7 p.m. and Feb. 27 at 2 p.m. at the Mercury Theatre located at 331 Brae Rd. in Duncan. There are six roles for females ranging in age from 19 to 66. Callbacks take place Sunday, Feb. 28 at 2 p.m.
Fun onstage and backstage
YOUNG MUSICIAN OF THE WEEK
Y R O T N E V IN ANCE R A CLE hing Must Go!
BRENTWOOD, From Page 18
t y r e Ev
Austin Frykas is a bass-baritone singer on the rise. His voice teacher Meredythe Broadway helped him prepare for the shepherd role in the recent performance of the opera ‘Amahl and the Night Visitors’, conducted by Joy Ann Bannerman. His inspiration has been time spent in the music classroom of Laura Cardriver. He loves making music and enjoys “being on stage”.
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A g reat musical score by Andrew Lippa keeps the action hopping along under musical director Phil Newns, with dramatic, detailed sets conveying a decidedly Gothic tone. Top-notch technical direction from Don Armitage and choreography by Lorraine Blake complete Widenmaier’s superb direction. Van Wiltenburg said working with the cast and crew has been tremendous. “It is awesome. Everybody is just super supportive of one another,” he said. “We all have a blast when we’re onstage together.” Handford has also found it a great experience working with the cast of 56. “It’s been incredible,” she said. “The whole cast has worked together and become sort of our own family too.” The Addams Family – A New Musical Comedy opens March 1 at 7:30 p.m. Tickets are available at the door or by reservation through www.theatre. brentwood.bc.ca or by calling 250-743-8756. Special group rates are also available through the box office for parties for 10 or more.
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Wednesday, February 24, 2016
Adagé dancers take the stage in Duncan
Dancers performed in a variety of pieces.
Hip hop was one of the styles on display at Saturday’s show in Duncan.
Adagé Studio students performed styles that ranged from ballet to modern.
Adagé Studio presented its Highlights Dance Feb. 20 at the Cowichan Performing Arts Centre. Dancers of all ages wowed the crowd with their energy, expertise and creativity. [PHOTOS BY PAUL BRIAN/CITIZEN]
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Wednesday, February 24, 2016 | Cowichan Valley Citizen
250-748-2666 ext. 236 kevin.rothbauer@cowichanvalleycitizen.com
The U17 Cowichan Grizzlies are headed to provincials. [SUBMITTED]
Grizzlies avenge 2015 defeat and advance to provincials in thriller KEVIN ROTHBAUER CITIZEN
Cowichan LMG’s Josh Cuthbert keeps the ball away from Powell River defenders. [KEVIN ROTHBAUER/CITIZEN]
No surprises as LMG moves on JACKSON CUP:
Cowichan United eliminated by Lakehill KEVIN ROTHBAUER CITIZEN
There weren’t many surprises last Sunday afternoon as Cowichan LMG opened their defence of the Jackson Cup — the biggest prize in soccer on Vancouver Island — with a 6-0 win over Powell River Villa at Williams Field. Cowichan, the best team in Division 1, had little trouble with the Div. 2 Powell River team. “The game went how we thought it would go,” Cowichan head coach Glen Martin said. “They played very defensive. It was park the bus, keep everybody back, and go as long as they could at 0-0.” That turned out to be about half an hour. In the 30th minute, Cowichan captain Jesse Winter banged in a goal from a scramble just outside the goal line to put his team ahead. A minute later, Steve Scott scored a similar goal. Not long after that, a Powell River player who had been handed a yellow card for chirping at
the ref was given a red card for a nasty tackle on Josh Cuthbert. That sealed Powell River’s fate. “Behind by two and down a man, it was pretty well game over at that point,” Martin said. It was still 2-0 at halftime, but Stu Barker scored in the 55th minute, and Cuthbert scored 11 minutes after that. Govinda Innes and Jordan de Graf added penalty shot goals. Somewhat surprisingly, Vancouver Island Soccer League scoring leader Paddy Nelson was held off the scoresheet despite playing an excellent game. “It’s a good sign when we get six goals from six different players and our 27-goal scorer didn’t score,” Martin said. In the first half, Nelson found himself alone in front of a wide open net, only to see his shot stopped by a Powell River player who appeared seemingly out of nowhere. “That was message to the Wiz,” Martin said. “That was his day right there. He’s played much worse than that and scored three or four goals.” The game also marked a defensive milestone for Cowichan, who got their first clean sheet
against a Div. 2 team in 10 tries going back over the last seven Jackson Cup tournaments. Sam Hutchison did the bulk of the work in goal, but Joel Wilson came in for the last 15 minutes. LMG will have two weeks off before their next Jackson Cup game on the weekend of March 4-6, when they will be back on the Williams Field turf at home against Nanaimo’s Div. 1 team. Sadly, any hopes for an all-Cowichan Jackson Cup final were dashed on Saturday evening as Div. 2 side Cowichan United lost 4-0 to Lakehill, the last-place team from Div. 1. Martin, who was on the sidelines, called it a “strange game.” “[United] outplayed them and out-chanced [Lakehill],” he said. “But every time they thought they had something going, the other team would go down and score.” Martin estimated that United controlled possession about 70-30 over Lakehill, and guessed that Cowichan had five or six chances to Lakehill’s three — even though Lakehill scored four goals. “That happens in soccer,” he said.
