T.W. Paterson’s ‘Chronicles’: Prohibition couldn’t stand up to profit
LIVING, Page 13
Jr. B Cowichan Valley Thunder win ‘ugly’ one over Nanaimo T-Men
SPORTS, Page 19
WEDNESDAY
‘MARY POPPINS’ DELIGHTS /15
Serving the Cowichan Valley
www.cowichanvalleycitizen.com
Wednesday, May 11, 2016
NORTH COWICHAN
Taxes going up almost 3 per cent CITIZEN
GRAD GRINS See more photos from Chemainus’s parade Page 11
Decked out in their finest attire, Chemainus Secondary School graduates brightened the town on an already-sunny Friday afternoon last week as part of the school’s annual grad parade. [JAMES GOLDIE/CITIZEN]
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The Municipality of North Cowichan increased property taxes 2.9 per cent for the average homeowner in 2016 at its council meeting on May 4. That amounts to an increase of $56 in taxes for the average $320,000 home in the municipality. The municipality was considering a tax increase of 2.51 per cent in all classes, but a decision was made to reduce light industrial rates by 15 per cent to make them more competitive with other jurisdictions in the province. That resulted in the decision to raise the municipality’s taxes in the other seven categories by 2.95 per cent. According to a staff report, as of the end of 2015, the municipality had an accumulated surplus of $276.6 million, an increase of $4.2 million for the year. “This is largely comprised of net investments in tangible capital assets, worth $242 million, which includes land, park infrastructure, roads and utility assets,” according to the report. “Capital expenditures for the year were $11.4 million.” This included money for road, water and flood protection projects.
Wednesday, May 11, 2016 | Cowichan Valley Citizen
250-748-2666 andrea.rondeau@cowichanvalleycitizen.com
COURT
Stepfather ordered to pay $94K for voyeurism JOHN MCKINLEY BLACK PRESS
The court has awarded an unidentified woman nearly $94,000 after her stepfather secretly videotaped her in the shower. In a B.C. Supreme Cour t decision delivered Tuesday in Duncan, Justice Douglas Thompson ruled the woman should receive $85,000 in general damages, as well as further awards for past loss of earning capacity, cost of future care and special damages for a total of $93,850. “The plaintiff is a young woman who was in her home, a place where she was entitled to feel comfortable and safe. It is not surprising that having a family member so profoundly violate her trust and invade her personal privacy has caused serious harm,” Thompson wrote in his decision. “The defendant wanted to cause harm to the plaintiff. He accomplished his aim, and the harm has manifested both emo-
[CITIZEN FILE]
tionally and physically. “The defendant put his own selfish motivations of sexual gratification and feeling able to punish the plaintiff ahead of the plaintiff’s dignity and other important privacy interests. This was disloyal in the extreme and a breach of the relationship of trust between family members that the law imposes in circum-
stances such as existed in this case.” The plaintiff described many psychological and emotional problems in the wake of the discovery of the recordings, including depression, anxiety, mood swings, panic attacks, flashbacks, hypervigilance, irrational fears, loss of confidence and self-esteem, and suicidal ideation. The judgement was based on four incidents that occurred in the family home in the Duncan area when the woman was 20 and 21. Criminal charges were also filed after the woman discovered the recordings in July of 2011. The defendant pleaded guilty to voyeurism and received a suspended sentence with three years’ probation. His conviction also led to his registration as a sex offender. john.mckinley@blackpress.ca Follow me on Twitter @JohnMcKinleyBP
News
PUBLIC SAFETY
Lake, bay getting life rings installed ROBERT BARRON CITIZEN
The unsupervised docks at Chemainus Lake and Maple Bay will soon have life rings installed for public access, thanks mainly to a contribution from a local resident. Laura Robertson has contributed approximately $1,800 towards two Guardian 600 model life rings, which are being provided by the Royal Life Saving Society through its Public Access Life Ring project. Robertson’s son, 22-year-old Brayden Gale, drowned when the canoe he was in capsized on Chemainus Lake last November. Gale and his best friend Liem Pham had just returned to the Cowichan Valley from living in Alberta where Pham had been working for Gale at his Edmonton-based landscaping company, and were spending a day fishing on Chemainus Lake when their canoe capsized.
Both tried to swim for shore, but only Pham made it, and would-be rescuers at the scene said at the time they believed they probably could have saved Gale if there was some life-saving equipment on site. The cost of each life ring and the cabinet that it is stored in is $1,200, and the Chemainus Rotary Club has agreed to fund the $600 shortfall needed for one of the two life rings to be installed at Chemainus Lake. A plaque with a photo of Gale will also be installed at Chemainus Lake dock as a remembrance, at the request of Robertson. The Municipality of North Cowichan has agreed to cover the costs of installation and maintenance of the life rings. “It’s a shame that a tragedy like this had to happen before life-saving equipment is finally being provided there,” said Coun. Kate Marsh.
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NEWS
Cowichan Valley Citizen
SCHOOLS
Long assessment waits worrying LEXI BAINAS CITIZEN
A longstanding concern raised its head at the school board table last week as new trustees grappled with some home truths about how long students have to wait for the assessment of their behaviour problems. Dr. Paul Hasselback, medical health officer for Central Vancouver Island, after talking about the mental health of students at all levels on the Island, answered questions. Undiagnosed emotional and behavioural problems mean that a student may not secure a plan specifically designed to help him or her. Teachers and parents have raised concerns for years before the board about long waiting lists for assessments and how children without them can slip through the cracks, not getting the benefit of help while causing disturbance in their classes at school. Trustee Joe Thorne attacked the situation head on by telling Hasselback, “I have concerns about the assessments these kids are required to get and the time it takes to get them. I worry about student support because I don’t think it’s really being used as it could be, especially with my [First Nations] part of the neighbourhood.” Some students, without help, can become “self-isolated” in school, he said. Thorne said a situation has developed where the only time parents are getting a call is if someone’s son or daughter is in trouble. “If some of the principals would take the time to say: ‘Let’s talk about your child,’ I’d tell them: ‘Good.’’ But seeing how long it takes between the time a teacher suggests that a child go through an assessment process to actually getting that appointment and having that assessment is more than time consuming, “it’s worrying,” he said. “I understand that in some cases there’s a waiting list. What
Dr. Paul Hasselback, medical health officer for Central Vancouver Island, said a two-year wait wouldn’t be uncommon. [LEXI BAINAS/CITIZEN] happens to that child? And that teacher has to struggle, too.” There are other problems involved in dealing with behaviour problems, too, Thorne said. Students can be kept home from school by parents, or there may be a denial factor along the lines of “It’s not my kid, it’s the teacher, or whatever. There’s a lot of things I’m trying to come to grips with. I appreciate what you said, and I understand, but I can only talk about what I see and who’s at my house every day.” Hasselback thanked Thorne for bringing up the issue and “reflecting a lot of people’s sentiments.” He said it was one of the main reasons he was addressing the board. “Kids are challenged in quite different fashions than they have been in the past. Our systems aren’t necessarily responding,” he said. Trustee Elizabeth Croft asked if economic wellbeing tracked alongside mental wellbeing
BEGINS Friday, May 13th @ 7:00 pm
and learned from Hasselback that “economic conditions are a high predictor” of emotional outcomes. Trustee Rob Hutchins asked about the availability of child psychiatrists in the area covered by the jurisdiction. The medical health officer told him the problem often comes down to finding someone to hire. “This really is a supply and demand issue. As it is with most physicians, it comes down to whether they’ve received the training and if there is enough enticement for them to come to your community. Most of their income is based upon flow through. But there is a general dearth of child psychiatrists across the country,” he said. Hutchins then asked, “So if you are informed there is a twoyear wait for a child to see a child psychiatrist, do you act on that? Do you knock on some doors?” Hasselback smiled ruefully. “I have to say that if there was only a two-year wait, I think that would be pretty good. It’s
multi-jurisdictional, I’ve never seen what a wait list looks like. It’s a really good question,” he said. Thorne wasn’t done. He wanted to share related issues he’s seen. “Because teachers have 20-plus kids in their class, they can’t deal with just one particular child or two. So those kids are allowed to go to school maybe two hours a day,” he said. Parents who can’t afford a sitter are forced into the position where one must quit work or they must alternate day and night shifts. “It’s really complicated. It has to be addressed. I’m really hoping this board opens their eyes to the fact we need to start sitting down and talking to the teachers about what’s going on in their classrooms that we should know. There’s a lot going on,” he said. In addition, trustees must also come to grips with the problem of parents who don’t want to recognize that their child has an issue. “There are a lot of things that have to change. We have to start opening our eyes. The wait list is phenomenal. I’ve talked to several parents. They say, I’m so blessed tired of waiting. I don’t know what to do. It’s crazy,” Thorne said. Hasselback then shared that other jurisdictions reported there are sometimes “50 per cent more students that require a similar level of service that are waiting for it.” He agreed with Thorne about one difficulty. “What’s becoming a more common problem is the parents aren’t providing consent to have the assessments undertaken and yet the school district is having to grapple with those situations,” the medical health officer said, adding, “I would encourage the board to ask those questions because it would be eye opening and would actually help, not just to refocus attention but to bring forward provincially the severity of the situation.”
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Wednesday, May 11, 2016
‘Skimmer’ spotted at midway KEVIN ROTHBAUER CITIZEN
A suspicious man seen lurking around crowds at the midway set up in Duncan over the weekend may have been using a device to steal information from credit cards. After receiving several reports of a man in his late 20s walking very close to people and targeting their purses and wallets with a handheld device, North Cowichan/Duncan RCMP believe he was “skimming.” “Skimming is when you use a small device that fits in the palm of your hand to read the electronic information on debit and credit cards,” Cpl. Krista Hobday said. “There are different types, and they have been used in the past on automatic banking machines to record the black strip information on your card. It is then transferred onto a fraudulent card to be used anywhere by anyone. “You wouldn’t even know your information was stolen until you started getting unfamiliar charges on your credit card or unauthorized withdrawals from your bank account.” Officers flooded the area on foot on Friday night, looking for the suspect. He was described as a man in his late 20s, Caucasian, with brown hair and scruffy facial hair, wearing a white T-shirt, grey and silver shorts and a white and grey ball cap. He had numerous tattoos on his arms. Hobday cautioned citizens to be alert and take steps to avoid being victims of similar crimes. “As we all venture out to community events and other large gatherings, always remember there are those amongst us who are there for a completely different reason,” she said. “Keep your purses and wallets in front of you and be aware of those around you. Always do routine checks on your credit and banking cards and report unauthorized charges to your financial institution.”
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Wednesday, May 11, 2016
NEWS
| Cowichan Valley Citizen
BERKEY’S CORNER
BUSINESS NOTES News from the Cowichan Valley Business community
No to change after developer backs out Island Savings waves ROBERT BARRON CITIZEN
Robert Barron
Reporting
I MAEVE MAGUIRE in July and complete it in December, 2017. The landowner has stated he intends to move forward with the project with another developer, but has given no timelines as to when it will proceed. See BERKEY’S CORNER, Page 5
sland Savings is celebrating its 65th birthday on Vancouver Island this year and is holding a number of activities in 2016 to celebrate. They include its Waves of Kindness campaign, in which Island Savings intends to carry out 65 kind acts on the Island this year. Spokeswoman Melanie Tromp Hoover said Island Savings personnel were in Duncan’s SaveOn-Foods on May 8 handing out gift cards to shoppers to help with their weekend grocery shopping. “We still have 60 more waves of kindness to do before the end of the year,� she said.
Blue Grouse honoured for excellent service The Blue Grouse Estate Winery has won the Service Excellence Award for Duncan in the 2016 Holiday and Tour Specialist Awards from the Luxury Travel Guide. The award helps to solidify the winery as a leader in the Cowichan Valley, not only for winemaking, but also as a destination that must not be missed. The new facility, which
Island Savings staff members Rebecca Hollstein and Erynn Pawluk, both kneeling, hand out gift certificates in Duncan’s Save-On-Foods store last weekend to celebrate Island Saving’s 65th birthday. [SUBMITTED] opened last May, continues to be a sought-after hot spot for visitors to sample wines and hold events, picnics and family adventures. The award was initiated through the recommendations of visitors to Blue Grouse, and then a panel of judges selected the Luxury Travel Awards based on their achievements and strengths in the travel industry.
Chemainus company rebrands after 128 years After 128 years of business on Vancouver Island, Nanaimo Foundry & Engineering Works has rebranded with a new look and a new name in Chemainus. Since it is now operating as a manufacturing facility providing machining, fabrication and engineering-design services to
a wide variety of industries, the company’s management team decided to condense the original name to NFE Manufacturing. “The company ceased foundry work and relocated machining and fabrication operations to our current location in Chemainus in 1999,� said company president Marc Langevin. “Although we are no longer a foundry, we are a progressive manufacturing business with a strong history beginning in Nanaimo. Changing our name from the Nanaimo Foundry to NFE allows us to acknowledge our past while moving forward with our current business model.� The company will be hosting a “name launch� celebration and open house on May 19 at 3 p.m. robert.barron @cowichanvalleycitizen.com
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An effort to revisit the decision to approve a controversial commercial development at Berkey’s Corner was unsuccessful at the Municipality of North Cowichan’s last council meeting. Coun. Maeve Maguire made a motion to add a provision to allow no restaurant drive-throughs to the restrictive covenants on the development plans for the property now that Vancouver-based development company Hall Pacific has withdrawn from the project. Maguire said that with the tight time constraints now off the project due to the development company’s decision to pull out, it provides an opportunity for council to take a second look at aspects of the project that it gave a green light to in March. Hall Pacific had planned to begin construction of the commercial development, which would include a number of large chain stores and some smaller, more local tenants,
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NEWS
Cowichan Valley Citizen
Halalt demands fee for industrial use of road ROBERT BARRON CITIZEN
The Halalt First Nation has begun regulating traffic through its main village, Indian Reserve #2. Chief James Thomas said the First Nation signed a bylaw declaring that traffic will be regulated on all roads in the reserve, including provincial Highway 1A/Westhome Road. Thomas said the bylaw is a “proactive measure to ensure community safety and the band’s enjoyment of its village.” He said the First Nation wishes to extend notice of the new measures “in the spirit of reconciliation” towards the resolution of a “long-standing trespass” that has gone unaddressed by the Ministry of Transportation and Infrastructure. “Residential traffic is welcomed on the condition that visitors respect our village and be courteous to our community members,” Thomas said. “Industrial traffic is also welcomed, but on more stringent conditions which will be mutually agreed upon through the negotiation of a roaduse agreement in accordance with our bylaw.” Thomas said the band has yet to interfere with commercial vehicles travelling through the reserve and is currently engaging individually in talks with local forest companies, municipalities and other industrial users of the road. He said the First Nation is discussing safety issues and plans for commercial users to pay a fee for the use of the road through the reserve. Thomas said the main cause for the band’s action is an ongoing dispute with the province over ownership of the land the roadway is on. He said the federal government has acknowledged the land belongs to the First Nation, but the province has yet to turn ownership over to the Halalt. Thomas said the issue is separate from treaty
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“We’re not stopping any traffic, at least not yet,” JAMES THOMAS, Halalt chief
negotiations. “We’re not stopping any traffic, at least not yet,” he said. “This has been going on for the last 40 years, and everyone seems to just be passing the buck.” The band had blocked traffic on the highway through its reserve in previous years over the ownership issue, as well as safety concerns around the road. A statement from the Ministry of Transportation and Infrastructure said the ministry is aware that the Halalt First Nation has notified the local community that it plans to charge commercial-vehicle traffic on Highway 1A/Westholme Road where it passes through their territory. The statement said ministry staff have been in ongoing discussions with the First Nation over its concerns, and will continue to work with them on a resolution. “Ministry staff are closely monitoring this section of roadway and, should there be any disruption to traffic, will immediately advise the community and the travelling public of the alternative route that is available,” it said. “This information will be provided through DriveBC and our social media channels, as well as with traffic advisories as needed.”
BERKEY’S CORNER, From Page 4 Adding the provision to the restrictive covenants on the project would have rescinded the third reading of the approval process, and triggered a requirement for another public hearing on the project. Coun. Kate Marsh said many in the community have indicated they want some sort of development in that location, but not what had been approved, and she would like the community to have a further opportunity to explore better options for the site. “This is one of our more densely populated areas and there’s lots of interest in the community as to how it’s developed,” she said. But Coun. Tom Walker said council has already made a decision on Berkey’s Corner and it should stand. “I don’t think it was such a bad decision, but there have been efforts to try and find ways to overturn it,” he said. “I think we’d just be digging a
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Wednesday, May 11, 2016 | Cowichan Valley Citizen
OUR VIEW
Assessment waits dire in our public schools I
n our school system, a twoyear wait for an assessment for a child who may have a learning disability or some kind of behavioural issue is considered pretty good. It’s a pretty shocking fact, and some of our Cowichan Valley school trustees seemed surprised to hear it from the medical health officer for Central Vancouver Island, Dr. Paul Hasselback at a recent board meeting. They shouldn’t be surprised. We’ve been reporting about the problem for years, and their own professionals in the field have
spoken quite passionately to the board about it in the past. Though to be fair, that was a different school board and some of the trustees are new. We hope that perhaps this can encourage a new urgency on this very important issue crippling our school system. The fact of the matter is, it is a long, hard road to get your child any extra help from the public school system. The cold, hard truth is that by the time most of these kids get the assessment they need — which doesn’t always lead to adequate in-school support for
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their problem, school budgets being what they are — many grades have gone by where many of these students have learned virtually nothing. Often they are a problem for the rest of the class, as well, as they prove disruptive and eat up a lot of their teacher’s time, if their teacher is conscientious in trying to deal with their needs. Or there are the other kids who don’t act out, they just withdraw quietly into their own little worlds, silent victims floating by. In many classrooms there are a lot more than one or two of
these students as well. By the time their turn for assessment rolls around, a lot of these kids are no longer in the public school system, their parents long having gotten fed up with the bureaucracy that is so desperately failing these kids. Trustee Joe Thorne is correct, as well, that it is a whole other problem when parents refuse to admit to themselves that there’s anything different about their child. This attitude does a disservice to their child’s class, their child’s teacher, and most of all, their child.
Woodstoves a natural source of heat for homes
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 Publisher/Advertising director Shirley Skolos shirley.skolos@cowichanvalleycitizen. com Editor Andrea Rondeau editor@cowichanvalleycitizen.com Circulation manager Audette LePage audettelepage@shaw.ca 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.
When it comes to behaviour problems, the longer the children go without a proper plan to help them, the worse the whole situation becomes, as undesirable behaviours, and the trouble in school that so often comes with them, becomes ingrained, and can even escalate. We hear all the time about unacceptable wait times for surgeries at our hospitals and how the government is pouring resources into cutting those lists down. It’s time they do the same for our children who are waiting for assessments at school.
Woodstoves in Cowichan are not the problem In response to Lorne Adams letter [May 4, Cowichan Valley Citizen] in regards to the effects of woodstove smoke. I think banning woodstoves and suggesting that wood smoke threatens the lives of our constituents is misguided information. What we should be doing is having Health Canada look into why so many of our children now have asthma and asthma-like symptoms. We need to dig a lot deeper to solve this problem. Over half of the children in my son’s classroom have asthma. That is a very large amount of young people with compromised immune systems.
This condition is not the result of breathing in woodsmoke. As for subsidizing our heating bills, have you checked your Hydro bill lately? How is that smart meter working for you? Perhaps we should take a look at the EMF frequencies that our children are subjected to through this pulsing radiation throughout the house day and night. Where is the long term study on that? What long term effects will this have on future generations? Finally, take a good look up at the sky when our temperature rises. Have you noticed the geoengineering that is going on? We have so many chemicals raining down on us on a daily basis, it can make your head spin. We need to ask questions?
We have some serious problems, that need to be addressed. From the minute our children are born they are subjected to an arsenal of chemicals and toxins. Along with wifi and smart meter technology, they are having a very bleak start to their lives. Big and powerful companies only care about profit, they do not care about our children. The more questions we ask, the more powerful we become. It is our responsibility to take care of this planet, and our children. There are much bigger questions and solutions that need to be addressed. Banning the woodstove is certainly not going to solve these problems. Mary-Jane Bateman Duncan
I’m surprised at how many people are telling everyone to not use their woodstoves because they have health problems. I just bought my first home a couple years ago. First year all I did was use my brand new energy efficient furnace for heat and I paid enough money to BC Hydro that year to be able to supply and feed a small village (and this was before they raised their prices). I bought a double burning woodstove last winter, and my family and I were actually able to eat every night because we didn’t have to pay BC Hydro so much money for trying to keep warm. We didn’t have to choose between food or keeping our electricity on, which was very nice. Don’t like wood smoke? Then perhaps you should think about moving elsewhere, where people hardly use woodstoves (good luck with that!). I think its absolutely ridiculous for you to sit there and tell everyone it should be banned. It’s a natural source of heat that has been used for generations and generations. Not everyone is able to afford BC Hydro prices. Going to ask people not to have campfires next? Get real. Jason Wayne Chemainus
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OPINION
Cowichan Valley Citizen
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Wednesday, May 11, 2016
contact us Publisher, Shirley Skolos
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robert.barron@cowichanvalleycitizen.com Distribution, Audette LePage audettelepage@shaw.ca
LETTERS TO THE EDITOR Send your items to: editor@cowichanvalleycitizen.com
Cowichan Estuary nature trail now open for enjoyment I draw your readers’ attention to the revitalized nature trail on the Westcan Terminal Road on Cowichan Estuary. The Cowichan Estuary Restoration and Conservation Association took this on as its primary project this year in cooperation with Western Stevedoring and Island Savings. We have just completed Phase 1 of the development, widening the trail, clearing out much of the invasive Scotch broom, as well as overhanging blackberry bushes, clearing just enough of the latter to still allow for a nice crop of blackberries for late summer. Our volunteer labour also took out most of the garbage that has collected for many years, while others constructed more than 50 birdhouses for our Swallow Recovery Project, most of which have been numbered and installed on the north side of the trail at the outer end. The next phase of this project is to improve the parking area outside the main gate, while WS has committed to restore the wooden footbridge at the trail-head. Later this year we plan to construct wooden viewing platforms along the trail, one viewing tower, and several educational billboards explaining the historical, ecological and economic importance of the estuary. This project is being carried out entirely with volunteer labour, with some funds for materials provided by Island
Savings and WS. While not complete, we already have a nice clean walking trail extending 1.5 km from the parking area out to the new bridge. The last half of the trail still has the old rail line intact. This is too expensive for CERCA to remove, so our plan is to cover it with a gravel base, hard-packed so that the whole trail will be wheelchair accessible. The trail is open to the public to come and enjoy the flora and fauna. Dogs are welcome, but we ask that each dog owner bring a bag to remove their own dog’s solid waste and take it back with you. We do not yet have funding for maintaining bags and garbage containers. For more information on this and other CERCA projects, to join the group, or to volunteer visit cowichanestuary.com/ Geoff Strong, co-chair CERCA Cowichan Bay
Who will compensate property owners for noise? Since there was no public consultation for the establishment of a racetrack on Highway 18, who will compensate those of us in a two- to three-kilometre distance whose property value has now dropped because of noise? Will it show up on our land assessment? Mike Haines Duncan
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The nature trail on the Westcan Terminal Road on the Cowichan Estuary has been revitalized thanks to the Cowichan Estuary Restoration and Conservation Association. [SUBMITTED PHOTO]
Thank You! The “K” Family Sponsorship Group would like to acknowledge the generosity of the following Cowichan Valley businesses and the residents of Thetis Island who gave so willingly of their time, expertise, goods and services to the family of four whom we sponsored from Syria; formerly refugees and now permanent residents of Canada.
• T C Self Storage • • The Real Canadian Super • Store • • Walmart • • Steve Wallace Driving • School • • True Grain Bakery • Paris Styling Salon • • Cobble Hill Dental • Ishai Horticultural • Knowledge • • Dr. Rachel Martin
Cycle Therapy Radway Boutique Beverly Corner’s Thrifty’s Cowichan Valley Farms Camp Pringle Residents and Friends of Thetis Island Pot of Gold Coffee Roasting Co. Jollity Farm Cowichan Woodwork Ltd.