After a heartbreaking loss to the same team last year, the Cowichan Valley Soccer Association U17 Gold Grizzlies is returning to the provincial B Cup championships this year after a thrilling win over Prospect Lake at the Williams Field turf on Valentine’s Day. The 2015 showdown between Cowichan and Prospect Lake went all the way to penalty kicks, and the story was the same this year, surprising no one. “After eking out a narrow 1-0 game against the same team three weeks ago, we knew the game would be close,” Grizzlies coach Al Longair said. The Cowichan players got off to a fast start in the Feb. 14 game, and just missed some early scoring chances. “They kept putting on the pressure, but the Prospect Lake keeper was superb at parrying our shots” Longair said. Although the Grizzlies held the edge in possession, a quick counter-attack goal allowed Prospect Lake to pull ahead late in the first half. Prospect Lake carried that momentum into the second half, and put pressure on the Cowichan defence, but were unable to get through. It wasn’t until the last five minutes of the game that Tyler Leech was able to muscle the ball into the net to knot the score at 1-1. The Grizzlies pushed for the go-ahead goal, but it didn’t materialize, and the game went to extra time. The Grizzlies dominated the two 15-minute extra-time ses-
“We’re very fortunate to have so many committed and outstanding players.” AL LONGAIR, Cowichan Grizzlies coach
sions, and had several chances that either narrowly missed their targets or were stopped by the Prospect Lake keeper. “Late in the second overtime half, Liam Thibodeau-Perry got his foot onto on a beautiful cross that looked to be the winner,” Longair said. “Unfortunately, his shot bounced off the underside of the crossbar and bounced out.” After a frantic finish, the game went to penalty kicks. The Grizzlies had been practicing their penalty kicks, and all five shooters scored. Unfortunately, the first five Prospect Lake shooters also scored. The sixth Cowichan shooter also found the back of the net, and Prospect Lake’s keeper stepped up to shoot. Grizzlies goalie Ty Benson, who had been subbed into the game specifically for his penalty shot prowess, made the save. “There were many heroes on the team,” Longair said. “With a full team roster of skilled players, we’re very fortunate to have so many committed and outstanding players. It’s an impressive group of young men; it took every one of the 18 team members to reach this season’s goal.” The Grizzlies will play for the Coastal B Cup in Aldergrove in April and May. The provincial tournament is set for July 7-10 in Vancouver.
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Wednesday, February 24, 2016
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T-Birds off to Islands as top seed KEVIN ROTHBAUER CITIZEN
Caps win two on Mainland trip, lock up third place KEVIN ROTHBAUER CITIZEN
The Cowichan Valley Capitals collected two wins on their three-game Mainland Division road trip last weekend and returned firmly ensconced in third place in the B.C. Hockey League’s Mainland Division. The Caps started the season with the goal of finishing higher in the standings, and sat in second place for much of the year, but ended up a little short of their aim. “We didn’t set out to get third at the beginning of the year,” head coach Bob Beatty said. “It would have been nice to have home ice in the first round, but it is what it is.” The Caps started their trip last Friday with a 7-3 win over the Surrey Eagles. They got past the Wenatchee Wild 3-2 in overtime the next night, then wrapped it all up with a 5-2 loss to the Chilliwack Chiefs. Against Surrey, the Caps gave up the opening goal just 54 seconds in, but led 5-1 by the end of the first period, and held on to that four-goal lead. “We played well enough to win,” Beatty said. “It was a good start to the road trip.” Jared Domin led the Caps with a hat trick, while Josh Adkins had a goal and four assists, and Ryan Burton scored once and added three helpers. Chris Harpur and Adam Osczevski also scored, while goalie Lane Michasiw stopped 31 of 34 shots for the victory. The Caps and the Wenatchee played to a thrilling 2-2 tie at the Island Savings Centre on Dec. 11, and last Saturday’s game — the Capitals’ first contest south of the border in more than 20 years — followed that pattern. “It was similar, end-to-end. I think it was even a little better game down there,” Beatty said. “There was a lot of neutral-zone play. I think the game was even better executed in Wenatchee than it was
here. Both goalies played well.” Three minutes into overtime, Corey Hoffman sprang Matthew Hudie, who went in and beat the Wenatchee goalie. Burton and Osczevski had the other goals, while Hoffman finished with two assists. Storm Phaneuf stopped 38 of 40 shots for his 20th win of the season. “They have a great atmosphere there,” Beatty said of Wenatchee’s Town Toyota Center. “Our guys played really well. Storm was certainly a factor. I thought our defensive zone play was pretty good, even though we gave up a lot of shots. I think we played a strong game.” The Caps closed out the trip with a rough outing in Chilliwack. “We didn’t mail it in, but we weren’t moving the puck well,” Beatty said. “We weren’t executing like we can. It wasn’t a sloppy effort, but we played them a lot better here last weekend.” Adkins and Kade Kehoe scored against the Chiefs, while Michasiw stopped 32 of 37 shots. The Caps will round out the season this weekend with a home-and-home series against the Nanaimo Clippers, playing at Frank Crane Arena on Friday and the Island Savings Centre Saturday at 7 p.m. Cowichan and Nanaimo sit first and second in penalty minutes in the BCHL, the Clippers with 1,017 and the Caps with 951, more than 100 ahead of the Alberni Valley Bulldogs and West Kelowna Warriors, who are tied for third. “It should be an interesting weekend,” Beatty said. “Both teams are locked in to where they’re going to finish, but there’s never any love lost in our meetings. I expect a couple of spirited outings, considering there isn’t a position at stake.“ By virtue of their third-place finish, the Caps know they will play the Powell River Kings in the first round of the playoffs, with the Kings holding home-ice advantage. The Caps lost 4-0 and 7-0 last time they played in Powell River.
Noah Charles scores two against Vanier. [KEVIN ROTHBAUER/CITIZEN]
at the Island tournament this weekend. Cowichan will play the winner of the game between Vanier and Belmont.