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Wednesday, May 11, 2016
NEWS
| Cowichan Valley Citizen
BUSINESS
Marijuana production has bright future ROBERT BARRON CITIZEN
The operators of Tilray, the medical-marijuana production facility in Nanaimo, see great potential for the company in the coming years. Speaking at a luncheon hosted by the Duncan Cowichan Chamber of Commerce last week, Tilray CEO Greg Engel said a major societal shift in the perception of the drug is currently underway around the globe. As the medical benefits of marijuana are becoming more widely known and accepted, he said, people are increasingly turning to it to either replace or add to their current prescription medications. Engel said most of Tilray’s products are used to treat con-
Julie Scurr, president of the Duncan Cowichan Chamber of Commerce, talks to Greg Engel, CEO of Tilray, at a chamber luncheon. [ROBERT BARRON/CITIZEN] ditions related to chronic pain and mental health. “Research indicates that about 30 per cent of the drugs that are being replaced by medical marijuana are opiates,”
Engel said. “We are also working with marijuana extracts, capsules, droppers and oils to give people more choices with taking the drug, and these are either in the
development or production stages at this time.” Engel said the University of B.C. is also conducting tests on the therapeutic potential of medicinal pot for people suffering from PTSD. “There’s been a lot of work in recent years to remove the stigma
that is attached to marijuana,” he said. “The drug has been used for thousands of years, but there has been almost no research done on it until recently. The perceptions around it are changing rapidly and marijuana is now gaining greater acceptance, so we’re invested in this at the right time.” As for specific plans for Tilray’s future, Engel said the industry’s growth is expected to be rapid but “unpredictable.” “We’re trying to look ahead and plan for up to 18 months into the future and that’s all we can do for now because we don’t really know what’s going to happen with this industry around the globe beyond that,” he said. “But we expect that we’ll soon be thinking on expanding our operations and we’ll be looking at other locations on the Island, including the Cowichan Valley.”
Dr. J Kent Harris Cowichan Way Clinic I will be retiring as a family physician on May 19, 2016. The Cowichan Way Clinic family physicians will provide continuity of care for patients in my practice after that date. I cannot express in words the appreciation and gratitude I have for my patients. It has been such a privilege to be your family doctor all these years. Thank You.
YOU’LL CLEAN UP WELL.
My patients are invited to a Thank You party on Friday May 13, from 3:00pm to 6:00pm at the River Walk Café, Quw’ustun’ Cultural Centre.
I hope to see you there.
OCEANFRONT LOTS FOR SALE
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The Municipality of North Cowichan gives notice pursuant to section 26 of the Community Charter that it intends to sell 5 rural oceanfront building lots on the Maple Bay Peninsula. These lots are located approximately 10 minutes from Maple Bay Village, 20 minutes from Duncan, and 1 hour from Victoria or Nanaimo. These lots offer outstanding scenic views of Maple Bay, Sansum Narrows and Salt Spring Island. They are serviced by a new public road, and power to the lot lines is anticipated to be available within 18 months. Purchasers will be responsible for drilling wells and developing their own onsite sanitary disposal systems. The 5 lots range in size from 1.05 acres to 1.32 acres. Information is available at northcowichan.ca/landsales.
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Wednesday, May 11, 2016
NEWS
| Cowichan Valley Citizen
REGIONAL DISTRICT
Campaign aims to curb asbestos exposure The Cowichan Valley Regional District has launched an asbestos-awareness campaign to increase the public’s knowledge of the health risks associated with asbestos exposure. Two out of three Cowichan homes were built before 1990 when asbestos was commonly used in construction, making asbestos exposure a real risk when renovating. Asbestos can be found in walls, ceilings, plumbing, wiring, light fixtures and more. Staff at the regional district’s recycling centre have been trained to identify asbestos material.
Contaminated material is brought to the centre many times a week, often by residents who are unaware they are dealing with a potentially deadly material. “The summer is a busy season for asbestos as the warm weather encourages home renovations,” said Tauseef Waraich, manager of recycling and waste management. “Unfortunately, many homeowners are not familiar with asbestos and in which materials it can be found.” Waraich said renovations can disturb asbestos material and release asbestos fibres into the air. He said the fibres can stay suspended in the air for hours and even days, put-
ting everyone who comes into contact with it at risk. The CVRD’s education campaign, which includes web and print information for homeowners, will target homeowners before they renovate. Waraich said the goal is for people to become asbestos aware and take the necessary steps to ensure it is handled safely by a reliable asbestos-abatement company before any renovation projects begin. “The cost of doing it right is a small price to pay when buying or renovating a house to protect everyone you care about, and many you have never met,” he said. Check out www.cvrd.ca/asbestos for more information.
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Vanessa Goodall of Cowichan Green Community shows off the 2016 edition of the Buy Local! Buy Fresh! map. [LEXI BAINAS/CITIZEN]
Farm Map details where to buy local LEXI BAINAS CITIZEN
If you’ve been waiting for the 2016 Buy Local! Buy Fresh! Cowichan Farm Map, it’s now available. Cowichan Green Community, which puts out the extremely popular annual publication, announced April 28 that the seventh edition was hot off the press. It covers a wide area, from Shawnigan Lake to south of Nanaimo, helping Cowichan residents and visitors to the region search out Cowichan-grown food, drink, and value-added products. There’s a good reason why the 50 Mile Diet and even the 10 Mile Diet is a hit across the Valley. Blessed with Canada’s only maritime-Mediterranean climatic zone, the Cowichan region is continually making a name for itself for producing a wonderfully diverse range of high-quality farm-fresh produce, artisanal foods, and beverages. The map showcases it all, and the talented and hard-working producers behind it. This year, 56 farms and businesses are included, each with something distinctive, fresh, and delicious to offer consumers. From seasonal fruits and veggies, wines, baked goods, honey, tea, seafood, nuts, berries, and meats to more unusual products like steelhead trout, hemp, limes, and balsamic vinegar, local ingredients and products can be easily found by browsing listings on the map or using the online search component at cowichangreencommunity.org/foodmap. Search by farm name, product, production method, or location. Print maps are also available at Cowichan Green Community’s office at 360 Duncan St. in Duncan or phone 250-748-8506 for other pick-up locations.
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250-746-8123 • mail@kenandkelli.ca
250-748-2666 editor@cowichanvalleycitizen.com
Cowichan Valley Citizen | Wednesday, May 11, 2016
11
Chemainus graduates
Decked out in their finest attire, Chemainus Secondary School graduates brightened the town on an already-sunny Friday afternoon last week as part of the school’s annual grad parade. Arriving at Waterwheel Park in a motorcade of fancy cars, trucks and even a boat, the graduating students then graced the red carpet while friends and family members on all sides snapped photos like paparazzi. The park was abuzz with activity until the time came for the students to hit the prom. [JAMES GOLDIE/CITIZEN]
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Wednesday, May 11, 2016
LIVING
| Cowichan Valley Citizen
DRIVESMART
The trailer tug test revisited: can your vehicle take the load? Tim Schewe
Drivesmart
any functioning lights and I worry about what else might have been overlooked. It may seem silly, but the first issue is capacity, hitch ball size and safety chains. The entire hitch assembly must be strong enough to handle the gross trailer weight. The diameter of the ball
Help Renew VIU’s Malaspina Theatre
take a look back. Are your mirrors adequate to see behind you as required and are they adjusted properly? A circle check of the entire combination should be done. Do all of the lights light? Are any of them missing, broken or obscured by the load? Do the tires have sufficient tread, are they properly inflated and are the wheel nuts tight? One last thought, and that is, you are no longer a shorter, more agile vehicle. Longer braking and following distances are needed along with careful consideration of your new turning radius! Tim Schewe is a retired constable with many years of traffic law enforcement. To comment or learn more, please visit DriveSmartBC.ca
Ross Douglas, piano player of ‘Billy Bishop’ fame, heads to coffeehouse Ross Douglas headlines the May 14 Cowichan Folk Guild Coffeehouse. The evening begins as the doors open at 7 p.m. at the Duncan United Church with an open stage and Douglas will entertain later on. This award-winning musician, songwriter and actor is also a powerful singer and a multi-instrumentalist so you never know what you’ll get, but it’s sure to be quality. In the 1980s Douglas toured much of the world as the piano player for the famous show, Billy Bishop Goes to War. His live show blends history, comedy, theatre, a variety of musical genres and a litany of instruments into a fun presentation. Admission is $10 or $5 for CFG members.
Celebrating 40 years of Community Performance
7002013
B
ack in 2004 I put tongue in cheek and wrote about the trailer tug test. You hook the trailer up, drive off and look in the rear view mirror. If it’s still following you, carry on! I found myself behind a couple of vehicles pulling trailers yesterday and wondered if their drivers had missed the fact that I was being facetious. Neither trailer had
must match the size of the coupler on the trailer. The lock must be locked. Safety chains must also be strong enough and if two are present, crossed like a cradle under the hitch. In certain circumstances brakes are not needed, but if the trailer is equipped with them they must work properly. Check that the brake fluid is clear, straw coloured and full if the trailer has hydraulic brakes. Activate the breakaway brake and try to move forward. The brake should prevent you from doing this. Reconnect the breakaway and if you can apply only the trailer brakes from the driver’s position, do so and try the tug test again. While we’re in the driver’s seat, lets
250·746·8123 Email: ken@kenneal.com Website: KenNeal.com Tel:
Facebook.com/kennealduncan
Since 1976, VIU’s Malaspina Theatre has proudly supported the arts community by hosting the Vancouver Island Short Film Fest, Jazz Festival, Nanaimo Theatre Group, TheatreOne and many more. Help us continue to provide this much needed theatre space to the community.
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LIVING
Cowichan Valley Citizen
HISTORY
Prohibition couldn’t stand up to profit Chronicles Socialist MLA J.H. Hawthornwaite challenged the audience to show him where “one vice or crime in which there was profit had ever been abolished by law”.
A
s we saw last week, Archibald Tiderington of Lake Cowichan, was charged with bootlegging when British Columbia was locked in the cold embrace of Prohibition. For four years, 1917-1921, temperance prevailed throughout the province. Originally passed as part of the War Measures Act, the ban on the selling of alcohol sparked heated debate. Particularly so as the ban on alcohol came up for confirmation in a referendum. In April 1920, 300 citizens crowded into the Duncan Opera House to hear the case for ‘Moderation’ vs. Prohibition in the use of wines, beers and spirits. The audience, which was equally divided between men and women, favoured the view that the outright ban on the sale of alcohol, as prescribed in the Prohibition Act, was excessive. Billed as the three key speakers were J.H. Hawthornwaite, Socialist MLA; Col. Collard, CB; G.A. Cheeke of Cobble Hill and C.T. Cross of Victoria. Cherry Point’s Capt. Arthur Lane, well known to enjoy a tipple, opened the meeting by defining ‘moderation’ as a revised Act whereby the provincial government would “control the sale of spirituous or malt liquors in sealed packages”. In other words, moderation, so-called, had nothing to do with personal consumption. Lane said he hoped that the Moderation movement would, like St. George, slay the dragon of Prohibition. George Cheeke, saying he came to the discussion from a sense of duty, believed that “the future of the province depended on the way the people voted on the coming issue”. It was time to “put away feelings of what might be politic for oneself and come out into the open”. He was saddened by the fact that many honest, law-abiding citizens had broken the law in their quest for liquor; he thought it was a reflection on social life generally and that it would have a sad effect on general morality: “Law-abiding people [are] denying themselves for the sake of the law instituted for the sake of those people who [are] no better than they were before. For the last four years the community [has] been living one large and deplorable lie.” That argument, that the availability and consumption of liquor led to ruined families, was specious, he said; the controlled sale of liquor would not lead to drunkenness and ruination. Why, even the Prohibitionists had admitted that the policy was a failure because it was difficult to legislate to protect the individual from himself. Cheeke cited previous failed attempts at enforced temperance in the Old Country and in the U.S. Hence Moderation should be given a fair trial and ‘Moderates’ had better wake up and vote down further Prohibition or the province would go on being bone-dry. Addressing himself to the ladies, Col. Collard warned against the sentimentality of “pussyfoot”. There was no denying that “in the old days” women “had had the hard side of drink”. But that was in the era of saloons and other public drinking places. “I stand tonight on what amounts to an anti-prohibition platform. Any man who stands up against an attack on his home and his personal liberty has no need to be ashamed to stand here. If the issue stood
The government took over distribution of alcohol. [SUBMITTED PHOTO] between the return of bars and total prohibition I would be standing tonight on a pro-prohibition platform.” Social drinking by adults in their own homes was a matter to be settled between husband and wife, not by legislation, he concluded. MLA Hawthornwaite pointed out that when Prohibition was passed in the provincial legislature, only he and two other MLAs had had the “courage or honesty” to vote against the bill. Women, he said, now had the vote and for their children’s sake they intended to destroy the danger — the saloons. But prohibition “involved so many questions” that he despaired of “educating” women before the coming referendum. He didn’t think a plebiscite was necessary; it
Wednesday, May 11, 2016
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was up to the members of the legislature to re-examine a law they knew to be resented by a majority of the electorate. The old days of privately-owned saloons were over and Prohibition was a failure and a positive disgrace. Wherever it had been tried in the world it had failed and been followed by “greater curses than drunkenness and drinking”. He was referring to “the drug habit” and claimed that Vancouver’s chief of police calculated that that city’s addict population had soared by 2,000 since the advent of Prohibition. Worse, in Montreal, “women and children hawked liquid morphine to men coming home from work” and the majority of inmates in Canadian asylums were women addicts(!) He challenged the audience, as he had a Methodist congregation in Victoria, to show him where “one vice or crime in which there was profit had ever been abolished by law”. Should a 51 per cent majority have the right to “dictate what men or women do inside their own homes”? Were attacks on smoking to follow? The answer was to eliminate profit by “letting the government take over the [liquor] business and administrate it”. There was more but you get the drift. And so did the provincial government which, the next year, rescinded Prohibition and established its own liquor distribution system.
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Cowichan Valley Citizen | Wednesday, May 11, 2016
15
DUNCAN CHRISTIAN SCHOOL
Life’s a jolly holiday with Mary Poppins, and her chimney sweeping pal, Bert: taking tea with children Michael and Jane Banks, learn about life and spell Supercalifragilisticexpialidocious. [LEXI BAINAS/CITIZEN]
‘Mary Poppins’ delights on the big stage LEXI BAINAS CITIZEN
Taking a big chance on a big name musical paid off for Duncan Christian School last weekend. Near capacity crowds packed the Cowichan Performing Arts Centre last Friday and Saturday to enjoy DCS’s production of the classic musical, Mary Poppins. Only just released for off-Broadway presentations, the show is filled with catchy songs that leave the audience humming when they make their way home. It’s no small challenge to bring an iconic show to the stage, but the young cast, directed by teacher Greg Hollett, was up to the job. Led by Brenna Bazinet as the surprising nanny, Mary Poppins, and Jared Popma as the chimney sweep, Bert, they sang and danced their way through the entrancing score. And what a score!
With songs like ‘A Spoonful of Sugar’, ‘Chim Chim Cher-ee’, ‘Jolly Holiday’, ‘Practically Perfect’, and, of course, ‘Supercalifragisticexpialidocious’, Mary Poppins has a lot to offer an audience of all ages. On top of great performances by the two leads, the audience also enjoyed following the adventures of young Jane and Michael Banks, (Kayleigh Morris and Ethan Kremer) and their parents, George and Winnifred Banks, (Lucas Hols and Lourdess Sumners) and the rest of a great supporting cast. A tremendous numbe of people put a lot into bringing a professional-looking show to the stage. The show was enhanced by some dandy stepping from members of Judy Hogg’s Celtic Rhythm Dancer, while Tamara Alyward led the talented and enthusiastic nine-piece orchestra in the on-stage pit through the tuneful evening. lexi.bainas@cowichanvalleycitizen.com
Friday, May 13, 2016 T. GIL BUNCH CENTRE FOR THE PERFORMING ARTS
All Tickets $10 BOOK ONLINE
theatre.brentwood.bc.ca Box Office 250.743.8756 Lorraine Blake Lorraine Blake & Samantha Madge COSTUME MISTRESS Sally Smith DANCE CAPTAIN Emma Carr PRODUCER
ARTIST DIRECTION
7597834
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Wednesday, May 11, 2016
A&E
| Cowichan Valley Citizen
COWICHAN PERFORMING ARTS CENTRE
Show delves into the life of performer Robeson LEXI BAINAS CITIZEN
Anyone who recognizes the name of Paul Robeson probably associates it with the song ‘Old Man River’, but Robeson the man was far, far more than just a singer. The Cowichan Performing Arts Centre is presenting Call Mr. Robeson Friday, May 13, starting at 7:30 p.m.
The show looks at the life of Paul Robeson. [SUBMITTED PHOTO]
An award-winning one-man show by Tayo Aluko, this event follows the bumpy road of Robeson’s life, and while it includes some of his famous songs, that is certainly not all. Robeson was an All-American football player and Columbia Law School graduate who became a Broadway actor and then a fiery speaker and activist for civil rights.
Two Duncan dancers join Dancestreams weekend show
YOUNG MUSICIAN OF THE WEEK
Cowichan Valley Youth Choirs present their end-of-season concert:
LEXI BAINAS CITIZEN
Julia Cutt, who celebrated her 16th birthday last week, is a Grade 10 Cowichan Senior Secondary French Immersion student. She has had seven years of piano with Ann Mendenhall, and in January, she “aced” her Grade 6 RCM piano exam. Julia also enjoys musical theatre, and will sing the role of the Wicked Witch of the West in Chalkboard Theatre’s production ‘The Wizard of Oz’, directed by her voice teacher, Tilly Lorence.
Saturday, May 14, 2016 – 2:00 pm Sylvan United Church 985 Shawnigan Mill Bay Road — Mill Bay
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HARVEY By Mary Chase
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Dancestreams, a pre-professional company that features dancers from all across Vancouver Island, will perform on Saturday, May 14 at the George Bonner Elmentary School, starting at 7 p.m. This year’s company includes two Duncan dancers: Hunter Cook and Sienna Quast, both students at Carlson’s School of Dance. Formed 30 years ago in Nanaimo to address the needs of talented and professionally minded Island dancers, Dancestreams aims to offer enriched opportunities to some of the Island’s most promising dancers, who are selected by audition. They work together for an intensive six hours each Sunday from September to May, in addition to their regular home-studio training. The works they dance to are all commissioned from leading professional choreographers, and the finished works are toured throughout Vancouver Island and Gulf Islands each spring. This year’s repertoire includes works by a galaxy of professional dancers, and offers the young dancers plenty of scope to display the results of their year of hard work. Tickets are available from Carlson’s, Body Wrapsody and at the door.
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Reflections
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DUNCAN CHRISTIAN REFORMED CHURCH
Saturday May 21, 2 p.m. St. Christopher’s, Lake Cowichan Sunday May 22, 2 p.m. Duncan United Church, Duncan
Tickets in advance $17, at the door $20. Available at Volume One book store, Duncan or Choir members. Children 12 & under free.
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His high profile meant he frequently found himself in trouble, especially in the ultra-conservative political climate in the U.S. after the Second World War and Robeson found himself blacklisted and refused a passport to travel. Tickets are $30 for adults, $28 for seniors, $25 for students. Partial proceeds will go to the Cowichan Valley Hospice Society.
A&E
Cowichan Valley Citizen
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Wednesday, May 11, 2016
17
CHEMAINUS THEATRE
‘Harvey’ delightful, funny splash of colour LEXI BAINAS CITIZEN
A
ll is not what it seems in the Chemainus Theatre Festival’s presentation of Mary Chase’s play, Harvey, which runs until May 28. Of course, it all starts with Harvey, the six-foot white rabbit, who can apparently only be seen by Elwood P. Dowd, but the story unfolds surprisingly from there. “He’s nuts, he needs to be committed,” claim Elwood’s relatives, Veta (Erin Ormond) and Myrtle Mae (Ella Simon), but once the audience meets Elwood, they realize he’s a pretty cool guy, for all his oddities. This production welcomes the Festival’s artistic director, Mark DuMez, back to the stage in the role of Elwood, and there couldn’t have been a better choice to breathe vibrant life into the gentle fellow with the imaginary pal. All DuMez’s own well-known courtliness is a superb asset in this production; Elwood looks on the world through his own colourful kaleidescope. And colourful is a key word here. When the play begins, the set and the characters, are monochromatic, indicating subtly the sterility of their lives. The only dash of colour is supplied by Elwood with his brilliant turquoise sweater and socks. Slowly, as the scenes change, more and more colour is added to the costumes and the set as his exuberant life flows outward, warming the world around him. But no one sees it. Veta is obsessed by trying to climb the social ladder, but, in some of Erin Ormond’s best work at Chemainus, we see that she’s not as sure of herself as she hopes to portray. As her daughter, Myrtle Mae, Ella Simons is in her element, bringing all her delicious abilities in physical comedy to bear. At the sanitorium, Bernard Cuffling as Dr. Chumley, Mack Gordon as Dr. Sanderson, and Jay Clift as Duane Wilson are ably joined by Simon in her other role of the flirtatious Nurse Kelly. There’s an element of French farce to
Kathryn Kerbes, left, Erin Ormond and Ella Simon start out seeing the world in black and white but before long, their characters’ lives take on a more colourful tone. [LEXI BAINAS/CITIZEN] this play: people are whisked on and off stage through doors, but Elwood meanders surefootedly through it all without even realizing he’s in any danger. In fact, it’s his family who realize they are in danger as the play nears its conclusion, and act decisively to bring this fun evening to a surprising conclusion.
This comedy has a lot to say, comments star, artistic director DuMez talked about Harvey and playing Elwood. Older theatregoers may feel they know the story or even have seen it on TV. “They did a movie of it with Jimmy Stewart and also did a remake of the play when he was older. But the original play came before the movie; Mary Chase wrote it in the 1940s. What I’m finding is that a lot of people have a vague, or a fuzzy memory of something about a rabbit,” he said, adding that the story stands up well. “The premise has a lot to say. It’s a really interesting and engaging comedy in its own right. The idea that Elwood sees a white rabbit that he hangs out with and
is one of his best friends taps into Celtic mythology and into the trickster legends of other cultures. But, of course, there is also the question: is he mentally ill or does he have a drinking problem? And how does that impact his community and his family?” The possibility of mental illness may sound a bit grim, but this is a comedy. “I say it’s got a lot of hop, when I’m being facetious. It’s got a lot of bubble,” DuMez said. “It’s funny. The characters are very sturdy, they have very strong agendas. And the actors, the company we’ve got,
are all people I’ve been on stage with or had the pleasure to direct. That’s making it a lot of fun.” The costumes are gorgeous and they’ve been working with two revolving sets, he said. “I think the play leaps off the page a lot; for being an old play, it really pops.” Younger audiences who’ve never heard of Harvey, or the concept of an imaginary friend, can just sit back and enjoy the comedy, he said. “ I t ’s v e r y a p p r o a c h a b l e , v e r y understandable.” The idea of having an imaginary friend can be found in many cultures, and at many times of life, but “if that friend is substantial enough in your imagination you have to question if it’s imaginary or not. That’s what the story plays with,” he said. And then, there is the utterly useless “reality” of the social climbers in the story. “That allows people to consider the idea: if we don’t have kindness, what are we living for? To be present with people in the moment is important.” Wearing his artistic director’s hat, DuMez said he’s delighted with the way this season is going at Chemainus. “It’s been wonderful. Last season was good and I think we’re reaping some of the benefits of that audience loyalty and enthusiasm. We’ve had a great start to the season this year. It’s been really fun, and we’re hoping for more of the same.” lexi.bainas@cowichanvalleycitizen.com
Fundraiser for the Cowichan Valley Hospice Society
Call Mr. Robeson A Life, with Songs
Tayo Aluko takes you on a roller-coaster journey through Paul Robeson’s remarkable life.