SATURDAY, MARCH S C 5TH, 2016
SATURDAY, MARCH 19TH, 2016
WHL HOCKEY Name: _______________________________ Phone: _______________________________ Enter at 251 Jubilee St., Downtown, Duncan
Contest ends March 1st, 2016 • 5:00 pm
7467087
Pictured here in a recent game against the Victoria Grizzlies, Corey Hoffman assisted on two goals in Cowichan’s victory over the Wenatchee Wild, including Matthew Hudie’s overtime winner. [KEVIN ROTHBAUER/CITIZEN]
The Cowichan Secondary Thunderbirds will head to the Island AAAA senior boys basketball tournament as one of the top seeds after sweeping through the North Island tournament last weekend. The T-Birds, who hosted the North Island tournament, started out with a 57-49 win over Dover Bay. The game was tied at 49-49 in the late going before Zach Waddington nailed a three-pointer to put Cowichan ahead for good. Eston Unrau added another three soon after. Humza Khan finished with a team-high 15 points, while Noah Charles added 14. “A number of guys contributed in various ways, chipping in with baskets, grabbing rebounds, and keeping the ball moving on offence,” head coach Lucky Walia said. “That said, Zach Waddington and Matthew Miller did some great work defending Dover Bay’s guards. Their guards are good offensive players, who receive a lot of screens on, and off the ball. It takes resilience to keep working through those screens to make shooters uncomfortable.” On Saturday, the T-Birds clinched the tournament title with a 76-56 win over G.P. Vanier. Charles put up 27 points and boosted the offence with several nice passes. Unrau added 13 points and Andy Derocher had 10. “Andy picked up some fouls, but he did a really nice job of competing, and making Vanier’s big guy work for his shots and to get to his favourite spots on the floor,” Walia said. As the top seed from the North Island, the T-Birds have a bye to the semifinal
24
Wednesday, February 24, 2016
Sports
| Cowichan Valley Citizen
Isles brace for playoff series with Cougars KEVIN ROTHBAUER CITIZEN
The Kerry Park Islanders haven’t beaten the Victoria Cougars since March 8, 2012, consistently struggling against the Vancouver Island Junior Hockey League powerhouse in the last four seasons. That last win over Victoria came in the playoffs, and with the Isles set to open the first round of the VIJHL playoffs against the Cougars, the time is ripe to end that streak. “The playoffs are a new season, so we’ll see,” said Islanders owner Mark Osmond, who bought the team in late 2012. “Win or lose, it will be an exciting series.” The series will begin Thursday at Archie Browning Arena. The teams will play at Kerry Park on Saturday at 7:30 p.m., then return to Esquimalt on Sunday at 3:30 p.m. Game four is set for next Tuesday, back at Kerry Park, at 7:30 p.m. If more games are necessary, they will be played on March 3, 5 and 6, continuing to alternate locations between Archie Browning and Kerry Park. The Isles were shooting all season for second place in the South Division, which would mean both avoiding a first-round matchup with the Cougars and home-ice advantage in the first round. They sat second for much of the season, but slipped in the stand-
Kerry Park forward Keenan Eddy slips between a pair of Nanaimo Buccaneers during last Saturday’s regular-season finale. Eddy was the Islanders’ scoring leader in the regular season with 13 goals and 23 assists in 40 games. [KEVIN ROTHBAUER/CITIZEN] ings over the last few weeks. “We had good positioning, but it wasn’t to be, I guess,” Osmond said. Osmond and head coach Aaron Spotts are doing their best to rally the troops for what will be a daunting series, but one that
isn’t completely out of reach. “We keep telling the boys, ‘They’re just young men like you,’” Osmond said. “‘They’re not superheroes just because they’re wearing a Cougars shirt.’” An arena packed with fans will
go a long way to helping the Isles overcome the Cougars, Osmond pointed out. “We’ll try and win,” he said. “Hopefully we’ll get the crowd behind us.” The Isles’ last two regular-season games included a 9-2 loss to the Cougars last Thursday. The Isles were playing with a short bench due to injuries and had two defensemen kicked out. By the end of the game, they were down to 11 healthy bodies, but it wasn’t a hopeless case. “At times, when we played fiveon-five, you could see we can do something against them,” Osmond said. David Bittner and Caleb Franklin had the Kerry Park goals. Ty Rennie started in goal and allowed five goals on 16 shots over the first 31 minutes and 45 seconds. Chase Anderson relieved him and allowed four goals on 16 shots. Still short players but with pride on the line, the Isles managed to win their regular season finale 5-2 over Nanaimo at Kerry Park Arena on Saturday. “It was nice to win our final game of the year going into the playoffs,” Osmond said. The Isles got a goal and assist each from Keenan Eddy, Graham Winship and Corey Peterson, with Chris Carpentier and Tait Aptakin also scoring. Anderson stopped 39 of 41 shots for the win.
Valley climbers qualify for nationals KEVIN ROTHBAUER CITIZEN
Five rock climbers from the Cowichan Valley all scrambled to top-10 finishes in their age groups at the Sport Climbing British Columbia Provincial Bouldering championships late last month. “Bouldering, for those not in the know, consists of short intense routes that are done without the use of a rope,” coach James Doyle explained. “Usually the climbs are lower than 15 feet in height.” Brennan Doyle won the Youth C boys category (ages 12-13), Aidan Doyle placed second in Youth B boys (14-15), Jack Whitney was fourth in Youth D boys (under 11), and Ethan Fagan and Marc Platt finished sixth and eighth, respectively, in the junior boys category (ages 18-19). Fagan and the Doyle brothers qualified to represent B.C. at the Bouldering Nationals in Ontario this month.