May 6th to May 28th
“Aluko does a fine ne job… first-rate… an admirable introduction to a great pioneering performer” ★ ★ ★ ★ The Guardian
Harvey… is an unassuming charmer
This Friday May 13, 2016 7:30 PM Tickets: Adult Senior Student eyeGo
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“If a rabbit, six feet one and one half inches tall sits down beside you, you may count yourself fortunate.” Lewis Michels, New York Times, 1944
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Cowichan Valley Citizen | Wednesday, May 11, 2016
19
LACROSSE
Jr. B Thunder win ‘ugly’ one over T-Men
KEVIN ROTHBAUER CITIZEN
It wasn’t pretty, but the Cowichan Valley Thunder beat the Nanaimo Timbermen in a Pacific Northwest Junior B Lacrosse League contest at Kerry Park Arena on Saturday. “It was an ugly game,” assistant coach Traves Black said after the 14-9 victory. The T-Men never stood a chance as Cowichan jumped out to a 6-0 lead in the first period, so they turned their attention to trying to get Cowichan players off their game. “They were asking our guys to fight right the first period,” Black said. At the same time, the Cowichan players realized they had a chance to pad their own stats and got a little selfish. “It was out of hand,” Once we
were up 6-0 in the first four minutes, it was discipline. Everyone wanted to score. Instead of playing a team game, they got too individual.” Black noted a specific example of a Cowichan player essentially throwing the ball away when his team could have retained possession with the shot clock turned off. “At the end there, we were trying to kill a penalty,” he said. “Four minutes left, the guy takes a shot. They were thinking of themselves instead of the team.” Cowichan led 6-2 after the first period and 12-4 after the second, then managed to hold off a Nanaimo surge in the third. Black felt that if his team had played their best the whole game, it wouldn’t have been as close. See MARTIN LEADS, Page 20
Taylor Martin moves in on the Nanaimo net for one of his seven goals in a 14-9 win. [KEVIN ROTHBAUER/CITIZEN]
FASTBALL
U14B RiverCats take silver at strong Mainland tournament KEVIN ROTHBAUER CITIZEN
Moving up to U14B fastball this year after winning the U12B district championship and placing seventh at provincials in 2015, the Duncan RiverCats continued right where they left off. The RiverCats had already put together an impressive 11-2 record on the Island before heading to a tournament in White Rock earlier this month to test themselves against Mainland competition. The RiverCats passed that test and finished second in a strong field. The Duncan team opened against the South Surrey Thunder ‘02, and found themselves trailing 4-0 early on. They rallied with four runs of their own in the third inning, however. Katie White led off with a walk, followed by singles from Emma Wright and Katie Murphy, setting up a one-out homer by Marissa St. Amand to tie the score. Neither team mustered any more offence, and the game was called due to time limits, and went on record as a 4-4 tie. Katie Murphy and Mya Rosenlind split pitching duties, while Emma Wright went 2-for-3 at the plate. The RiverCats went right back into action against the Tri City Titans, losing 7-1. “Tri City is one of the top teams in the
The U14B Duncan RiverCats display their silver medals after placing second at a tournament in White Rock earlier this month. [SUBMITTED] Lower Mainland league,” Duncan coach Kevin Olender said. “Their pitching was good but we just couldn’t get the offence going.” In their third game of the day, the RiverCats earned another tie, this time with the Langley Extreme ‘03. With Duncan trailing 3-2, a single by Paiton Douglas and a sacrifice by Katie White plated St. Amand
for the tying run. The Extreme responded with five runs in the top of the last inning, but the RiverCats weren’t finished. Katie Murphy singled and came home on Brooklyn Lang’s two-run homer, then Rylee Smith and Mary Murphy singled to set up Anna Beauchamp’s game-tying single. Rosenlind and Smith shared pitching duties.
The RiverCats found themselves in a must-win situation against South Surrey Thunder ‘02 on Sunday morning, needing a victory to advance to the playoff round. First-inning homers by Lang and Katie Murphy kick-started the Duncan attack in an 8-7 victory, while a diving catch by shortstop Mary Murphy and a two-out game-winning hit by Beauchamp proved to be the biggest highlights. Rosenlind and Lang were both 2-for-2 with home runs, and Katie Murphy was 2-for-3 with a homer. Rosenlind and Smith again split the work on the mound. A third-place finish in the round robin set up a semifinal rematch with the Extreme ‘03, which the RiverCats won 8-5, thanks to solid defence from Wright at first base and Beauchamp in the outfield. Smith pitched five compete innings and Rosenlind collected the save while the RiverCats combined for 16 hits, let by Wright, Rosenlind and Katie Murphy, who all went 3-for-4. The RiverCats again faced the unbeaten Tri City team in the final. Although they fell behind 5-0 early on, the Duncan team rallied, only to fall short 7-5. Rosenlind, Smith and Katie Murphy split pitching duties. Katie Murphy also went 3-for-4 at the plate with a homer and a double, while Smith was 2-for-4 with a triple.
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Wednesday, May 11, 2016
SPORTS
| Cowichan Valley Citizen
BADMINTON
Host Chargers finish second at N. Island tourney KEVIN ROTHBAUER CITIZEN
A thrilling match by Matt Brandsma and Sungjun Jang late in the event helped Duncan Christian School clinch second place at the North Island high school badminton championships on April 27 and 28 and advance to the Island tournament. Brandsma and Jang came back from a 19-13 deficit in their third set against Alberni District to prevail 23-21. “Under amazing pressure, these two Chargers played with confidence and determination to claw their way back, point after point, to win the match,” DCS athletic director Tom Veenstra said. DCS beat Alberni 6-5 in the crossover playoff series thanks to victories by Brandsma and Jung in boys doubles, Danielle Groenendijk and Rebecca Bakker in girls doubles, Minseok Kim and Adam Kapteyn in boys doubles, Rachelle VanBoven in girls singles, Dennis Jiang in boys singles, and VanBoven and Jiang in mixed doubles. Dover Bay, who beat Ucluelet 9-2 in their crossover series, will go to Islands as the top seed from the North by virtue of their round-robin win over DCS, also by a 9-2 score.
DCS players Diana Hoeft and Jordyn Mitchell take on a Chemainus pair during the first day of the North Island competition. [KEVIN ROTHBAUER/CITIZEN] DCS swept their round-robin series against Lake Cowichan and Chemainus by 11-0 scores. Against Lake Cowichan, the Chargers got two wins each from Groenendijk and Bakker in girls doubles, Dianna Hoeft and Jordan Mitchell in girls doubles, Kapteyn and Malachi Wall in boys doubles, and Brandsma and Jang in boys
doubles, and one win each from Kim in boys singles, VanBoven in girls singles, and Kim and VanBoven in mixed doubles. Against Chemainus, the Chargers got two wins each from Groenendijk and Bakker in girls doubles, Hoeft and Mitchell in girls doubles, Kim and Kapteyn in boys doubles, and Brandsma
and Jang in boys doubles, and one win each from VanBoven in girls singles, Jiang in boys singles, and VanBoven and Jiang in mixed doubles. The two match victories by DCS over Dover Bay came from Kim and Kapteyn in boys doubles and Jiang in boys singles. With seven teams participating,
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the 2016 tournament was the largest North Island championship to date. Behind Dover Bay and DCS, Alberni finished third and Ucluelet fourth. Nanaimo District was fifth, followed by Lake Cowichan in sixth and Chemainus seventh. The Island tournament will be played on May 18.
Martin leads Thunder with seven goals against T-Men JR. B THUNDER, From Page 19 “It’s a matter of staying disciplined,” he said. “Keep out of the penalty box.” Speedster Taylor Martin was phenomenal for the Thunder at both ends of the floor, scoring seven goals and setting up another. “Taylor lit it up, playing defence,” Black said. “No one could catch him. He just blows by them.” Brandon Brown scored twice and had one assist, while Jacob Taylor notched a pair of goals in the first period. Team captain Tyson Black had a goal and five helpers, Jaeden Ashbee had a goal and two assists, and Liam Clinging also had a single. Coach Black wasn’t handing out too many accolades after the win. “We just got too many guys who wanted to do stupid things,” he said. “There’s not much you can get out of these games.” The Thunder will visit Westshore on Thursday, followed by two more home games at Kerry Park, against Nanaimo again on Saturday and Saanich next Tuesday.
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SPORTS
Cowichan Valley Citizen
EQUESTRIAN
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Wednesday, May 11, 2016
21
SOCCER
Two seconds for Eagles at annual youth tournament KEVIN ROTHBAUER CITIZEN
Hannah Anderson, left, is congratulated by coach Cheryl Keith as she displays her ribbons from competitions at Thermal, California. [SUBMITTED]
QMS turns up the heat at Thermal KEVIN ROTHBAUER CITIZEN
Queen Margaret’s School equestrian team riders wrapped up a sixweek stint in the California desert late last month, and came home with a long list of accolades. Head coach Cheryl Keith and equestrian program director Jodie Buydens took eight riders to Thermal, California to compete in the HITS Desert Circuit over a six-week span. The most successful of those riders was Grade 12 student Kassidy Keith, who headed south in February, ahead of the rest of the team. Working with four different horses, Keith racked up the honours. On La Reserve, Keith received second half circuit champion in modified junior amateur hunter, reserve grand circuit champion in modified junior amateur hunter, second half circuit champion in 1.3m junior jumpers, and reserve grand circuit champion in 1.3m junior jumpers. On Chicago, she was winner of the USEF Pessoa Medal in week three. On Crackerjack, she was champion mid circuit in 1.3m junior jumper, reserve champion grand circuit in 1.3m junior jumper, and top five in the junior amateur 1.35m classic. And on Rigoletto, she placed second in the Maclay Medal, won the large junior hunter stake in week five, and finished fourth in the Ronnie Mutch Equitation Championship. The rest of the QMS riders reached California in March. “Taking a team of this size to
an international competition is a large undertaking,” Buydens said. “Coordinating the transportation of our students, their horses, equipment, and accommodation was time consuming. Yet the passion these athletes display for the equestrian sport makes the effort absolutely worth it.” Lillian Jiang was reserve champion in short stirrup equitation in week six on Rising Tide. Kyra Westman rode LL Bean and Will I Am to top three placings in low children’s jumper in weeks five and six. Lily Li was reserve champion in pre children’s hunter on Providence. Christine Coels and TeAmo took consistent ribbons in low children’s jumper in weeks five to seven, and Miranda LeBeuf had consistent ribbons on Carivero in modified child adult. Tianna Jerome rode Capo E to some impressive rounds in the 1.0m jumpers. The youngest QMS rider at Thermal was Grade 5 student Hannah Anderson. Riding Rosewood, Anderson was second half circuit champion in pre child hunter, reserve grand circuit champion in pre child hunter, second half circuit reserve champion in short stirrup equitation, and second half circuit champion in short stirrup hunter. “It was really hot in Thermal, but it was really fun to ride in such a big show,” she said. “I was so happy to compete for the month. My Thermal results have given me confidence to compete in more shows locally, and I want to go back to HITS next year.”
The Cowichan Eagles Youth Soccer teams finished second in two age divisions, while WeWaiKai from Campbell River won three of the four competitive groups during the Eagles’ 14th annual tournament, held on Saturday at the Alexander and Quamichan school fields. The Eagles finished second in the U7 and U16 age groups, placing behind WeWaiKai in both. WeWaiKai placed first and third in the U7 division, with the Eagles sandwiched in between. In U10, the San’alt Fury took first, followed by the Guilford Island Breakers and Shellbeach Raiders. WeWaiKai also won the U13 age class, ahead of the T-Birds from Victoria and Turner Island Braves. In the U16 bracket, WeWaiKai and the Eagles were followed by the T-Birds in third place. The U5 division was played jamboree-style, with all players receiving goodie bags for their participation. Tour nament organiz ers
Liamb Sylvester delivers a cross for the U16 Eagles during Saturday’s tournament. [KEVIN ROTHBAUER/CITIZEN] thanked all the parents who volunteered to make the day a success, all the teas who supported the tournament, and all the businesses and individuals who donated to the event,
including Alec Johnny and Cowichan Tribes Operations and Maintenance, Columbia Ice, LMG Insurance Brokers, Duncan Paving, and Mike & Mike Comfort Systems Ltd.
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SPORTS
| Cowichan Valley Citizen
RUGBY
T-Birds head into playoffs after Stadium Series loss KEVIN ROTHBAUER CITIZEN
Cowichan fullback Owen Harvey looks to offload the ball during Saturday’s game against Lord Tweedsmuir at Shawnigan Lake School. [KEVIN ROTHBAUER/CITIZEN]
The Cowichan Secondary School Piggies played their last game before the Island senior boys rugby playoffs at Shawnigan Lake School on Saturday, falling 54-0 to Surrey’s Lord Tweedsmuir. “Unfortunately, we were completely outmatched against a very strong team,” Cowichan coach Tom Fogarty said. “They will go into the provincial tournament as one of the favourites for the Tier 1 AAA bracket. They were a big, well-conditioned group of athletes and their size and strength caused major problems for us both on attack and on defence.” Nevertheless, Fogarty was impressed
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with the way his team responded. “I was very proud of the heart and passion that our young team displayed,” he said. “We were able to dominate the scrums and lineouts, and overall play was positive. Even so, rugby is a physical game and with so many strong athletes at their disposal, they took advantage at every turn during the contest.” The Thunderbirds will head into the Island playoffs as the second seed from the North Island zone. Their next game is against the South Island third seed, most likely Belmont Secondary, at UVic on May 17. The winner of that game will move on to the Tier 1 AAA provincial tournament in Abbotsford on May 25-28.