COWICHAN’S DREAM TEAM LAST HOME GAME BEFORE PLAYOFFS
February 27th • 7 pm
GO! CAPS! GO!
The Duncan Lions Club Fundraiser draw will take place at the last home game of the season.
PURCHASE TICKETS AT CAPITALS OFFICE OR AT ANY CAP’S GAME.
7467124
VS
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Wednesday, February 24, 2016
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INDEX IN BRIEF FAMILY ANNOUNCEMENTS COMMUNITY ANNOUNCEMENTS
FAMILY ANNOUNCEMENTS
FAMILY ANNOUNCEMENTS
FAMILY ANNOUNCEMENTS
FAMILY ANNOUNCEMENTS
FAMILY ANNOUNCEMENTS
COMMUNITY ANNOUNCEMENTS
BIRTHS
BIRTHS
CELEBRATIONS
IN MEMORIAM GIFTS
DEATHS
PERSONALS
Thank you for considering donations to: COWICHAN DISTRICT HOSPITAL FOUNDATION #4-466 Trans Canada Hwy Duncan, BC V9L 3R6 Phone: 250-701-0399 Website: www.cdhfoundation.ca Donations may be made via mail, over the phone or on our website. Donations are tax deductible & finance hospital equipment & patient care. Memorial donations are acknowledged with a letter to the family and loved ones are commemorated on our Memorial Board or Book in the hospital lobby.
WILMA HELEN MACDONALD Mrs. Wilma Helen MacDonald born in Alberni, BC on March 21, 1926 passed away on Feb. 15, 2016 at Trillium Lodge in Parksville, BC, where she resided over the past year. A long time resident of Duncan she was a housewife, a mother of 2 and worked at CIBC, The Home Bakery and BC Tel. Wilma was predeceased by her father Ed Davey, her mother Ellen Vidal, her husband Ken MacDonald, and her son K. Bryn MacDonald and is survived by her daughter Norma Gibson and son-in-law Ken Gibson currently of Qualicum Beach, BC. Be at peace... my precious Mom.
ALCOHOLICS ANONYMOUS When you are sick and tired of being sick and tired. Call us. Cowichan Valley AA. Toll free 1-866-233-5255 (24-hours)
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â&#x20AC;&#x153;Mama Naomi, Papa Blair & Big Sis Anais MIDDLEMISS are very happy to announce the birth of
Elliot Claude Middlemiss;
born December 14, 2015, in Duncan. We are thankful for a happy, healthy addition to our family!â&#x20AC;? FAMILY ANNOUNCEMENTS
FAMILY ANNOUNCEMENTS
DEATHS
DEATHS
Luther, Otto Otto passed away peacefully on February 21, 2016. Born in Blotto, Poland on March 12, 1929, he arrived in Canada in 1949. Otto was well known for building many houses in the Cowichan Valley. Predeceased by his wife Helga (2001) and daughter Heidi (1970). He will be lovingly remembered by son David (Maryanne) Luther; daughters Annelie Mannly and Ellenore (Sid) Kershaw; eight grandchildren and 14 great-grandchildren. Private family arrangements. Forever in our Hearts SANDS of DUNCAN 250-746-5212
PEVERELLE, Kenneth Robert, October 17, 1943 - February 20, 2016
It is with sad hearts that we share the news of the passing of Ken of a massive heart attack. He is survived by his wife, Bev, of 50 years: also his brother Gary; his children Lisa, Catherine (Mark) and Tom (Kirsten). A very, very proud Papa to Michael (Brianne), Megan, Max, Aidan and Jacob. He served in the Armed Forces for 25 years as well as the Commisionairs for a number of years. He had a real love of the outdoors whether it be hunting with Al and Tom; or fishing with his grandsons. We would like to thank all the doctors and nurses that have seen him over the past few years â&#x20AC;&#x201C; he put up a good fight. Many thanks to the Shawnigan Lake Volunteer Fire Department and the ambulance crew that tired so hard to save him; also to Jim the CIU nurse at the Victoria General Hospital who helped us to notify Lisa and Michael. There will be an open house on Saturday, February 27 at 3362 Boyles Rd., Cobble Hill from 1-4 pm. Cremation has taken place. No flowers, donations to the Heart & Stroke Foundation. To sign the book of condolence please visit www.sandsfuneral/colwood.com.
SANDS of COLWOOD 250-4783821
HAPPY 80th BIRTHDAY! Grandma Kelly February 23, 2016 Thanks for all your love and support over the years. Much love Sharon, Doug & families!
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FAMILY ANNOUNCEMENTS
FAMILY ANNOUNCEMENTS
DEATHS
DEATHS
Frederick George Bourne
Sands of Nanaimo
Darrell â&#x20AC;&#x153;Duffâ&#x20AC;? Bowcott
September 4, 1959 â&#x20AC;&#x201C; February 3, 2016 With great sadness we announce the sudden, unexpected passing of our dad, Darrell â&#x20AC;&#x153;Duffâ&#x20AC;? Bowcott on February 3, 2016 at the age of 56. Darrell leaves behind completely heartbroken, his three children, son Jesse, daughters Jenna and Keshia (Garrett), and grandson Ryan. Also left to mourn his loss is his mother, Peggy, and siblings Bill (Tauni), Kathy, and Corrine, many nieces and nephews, and countless other family and friends. We love you and miss you so much Dad. Thank you for all the long days at the river, nights spent watching the stars and for always telling us you loved us and you were proud. A celebration of Darrellâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s life will be held in Crofton at his childhood home on Saturday February 27th from 1 â&#x20AC;&#x201C; 4.