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Wednesday, May 11, 2016
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®/™The Hyundai names, logos, product names, feature names, images and slogans are trademarks owned by Hyundai Auto Canada Corp. All other trademarks are the property of their respective owners. *The customer prices are those reflected on the dealer invoice from Hyundai Auto Canada Corp. The dealer invoice price includes a holdback amount for which the dealer is subsequently reimbursed by Hyundai Auto Canada Corp. ΩPrice adjustments of up to $3,000 available on the 2016 Santa Fe Sport 2.0T Limited models. Price adjustments applied before taxes. Offer cannot be combined or used in conjunction with any other available offers. Offer is non-transferable and cannot be assigned. No vehicle trade-in required. †Finance offers available O.A.C. from Hyundai Financial Services based on a new 2016 Santa Fe Sport 2.0T Limited with an annual finance rate of 0%. Weekly payments are $190 for 48 months. $0 down payment required. Cost of borrowing is $0. Finance offers include Delivery and Destination charge of $1,895. Finance offers exclude registration, insurance, PPSA, fees, levies, charges and licence fees. ◊Leasing offers available O.A.C. from Hyundai Financial Services based on a new 2016 Sonata GL Auto/2016 Tucson 2.0L FWD with an annual lease rate of 0%/1.8%. Biweekly lease payment of $118/$130 for a 60-month walk-away lease. Down payment of $0 and first monthly payment required. Total lease obligation is $15,340/$16,900. Lease offers include Delivery and Destination charges of $1,795/$1,795. Lease offers exclude registration, insurance, PPSA, fees, levies, charges and licence fees. ♦Prices of models shown: 2016 Santa Fe Sport 2.0T Limited/2016 Tucson 1.6T Ultimate AWD/2016 Sonata 2.0T Ultimate are $42,444/$41,394/$37,494. Prices include Delivery and Destination charges of $1,895/$1,795/$1,795. Prices exclude registration, insurance, PPSA, fees, levies, charges and licence fees. *◊†♦ΩOffers available for a limited time and subject to change or cancellation without notice. Dealer may sell for less. Inventory is limited. Visit www.hyundaicanada.com or see dealer for complete details. ††Hyundai’s Comprehensive Limited Warranty coverage covers most vehicle components against defects in workmanship under normal use and maintenance conditions.
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Wednesday, May 11, 2016
| Cowichan Valley Citizen
To advertise in print:
Browse more at:
Call: 1.866.865.4460 Email: bcclassifieds@blackpress.ca Self-serve: blackpressused.ca Career ads: localworkbc.ca
A division of
30
$
50% OFF RENTALS
PACKAGE ANY 3 MARKETS OF YOUR CHOICE* *Private party only, cannot be combined with other discounts.
EQUALS 3 WEEKS ANY 1 MARKET
FAMILY ANNOUNCEMENTS
FAMILY ANNOUNCEMENTS
FAMILY ANNOUNCEMENTS
FAMILY ANNOUNCEMENTS
FAMILY ANNOUNCEMENTS
FAMILY ANNOUNCEMENTS
COMMUNITY ANNOUNCEMENTS
DEATHS
DEATHS
DEATHS
IN MEMORIAM
IN MEMORIAM
IN MEMORIAM
INFORMATION
Celebrate the Life of
CANCEL YOUR TIMESHARE. NO Risk Program STOP Mortgage and Maintenance Payments Today. 100% Money Back Guarantee. FREE Consultation. Call Now. We Can Help! 1-888-356-5248
Nancy May Casswell (nee Calnek) November 29, 1923 - May 6, 2016 Shortly after sunrise on Friday, May 6, 2016, Mom/Grandma/Grammy finally got her pilot’s wings, and flew off to her next adventure. Mom was born in 1923, in Southey, Saskatchewan, only child of John Maurice Calnek and Margaret Calnek (Falconer), who died two weeks after giving birth to her. After a couple of years, she went to live with her paternal grandparents in Granville Ferry, Nova Scotia, where she stayed until she was old enough to start school. She then returned to her dad in Saskatchewan, living in a variety of small communities, wherever he could find work as a teacher. Maurice remarried when Mom was 10, and she was extremely fond of her new mother Helen, admiring her quiet, gentle work ethic. When she was 17, Mom attended “Normal School�, the teacher training college in Regina, while she waited to be old enough to join the RCAF (WD). The Second World War was on, and she wanted to be sent overseas. Much to her disappointment, by the time she was old enough to join, they had stopped sending women overseas, so she was stationed in B.C. instead, first in Victoria, then Vancouver, spending a memorable 21st birthday “on leave� at the Hotel Vancouver. Following discharge at the end of the war, Mom returned to Saskatchewan and teaching, and it was while teaching in a small community called Hubbard that she met a young farmer named Harold Casswell. Mom and Dad were married July 31, 1948. They had 3 children, and Dad eventually took over the Post Office in Hubbard, while Mom continued to teach. Having followed her dad’s footsteps into teaching and the Air Force, it was only natural that when her parents moved to Victoria in the mid-60’s, that Nancy follow them west as well. In 1967, the whole family moved to Duncan, B.C., where she spent the rest of her life. Mom taught at Quamichan Junior Secondary School for 16 yrs. until she took early retirement in 1983. Her retirement didn’t last long though, as in late 1984, she took over as Executive Director of what is now the Clements Centre Society, until finally retiring for good in Mar. 1989, at the age of 65. She was a tireless volunteer in the community, serving on the Board of what is now the Clements Centre Society from the late 60’s until the mid 80’s, and as a Board member of the Duncan Housing Society from 1995-2005. She joined the Valley Seniors Organization shortly after it formed in 1999, where she served as Secretary until May 2010, and as part-time receptionist, kitchen helper, shuffleboard coordinator and bus trip hostess, until finally “retiring from active duty� in 2012. She was a Life Member of both the Clements Centre Society and the VSO. Mom was an active member of the St. John’s ACW group, and a keen Golden Age 5-pin bowler. Mom loved to read, do puzzles, knit and crochet, garden, play cards and games, watch sports on t.v. especially hockey, curling and golf, various game shows, cooking, and home and garden shows. She loved her trips to the casino, and enjoyed going out to eat. She made the best apple pie and lasagna ever! Most of all, she loved spending time with her family. Mom was pre-deceased by her parents, her husband Harold (1974) and daughter Marilyn Hankins(2006). She is survived by her son Al (Kim) Casswell and daughter Sheila (Tim) Coogan, grandchildren Pat (Melissa) Hankins, Matthew (Carrie) Bartlett, Jason (Pam) Bartlett, Dan Coogan, Finn Coogan and Brynna Coogan, and great-grandchildren Ariana, Brooklyn, Nathan, Kristen, Katie, Allie, Austin and Sofia. Our family would like to thank Drs. Ismail, Hamilton-Irving and Chad, all the wonderful nurses at CDH, Barb Coleman and Rev. Clara Plamondon of St. John’s Anglican Church, Duncan, for making Mom’s last couple of weeks as comfortable and peaceful as possible. A Memorial Service will be held on Saturday, May 28, 2016, at 2 p.m. at St. John’s Anglican Church, Duncan, B.C. Condolences may be shared online at www.firstmemorialfuneral.com FIRST MEMEORIAL FUNERAL SERVICES Duncan, BC 250748-2134
Your Community, Your ClassiďŹ eds. Call 1-866-865-4460
Lomma, Filomena May 9, 1935 ~ May 6, 2006 Happy Birthday Happy Mother’s Day in Heaven Heaven holds our Mother. On this her Special day. Lord we ask this of you. To give her a bouquet of beautiful scented flowers and tell her they’re from her family. Please tell her that we will love her for eternity. Love and Miss you Mommy. Love always, Antonio, Daughters & Families DEATHS
DEATHS
Lindsey Dawn Bellvau June 13, 1996 ~ May 4, 2016 It is with great sadness that we announce the sudden passing of our beloved daughter and sister Lindsey Dawn Bellvau on May 4, 2016. Lindsey was born and lived in the Cowichan Valley where her generous and caring nature touched the hearts of all who knew her. You could always count on her smiling eyes and quirky expression and you knew when she was truly amused by the outrageous burst of highpitched laughter that filled the room. She will be deeply missed and loved. Survived by parents Larry Bellvau and Tina Kirkpatrick, sisters Elyse Bellvau (Josh Laughland) and Rachel Kirkpatrick (Kyle Heglin), grandparents Bill Bellvau (Trish Kolk), Elsie Bellvau and Aldine Kirkpatrick, best friend and partner Paul Carswell, numerous aunts, uncles, cousins and friends. Predeceased by grandfather Ken Kirkpatrick in 2014. A memorial tea will be held at Duncan Community Lodge (Moose Lodge) on Thursday, May 12 from 1:30 to 4:30 pm for all who wish to join us in celebrating Lindsey’s life.
For those who love, time is not. Missing you today and always.
CAREY SCHAUB Saturday, May 14th, 2016 (12 noon - 4pm) at his property 3950 Hillbank Rd, Cobble Hill V9L 6M1. Dress Comfy & Casual. Food will be serviced Picnic Style. We look forward to meeting all who knew Carey. Weather permitting we will be outside. Inquiries: Sue 250-474-8188 or sschaub@shaw.ca
IN MEMORIAM GIFTS
LOST AND FOUND FOUND: Baseball Glove, Sat., Apr. 30, by hospital entrance. Please call: 778-455-4775.
CAREER OPPORTUNITIES
DEPUTY DIRECTOR OF OPERATIONS
9/52Ă–#/--5.)49 Ă–9/52Ă–#,!33)&)%$3 $BMM
District of Kitimat, exempt staff position with generous compensation. Reporting to the Operations Manager, is responsible for repair and maint. of the municipality’s infrastructure including roads, signage, sidewalks, general clean-up, common services, buildings & fleet equipment, and assists with municipal water and sewer operations. Candidates will have a Civil Technologist Diploma and 5 years’ senior management experience in a municipal or similar work environment; an Applied Science Tech. Cert. is an asset. Submit resumes by May 29, 2016, 4:30 p.m., to Personnel, District of Kitimat, 270 City Centre, Kitimat, B.C. V8C 2H7, Fax: 250-632-4995 E-mail dok@kitimat.ca
FAMILY ANNOUNCEMENTS
FAMILY ANNOUNCEMENTS
DEATHS
DEATHS
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.
JOAN BALTARE CELEBRATION OF LIFE MAY 21, 2016
A celebration of life service for Joan Baltare will be held May 21, 2016 at 1:00 pm at the Youbou Community Church located at 10648 Youbou Road in Youbou, BC. A come and go time of visiting after the service will be available until 3:00 pm in the lower reception area in the church building. All who knew Joan, or who know the family, are invited to attend.
Cowichan Valley Citizen PERSONAL SERVICES EDUCATION/TRADE SCHOOLS FOODSAFE COURSES Level 1. May 21 & June 25 2016. $75/person. Location: Island Savings Centre. Register online: www.saferfood.ca or Call: 250-746-4154 MEDICAL TRANSCRIPTION, HEALTHCARE DOCUMENTATION, Medical Terminology online courses. Train with CanScribe, the accredited and top-rated online Canadian school. Work from home careers! 1-866-305-1165. www.canscribe.com info@canscribe.com MEDICAL TRANSCRIPTION! In-demand career! Employers have work-at-home positions available. Get online training you need from an employer-trusted program. Visit: CareerStep.ca/MT or 1-855-768-3362 to start training for your work-at-home career today!
START A NEW CAREER in Graphic Arts, Healthcare, Business, Education or Information Tech. If you have a GED, Call: 855-670-9765
HELP WANTED LICENSED LOG SCALER Required full-time for a Coastal Operation in Chemainus, BC., Union position. Metric & Scribner scale experience required. Email resume to: chemainusdls @hotmail.com
PART TIME SALES CLERK WANTED
Experience an asset. Must be available for Saturdays. Knowledge of health food industry required; computer knowledge. Duties include: customer service & sales; stocking shelves. Food Safe certification a plus. No phone calls. Submit resume in person to: LYNN’S VITAMIN GALLERY
HELP WANTED
HELP WANTED
FINANCIAL SERVICES
PHARMACY ASSISTANT
PRODUCTION WORKERS Canada’s Largest Independently owned newspaper group is currently looking for Part Time Production Workers for its Ladysmith location. This is an entry level general labour position that involves physical handling of newspapers and advertising supplements. REQUIREMENTS: • Prior bindery and/or machine operator experience would be an asset • Motivated self-starter willing to work in a fast paced environment performing repetitive tasks • Must be able to lift up to 15 lbs and stand for long periods of time • Ability to work cooperatively in a diverse, team based environment • Must be reliable, dependable, have excellent communication skills and good attention to detail âœąAfternoon and evening shifts 8-16 hours per week. $11.25/hr Interested parties can email jobs@ladysmithpress.com or drop off their resumes between 9am and 5pm at:
LADYSMITH PRESS 940 Oyster Bay Drive, Ladysmith, BC V9G 1G1
CONNECTING JOB SEEKERS AND EMPLOYERS
Att’n: Mgr, #4 -180 Central Rd., Duncan, BC
www.localworkbc.ca
HELP WANTED
HELP WANTED
Part-time with potential for full-time. Monday to Friday, no evenings or weekends. Good customer service skills required. Pharmacy experience an asset. email resume to: pharmacysage123 @gmail.com
MEDICAL/DENTAL Chiropractic Assistant
Required P/T for Cowichan Chiropractic. Please apply in person with hand written cover letter w/ your view of alternative medicine during working hours by May 13th, 5:00 p.m. Unit #204 - 225 Canada Avenue, Duncan. No phone calls please!
WORK WANTED HUSBAND FOR Hire. Nothing but the best - Carpenter, Plumber, Painter, Electrician, Pressure Washing. Just ask my wife. Call 250-709-1111.
$750 Loans & More NO CREDIT CHECKS
Open 7 days/wk. 8am - 8pm
1-855-527-4368
Apply at:www.credit700.ca LARGE FUND Borrowers Wanted Start saving hundreds of dollars today! We can easily approve you by phone. 1st, 2nd or 3rd mortgage money is available right now. Rates start at Prime. Equity counts. We don’t rely on credit, age or income. Call Anytime 1-800-639-2274 or 604-430-1498. Apply online www.capitaldirect.ca NEED A LOAN? Own Property? Have Bad Credit? We can help! Call toll free 1 866 405 1228 www.firstandsecondmortgages.ca
• Experienced Window Installer • Delivery Driver (clean abstract) We offer great rate of pay and extended health and dental benefits. Apply with resume to: sbwindowsanddoors@telus.net
RESPONSIBLE CARRIERS WANTED & P/T OR ON-CALL CARRIERS
(for emergency situations) WANTED
FOR MORE INFORMATION PLEASE CALL: 250-715-7783 COWICHAN BAY DC519773 – 78 papers Alder Glen Rd 4620-4651 Austin Pl Cedar Glen Pl Glen Rd Maple Glen Rd McGill Rd 4660-4677 DC519774 – 51 papers Fenwick Rd Gillis Rd Pritchard Rd 1735-1845 Wilmot Rd DC519784– 50 papers Pritchard Rd 1700-1730 SHAWNIGAN LAKE DC519994 – 68 papers Decca Rd Inn Rd Morningstar Rd Widows Walk SPECTACLE LAKE/MALAHAT DC519944 –70 papers Spectacle Lake Mobile Home Park Section A 1-42 & Section B 1-38 DC519945 – 39 papers Spectacle Lake Mobile Home Park Section C 1-36 & Section D 1-10 LAKE COWICHAN DC519846 - 56 papers Berar Rd Fern Rd Sall Rd South Shore Rd 232-350 HONEYMOON BAY DC 519880 - 63 papers Beach Dr March Rd Paul’s Dr South Shore Rd First St Second St Charles Pl
Wednesday, May 11, 2016
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HOME/BUSINESS SERVICES
HOME/BUSINESS SERVICES
CLEANING SERVICES
HAULING AND SALVAGE
HOME IMPROVEMENTS
COWICHAN Hauling & Moving
HOME RENOVATIONS. Deck work, carpentry, flooring, plumbing, eaves trough-cleaning & rubbish removal. Small moving jobs. Sr. Discount. Ian 250-743-6776.
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.islanddomesticservices.ca
(250) 597-8335 HAULING/JUNK REMOVAL MOVING & DELIVERIES SMALL DEMOLITION JOBS
ALL YOU NEED IN PRINT AND ONLINE www.used.ca CAREER OPPORTUNITIES
CAREER OPPORTUNITIES
HOME/BUSINESS SERVICES
PLUMBING A SERVICE PLUMBER. Licence, Insured. Drains, HWT, Reno’s, Repairs. Senior Discounts. After Hour Service. Call Coval Plumbing, 250709-5103.
CAREER OPPORTUNITIES
TRANSPORTATION SUPERVISOR
PERSONAL SERVICES
CLEANING SERVICES
The Cowichan Valley School District invites applications for the position of Transportation Supervisor. A detailed job description can be viewed at www.sd79.bc.ca under Employment Opportunities – Excluded.
FINANCIAL SERVICES
EXPERIENCED and Reliable House Cleaners. Excellent references. 250-732-1713.
The deadline for applications is 4:00 pm on Friday, May 20, 2016.
GET BACK ON TRACK! Bad credit? Bills? Unemployed? Need Money? We Lend! If you own your own home - you qualify. Pioneer Acceptance Corp. Member BBB. 1-877-987-1420 www.pioneerwest.com
HOME/BUSINESS SERVICES
HOUSE Cleaning with 30 yrs exp $25 per hour,Excellent refs. Bi-Weekly ,long term ,3-4 hr minimum 250-815-0648
CAREER OPPORTUNITIES
CAREER OPPORTUNITIES
Molehill Mountain Ventures Ltd. Port Mellon
WHEEL LOADER OPERATORS Molehill Mountain Ventures Ltd. is seeking two full-time Wheel Loader Operators for their Avalon – Port Mellon Dryland Sort Operation.
If you are interested in a future with us, please send your resume to jeff@mmv-bc.ca or fax to (250)286-3653. HELP WANTED
HELP WANTED
LEGALS
#,!33)&)%$Ă–!$3Ă–7/2+ $BMM
Logging experience is required. Shifting will be 8 days on and 4 off, union rate and full benefits. Due to rapid expansion SB Windows and Doors in Duncan, BC has immediate full-time openings for:
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RESPONSIBLE CARRIERS WANTED & P/T OR ON-CALL CARRIERS
LEGALS
IN THE SUPREME COURT OF BRITISH COLUMBIA BETWEEN: AND: To: WILLIAM STANLEY SMITH
No. S12872 Campbell River Registry
MATSUNAGA VENTURES LTD.
PETITIONER
WILLIAM STANLEY SMITH
RESPONDENT
ADVERTISEMENT
TAKE NOTICE THAT on April 26, 2016, an order was made for service on you of a Petition to the Court issued from the Campbell River Registry of the Supreme Court of British Columbia, in proceeding number S12872, by way of this advertisement. In the proceeding, the Petitioner applies for an order and declaration that: Pursuant to the policy and regulations of the Department of Fisheries and Oceans Canada (the “DFO�), the Petitioner is the legal holder of the Category C fishing licence eligibility identified in the records of the DFO by tab number C 667 which is currently issued in respect of the motor vessel “Sliver Harverster� official number 190293, port of registry Vancouver, DFO VRN 28174. You must file a Response to Petition at the Campbell River Registry within 21 days from the later date of which this advertisement is published, failing which further proceedings, including judgment, may be taken against you without notice to you. You may obtain, from the Campbell River Registry, at 500 – 13th Avenue, Campbell River, British Columbia, a copy of the Petition to the Court and the Order providing for service by this advertisement. This advertisement is placed by the Petitioner, MATSUNAGA VENTURES LTD., whose address for service is: Shook Wickham Bishop & Field 906 Island Highway Campbell River, BC V9W 2C3 Fax No. 250-287-8112 ACCOUNTING/ BOOKKEEPING
(for emergency situations) WANTED
FOR MORE INFORMATION PLEASE CALL: 250-715-7783 MAPLE BAY DC519189 – 88 papers Stonehouse Pl St. Ann’s Dr Eagle Ridge Pl Eagle Ridge Terr Eagle View Pl COBBLE HILL DC519505 – 44 papers Champagne Dr Clearwater Rd Lefran Rd Red Baron Pl Red Oak Dr Satellite Park Dr DC519506 – 91 papers Cobble Hill Rd Fairfield Rd Fisher Rd Garland Ave Holland Ave Watson Rd Verner Rd DC519515 – 63 papers Beatrice Way Bonnie Pl Carlton Dr Cheal Pl Dale Pl Nora Pl Sylvia Pl DC519517 – 55 papers Dougan Dr Hutchinson Rd 1126-1475 Verner Ave 3455-3492 DC519519 – 33 papers Aros Rd Grandfield Rd McAlpine Rd Peach Rd White Cap Rd DC519521 – 40 papers Ellison Pl Inverness Pl Judge Dr 4100-4135 St. Catherine Dr DC519540 – 47 papers Cedarwood Rd Cowerd Rd MILL BAY DC519654 – 85 papers Alget Rd Staats Pl Benko Rd Lodgepole Rd Fawn Terr Frayne Rd Windsong Pl DC519670 – 69 papers Baptist Rd Homewood Pl Keparo Rd Meadow Pl Meredith Rd Mutter Rd Voutrait Rd
LEGALS
%
%
% % % %
ACCOUNTING/ BOOKKEEPING
ACCOUNTING/ BOOKKEEPING
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Wednesday, May 11, 2016
| Cowichan Valley Citizen
PETS
REAL ESTATE
PET CARE SERVICES
FOR SALE BY OWNER
DOG SITTER. Reliable, devoted, for small dogs. Short or long-term stays, fenced yard. Chemainus. (250)246-3813.
CHEMAINUS GARDENS. Small 1-bdrm home with wraparound deck & small garden in back. I yr old. Asking $71,000. Immediate occupancy possible. Call 1(604)354-5421.
MERCHANDISE FOR SALE
RENTALS
FURNITURE TABLE w/5 chairs & China Cabinet, $300.00. Antique 5-pc. double bedroom suite, $400.00. Queen bed w/ 1 year old mattress, dresser w/ mirror, night stand, $300.00. 250-246-2407.
MISCELLANEOUS FOR SALE HUSQVARNA ride on lawn mower. 42 cut. Good condition. $600.00. 250-245-8608 (Ladysmith). REFORESTATION NURSERY SEEDLINGS of hardy trees, shrubs, & berries for shelterbelts or landscaping. Spruce & Pine from $0.99/tree. Free Shipping. Replacement guarantee. 1-866-873-3846 or www.treetime.ca
STREAM OF DREAMS
APARTMENT/CONDO LADYSMITH- New 1 bdrm Coach House, balcony w/ocean view, all new appls, priv entry, priv off street prking, in suite laundry, well suited to a single. $925 inclusive. N/P, N/S Call 250-9244545.
HOMES FOR RENT 3 bdrm, 2 bath, 5 appliances, heat pump. Quiet area. N/P. N/S. 3.5 klm to Chemainus. References. $1200/mo. Avail May 15. 250-246-7503.
750
SUITES, LOWER
SAWMILLS from only $4,397 MAKE MONEY & SAVE MONEY with your own bandmill - Cut lumber any dimension. In stock ready to ship. FREE Info & DVD: www.NorwoodSawmills.com/400OT 1-800-566-6899 Ext:400OT.
MISCELLANEOUS WANTED
WANTED
Scandinavian Teak & Rosewood Furniture
From 50’s/60’s & Accessories. Records / LP’S
TRANSPORTATION CARS
250-380-7022
Drinkwater Elementary School participated in the Stream of Dreams program, April 19-22. Students received instruction from biologists about the importance of our streams and the fish that live in them. Then each member of the Drinkwater community painted a colorful fish to honour the importance of this ecosystem. The culminating activity on April 22, Earth Day, was attaching the colorful wooden fish to the school fence. Visit to see this community mural on the fence. The school would like to thank Louise Towell, coordinator of the Stream of Dreams; Mary, Allison, Tracey, presenters of the program; parents who helped attach the fish to the school fence and supported painting the fish, the Pacific Salmon Foundation for their generous grant, and the Drinwater parent advisory committee. [SUBMITTED PHOTO]
REAL ESTATE FOR SALE BY OWNER 3-BEDROOM mobile home for sale by owner, in Lake Cowichan 250-749-3022
- BUYING - RENTING - SELLING -
1-866-865-4460
used.ca
Garage Sales
#ALLÖ TOÖPLACEÖYOURÖGARAGEÖSALEÖADÖ ANDÖRECEIVEÖ&2%%ÖINVENTORYÖANDÖTIPÖSHEETSÖÖ ANDÖBRIGHTÖGARAGEÖSALEÖSIGNSÖ
GARAGE SALES
GARAGE SALES
Garage Sale
1591 Westlock Place
(in Trumpter Pointe, across from the Properties)
Saturday May 14th 8:00 am - 2:00 p.m.