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September 20, 1921 January 29, 2016 A Celebration of Life will be held for Frederick Bourne of Chemainus, BC on Friday, March 11, 2016 at 2:00pm at Oceanview Community Church, 381 Davis Rd., Ladysmith, BC.
DUNCAN AREA
I WOULD LIKE TO MEET A SINGLE WOMAN in the Duncan Area. She must be 5 feet tall, of medium build, and like to listen to country music. I am looking for a person that is quiet just like myself to meet for coffee and talk. I would like to hear from you soon. I can be reached at this address: Walter Cain, GD LCD Main Duncan, BC V9L 3W9
CANADA BENEFIT Group Do you or someone you know suffer from a disability? Get up to $40,000 from the Canadian Government. Toll-free 1-888511-2250 or www.canada benefit.ca/free-assessment HAVE YOU been denied Canada Pension Plan disability benefits? The Disability Claims Advocacy Clinic can help you appeal. Call 1-877-793-3222, www.dcac.ca info@dcac.ca HIP OR knee replacement? Arthritic conditions or COPD? Restrictions in walking/dressing? Disability Tax Credit $2,000 Tax Credit $20,000 Refund. Apply Today For Assistance: 1-844-453-5372.
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26
Wednesday, February 24, 2016
| Cowichan Valley Citizen PERSONAL SERVICES
ACCOUNTING/ BOOKKEEPING
Inter Tribal Health Authority MANAGER
COMMUNITY HEALTH AND WELLNESS Temporary full-time one year position. Nanaimo Inter Tribal Health Authority (ITHA), a multidisciplinary health organization providing services to 29 member First Nations on Vancouver Island based in Nanaimo, British Columbia is seeking a Manager, Community Health and Wellness (CHW) to lead the CHW Department and related programs such as those related to Residential School survivors, those who have suffered Intergenerational trauma, suicide and critical incident response and youth leadership. The ideal candidate has a degree in the field of human services plus 3 to 5 years directly related experience including supervision. The incumbent must have suicide prevention, substance abuse and mental health program knowledge as well as knowledge of programs and services available through other provincial, federal and First Nations agencies and organizations. Advance your career today with a great organization! Please send your resume and cover letter by e-mail to hr@itha.ca or by fax at 250-591-2169. Please refer to the position title when submitting your application. â&#x153;ąThe closing date for this competition is February 26, 2016.
CAREER OPPORTUNITIES
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Fully licensed for full time job - Nanaimo area. Inventory management/computer skills favorable but will train suitable candidate. Tremendous growth, opportunity, and learning environment. Duties may include but not limited to: metric & scribner scaling, weight scaling, custom log sorting, inventory mgmt - land and water, water scaling, etc. Email: scalingjobs@gmail.com
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EDUCATION/TRADE SCHOOLS MEDICAL TRANSCRIPTION! In-demand career! Employers have work-at-home positions available. Get online training you need from an employertrusted program. Visit today: CareerStep.ca/MT or 1-855768-3362 to start training for your work-at-home career. START A New career in Graphic Arts, Healthcare, Business, Education or Information Tech. If you have a GED, call: 855-670-9765.
HELP WANTED JANITOR Pacific Energy requires a Janitor for its premises at 2975 Allenby Rd., Duncan. QualiďŹ cations would include: â&#x20AC;˘ â&#x20AC;˘ â&#x20AC;˘
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FINANCIAL SERVICES
LOOKING FOR TEMPORARY / ON CALL REGISTERED DENTAL HYGIENIST
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Has an opening for a full time Counsellor in their Duncan/Nanaimo Offices. Our clinical team provides short term EFAP counselling to employees and families emphasizing our core values of compassion, respect and integrity. We have been a well-respected and valued â&#x20AC;&#x153;not for profitâ&#x20AC;? community counselling service since 1980. Some of our key selection criteria include: r Strong counselling skills working with individuals, couples and groups r Expertise in addictions and mental health issues r Facilitation of onsite workplace Critical incident Stress Debriefing r Experience providing short term counselling in an EFAP environment r Available to work some evenings r Eligibility for Professional Certification r Minimum 7 years related experience r Masters in Counselling Please forward your resume by 4th of March, 2016. Please respond to: Bruce Youngren Executive Director Vancouver Island Counselling Fax# 250-746-8994 or Email: admin@vancouverislandcounselling.com We thank all who apply.
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Advertising Sales Consultant The Cowichan Valley Citizen, has an opening for an experienced multimedia advertising Consultant. By joining the leading community newspaper serving Cowichan Valley you can develop a rewarding career in advertising and marketing while contributing to one of the most vibrant communities in Duncan, BC. The team environment at The Citizen will inspire you to the highest level of customer partnership and reward your motivated approach to excellence. You should be a strong communicator, well organized, self motivated and enjoy working in a fast-paced environment. Print advertising sales experience is preferred. A car and a valid driverâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s license are required. The Cowichan Valley Citizen is a member of Black Press, Canadaâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s largest private independent newspaper company with more than 150 titles in print and online in British Columbia, Alberta, Washington, Hawaii, California and Ohio. Send your resume with a cover letter to: Shirley Skolos, Publisher shirley.skolos@cowichanvalleycitizen.com Cowichan Valley Citizen 251 Jubilee St., Duncan, B.C. V9L 1W8
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RESPONSIBLE CARRIERS WANTED & P/T OR ON-CALL CARRIERS
(for emergency situations) WANTED
FOR MORE INFORMATION PLEASE CALL: 250-715-7783 DUNCAN DC519002 â&#x20AC;&#x201C; 29 papers Phillips Rd Sunrise Terr DC519003 â&#x20AC;&#x201C; 76 papers Dogwood Rd Glenora Rd Miller Rd 5180-5295 DC519004â&#x20AC;&#x201C; 52 papers Hykawy Rd Koksilah Rd 5170-5310 DC519125â&#x20AC;&#x201C; 116 papers Baker Rd Banks Rd Deuchars Dr Gibbins Rd 3079-3158 DC519126â&#x20AC;&#x201C; 80 papers Uplands Ave Gibbins Rd 318 - 3228 DC519174â&#x20AC;&#x201C; 90 papers Evergreen Mobile Home Park 3497 Gibbins Rd DC519195 â&#x20AC;&#x201C; 94 papers Laurel Grove Miller Rd Mountain View Cres COWICHAN BAY DC519784 â&#x20AC;&#x201C; 50 papers Pritchard Rd 1700-1730 DC519777 â&#x20AC;&#x201C; 87 papers Buena Vista Pl Cowichan Bay Rd 1530-1600 Regatta Pl DC519774 â&#x20AC;&#x201C; 51 papers Fenwick Rd Gillis Rd Pritchard Rd 1735-1845 Wilmot Rd DC519773 â&#x20AC;&#x201C; 78 papers Alder Glen Rd 4620-4651 Austin Pl Cedar Glen Pl Glen Rd Maple Glen Rd McGill Rd 4660-4677 CROFTON DC519412 â&#x20AC;&#x201C; 78 papers Adelaide St 1633-1639 Arthur St 7976-8097 Coronation St 1634-1655 Edmund St 79618064 Emily St 1632-1680 Musgrave St 8011-8060 DC519460 â&#x20AC;&#x201C; 52 papers Adelaide St 1528-1610 Queen St 7990-8077 COBBLE HILL DC519543 â&#x20AC;&#x201C; 56 papers Douglas Vale Pl Judge Dr 4136-4245 Highland Pl Chelsea Pl Canterbury Pl DC519542 â&#x20AC;&#x201C; 76 papers Cowichan Bay Rd 1465-1495 Jims Cres Mindy Rd Nelson Pl Robson Rd Sears Rd Wood Rd Telegraph Rd 4327-4390 DC519521 â&#x20AC;&#x201C; 40 papers Ellison Pl Inverness Pl Judge Dr 4100-4135 St Catherine Dr DC519519 â&#x20AC;&#x201C; 33 papers Aros Rd Grandfield Rd McAlpine Rd Peach Rd White Cap Rd MILL BAY DC519658 â&#x20AC;&#x201C; 61 papers Boom Pond Rd Bucktail Rd Fawn Rd Glendoik Way Misty Glenn SPECTACLE LAKE DC519945 â&#x20AC;&#x201C; 39 papers Spectacle Lake Mobile Home Park Sections C & D SHAWNIGAN LAKE DC519902 â&#x20AC;&#x201C; 48 papers Worthington Rd Catalena Dr Sunny Glades Ln DC519904 â&#x20AC;&#x201C; 40 papers Cudlip Rd Delleith Crt Ravenhill Rd 2300-2313 Skrimshaw Rd San Juan Pl DC519955 â&#x20AC;&#x201C; 45 papers Dundas Rd 2701-2750 Kalmar Rd 1746-1764 Shawnigan Lake Rd 2721-2750 Shawnigan-Mill Bay Rd 1681-1770 Wilmot Rd 1702-1756 Wallbank Rd 2765-2771 DC519994 â&#x20AC;&#x201C; 68 papers Decca Rd Inn Rd Morningstar Rd Widows Walk DC519997 â&#x20AC;&#x201C; 74 papers College Pl â&#x20AC;&#x201C; Hurley Rd Lonsdale Pl â&#x20AC;&#x201C; McIntosh Rd Meadowview Rd â&#x20AC;&#x201C; Park Pl LAKE COWICHAN DC519836 - 65 papers North Shore Rd 3-134 Wilson Rd Park Rd DC519846 - 56 papers Berar Rd Fern Rd Sall Rd South Shore Rd 232-350 HONEYMOON BAY DC 519880 - 63 papers Beach Dr March Rd Paulâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Dr South Shore Rd First St Second St Charles Pl
ďŹ l here please
Cowichan Valley Citizen PERSONAL SERVICES
HOME/BUSINESS SERVICES
FINANCIAL SERVICES
HOME/BUSINESS SERVICES
MERCHANDISE FOR SALE
COMPUTER SERVICES
HOME IMPROVEMENTS
GARAGE SALES
ABLE COMPUTER REPAIR In-home service. Seniorâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s discount. Nico 250-746-6167
HOME RENOVATIONS. Deck work, carpentry, flooring, plumbing, eaves trough-cleaning & rubbish removal. Small moving jobs. Sr. Discount. Ian 250-743-6776.
COUNTERTOPS GRANITE Countertops , we supply, fabricate and install ,with over 25 years experience and reasonable pricing. Call Scott 250-715 6652 , E-Mail: bigscottgranite@hotmail.com
TOTAL RENOVATIONS
Carpenter will do additions, Carports, Decks, Siding, Flooring, Painting, Finishing, Plumbing, Fences Pres-washing, plus more. All work guaranteed.
ELECTRICAL
Insured
250-748-9150
PLUMBING Rapid debt relief. Good people to know in times of trouble. Serving communities throughout Vancouver Island. Call Kyle for a consultation. 1-855-812-6767; Abakhan & Associates Inc. www.abakhan.com
A SERVICE PLUMBER. Licence, Insured. Drains, HWT, Renoâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s, Repairs. Senior Discounts. After Hour Service. Call Coval Plumbing, 250709-5103.