Moving and downsizing sale, home furnishings, framed pictures, baby furniture, toys. Some tools ladders, hoses, wheelbarrow, books & cd’s. Complimentary coffee!
HUGE GARAGE SALE SPRING CLEANING
Sat., May 14 * 9am -2pm 5555 Paige Rd., Duncan Tires, Queen size bed, Chairs, Clothing, Dishes
“KLEER THE KLUTTER” Multi-Family Garage Sale Sat., May 14 * 9am - 1pm 5855 Church Rd. Maple Woods strata complex RV Supplies, Furniture & More!
MOVING SALE
Sat., May 14, 9-2pm 2280 Benko Rd.,
Mill Bay (off Butterfield Rd) Household items, books, clothing and more. VERY, VERY, LARGE GARAGE SALE 1370 Tatlo Rd., Crofton 6 days - May 13, 14, 15, 20, 21 & 22 * 8am - 3pm
Maple dining table & chairs, “loaded” electric scooter & other equipment for disabled. Hunting/camping equipment, some tools, collectibles, clothes. See you there!
VALLEY Calendar Miscellaneous • Cowichan Pipes and Drummers Society fundraiser, Sunday, May 15, 1-4 p.m., doors open at noon, 198 Government St., Duncan n(Cowichan Valley Seniors Centre). Second annual Merchandise Bingo — prizes awarded are merchandise or gift certificates donated by local businesses. Tickets $25 at Senior Centre, or Lorna 250-7432107. Must be 19 years old. Door prizes, 50/50 draw, halftime entertainment by the Cowichan Pipes & Drums band. • Council of Canadians shows film “The Price We Pay” Sunday, May 15, 2 p.m., library at the Island Savings Centre, Duncan. Director Harold Crooks draws the link between corporate tax havens and the erosion of our social programs. Free admission. Info: Donna Cameron 250-748-2444. • Junk in your Trunk Garage Sale Bonanza, June 4, 9 a.m.-3 p.m., Westholme School grounds, 2558 Mt. Sicker Rd., just off the highway at Crofton turnoff. Fundraiser for Westholme School Historical Society for roof for Anex. Book a stall for $20, all items and small businesses welcome (250-246-4796 or westholmeschoolsociety@ gmail.com). Barbecue, tours of historic school. • Canadian Firearm Safety Course, non-restricted and restricted, in Duncan starting Friday, June 10. Details and registration: Mike 250-748-0319 or email canadianfirearmsafety@shaw.ca • Ladysmith is hosting its 6th Annual “Be a HomeTown Tourist Weekend” June 18 and 19. On this special weekend you can enjoy free events, plus discounts on activities, attractions, dining and more. We are always looking for more participants, contact our office if your organization would like to host an activity. Info: www.take5.ca/hometowntourist/ or call TAKE 5, 250-245-7015. • Register for Garden Pals, free community gar-
den program for children and parents, Jubilee Community Garden in Centennial Park. Learn to garden and take something home each time. Info: www.duncangarden.com. Phone: 250-748-0580. • Fraternal Order of Eagles #2546-2965 Boys Rd., Duncan. Weekly meat draws, Friday, 4:30 p.m., Saturday and Sunday 3:30 p.m. • Cowichan Neighbourhood House accepting registration for workshops: February: Rent Smart, Chronic Pail Management, Spanish Lessons, Non Violence Intervention; March: Foodsafe, Canning, First Aid. More info: www.cnha.ca or 250-246-3202. • Mt. View 1966 — 50th reunion. Grads send contact info to mtview1966@gmail.com or call Dave Hutchings 250-477-4505.
Seniors • Chemainus Seniors Drop-in Centre soup and sandwich May 18, 11:30 a.m.-1 p.m., $6. Entertainment: ladies choir. • Chemainus Seniors Drop-in Centre blood pressure clinic May 18, 9:30-11 a.m. • Chemainus Seniors Drop-in Centre May 21, birthday party with pot luck dinner, bar and entertainment, 5-8 p.m. • Valley Seniors Duncan, dance and social every Wednesday, 3-5 p.m., dance to ‘50s and ‘60s music, first time attendees are free. Info: Ron 250-743-7821. • Chemainus Seniors Drop-in Centre blood pressure clinic 9:30-11 a.m.; muffin mornings Wednesdays and Fridays 9:30-11 a.m.; Bingo every Monday, doors open at 4:45 p.m. starts at 6:40 p.m. Loonie Pot, G-Ball, Bonanza, & 50/50 draw. Everyone Welcome. • Lake Cowichan’s air-conditionded 50 Plus Activity Centre open 7 a.m.-3 p.m. Monday-Friday. Bridge, canasta, cribbage, shuffleboard,
pool, line dancing, music. Exercises 9:30 a.m. Monday, Wednesday, Friday. Bingo for over 19 Wednesday, 1 p.m. and Sunday, 7 p.m. Kitchen serves home-made lunches, 11 a.m.-1:15 p.m., weekly specials. Banquets, bazaars and bus trips organized throughout the year. More volunteers wanted. Info: 250-749-6121.
Recreation • Mill Bay Carpet Bowling Group meets every Wednesday, 1 p.m., Mill Bay Community League Hall, beside Kerry Park Arena. Info: Jim 250-7435189 or Pauline 250-733-9886. • Cowichan Kayak and Canoe Club meetings second Tuesday each month except July and August, 7:30 p.m., socializing time 7-7:30 p.m., Seniors Activity Centre, Duncan. Refreshments provided. Info: cowichankayakandcanoe.word press.com • Cowichan Intercultural Society presents Art Healing Series, Wednesdays, 2-3:30 p.m., Mill Bay Library. Meet to paint, draw, sketch and create art pieces. Info: Francoise francoise@cis-iwc.org or 250-748-3112.
Meetings • Branch 53 Royal Canadian Legion general meeting, Sunday, May 15, 1 p.m., Air Cadet Hall, 3790 Gibbins Rd. Provincial award will be presented to one of the winners of the poster competition from the 2015 Poppy Campaign. Snack provided. • Big Brothers Big Sisters Annual General Meeting, May 18, 6 p.m., Koksilah Room at the Island Savings Centre in Duncan. RSVP to 250-7482447 or erin.generous@bigbrothersbigsisters.ca Meet our Board of Directors, staff and volunteers. Learn more about Big Brothers Big Sisters and the positive impact mentoring has.
Cowichan Valley Citizen
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Wednesday, May 11, 2016
27
MAY IS OPEN FREE BBQ! HOUSE MONTH JOIN US FOR A
THIS Saturday, join us for a FREE BBQ inars* EE Service Sem
Come Enjoy a ed hion Good Ole Fas Q! FAMILY BB
Saturday 11am - 3pm May14th Mill Bay
• FR rts Specials • 1-day ONLY Parizes • Draw P ate Special… R Y L N O y a d 1• AND n select models)! only 3.98% oac (o ailable at ails av *Full seminar detide.com/ u g islandrv ial-offers/ index.php/spec
2017 Island Wild 175BH Trailer w/Bunks
2016 Breckenridge Lakeview 41ETS Dest. T.
2016 Island Vibe 207RD Travel Trailer
2016 A.C.E. 27.1 Class A
WOW! Arbutus RV Exclusive Family Favourite - front queen, rear bunks, fullyequipped kitchen. Easily affordable and towable!
Ultra-modern destination trailer w/3 slides, 102” widebody, hardwood cabinets, fireplace, insulated dual panes - perfect “cottage”.
Exciting news! Just arrived & Exclusive to Arbutus RV, the Island Vibe delivers true comfort and unsurpassed quality at a GREAT introductory price.
Drop-down OH bunk plus king walkaround bed, large slide, huge front window, 2-32” LED tvs, 8000lb. trailer hitch, auto-levelling jacks w/touch pad.
STK#: M17N1742
STK#: P16N995
MSRP $22,549
$79*
BI-WEEKLY OAC
May Open House FeaTuRe PRICe*
$18,995
2016 Grand Design Momentum 350M Toy H
EXTRAORDINARY! This just might be the finest 5th W. toy hauler ever designed. Perfect for entertaining. 3 slides & too much to list so, check it out!
MSRP $91,750
$252**
BI-WEEKLY OAC
May Open House FeaTuRe PRICe*
$69,998
2016 Wildcat Maxx 245RG Travel Trailer
Easy-tow aluminum cage constr., dual panes, solid surface counters, Serta mattress, Maxx Bright LED package, U-shaped dinette in slide.
MSRP $119,900
$389**
BI-WEEKLY OAC
May Open House FeaTuRe PRICe*
$107,997
MSRP $35,334
$101**
BI-WEEKLY OAC
$135**
BI-WEEKLY OAC
$37,497
May Open House FeaTuRe PRICe*
$27,983
$124,996
F R EE 5-Day/4Nigh
Rugged & retro! Luxury & Green packages, custom graphics & black powder-coated fenders, A/C, convection microwave, bike carrier and 19” LED TV.
STK#: 16N1955
MSRP $52,321
May Open House FeaTuRe PRICe*
MSRP $148,309
May Open House FeaTuRe PRICe*
2016 R-Pod RP172 Trailer with Bunks
STK#: P16N949
STK#: a16N2817
STK#: 16N1947
STK#: a16N2717
MSRP $31,926
$101**
BI-WEEKLY OAC
May Open House FeaTuRe PRICe*
$27,980
t stay
EXCLUSIVELY ARBUTUS RV to every purchaser* www.pa cificpla *Applies to pu
yground s
rchases made
AFTER OCTOBER
.com
, 2014
Check out our 30 NEW PRODUCT LINES and BC’S BIGGEST SELECTION of over 700 NEW & PRE-ENJOYED RVs PLUS Parts & Service Specials online at
www.arbutusrv.ca
NANAIMO 250-245-3858
MILL BAY 250-743-3800
SIDNEY 250-655-1119
COURTENAY 250-337-2174
PORT ALBERNI 250-724-4648
Toll Free 1-888-272-8887
Toll Free 1-800-665-5581
Toll Free: 1-888-272-8888
Toll Free: 1-866-330-2174
Toll Free: 1-877-724-4648
◆ Total Price including freight, excluding Road Ready Package and Taxes. PAYMENTS based on total price including freight and taxes less 10% down (or equivalent trade). Variable interest rate at the time of calculation 6.99% on approved credit (OAC), amortized over *390 bi-weekly pymts/5/15 term, **520 bi-weekly pymts/5/20 term. Zero down option available on request (on approved credit)
DL#8996
28
Wednesday, May 11, 2016
| Cowichan Valley Citizen
7578019
May is La-Z Boy Month Save on All In Stock La-Z Boy Recliners Starting at $499
MAY IS
MAYTAG MONTH APRIL 28 - JUNE 1, 2016
SAVE
20%
............................................
............................................
on the purchase of 3 or more eligible Maytag® major appliances*
SAVE
15%
on the purchase of 1 or 2 eligible Maytag® major appliances*
See in-store sales associate for instant savings details and list of available qualifying appliances**
* In store instant savings equal to 15% of retail purchase price (before taxes) on purchase of 1 or 2 qualifying MAYTAG® major appliances will be deducted at time of purchase. In store instant savings equal to 20% of retail purchase price (before taxes) on purchase of 3 or more Maytag® major appliances will be deducted at time of purchase. Purchase must be made between April 28, 2016 and June 1, 2016 from a participating authorized Canadian Maytag® appliance dealer. Multiple qualifying appliances must be purchased from the same dealer at the same time to qualify for instant savings. Open to Canadian residents only. Offer cannot be combined with any other Maytag® appliance offer. This offer is not available to second channel, dealers, builders, or contractors. ** Not all models qualify for the instant savings. Offer excludes discontinued products. All qualifying models may not be available at all dealers. No substitute models qualify. Dealer prices may vary. Dealer alone has sole discretion to set retail prices. See Sales Associates for qualfiying models and instant savings details. ®/™ © 2016 Maytag. Used under license in Canada. All rights reserved.
Local
Dealer
MERIT 107 Ingram St, Duncan, BC
250-746-5527
Monday - Saturday 9:00am till 5:30pm Sundays + Holidays 12:00pm till 4:00pm
Local ® FURNITURE INDUSTRIES, INC.
Dealer