HOME/BUSINESS SERVICES CLEANING SERVICES FANTASTIC HOUSE Cleaner Prof. 5 star hotel & Resort Relais & Chateaux trained. Energetic, hard-working, own supplies, reliable friendly service. Tons of refs. Over 20 yrs cleaning exp. Beds and laundry welcome $25hr. Please call Melinda 250-715-1185 or mclemente@shaw.ca FOR ALL your cleaning, cooking and laundry needs. Island Domestic has experienced housekeepers. We also do apartments, offices and one-time cleans. Serving Mill Bay to Ladysmith. Bonded, Insured, WCB, registered with DVA. 250-710-0864. www.islanddomestic services.ca
Licensed #LEL0203619. Bonded. Commercial & Residential. New construction, renos, and maintenance. Call James: 250-710-4714
FULL SERVICE Plumbing from Parker Dean. Fast, reliable, 24/7 service. Take $50 off your next job if you present this ad. Vancouver area. 1800-573-2928.
FLOOR REFINISHING/ INSTALLATIONS
CUSTOM HARDWOOD FLOORING
MERCHANDISE FOR SALE
Professional installations of solid, engineered hardwood floors, laminated, vinyl plank, etc. Over 20 yrs. experience.
ANTIQUES/VINTAGE
For estimate call 250-710-5712
â&#x20AC;˘ â&#x20AC;˘
â&#x153;ą3 DAY SALEâ&#x153;ą 75% off all clothing.
25% off everything else.
531 CANADA AVENUE Last Thursday, Friday, Saturday of every month February 25, 26 & 27th. 10am-5pm. Stocked up & replenishing throughout Sale!
*KIWANIS FLEA MARKET*
EVERY SAT. FROM 9AM TIL 2PM. Girl Guide Hall: 321 Cairnsmore St. For info phone Gloria at 250-746-9678 or Dave at 250-746-3616 MOVING SALE BUSINESS AND HOUSEHOLD FURNITURE CONSTRUCTION TOOLS DRAFTING TABLE WASHER/DRYERS MISC. SATURDAY FEB 27/16 9AM1PM. NO EARLY BIRDS. 2922 ALLENBY ROAD
GARDEN EQUIPMENT
RENTALS
RENTALS
MISCELLANEOUS FOR SALE
APARTMENT/CONDO
OFFICE/RETAIL
BACH. SUITE - DUNCAN
OFFICE & RETAIL SPACE FOR LEASE
SAWMILLS FROM only $4,397. Make money and save money with your own bandmill. Cut lumber any dimension. In stock, ready to ship. Free Info & DVD: 1-800-566-6899 ext: 400OT. www.NorwoodSawmills.com/400OT
STEEL BUILDING Sale. Really big sale, extra winter discount on now!! 21x22 $5,190 25x24 $5,988 27x28 $7,498 30x32 $8,646 35x34 $11,844 42x54 $16,386. One end wall included. Pioneer Steel 1-800668-5422; www.pioneersteel.ca
REAL ESTATE LOTS 10.4 acres - 7705A Cowichan Lake Rd. Well tested, septic needed, other services at road. Motivated vendor, will consider financing. $190k ph:604-250-2396
APARTMENT/CONDO DUNCAN- 8 km North; furnished studio apartment; internet, satellite, laundry, hydro, heat. NS/NP. $600/mos. Call 250-748-1310.
MISCELLANEOUS FOR SALE
HELPING HANDS FOR YOUHome and Garden Service
POLE BARNS, Shops, steel buildings metal clad or fabric clad. Complete supply and installation. Call John at 403998-7907;
*Housecleaning (seniorâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s 1-hr discount) *Garden Tidying (now is not too soon!)
jcameron@advancebuildings.com
GARAGE SALES
*Mending clothes or ironing. *Run errands or pick-up service.
REFORESTATION NURSERY seedlings of hardy trees, shrubs and berries for shelterbelts or landscaping. Spruce and Pine from $.99/tree. Free shipping. Replacement guarantee. 1-866-873-3846 or www.treetime.ca
#,!33)&)%$Ă&#x2013;!$3Ă&#x2013;'%4Ă&#x2013;2%35,43
9/52Ă&#x2013;#/--5.)49 Ă&#x2013;9/52Ă&#x2013;#,!33)&)%$3 Ă&#x2013;$BMM
2349 Arnhem Rd, Sat. Feb. 27/16 9:00 AM - 1:00 PM. Household & yard sale.
*Need something else done? Please ask.
Call Lori 250.732.2100 Great References Licensed/insured/bondable
Business at a
GLANCE
1 and 2-br; balcony; F/S; heat & hot water; 1 bldg only; parking; pets considered. $550 to $775 per month. AVAILABLE NOW CALL 250-748-7764 COWICHAN BAY. 1-br condo with patio. Unfurnished $800, furnished $850. No pets. 250-245-0835; 250-246-4999. DUNCAN - First & Jubilee. Brand new 900sq.ft. apt. 2Bdrm,1Bath. $950/mo. Avail. Apr. 1, 2016. N/S, No pets. Appliances & in house laundry. Cell: 250-709-0576. Email: chrisclement@shaw.ca
STORAGE HEATED Mini storage lockers available in Crofton by the month. 3X6=$30. 4X6=$40. 7X9=$83. 9X10=$125. Tax incl. Call or txt: 250-709-1379.
SUITES, LOWER
3541 Auchinachie Road, Duncan 2-bdrm; W/D; F/S. Hydro & cable incl. No pets. $1,000 mos. Available now! 250-748-3663
LOVELY 2 bdrm suites in seniors oriented building, Central Duncan. Heat incld. NS/NP. $825. Please call Resident Manager at 778-936-0400.
1800 SQ.FT. Commercial/ Light industrial unit in modern strata complex with Highway Exposure in Duncan area. Call 1(250)658-4336.
"59).'Ă&#x2013; Ă&#x2013;2%.4).' Ă&#x2013;3%,,).' $BMM
ALL YOU NEED IN PRINT AND ONLINE 1-855-310-3535
We Fill You In... ďŹ l here please Every Wednesday and Friday, we bring you up to date on news and community events that matter to you. Phone: 250-748-2666 Fax: 250-748-1552
Call to place your ad: 250-748-2666 Monday - Friday 8:30am - 5:00pm Email: shirley.skolos@cowichanvalleycitizen.com
Purely Optometry BESIDE DIAMOND EYECARE
EYE EXAMS
The sale is $ 50 trade in on any New
Call for most reasonable rates
Walk Behind mower.
Family Eye & Vision Care
250-597-1011
.%7 (/523 s -ONDAY &RIDAY AM PM s 3ATURDAY AM PM .ORCROSS 2OAD $UNCAN "ETWEEN (ONDA TOYOTA #AR ,OTS www.islandSawAndTurf.ca
159 Trunk Road, Duncan 6959398
Gloriaâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Food Service
JA C KO â&#x20AC;&#x2122; S Concrete Finishing
â&#x20AC;˘ â&#x20AC;˘ â&#x20AC;˘ â&#x20AC;˘ â&#x20AC;˘
Form Work â&#x20AC;˘ Prep â&#x20AC;˘ & More
FREE ESTIMATES (250)
733-0884
6959469
Phone:
27
55 Canada Ave. Wheelchair accessible Motivated Landlord offering incentives. Contact Jayson Deleskie 250-755-7257 oceansidejay.com
COMMERCIAL/INDUSTRIAL
RENTALS
2006 Pontiac Pursuit, Black, 4 door, auto, 147,000 km, new tires, new brakes - $3,000. Weider Pro 9635 home gym, excellent cond. - $200. 1970 Nova project car - $2,000. Contact 250-715-7841.
#,!33)&)%$3Ă&#x2013;7/2+Ă&#x2013;(!2$
Wednesday, February 24, 2016
MERCHANDISE FOR SALE
FOR Sale. John Deere LT166 Lawn Mower. 250-746-5558.
CLEANING SERVICES
CLEANING SERVICES
DONâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;T MISS THIS! Cowichan Family Life Thrift Store
|
Catering Weddings Anniversaries Memorial FRESH or FROZEN meal delivery w w w. g l o r i a s f o o d s e r v i c e . c o m
250-748-9216 â&#x20AC;˘ 250-715-6792
TO ADVERTISE ON THIS PAGE call the
Cowichan Valley Citizen Newspaper
(250) 748-2666 251 Jubilee St., Downtown, Duncan
shirley.skolos@cowichanvalleycitizen.com
Your Local 28
Wednesday, February 24, 2016
| Cowichan Valley Citizen
r a e Y 1LYEAR NO eap
Dealer -
PAYMENT CLEARANCE
L e ap Yea 250-746-5527 NOMonday INTEREST r - Saturday 9:30AM till 5:30PM
FALL EVENT MERIT ON ALL IN STOCK FURNITURE SHAVE ! a TO GO THESE FLOOR MODELS & OVERSTOCKED ITEMS e Local
le! Sal La-Z-Boy Reclining Sofas www.merithome.ca Recliners from Customer Appreciation Week 599 Dealer
Friday Open till 8PM Sundays & Holidays 12pm till 4PM
107 Ingram St, Duncan, BC
from 1499 $799
Sofas
Reclining Leather Sofas
from
$599 $
Loveseats Save an Additional 20% Off from $
from
499 Low Prices on Our Everyday $
Selected In Stock Furniture LazyBoy BC MadeThe SolidONLY Wood Save up to Authorized Ask for details La-Z-Boy Recliners starting at $2000 Bedroom Suites from
Canadian Made Custom Sofas
Dealer in the Cowichan Valley! on Home $499 from Theater Set Featuring
$999
$1499
Queen Bed/Dresser/ Save 20% Mirror/Night Table
on Selected Floor Model Bedroom Suites
Memory Foam Mattresses fromAll Floor
$299
Save an additional $500
Simmons Queen Beauty Rest Mattress Sets on Dining Room Suites
from
Model Appliances Reduced
starting at
$ 250-746-5527
Also Chest Freezers fromMERIT Fridges from Featuring Local
$599 299
Memory Foam Mattresses
Monday - Saturday 9:30AM till 5:30PM Friday Open till 8PM Sundays & Holidays 12pmLatex till 4PM Queen
$699 $299 Washers from $499 Ranges from Mattresses 10” $899 8” $499 $599 Over$699 Used Store Your Local Dealer - Buying Power Dealer
7265091 7209305
Simmons Floor Model107 Pocket Ingram St, Duncan, BC Coil Mattress
7462504
starting at
Local
Dealer 7209305 7369605 7428803
MERIT 107 Ingram St, Duncan, BC
250-746-5527
Monday - Saturday 9:30AM till 5:30PM Friday Open till 8PM Sundays & Holidays 12pm till 4PM
www.merithome.ca
Local
® FURNITURE INDUSTRIES, INC.
Dealer